The Rangers have made the postseason seven straight seasons, so they're familiar with the position Montreal is in. From their point of view, though, they're in an ideal situation to carry over their strong play from the second-half of Thursday's Game 5 onto home ice.
"It's an elimination game for them. We've been in that situation a lot and know the feeling going into it and doing anything you can to get a win," defenseman Marc Staal said. "I think for us the opportunity is to close the series out at home. Our effort and our compete and desperation will be there."
The Rangers enjoyed Thursday's overtime win, but by Friday morning Game 5's hero Mika Zibanejad said he and the team had already turned the page.
"Still amazing. Still one of the most important goals and one of the greatest goals I've scored," Zibanejad admitted. "But as far as that, now it's done. Now the focus goes on to the next game here. We know we put ourselves in a really good spot and have a great opportunity to close this out on home ice and don't have to come back [to Montreal]. The focus is on tomorrow."
The goal now is to carry over the momentum from Game 5 into Game 6, especially the latter stages of the contest when New York carried the play from late in second period through Zibanejad's winner at 14:22 of the extra frame.
The Rangers outshot Montreal 10-3 in the overtime, and Staal said that aggression was by design and is the way New York wants to play from the start of the game Saturday.
"We didn't want to go into it with our toes in the water." Staal said of the team's mindset heading into overtime. "We wanted to come in and try and dictate the play. I think our guys up front were doing a good job of making plays and not being afraid to skate the puck, make a play and try to create something and try and go out there and get a goal."