Jones sensational as Sharks stay alive vs. Penguins

PITTSBURGH -- Martin Jones turned aside a flurry of Penguins shots during a frantic but scoreless final two periods in a potential clinching game for Pittsburgh and the San Jose Sharks kept the Stanley Cup finals going, winning 4-2 in Game 5 Thursday night.

With nearly 19,000 jammed inside Consol Energy Center, and probably twice that jammed into two downtown Pittsburgh viewing locations, the confident Penguins were poised to be the first major sports team to clinch a title in the city since the 1960 Pirates.

But Melker Karlsson scored what proved to be the winning goal at the end of a five-game breakout in the first period, and Jones -- with his strongest game of the finals yet -- made the lead hold up despite the Penguins' overwhelming 46-21 edge in shots.

The Penguins hold a 3-2 series lead heading into San Jose for Game 6 on Sunday.

Brent Burns and Logan Couture scored their first goals of the finals only 1:49 apart early in the first, and the Sharks then stood up to a Penguins comeback on which Evgeni Malkin and Carl Hagelin scored in a span of 22 seconds.

Karlsson scored off Couture's adept backhand pass at 14:47 of the first, and there was no more scoring under Joe Pavelski scored his first goal of the finals into an empty net with 1:20 remaining.

Even with '60 Series star Bill Mazeroski twirling a yellow Penguins towel, the Sharks spoiled a denied the Penguins a fourth Stanley Cup in 25 years and a second in seven years.

Jones and Penguins goalie Matt Murray each looked uneasy at the start, but it was Jones who made more -- and much tougher saves -- the rest of the way, as Pittsburgh pressed but never scored the tying goal. Jones finished with 44 saves, which are the most in a regulation win when facing elimination in the Cup Final since 1968, accoring to Elias Sports Bureau.

After a succession of low-scoring games -- the winning team never scored more than three goals in the first four games -- this one started out as a shootout.

San Jose scoring the first two goals in a span of 1:49 early in the first. That was more goals than Murray gave up in three of the first four games -- and the Sharks' first lead in any regulation in any game.

But the Penguins surged back with a power-play goal by center Evgeni Malkin less than two minutes after the Sharks made it 2-0 then, even before that goal announcement was made, left winger Carl Hagelin tied it 22 seconds later.

With Murray playing shakily, the Sharks retook the lead at 3-2. Karlsson wristed a shot under Murray's glove at 14:47 off Couture's perfectly placed backhand pass.

After Karlsson's forechecking kept the puck in the Penguins' end, Burns brought it around from behind the net and beat Murray high to the short side 1:04 into the game for his seventh of the playoffs. Couture followed at 2:53 with his ninth, redirecting defenseman Justin Braun's shot from the point.

But rather than being stunned into submission, the Penguins came right back with Malkin scoring his sixth and second in as many games at 4:44 with a shot that deflected off Braun's stick and past Jones. Malkin's 22 playoff power-play goals since 2007 lead the NHL.

The Penguins, mere seconds after the ensuing faceoff, regained the puck on Sharks defenseman Brenden Dillon's giveaway and Hagelin tipped in Nick Bonino's shot for his sixth at 5:06.

NOTES: Sharks LW Tomas Hertl (six goals, five assists in 20 playoff games), San Jose's best player in the first two games in Pittsburgh, missed a third consecutive game with a lower-body injury. ... Since 2007, Sidney Crosby's first playoff year, Phil Kessel and Marian Hossa (2008) are the only Penguins players other than Evgeni Malkin and Crosby to have 10 goals and 10 assists in a postseason.
Final1st2nd3rdScore
Pittsburgh PenguinsPenguins2002
San Jose SharksSharks3014
* Pittsburgh Leads Series 3 - 2
Season Series
PittsburghStatsSan Jose
1-1-0Vs1-1-0
6Goals4
8.8Shot %6.3
25.0Power Play %14.3
54.3Faceoff %45.7