Rangers face Penguins on banner night

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When the Stanley Cup makes an appearance on the ice here for tonight's pre-game banner-raising festivities that will commemorate the Penguins' 2008-09 championship, John Tortorella will have the Rangers on their bench, watching.

"I think it's a great thing," the head coach said yesterday. "For some of our youth especially, I think it will be good to see it.

"I don't want to disrespect the league and the Cup we're trying to get to and win."

Chris Drury is the only Ranger on the opening roster to win the Stanley Cup, and that was in 2001 as a support player for the Avalanche. But Marc Staal has seen it up close and personal, both this summer when his brother Jordan had the Cup for a day at the family home, and during the summer of 2006 when his brother Eric had it for a day following the Hurricanes' title victory. "Obviously I'm very proud of what they've accomplished, but I wasn't so happy having to see that thing come into my parents' house and be paraded around for a day," Marc Staal said. "They've both won it early in their careers, and that's what I'm aiming for, so it was tough for me."

It remains to be seen whether the absence of NHL championship pedigree will make it tough for the Rangers as they open the season following another summer extreme makeover. Of the 21 players who suited up for the Blueshirts in the playoffs, only a dozen have made it to tonight. That includes Sean Avery, who will be sidelined because of a knee injury.

"It feels like we have a more skilled group and more guys who know how to score goals, which is fun for me in practices, but it takes a while before you know the kind of a team you have," said Henrik Lundqvist.

"You really need to go through a lot together to see how the group is going to react. It takes time before everyone is on the same page."

Tortorella, who will name the club's pair of assistant captains this morning, wants everyone on the page that reads: "Attack." The Rangers will pressure the puck in the neutral zone and offensive zone. Their defensemen will join the attack, if not lead it. Breakdowns in decision-making and execution will expose the Blueshirts to odd-man counter-attacks.

"We want the D to be up on the play, and we have the guys who have the ability and the inclination, like [Matt] Gilroy and [Michael] Del Zotto, but we also understand that it can't be a free-for-all out there," said Drury. "We understand that Torts' system isn't a license to be run all over and be undisciplined.

"It might take some time before we have it buttoned down, but that's not going to be an excuse for undisciplined play."

The 1994 Cup winners featured three defensemen 25 or younger in Brian Leetch, Sergei Zubov and Alexander Karpovtsev. These Rangers will start with four in Staal, Dan Girardi, Gilroy and Del Zotto. Up front, there's 21-year-old freshman center Artem Anisimov.

"I think we're better than we were last year, and one of the reason is the young guys," said Brandon Dubinsky. "I love what they bring to out team."

Dubinsky, of course, is 23 -- and talking about young guys.

"I can't hide behind that 'young thing,' as an excuse," said Dubinsky, who is primed to center Vinny Prospal and the brilliant Marian Gaborik. "I'm no rookie, so to me they're young guys and I'm not.

"I've got to be one of the guys leading the way."

Starting tonight, under some other team's Stanley Cup banner.
 

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Rangers gaga for Gaborik

An explosive push-off accelerated Marian Gaborik toward Henrik Lundqvist for a penalty shot Wednesday in practice. The Rangers? key free agent signing first froze the goalie, who is noted for his success in one-on-one showdowns with skaters, then beat him with a blink-and-you-missed-it wrist shot.

"You need that guy, that game-breaker," coach John Tortorella said. "Those are key players if you want to win in this league consistently."

The Rangers open their first full season under Tortorella tonight at Pittsburgh with serious questions remaining about their defensemen, power play and depth at center.

But there?s no doubting Gaborik?s potential to elevate the Rangers as the ex-Wild right wing, 27, who signed a five-year deal worth $37.5 million, gives the Rangers their best scoring threat since Jaromir Jagr left for Russia. He had 13 goals and 10 assists last season in only 17 games as he battled hip and groin injuries.

"It?s always good to have players who bring a lot of attention," said Lundqvist, 27, a three-time Vezina Trophy finalist entering his fifth season. "You?ve got to be aware of a guy like that. There?s 10, 15 players, they?re just a little bit better than the rest in putting the puck in the net."

Gaborik is one of 11 new players as the Rangers have turned over 50 percent of their roster after blowing a 3-1 series lead and losing in the first round of the playoffs to the Capitals.

Whether the new mix brings a different result remains to be seen. The Rangers have added rookies Michael Del Zotto, 19, their 2008 first-round pick, and Matt Gilroy, 25, last season?s Hobey Baker winner and NCAA titlist at Boston University, on defense while acquiring veteran wings Ales Kotalik (three years, $9 million), Christopher Higgins and Vinny Prospal, who may also be used at center.

Rookie Artem Anisimov, 21, will also center a line to start the season.

As a result, predications on the Rangers? finish this season have ranged from fifth in the 15-team Eastern Conference to 13th.

"From what I?ve heard from friends and people around the league, we?re not picked to be in the playoffs," said Higgins, a left wing acquired from the Canadiens when the Rangers dealt Scott Gomez and his $7.5 million annual salary. "I don?t know what they?re looking at. For sure, we have a playoff team."

"Maybe it?s over-analyzation," added holdover right wing Aaron Voros. "If you look at our team, we have a pretty good mix of everything and we?re playing a system that caters to what we have with speed and jump and the best goalie in the league."

Still, the Rangers have not advanced to the Eastern Conference finals since 1997 and needed a 12-7-2 finish after Tortorella replaced Tom Renney to reach the postseason.

Tortorella?s system demands players to be aggressive, particularly in the neutral zone in creating turnovers and transition opportunities. Tortorella is not ready to claim his players have fully grasped the philosophy, but he sees it becoming more and more instinctual on the ice.

"I think we?ve got a really good goalie," Tortorella said. "I think we?ve added some scoring. If we can be stiffer defensively, and stingier there, it?ll allow us to have the puck more and we?re heading down the right road."

BRIEFS: Tortorella said there was "no possibility" Sean Avery (sprained right knee) would play tonight. ? The Rangers will be on the visitors? bench during tonight?s Stanley Cup banner-raising ceremony. "I don?t want to be disrespectful to what that trophy is," Tortorella said. "I think it?s a great thing, especially with the youth on this team." ? A snag developed between Alexei Semenov, who Wednesday agreed to a one-year deal worth $600,000 after coming to training camp on a tryout basis, and the Rangers. Semenov did not practice Thursday, but accompanied the team to Pittsburgh.
 
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