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Pascal Dupuis pushed the Penguins' lead to 5-2 at 7:35. Crosby didn't figure in the scoring on that one, as Dupuis put in a rebound of defenseman Paul Martin's shot, but he was on the ice for it. Cooke gave the Penguins a 1-0 lead 2:54 in, and Malkin and Cooke connected 1:22 apart in the second period to stretch the advantage to 3-1.
Carl Hagelin got the Rangers even at 1 in the first period, and Marian Gaborik brought New York within 3-2 late in the second with his 35th goal. Brad Richards had two assists, and Gaborik and Hagelin both had one for the potent line that has scored the team's last seven goals over three games.
"We need to get some other guys going in behind it," Rangers coach John Tortorella said. "A few guys are struggling. I'm really excited at what Richie's line is doing, but we have to come back in there with something that can handle defensive stuff, and another line that can score a goal or two."
Biron stopped 27 shots, but the Rangers lost for the fourth time in six games.
As the Penguins are getting healthy, the Rangers are still missing key cogs from their lineup. Biron was forced to start his second straight game in place of Henrik Lundqvist, New York's No. 1 goalie who is still feeling the effects of the flu. The Rangers were also without forward Ryan Callahan (bruised foot), who sat out for the sixth time in nine games, and defenseman Michael Del Zotto (hip), who has missed five of eight.
"We get them one more time," Richards said of the Rangers' last meeting with Pittsburgh on April 5. "We're still in first place and we're still a good team. We have guys coming back soon and we are going to keep plugging away."
Crosby, who had two goals and eight assists in eight games this season before Thursday, heard a mixture of cheers and boos when he hit the ice during pregame warm-ups. The reaction turned more to boos as the game went along when Crosby had the puck.
Crosby made his season debut on Nov. 21 against the New York Islanders, his first game action since January 2011, and had two goals and two assists in that 5-0 home win. He lasted only seven more games before being shut down again.
He looked to be more relaxed in his play than he was in his first return. Crosby took 18 shifts that totaled 16 minutes of ice time -- exactly the limit Penguins coach Dan Bylsma wanted to hit.
"I was pretty excited last time. I was excited this time, too, but I didn't want to get caught doing too much," Crosby said. "Just making sure I was responsible out there, doing the right things. All those details are important in games like this."
Crosby is expected to play in each of Pittsburgh's remaining games -- including two this weekend at New Jersey and Philadelphia to complete a stretch of three games in four days against divisional foes.
Bylsma laughed off questions earlier Thursday about the potential "problems" that could arise in getting Crosby back into the lineup. A performance like this one from No. 87 should be enough to stop those questions.
"I hope so," he said, again with a laugh. "I am sure there is going to be another one somewhere."
[Associated Press;
Copyright 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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