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Penguin woes continue vs. 'Canes

PITTSBURGH — Morgan Geekie didn’t have time to think.

On Saturday he was in the minors. By Sunday afternoon the newest Carolina Hurricanes forward found himself thrust in the middle of the playoff race. The 21-year-old rookie hardly looked overwhelmed by the moment. Neither did his team.

Geekie scored twice and dished out an assist in his NHL debut, a 6-2 victory over listless Pittsburgh that capped a frantic 24 hours for the 2017 third-round pick. He arrived in town late Saturday night after being called up from the American Hockey League.

By the middle of the first period, he’d already had his first NHL goal then added an exclamation point in the third period to cap a dominant performance by the Hurricanes. Things happened so quickly Geekie didn’t have time to get nervous.

“It’s kind of good that way, that you don’t get to think about stuff,” Geekie said. “You kind of go out there and play the game you’re used to play. Just tried to go out there and keep things simple, adjust to the speed of the game and play hard out here.”

Justin Williams added two third-period goals for Carolina, which pulled into a tie with Columbus and the New York Islanders for the two wild-card spots in the Eastern Conference. Columbus plays in Vancouver on Sunday night. Alex Nedeljkovic stopped 28 shots to earn the second win of his career for Carolina.

“That third period was as quiet as I’ve ever heard this arena,” Williams said. “This arena gets really buzzing. So we definitely did something right.”

Patrick Marleau and Evgeni Malkin scored for Pittsburgh and Tristan Jarry finished with 30 saves but the Penguins capped a miserable weekend at home by losing for the second time in 24 hours to teams they’re scrapping with for positioning in the crowded Metropolitan Division.

Pittsburgh headed into Saturday with some momentum after wins over Ottawa and Buffalo halted a six-game losing streak that marked the franchise’s longest in a decade. By Sunday afternoon the Penguins were reeling after getting manhandled by first-place Washington and following it up with a lethargic performance against one of the teams they are attempting to fend off for a playoff spot.

“It’s a tight league, that happens sometimes,” Pittsburgh captain Sidney Crosby said. “These last two games, you look at (the Capitals) game, a few mistakes early on gets us behind the 8-ball and then today just a short span in the second period, they tie it and get the lead. We’re talking about small things here.”

Small things that are leading toward big problems for the Penguins, who have dropped 8 of 10 and are as close to missing the postseason as they are first place in the division with less than a month to go in the regular season.

“We’re obviously not thrilled with the position we’re in over the last few weeks,” Pittsburgh coach Mike Sullivan said. “We all have to take ownership for it and now we have to take responsibility to pull ourselves out of it.”

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