Adam Fox, Artemi Panarin provide reminder of how good they can be

The Adam Fox dilemma Rangers coach Gerard Gallant must manage

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There was Artemi Panarin racing down the right side during the first minute of overtime and there, filling the middle on an odd-man rush while he tried to keep up with the explosive Russian, was Adam Fox.

“When I saw the two-on-one chance there I got a little second wind, especially with Bread,” Fox said after taking Panarin’s feed to beat John Gibson from the slot at 0:55 of OT to give the Blueshirts a 4-3 victory over the Ducks on Tuesday at the Garden. “I was saying that I play [against] those two-on-ones a few too many times in practice so I tried to do what the forwards do against me.”

The victory, achieved after the club had fallen behind 3-2 midway through the third, lifted the Rangers into second place by percentage points over the Penguins. Two points are their own reward in the push to clinch the Rangers’ first playoff invite since 2017.

But what stood out about this one — including Chris Kreider’s league-leading 20th power-play goal that tied the score at 13:40 of the third — were the performances of Fox and Panarin, marquee athletes who have been just a wee bit ordinary over the last few weeks.

Oh, and can we add the authoritative performance of Filip Chytil, whose second straight strong showing could auger well for both 72 himself and for his team that has been searching just about all season long for a third line that can be a threat?

The Rangers’ resourcefulness is a trait to be admired. They are an incontrovertibly impressive 38-17-5, but perhaps just as commendable is the 8-4-1 record since coming out of their winter solstice crafted even as premium players Fox and Panarin have not been at their best.

Artemi Panarin and Adam Fox
Artemi Panarin and Adam Fox
Getty Images; AP

Fox’s season hit a nadir in St. Louis on March 10 when he was on for four even-strength goals against while going minus-four in a 6-2 defeat, each unprecedented in his three-year storybook career. That match, though, seemed the (il)logical conclusion to a stretch in which Fox appeared fatigued.

The bounce-back began in Dallas on Saturday. By the end of this one, last Thursday had receded into distant memory. Fox was jumping. Fox, whose assists on the second and third goals elevated his total to 52, was himself through 24:27 of ice time.

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