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Sidney Crosby takes a faceoff against Anaheim’s Rickard Rakell during the Penguins’ home-opener in Pittsburgh Thursday night.Justin K. Aller/Getty Images

NHL MVP Sidney Crosby scored twice and added an assist as the Pittsburgh Penguins beat the Anaheim Ducks 6-4 Thursday night in the season opener for both teams.

Pascal Dupuis added a goal and three assists in his return from knee surgery for the Penguins, who rolled to victory in new coach Mike Johnston's debut. Patric Hornqvist, Blake Comeau and Brandon Sutter also scored for Pittsburgh. Marc-André Fleury made 25 saves.

Corey Perry had a hat trick for the Ducks, who collapsed after erasing an early three-goal deficit. Ryan Kesler added a goal in his debut with Anaheim. John Gibson struggled while making his first start in his hometown, stopping 33 of 39 shots.

The Penguins underwent a massive overhaul following a fifth straight spring that ended without a trip to the Stanley Cup Finals. Pittsburgh fired coach Dan Bylsma and general manager Ray Shero and brought in former Carolina Hurricanes executive Jim Rutherford, who hired the well-travelled Johnston and tasked him with making sure Crosby and Evgeni Malkin's primes don't go to waste.

The early returns were promising. Hornqvist, acquired from Nashville in a draft-day trade that sent talented but turbulent forward James Neal to the Predators, needed all of five minutes and 16 seconds to make a first impression. Playing alongside Crosby helped. Crosby won a faceoff at the right dot and slipped a pass to Hornqvist at the top of the circle. The wrist shot deflected off Gibson's arm and into the net and the Penguins seemed to exhale.

Crosby doubled the lead just more than two minutes later, streaking down the left side and firing a shot that Gibson couldn't get a handle on. The goal was the seventh in the 10 home openers during Crosby's now decade-long career. Dupuis, nine months removed from surgery to repair a torn ACL in his right knee, tapped in a perfect setup from defenceman Olli Maatta to make it 3-0 before the season was 15 minutes old.

The Ducks, however, quickly erased all the good vibes. Anaheim underwent significant tweaks over the summer, when the best regular season in franchise history ended with another early post-season flameout. The Ducks acquired Kesler, a two-way forward and added centre Nate Thompson, defenceman Clayton Stoner and veteran scorer Dany Heatley while Teemu Selanne retired and veteran goaltender Jonas Hiller walked in free agency.

The moves were made with making the Ducks more suited to the rough-and-tumble post-season. There are six long months to get there. The initial steps were wobbly, but Anaheim's offence remains explosive.

The Ducks rallied to tie the game at three, with the Penguins doing their best to help Anaheim get back in it. Kesler scored his first for Anaheim with an easy power-play goal 14:22 into the first. Perry then pumped in two, including arguably the easiest goal he'll score all year when Fleury ventured far from the net and Patrick Maroon stole the goaltender's pass and sent it to Perry in front of an empty net.

Facing the first significant test in what will be a season full of them as they search for a new identity, the Penguins responded behind their captain.

Crosby finished off a 3-on-2 break by snapping a show low over Gibson's blocker with 2:26 left in the second to put Pittsburgh back in front. Comeau, another off-season signing designed to give the Penguins depth along the third and fourth lines, pushed it to 5-3 just 54 seconds later.

Sutter restored Pittsburgh's three-goal cushion with a short-handed breakaway 1:01 into the third as the Penguins began the Johnston era with a flourish.

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