Jagr breaks Rangers’ points record

Bear-Arms

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Jagr breaks Rangers' points record


UNIONDALE, N.Y. (AP) - Jaromir Jagr broke New York's single-season points record - and gave the Rangers a little cushion in the Atlantic Division race.

Jagr assisted on four straight goals in a 5-1 victory over the New York Islanders on Wednesday night to pass Hall of Famer Jean Ratelle on the team scoring list and help the Rangers move four points ahead of second-place Philadelphia.

"It's a big honor for me," Jagr said. "I'm glad I did it in the first period. ... We need the points. We want to stay in first in the division."

Drawing chants of "MVP! MVP!" from the many Rangers fans at Nassau Coliseum, Jagr broke the tie with Ratelle at 7:23 of the first period, setting up Petr Prucha's power-play goal for point No. 110. Jagr also assisted on Martin Straka's three goals.

"We had a lot of chances," Jagr said. "Sometimes it might look easy like tonight and other times it's really tough. That's just hockey."

Jagr, trying to hold off Joe Thornton for his sixth NHL scoring title, is the clear favorite to win the Hart Trophy as the NHL's most valuable player, an award he won in 1998-99 with Pittsburgh. Jagr has 113 points in 73 games, seven more than Thornton has in 70 games for Boston and San Jose.

"Without question, he's the MVP," Islanders goalie Rick DiPietro said. "Every time he gets the puck on his stick, he makes a good play. He's tough to defend.

"Them getting in the playoffs is great for hockey. I think the new rules have helped them out considerably. They're a tough team to play against."

Jagr also has an NHL-leading 52 goals, tied with Adam Graves for the team record. The 34-year-old Czech star had a chance to break that tie on a breakaway midway through the third period, but DiPietro stopped him with a pad save.

"It wasn't a good shot," Jagr said. "I thought someone was coming up behind me and rushed it. I'd like to have that one back."

Ratelle had 109 points in 1971-72, and Graves set the goal record in 1993-94.

Henrik Lundqvist also broke the Rangers' record for victories by a rookie, making 18 saves for his 30th win. The Swedish Olympic goalie improved to 30-10-9 to break a tie with Jim Henry (1941-42) and Johnny Bower (1953-54).

"It's a big number for me, especially in my first season," Lundqvist said. "The whole team played a great game."

Blair Betts also scored for the Rangers. Alexei Yashin scored his 25th goal for the Islanders, 10 points out of the final Eastern Conference playoff spot.

Prucha's goal, the rookie's 29th, opened the scoring at 7:23 of the first period. Straka scored at 8:53 and 13:59 of the first period and completed his hat trick at 12:14 of the second with his 18th goal of the season.

The Rangers, coming off a 5-4 shootout victory over Buffalo on Monday night at Madison Square Garden, will face Eastern Conference-leading Ottawa on Thursday night as they close in on their first playoff spot since 1997.

The Rangers and Flyers are fighting for the Atlantic title, with the winner in position to get the No. 3 seed in the Eastern Conference and the loser expected to open against Buffalo in the 4-5 series.

DiPietro, also in goal Tuesday night in a 2-0 loss in Montreal, made 17 saves. The Islanders have lost six of their last eight games.

Jagr is 16th on the NHL's career goals list with 589, 22nd in assists with 833 and 14th in points with 1,422 in 1,100 games with Pittsburgh, Washington and New York. In 73 career games against the Islanders, he has 51 goals and 71 assists for 122 points.

"He's a special hockey player," Islanders interim coach Brad Shaw said. "Early in his career, he looked like this. I don't know what happened in a few of his middle years, but certainly this year, he's found the love of the game again. We stood around and watched him make a lot of plays. We gave him too much respect and too much room."
 

jaxvid

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The NHL dicks with the rules every generation or so and completely screws up any continuity for scoring records. The rule changes this year are doing for hockey what steroids did for baseball.

Hockey has had several fluctuations. In 1968 they doubled the size of their league and inflated scoring by nearly a factor of two. There was the WHA merger which led to the Gretsky era high scoring. Then the "dead puck" era of recent times due to increased holding and defensive strategy.

Note how the Rangers record goes all the way back two steps to the first high scoring era. The Rangers have been so sad for so long they missed the high scoring of the Gretsky era.

Good for Jagr though, he has always been a high scorer, whatever era, the cream rises to the top I guess.
 

Realgeorge

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Jagr has played splendidly this year. He has persevered on every shift, heaping praise on his linemates, defenders and goalies. Jags has become a pretty decent team player. Perhaps its the seasoning of age.

Jagr is by far the most difficult NHL player to "move off the puck." When he has it, he sticks his big butt into the nearest defender and keeps possession forever.

The real "proof in the pudding" stat is the Plus/minus ratio, i.e., who scores the goals when YOU are on the ice. Jagr is plus-29, among the highest in the NHL. So is Michal Nylander, his center (+29), and Martin Rucinsky, his usual off-wing, posts at plus-12. The NY Rangers have adopted a rugged checking style of play, and their talent has done the rest. The Rangers clinched a playoff spot last night.

Jagr is an NHL leader reborn, and I'm ready to watch him in the first playoff round. He's made a remarkable transformation from the out-of-control wildman of his youth, chasing broads, complaining a lot, hogging the puck, generally irritating Mario Lemieux. Finally settling down in Tinseltown, Jagr is the gentleman athlete of New York. Knicks fans should abandon basketball in droves and instead support the New York Rangers hockey club!
 
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