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    PA Stats Inc
    Jan 7, 2009, 03:04

    By Chris Adamski

    PA SportsTicker Contributing Writer

    PITTSBURGH (Ticker) -- All the struggling Pittsburgh Penguins

    needed to get their recently anemic offense and power play going

    was a meeting with the last-place Atlanta Thrashers.

    Petr Sykora scored twice, Evgeni Malkin collected three assists

    and Marc-Andre Fleury stopped 27 shots as the Penguins topped

    the Thrashers, 3-1, on Tuesday.

    Pittsburgh had lost five in a row and scored only eight goals in

    their previous seven games. The Penguins also had not netted a

    power-play goal in that time, going scoreless over their past 32

    opportunities, but posted two tallies with the extra skater

    against Atlanta, which has the league's worst penalty-killing

    unit.

    "We want to build off this," said Penguins captain Sidney

    Crosby, who also scored. "We played well even in some of the

    games before this, so as long as the effort's there, I'm always

    confident that execution comes with that. Hopefully, that's a

    trend that's going to come along."

    "This was a huge win for us," Sykora added. "Now we have to

    build on it.

    Ilya Kovalchuk scored for the third time in four games for the

    Thrashers, who fell to 1-5-1 in their past seven.

    "I think we played a decent game tonight, especially in the

    third period," Kovalchuk said. "We had a lot of chances to

    score, but (Fleury) made some key saves."

    After 33 straight futile chances covering seven-plus games, the

    Penguins' power play finally converted.

    During his team's second opportunity of the night, Malkin made a

    pass to Ryan Whitney at the right point. The defenseman found

    Sykora open below the left faceoff circle with a slap pass that

    was redirected past goaltender Kari Lehtonen with 2:50 remaining

    in the first period for a 1-0 lead.

    "I thought we were ready to play," Penguins coach Michel

    Therrien said. "We set the tone right from the start and we got

    the lead, and it certainly gave us confidence."

    It was Sykora's 14th goal of the season and 10th on the power

    play.

    Sykora added an even-strength tally with 7:17 left in the

    second. Malkin won a faceoff in the left circle, went to the

    net and dished the puck across the crease to Sykora, who flipped

    a backhander that Lehtonen got his glove on but could not

    prevent from tumbling into the net.

    Pittsburgh recorded another power-play goal 2:58 later, when

    Malkin's rising slap shot from the right point was deflected in

    by Crosby, who was standing in front of Lehtonen.

    The goal was only Crosby's third since November 29 and first

    point in four games this month. It also was the superstar's

    first power-play tally in 25 contests.

    "It was a relief," Whitney said of getting the power play going.

    "I think we were actually better in New York (while going

    0-for-8 in a 4-0 loss to the Rangers on Monday), but it just

    finally went in tonight.

    "We hadn't been scoring, which is disappointing and frustrating,

    but we kept getting chances. If we keep going out there and

    getting chances and shooting the puck a little more, we knew

    we'd keep getting chances and we knew, eventually, it would come

    through."

    The previous time the Penguins scored two power-play goals in a

    game came on December 18, also against the Thrashers.

    "They got some good guys out there, especially on the power play

    when they've got both Crosby and Malkin, and Whitney, there,"

    Lehtonen said. "They make nice plays. That's about it, you

    can't take many penalties against this team."

    Kovalchuk scored with the man advantage with 5:40 left in the

    third to spoil Fleury's shutout bid.

    "(Fleury) played great for us," Sykora said. "When we needed

    him, he shut the door. He came up huge for us."