APPHILADELPHIA - Alex Goligoski said it was the easiest goal of his young career — and for good reason.
Goligoski and Bill Guerin scored midway through the second period to help the Pittsburgh Penguins hand the Philadelphia Flyers their first loss of the season, 5-4 on Thursday night.
Guerin scored on a breakaway off a cross-ice pass from Chris Kunitz to break a 2-2 tie at 5:26 of the period. The Penguins never trailed after that.
Goligoski, who also had an assist, made it 4-2 at 8:08 when Philadelphia defenseman Braydon Coburn, pressured by Ruslan Fedotenko, failed to clear his dump-in and the puck bounced into the net off goaltender Ray Emery’s skate. Goligoski was credited with the goal since he was the last Penguin to touch the puck.
“It certainly was the easiest goal of my career considering that I didn’t even touch it,” Goligoski, a second-year defenseman, said.
“It was kind of just a weird play,” Coburn explained. “I was trying to go behind the net to Kimmo Timonen and the puck just popped out and hit somebody in the leg or something.”
Evgeni Malkin, who also had an assist, Jordan Staal and Tyler Kennedy scored for the Penguins, who were coming off their first loss of the season, 3-0 to Phoenix on Wednesday.
Goligoski, who was Pittsburgh’s second-round draft choice in 2004, said he really enjoys playing against the Flyers.
“It’s always a more intense game and Philadelphia’s always a lot of fun to play against,” he explained. “The crowd is always into it and these games always seem to be a lot different.”
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Carter’s second goal came with the Flyers skating with the extra attacker with 41 seconds left.
This was the teams’ first meeting since the Penguins overcame a 3-0 deficit to eliminate the Flyers with a 5-3 victory in Game 6 of the Eastern Conference quarterfinals.
“They’re the Stanley Cup champions and you want to try to put your best foot forward and beat them,” Flyers coach John Stevens said. “We’ve got work to do.”
The intensity level remained the same as last season when the teams finished 2-2-2 with the Flyers holding the edge in goals, 21-20, and shots, 168-166.
“It’s pretty typical for our two teams,” Pittsburgh captain Sydney Crosby explained. “We’ve all kind of become accustomed to that. With the history of playing each other in the playoffs, that adds to it, too. It’s always an intense, emotional game.”
Pittsburgh’s Marc-Andre Fleury had 30 saves to improve his record to 3-0. He preserved the lead midway through the second period when he stopped point-blank shots from Mike Richards and Mika Pyorala.
Emery, who lost for the first time, made 20 saves.
Carter scored from the slot with the Flyers skating with a two-man advantage at 16:59, but Kennedy redirected Matt Cooke’s shot at 8:37 of the third period to make it 5-3.
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Briere tied it at 11:53 when he poked in a pass from Coburn, but Pittsburgh regained the lead 28 seconds later on a breakaway by Staal, who went backhand to forehand and scored.
Briere scored again from the side of the net to tie the game at 2:37 of the second period when his shot nicked off Cooke.
“Every time you play Philadelphia it’s a statement game,” Penguins coach Dan Bylsma said. “That’s the rivalry that we have. I know that they were coming in to make a statement as well and we responded well from last night.”
Ryan Callahan scored for the fifth time in four days and defenseman Ryan McDonagh snapped a second-period tie to lift the New York Rangers to a 3-2 victory over the Washington Capitals on Sunday.
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