Penguins vs. Senators live stream, Game 4: TV schedule, online and more
By Adam Stocker
After getting blown out in Game 3, the Pittsburgh Penguins attempt to even their series with the Ottawa Senators in Game 4 of the Eastern Conference Finals on Friday, May 19.
No one could have predicted that the Ottawa Senators would blow out the Pittsburgh Penguins in Game 3 of the Eastern Conference Finals. The Senators opened the scoring 48 seconds into the game and scored their fourth goal 12:52 into the game. After allowing four goals on nine shots, Pittsburgh pulled goalie Marc-Andre Fleury. The change did little to spark the Penguins who would lose 5-1.
Last season, the Penguins rode rookie goalie Matt Murray to a Stanley Cup. An injury late in the season forced Pittsburgh head coach Mike Sullivan to start Fleury, who lead the Penguins to the Stanley Cup in 2009. However, after pulling Fleury in Game 3, Sullivan may consider a switch to Murray in net. Fleury does have shutouts in two of his past four games but has allowed at least four goals in three of his past six games.
Craig Anderson was again excellent in net for Ottawa. Defensively, the Senators may not be playing the most attractive style of hockey but it is getting results for them. Through three games the Senators have only allowed three goals with Anderson posting a .963 save percentage. If Ottawa scores first they will continue to play their defensive trap.
Next: 10 reasons NHL playoffs are better than NBA playoffs
The NHL playoff game between the Pittsburgh Penguins and Ottawa Senators will be broadcast on the NBC and CBC in Canada. Live streaming is available on NBC Sports and CBC which you can access with your cable or satellite, either online or through their app.
Date: Friday, May 19
Start Time: 8:00 p.m. ET
Series: Ottawa leads 2-1
Location: Ottawa, Ontario
Stadium: Canadian Tire Centre
TV Info: NBCSN, and CBC (Canada)
Live Stream: NBC Sports, CBC, and fuboTV
For Ottawa to advance to the Stanley Cup Final, they need to take advantage of home ice. Offensively, Pittsburgh’s top lines have gone quiet. After scoring nine goals in the first two rounds, Jake Guentzel has just four shots against Ottawa. The Penguins need their top two lines to start producing.