NHL

Rangers nip rival Panthers in thrilling shootout win

The Panther𒅌s re🍌presented a major test that the pre-trade-deadline Rangers failed twice.

But after getting reinforcements for a crucial str🧸etch of the season, however, the Blueshirts finally p💦assed the Florida examination to become the front-runners for the Presidents’ Trophy.

A significant benchmark was reached when Mika Zibanejad and Artemi Panarin scored in the shootout to secure a 4-3 victory for the Rangers, who rallied from an early two-goal deficit ag𓆉ainst a ferocious Florida team to collect their 97th and 98th points of the season in front of an exuberant Madison Square Garden crowd on Saturday night.

Igor Shesterkin makes the game-ending save on Vladimir Tarasenko in the shootout to give the Rangers a 4-3 win over the Panthers. AP

“That’s a big one,” said Vincent Trocheck, who posted a three-assist night. “Two of the better teams in the East. These games are huge late in the season, ge🥀t you geared up for the playoffs. T🧜his is the style of hockey that we’re going to need to play. It goes a long way when you’re able to beat these teams.”

There is now only one team — the reigning Stanley Cup champﷺions, the Golden Knights — that the Rangers have not beaten this season.

Every other club has suffered a loss at the hands of🐓 the Rangers, who are coming together at the right time despite two major injuries affecting their lineup.

This was a re▨silient Rangers win through 🃏and through.

Despite playing without Aleksander Barkov, Aaron Ekblad, Gustav Forsling and Ryan Lomb🅰erg, 🍌the Panthers were still a handful.

They jumped out to a 2-0 lead just 21 seconds in🌃to the second period and also notched a go-ahead goal from Carter Verhaeghe w🦂ith 4:08 left in regulation.

Artemi Panarin (10) celebrates with teammates after scoring the game-tying goal. Jason Szenes / New York Post

The Rangers not only scored twice in the span of just over two minutes to even𒊎 the score at two-all in the middle frame, but Artemi Panarin continued his torrid scoring pace and netted the equalizer — his second in regulation — 43 seconds after the Panthers’ score to ಞultimately force overtime.

“He had another monster game,” head coach Peter Laviolette said of P🦄anarin, who followed up a hat trick against the Bruins with a two-goal performance and a shootout winner against the Panthers. “He’s so dangerous. He’s leaving everything out on the ice. He comes back to the bench and he’s completely gassed. He gives it all every shift. He’s playing his heart out.”

The second period looked like it was going to just be a continuation of the first for the Rangers, who took a bit of a beating in the openin▨g 20 minutes as they fell behind 1-0.

Mika Zibanejad scores a goal on Sergei Bobrovsky during the shootout in the Rangers’ win. NHLI via Getty Images

Florida jumped out on an odd-man rush right away ✤and Eetu Luostarinen buried a backdoor feed from Sam Reinhart to double its lead just 20 seconds into the middle🌳 frame.

When Kyle Okposo was called for tripping, however, the Rangers power play gave the home team the spar🐷k they desperately needed.

🍰Adam Foꦺx sent a sharp wrister past Panthers netminder Sergei Bobrovsky to cut the Panthers’ lead in half.

Igor Shesterkin makes of his 30 saves during the Rangers’ shootout win. Jason Szenes / New York Post

Laviolette then immediately deployed ☂his barn-burning line in Jimmy Vesey, Barclay Goodrow an✱d Matt Rempe.

The Rangers caug𒅌ht fire as Rempe landed hit after hit to the delight o🍰f those in attendance.

Swarming the Panthers’ zone, the Range💛rs worked to keep it in before Trocheck teed Panarin up for a one-timer that♑ the Russian wing got all of to knot the game at 2-2.

Adam Fox celebrates after scoring a second-period goal in the Rangers’ shootout win over the Panthers. Wendell Cruz-USA TODAY Sports

“And the fans, t🌞oo,” Panarin said of the momentum-swinging sequence, in which the emotion from the Garden crowd was palpable. “They gave the energy, too. Looked like we worked together, the whole building.”