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How Rangers can beat Devils
Igor Shesterkin. Brad Penner-USA TODAY Sports

How New York Rangers can beat New Jersey Devils

The Battle of the Hudson is coming.

With the regular season behind them, the New York Rangers and New Jersey Devils are locked into a first-round playoff matchup and a meeting for the first time in the postseason since 2012. The teams each finished in the top 10 in the league-wide standings and are headed for a dynamic clash.

Despite being the lower seed of the two, the Rangers are more than capable of upsetting their cross-river rivals. Here are three factors integral to the Rangers’ success in this matchup, which begins Tuesday at New Jersey.

I-gor! I-gor! I-gor!

In net for New York is the reigning Vezina Trophy winner, Igor Shesterkin, the great equalizer. When the Rangers have defensive breakdowns or give up odd-man rushes, Shesterkin is there to erase them.

After a historic 2021-22 season, the 27-year-old stumbled a bit by his standards earlier this season but has played well recently, finishing the season with a 2.48 goals-against average and a .916 save percentage. Even with his struggles against Pittsburgh in last year’s postseason, Shesterkin has proven he has a short memory and can handle the pressure of the postseason in New York.

Get production from third line

Third lines have been crucial to past Stanley Cup winners – most recently the Tampa Bay Lightning – and the Rangers have one that can be a matchup problem: 2017 No. 21 overall pick Filip Chytil, 2019 No. 2 overall pick Kaapo Kakko and 2020 No. 1 overall pick Alexis Lafrenière. 

New York’s top prospects have graduated from the “Kid Line” moniker and developed palpable chemistry, with each player setting career highs in multiple offensive categories. With all the talent on the roster, this trio is relegated to the third line. But that will give them advantageous matchups, and if they can provide secondary and tertiary scoring, the Rangers will thrive.

Play lights-out on road

The Devils will start with home-ice advantage, but that may not be easy to hold onto.

The Rangers had the seventh-best road record this season, picking up 24 of their 47 wins and only losing nine times in regulation. There is also the benefit of proximity. Rangers fans travel well, especially when the away arena (Prudential Center) is a short train ride away. There are sure to be plenty of red, white and blue jerseys in the crowd in Newark. 

The Devils are also a great road team, so the Rangers need to defend their home ice, but with the first two games on the road, New York could jump to an early lead.

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