"Luckily, we had a lot of time [to come back]," Crosby said. "We had some mistakes there early. Even with those, I thought, we still had 20-plus shots, we still had a number of chances, so it could've been a different game, but I still think we made mistakes and had time to climb our way back and found that level of desperation that we needed."
Penguins forward Phil Kessel tied the game 2-2 after defenseman Ian Cole whiffed on a shot that ricocheted off of Carl Hagelin's skate and to Kessel, who shot into an open net with 7:44 remaining in the second period. The goal was Kessel's 21st of the season and second in his past 12 games.
Crosby scored Pittsburgh's third unanswered goal when he dropped to a knee and deflected a slap pass from Cole over goalie Eddie Lack's right pad with 2:01 remaining in the second. Crosby leads the Penguins with 31 goals and has scored 29 goals in his past 52 games after scoring two goals in his first 18 games.
Penguins coach Mike Sullivan complimented Crosby's all-around game, which included breaking up a 2-on-1 during the second period.