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Nash, Rangers Hear It From Garden Crowd In Game 4 Loss

NEW YORK (CBSNewYork/AP) — Henrik Lundqvist had little help in front of him and couldn't rescue the New York Rangers from the loss that pushed them to the brink of elimination.

That series-opening overtime win against the Pittsburgh Penguins less than a week ago is now a distant memory as the Rangers have dropped three straight since — including back-to-back losses at Madison Square Garden.

And the crowd let them have it in what could have been the final home game of the season.

"The fans can do what they want. I'd prefer right now that the fans were supportive," Rangers coach Alain Vigneault said after Wednesday night's 4-2 defeat. "It might not look it but we're trying our guts off here, we're trying to play our best game on the ice. It's good to have support but at the end of the day the fans can do ultimately what they want."

The Penguins can advance to the Eastern Conference finals as early as Friday night at home.

"It's a tough feeling, a disappointing feeling," Lundqvist said. "Tonight is going to be a tough one, but tomorrow we just need to forget about it and go to Pittsburgh and look at it as just one game."

RANGERS UP FOR GOAT OF THE WEEK 'HONORS'

Brandon Sutter scored a short-handed goal to break a second-period tie, and the Penguins rode that momentum to victory. They are looking to reach the East finals for the second straight year and the fourth in seven seasons.

"We just have to stick together," Lundqvist said. "We will try to learn from the last two games and realize what we need to do better. Just look at yourself, what can I do better to help this team win? And that's the way we all have to look at it right now."

The Rangers recorded only 15 shots in a lackluster performance after firing 35 at Marc-Andre Fleury in a 2-0 loss in Game 3. They fought the puck all night, and star forward Rick Nash wasn't immune to that.

Nash, who leads the NHL in shots during these playoffs, hasn't scored in New York's 11 games. He heard loud boos when he touched the puck in the third period.

"It's a tough situation," said Nash, who called this the most frustrating time of his career. "It doesn't matter what you do (in the regular season). Playoffs do. Obviously I struggled.

"It's a battle right now. It's ultra-frustrating."

The Penguins have won seven of nine at the Garden and are 12-4 there since Dan Bylsma became their coach. Overall, Pittsburgh is 19-5 against the Rangers in the playoffs and 9-2 in New York.

"This is one of the best places to come in and play," Bylsma said. "It's a great building and we seem to always have a rivalry with the Rangers, so we don't need that motivation for the playoffs."

Evgeni Malkin scored 2:31 in, and Jussi Jokinen made it 3-1 at 7:02 of the third before the teams traded late goals.

The only negative for the Penguins was that Fleury allowed a goal for the first time in three games. Carl Hagelin's tying tally in the second period was the Rangers' first goal in 145 minutes, 30 seconds of playing time.

Mats Zuccarello cut it to 3-2 with 6:53 left on the Rangers' second shot of the third, but Chris Kunitz restored Pittsburgh's two-goal edge 57 seconds later.

Lundqvist made 23 saves.

"This is not the ideal night for us," Rangers forward Brad Richards said. "The good thing is ... we're still in it. We win Game 1, we are on top of the world. You lose three in a row, and as quick as it went that way it can go right back.

"We want to try to bring it back here. Our goal is to keep pushing the series along. You never know what can happen."

The weary Rangers played for the sixth time in nine nights, and not even a full rest day on Tuesday or the return of forward Chris Kreider helped. Kreider played for the first time since breaking his left hand a month ago.

Jokinen, who has an eight-game points streak, made it 3-1 with a shot that struck the right leg of Rangers defenseman Marc Staal and bounded past Lundqvist.

Pittsburgh had regained the lead late in the second period by pouncing on New York's inept power play. Not only did the Rangers fail to score for the 36th consecutive advantage, they fell behind for the second time.

New York threw all the momentum back to the Penguins when Sutter scored with 1:33 left in the second. The Rangers turned over the puck shortly after a drop pass in the neutral zone. Brian Gibbons streaked in alone and had his shot stopped by Lundqvist, but the rebound sat in front and Sutter scored his fourth of the postseason.

"It was huge momentum for us going into the third," captain Sidney Crosby said. "The way we played in the third showed that we fed off that."

The Rangers broke out of their drought 4:30 into the second when Ryan McDonagh passed the puck from his end to Hagelin, who took off with a burst of speed, split the defense, and snapped in his third of the playoffs to tie it.

It was New York's first goal since Derick Brassard's overtime winner in Game 1.

Any early lift the Rangers got from the return of Kreider was lost when Malkin gave the Penguins a 1-0 lead.

"We didn't pick a good night to manage the puck the way we did tonight," Vigneault said. "I don't want to take any credit against Pittsburgh, they forced the play and they played a real solid game without the puck that obviously forced us into a lot of those turnovers. Our puck management tonight and execution tonight weren't very good and ultimately cost us the game."

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(TM and © Copyright 2014 CBS Radio Inc. and its relevant subsidiaries. CBS RADIO and EYE Logo TM and Copyright 2014 CBS Broadcasting Inc. Used under license. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.)

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