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Pens take Game 4 to level series


EVGENI Malkin continued his post-season scoring spree leading the Pittsburgh Penguins to a 4-2 Game 4 win over the Detroit Red Wings to level the Stanley Cup finals on Thursday.

With both teams having held serve on home ice, the best-of-seven series now shifts back to the Motor City for Game 5 today, deadlocked at 2-2.

"We've played four very hard games," Penguins coach Dan Bylsma told reporters. "They're hard fought and they are not going to get any easier. "Battle lines are drawn for Game Five and it's going to be a tough one."

A finalist for most valuable player honors, Malkin has also put himself in line for the Conn Smythe trophy as the Stanley Cup MVP, scoring a goal and setting up another.

Through the first four games of the finals, the 22-year-old Russian has had a hand in 7-of-10 Pittsburgh goals and leads the playoff scoring race with 35 points.

Only "the Great One" Wayne Gretzky (47) and Penguins owner Mario Lemieux (44) have posted better numbers in a single post-season.

During the first four games of last year's finals, Malkin had come under harsh criticism after failing to score a single point.

He has been a one-man wrecking crew this year, turning around a Stanley Cup rematch that had been a carbon copy of last season's final when eventual winners Detroit claimed two convincing wins at home and then lost Game 3.

The Penguins broke from the script midway through the second period in Game 4, pumping three goals past Detroit netminder Chris Osgood in less than six minutes.

Malkin opened with a powerplay goal early in the first period, swiping a backhand from the side of the net past Osgood, bringing the capacity crowd at the Igloo to its feet.

The Red Wings threw cold water on the Pittsburgh party when Darren Helm beat Marc-Andre Fleury with a quickfire wrist shot before the end of the first and Brad Stuart blasted a rocket past the Penguins netminder early in the second to lead 2-1.

With the crowd growing jittery, Jordan Staal sparked the Pittsburgh rally with a momentum swinging shorthanded goal, fighting off Wings defenseman Brian Rafalski and shoveling the puck past Osgood.

"That was a huge momentum shift for us to get that," said Penguins captain Sidney Crosby. "You don't expect those, you just want a (penalty) kill. That was a bonus for sure, that was huge."



 

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