NEW YORK – Down two goals very early in this return to Madison Square Garden for two popular Seattle teammates, the Kraken rallied for a 4-2 win with both ex-Rangers Kaapo Kakko and Ryan Lindgren playing key roles on comeback goals. The Kraken are now 21-15-8 on the season and 9-1-2 in their last dozen games. New Jersey is the next stop on this road trip on Wednesday.
The winning goal was scored by a group of Lindgren and a pair of younger, home-grown teammates. Lindgren uncharacteristically jumped into the high slot, taking a pass from Shane Wright. NYR goalie Jonathan Quick made the first save, and it looked like Berkly Catton might get his fourth goal in a week’s time, but he couldn’t quite lift the puck over Quick’s leg pad. Wright hurried into the crease to make the final push of the puck over the goal line. The comeback was complete after the Rangers were up 2-0 less than six minutes into the night.
Jared McCann scored an empty-net goal late to remove any suspense.
The second period changed the mojo of this night in swift fashion. Second-line center Freddy Gaudreau stole the puck at center ice, and the right-shot veteran raced left-lane into the NYR zone. Just a couple of strides from the goal line, he backhanded a beauty of a pass to winger Eeli Tolvanen at the net front. The Finnish Olympian deked one way and scored on his next move. Put it in the highlight reel folder. The goal, scored exactly one minute into the middle stanza, provided the visitors with instant energy.
Jordan Eberle, just back in the lineup after missing two games, evened the score three-and-a-half minutes later with a delayed wrist shot in the high slot that vexed veteran goaltender Jonathan Quick. That’s 16 on the year for the 35-year-old. The play was set up masterfully by ex-Ranger Kaapo Kakko, who made impressive work behind the net, keeping the puck alive and patiently waiting for an open teammate. The pass to the Kraken captain was almost as sweet as the goal itself.
Matty Beniers picked up the secondary assist on the tying goal to extend what is now a personal point streak of five games. For his part, Kakko notched his 11th assist of the season, which was delayed and then halted a second time due to injury. He has now tallied three goals and nine assists in his last 14 games. The former 2019 No. 2 overall pick in the NHL Draft has clicked with Beniers and, lately, Eberle. Side note: Assistant coach Jessica Campbell held a lengthy iPad session with Kakko in the visitors' locker room after the team’s morning skate.
“We played all those games last year together,” said Kakko about when he was acquired in a trade sending D-man Will Borgen to New York. “I think we played well together last season. I think we are finding it right now. There have been some good games, and it's getting better and better. Ebs, too, my game with him is also getting better.
“Matty in the O-zone, he's, he's pretty good there, getting pucks for us. He knows where I like to be. I feel like I try to find him a little more. He’s more of a shooter than me. I like to stay close to the net and in the corners, try to make plays. And Matty knows where I am.”
NYR Coming in Hot, As Anticipated
Lane Lambert figured the Rangers would come out with hard-nosed purpose Monday night after getting embarrassed on the road against Boston Saturday, losing 10-2.
“They've got a good hockey team,” said Lambert after his team’s morning skate. “For example, expected goals against for them and for us are neck-and-neck. It’s a proud team over there. It doesn't matter who you are, what team you are, you're going to be looking for a response.”
Ex-NYR defenseman Ryan Lindgren was just as adamant that his former teammates would bounce (and push and shove and battle) back from that lopsided loss. Both coach and stalwart D-man were absolutely correct. The Rangers killed an early slashing penalty drawn by Matty Beniers' net front, then proceeded to score the game’s first goal in the fourth minute of play. There was some puck luck involved, the wrong type per the Kraken perspective.
NYR forward Mika Zibanejad took a slick cross-ice from superstar Artemi Panarin at full speed, unleashing a shot just past the right faceoff dot. Zibanejad’s attempt went wide because he followed the puck and slid it toward the crease from behind the blue line. Grubauer didn’t locate the puck, and he was gliding backwards when the puck caromed off him and into the net.
A few shifts and two-plus minutes later, New York doubled its lead when veteran fourth-line center Sam Carrick beat Grubauer stick-side from a close-in shot. While Grubauer might want that one back himself, veteran winger Jared McCann was clearly upset with himself as he had the puck in the neutral zone with his back to the NYR end. He attempted a pass to linemate Wright, but it skittered into the Kraken with Carrick reversing direction to score unassisted.
But from there, Grubauer settled, making several strong saves to keep matters at a two-goal deficit. The home squad outshot 11-9 with NYR notching three high-danger chances. The nine SOG for Seattle didn’t feel as threatening, and most of the offense was in the first 10 minutes of the opening frame.
Lindgren, Kappo Back at the ‘Garden’
Former Rangers and now Kraken teammates Ryan Lindgren and Kaapo Kakko faced their original NHL club here at Madison Square Garden for the first time. They were both warmly welcomed back during the opening period’s first TV timeout with separate tribute videos.


















