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Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Sidney Crosby, Henrik Lundqvist lead Metropolitan team to NHL All-Star win

Metropolitan Division’s Sidney Crosby, left, smiles next to Kris Letang, both of the Pittsburgh Penguins, during the first half of the NHL All-Star Game against the Central Division on Saturday in San Jose, Calif. (Tony Avelar / AP)
Associated Press

SAN JOSE, Calif. – Sidney Crosby had two goals and three assists and Henrik Lundqvist pitched a first-half shutout, leading the Metropolitan Division to a 10-5 victory over the Central Division in the championship round of the NHL All-Star Game Saturday night.

Selected the Most Valuable Player, Crosby finished the night with four goals and four assists in two games on the same ice where he won the Conn Smythe Trophy and Stanley Cup three years ago for Pittsburgh. Lundqvist stopped 11 of 13 shots in his two games, giving the Metropolitan Division its second title in four years of the 3-on-3 All-Star format and the $1 million prize shared by the winners of the four-team divisional tournament.

Mathew Barzal of the New York Islanders added two goals and three assists in the final game.

Mikko Rantanen had two goals and Colorado teammate Gabriel Landeskog added one for the Central. Landeskog finished with four goals and three assists, while Rantanen had four goals and two assists.

Crosby assisted on Barzal’s goal against Devan Dubnyk just 22 seconds into the championship game and then made it 5-0 in the closing seconds of the first half off a pass from Barzal. Crosby also assisted on Pittsburgh teammate Kris Letang’s goal in the first half and then helped seal the game with a goal in the second half that made it 6-2.

Lundqvist made big saves against Landeskog and Claude Giroux in the period one night after winning the save streak competition in the skills challenge.

The first time the All-Star Game came to San Jose in 1997, hometown favorite Owen Nolan capped the night by calling his shot and pointing to the spot where he completed a hat trick that delighted the Shark Tank.

Sharks fans didn’t have as much to cheer for in the return, even though their three All-Stars started the night on the ice together for the Pacific. The Central blitzed the Pacific early for its first win in four years in this format, scoring seven goals on nine shots against John Gibson in the first half of the period in a 10-4 victory.

Landeskog had a hat trick and an assist and Roman Josi had three assists and a goal for the Central.

The Metropolitan Division won the second semifinal 7-4, thanks to a tiebreaking goal by Letang with 3:38 to play. Sebastian Aho added an insurance goal seconds after Braden Holtby stopped John Tavares in close.