New-look Islanders succumb to same old issues in opening loss to Penguins

PITTSBURGH — The Islanders spent much of Thursday night looking like they were moving into a new era with both feet.Ultimately, though, it was old habits that doomed them to a 4-3 loss to the Penguins in their first game of the season.The penalty kill, a point of emphasis all preseason, coughed up a pair of goals and the Islanders gave up a third-period winner to Justin Brazeau after leaving Ilya Sorokin out to dry in the final 20 minutes, overshadowing all the positivity that came with Matthew Schaefer’s debut.Schaefer, who became the youngest player in history to record a point in his NHL debut, put forth a strong night in front of a crowd of roughly 30 family members and friends, assisting Jonathan Drouin’s goal 12:02 into the night and looking like he belonged in his first regular-season action.Long-term, that is very much a positive, and so too is the speed with which the Islanders played all night, a much-needed quality for a group that has long been derided for its slow pace.Still, with the chance to seize a come-from-behind win after Max Shabanov tied the game at three going into the second intermission, the Russian’s first NHL goal coming off a slick assist from Simon Holmstrom, the Islanders could not.The Penguins poured down pressure early in the third period, but Ilya Sorokin — whose rebound control had looked shaky earlier in the night — stood up to it, making save after save around the crease.Finally, though, at 14:21 of the third, Sorokin was beaten as Brazeau got around Scott Mayfield and went forehand-to-backhand, putting the Penguins up 4-3.The Islanders had a chance to re-tie the game shortly thereafter when Adam Pelech drew a hooking call on Ben Kinde with 3:45 to go.Even after Patrick Roy pulled Ilya Sorokin with a minute to go in the man advantage, though, the Islanders could not come up with a tying goal.Nor could they skating at six-on-five for the remainder, though Drouin came within inches of scoring with 14 seconds to go.

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Publisher: New York Post

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