LIGHTNING,
PENGUINS PUSHED TO THE BRINK
Look, we know what many of you were up to last night
watching playoff hockey. So for those of you that
couldn’t stay up.
Here's what happened in the NHL last night and what to watch
for tonight.
ABOUT LAST NIGHT.
GAME 3: NEW YORK
ISLANDERS 4, PITTSBURGH
PENGUINS 1 (ISLANDERS LEAD SERIES 3-0). The
Islanders have a formula for this series, and it's a formula that has pushed
the Penguins to the brink of elimination. It begins with a style of play that's
not winning any beauty contests, but is effective. As Pittsburgh Coach Mike
Sullivan said, "there's not a lot of risk associated with the
Islanders." That manifested itself in sterling defensive effort, as Robin Lehner stopped
25 shots and Penguins star Sidney Crosby was
held off the score sheet for the third straight game (and was a minus-3). It
continues with perhaps the most opportunistic offense in the playoffs, crushing
the momentum of the Penguins at every turn. To wit: The Penguins took a 1-0
lead at 12:54 of the first period; by the 14:24 mark, the Islanders had goals
from Jordan Eberle and Brock Nelson (62
seconds apart) to take a lead they wouldn't relinquish. On Tuesday, they'll
attempt to do to Crosby what no team in the NHL has done to him: Sweep him in
the first round.
GAME 3: COLUMBUS BLUE
JACKETS 3, TAMPA BAY
LIGHTNING 1 (BLUE JACKETS LEAD SERIES 3-0). Here's
a quick history lesson about this series. It's the first time the Jackets have
won three games in the same postseason. It's the first time the 2018-19
Lightning failed to score multiple goals in consecutive games. It's the fifth
time in the 100-plus years of NHL postseason competition that a team that led
the regular season in points found itself down 3-0 in a first-round playoff
series, the last one being the 2012 Vancouver
Canucks, who lost in five games to the Los Angeles
Kings. In fact, none of these previous four teams rallied to win
their series. The Lightning were without Victor Hedman
(injured), Nikita
Kucherov (suspended) and Steven
Stamkos' offensive impact (invisible). They finally looked like
themselves during a flurry of offensive chances in the third period, but Sergei
Bobrovsky passed the test with 30 saves. With another
power-play goal, the Jackets are now 4-for-8 for the series; the Lightning, who
had the best power play and kill in the regular season, are 0-for-5 and didn't
have a man advantage in Game 3.
GAME 3: WINNIPEG JETS 6, ST. LOUIS
BLUES 3 (BLUES LEAD SERIES 2-1). The Jets
relocated their offense in a must-win Game 3, scoring in bunches against rookie
goalie Jordan
Binnington (23 saves) and the Blues. Kevin Hayes, Patrik Laine (his
third goal) and Kyle Connor scored
in the second period just 4:01 apart to make it 3-1. After Vladimir
Tarasenko scored his first of the playoffs to cut the
lead, Brandon Tanev and Dustin
Byfuglien scored goals 3:41 apart to all but put the game away.
Kudos to Paul Maurice for his line tinkering, including a reunion of the TLC
line of Tavev, Adam Lowry
and Andrew Copp.
Binnington, meanwhile, hadn't given up more than four goals in a game this
season until this tilt. All eyes will be on the rookie to see how he responds
in Game 4.
GAME 3: VEGAS GOLDEN
KNIGHTS 6, SAN JOSE
SHARKS 3 (KNIGHTS LEAD SERIES 2-1). The other
day, Coach Gerard Gallant was asked about his second line of Paul Stastny, Mark Stone and Max
Pacioretty. "When did you declare them our second line?"
he asked, earning chuckles. Since Stone arrived at the trade deadline, few
trios in the NHL have matched the firepower of this Vegas line, and they owned
Game 3: Stone had a hat trick and two assists, Stastny had two goals and three
assists and Pacioretty had a goal and an assist. The line gave the Knights a
lead just 16 seconds into the game and a 4-1 lead after two periods.
Neither Marc-Andre
Fleury nor Martin Jones put
up good numbers in this brutally physical game between these newly minted
rivals -- but Jones followed being pulled in Game 2 with an .850 save
percentage in Game 3. Not great.
MY THREE STARS
1. MARK STONE, VEGAS GOLDEN
KNIGHTS. His hat trick was the first of the 2019
playoffs, the first in Golden Knights postseason history and his first in the
past 414 regular-season or postseason games. He was absolutely incredible, with
his usual defensive panache (four takeaways) and his underrated playmaking
(like his feed to set up Stastny's goal) also grabbing the spotlight.
2. SERGEI
BOBROVSKY, COLUMBUS BLUE
JACKETS. He didn't have much action for about 40
minutes, but Bob was the difference in the third period when Tampa found its
offense, stopping 16 of 17 shots. "We have a really good goalie. I thought
he stood really big in those 10-12 minutes there when they cranked it up,"
said Coach John Tortorella.
3. ROBIN LEHNER, NEW YORK
ISLANDERS. Like Bobrovsky, the beneficiary of the
great defense being played in front of him, but he also did some heavy lifting
in stopping all 18 shots he faced after the first period. One of the best
stories of the postseason adds another chapter.
While we'd normally showcase some display of offensive
artistry, an athletic save or a quirky play in this space, the play of the
night had to be the boiling over of the Evander Kane vs. Ryan Reaves feud
in a late-game fight. While Kane sought to show the Sharks won't go down
without a fight, that vibe was counteracted by the T-Mobile Arena game
operations crew playing "Baby Shark (Do Do Do Do Do)" after it was
over. Which was savage.
DUD OF THE NIGHT
Steven
Stamkos and Sidney Crosby.
With their teams in critical Game 3 battles, neither of these superstars posted
a point on Sunday, remaining 0-for-the-playoffs. The Lightning needed something
from their captain with Nikita
Kucherov suspended and Victor Hedman out
with an injury, but he was a minus-2 with no shots on goal. Crosby had three
shots in goal ... and was a minus-3 in the Islanders' win.
WHAT'S ON THE
SCHEDULE
BOSTON BRUINS AT TORONTO MAPLE
LEAFS, GAME 3, 7
P.M. ET. SERIES TIED, 1-1.
The Leafs should learn the fate of center Nazem Kadri before
the game, as he appears in person before the NHL Department of Player Safety to
answer for his hit on Jake DeBrusk in
Game 2. DeBrusk and defenseman Torey Krug are
"day-to-day" according to the team.
WASHINGTON
CAPITALS AT CAROLINA HURRICANES, GAME 3, 7
P.M. ET. CAPITALS LEAD 2-0.
The "Bunch of Jerks" return to Raleigh for the
first playoff home game for the Hurricanes since May 26, 2009. To put that in
perspective: Their most recent postseason home game was played three days
before Pixar's "UP" debuted in theaters. It sounds like that despite
two straight losses, coach Rod Brind'Amour intends to stick with goalie Petr Mrazek.
NASHVILLE
PREDATORS AT DALLAS STARS,
GAME 3, 9:30 P.M. ET. SERIES TIED 1-1.
Craig Smith's
OT goal in Game 2 evened this series, in what Coach Peter Laviolette called a
more "complete" game for the Preds than Game 1. The Stars gave up 43
shots in Game 2 and only generated 23 for the game -- including 14 at even
strength. They need to make greater use of their opportunities.
CALGARY
FLAMES AT COLORADO
AVALANCHE, GAME 3, 10
P.M. ET. SERIES TIED, 1-1.
UMass star Cale Makar quickly signed with the Avalanche after his college season ended.
Will we see the outstanding young defenseman in Game 3? The underdog Avs
knotted the series in overtime in Game 2. The Flames are looking for a faster
start and to "be the more desperate team" in Game 3, according to
Coach Bill Peters. He also feels that going on the road will be healthy for his
younger players: "It might be a little easier for the younger players to
go on the road and play and not worry about entertainment value," he said.
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