COLUMBUS STUNS,
VEGAS GETS EVEN
The Columbus Blue
Jackets followed up their Game 1 surprise with an emphatic win
over the heavily favored Tampa Bay
Lightning, one of three series that moved to 2-0 on Friday night.
The one that's tied up was delightfully contentious.
Here's what happened last night, and
what to watch for today, in today's edition of MY Stanley Cup Playoffs Daily.
ABOUT LAST NIGHT
GAME 2: COLUMBUS BLUE
JACKETS 5, TAMPA BAY
LIGHTNING 1 (JACKETS LEAD, 2-0). Coach Jon
Cooper didn't sugarcoat it after the Lightning, one of the best regular-season teams in NHL history, lost the
first two games of their series against the Blue Jackets. "This is a
five-alarm fire," he said.
It was also an embarrassing result on home ice. The Jackets
built a 2-0 lead in the first period on goals by Cam Atkinson and Zach Werenski,
both assisted by trade deadline coup Matt Duchene,
who made it 3-0 Columbus with a second period goal. The Lightning cut the lead
five minutes into the third period, but Riley Nash's
goal at 9:06 all but iced it. Sergei
Bobrovsky, maligned playoff goalie? He's allowed one goal in his
last five periods. Andrei
Vasilevskiy, potential Vezina Trophy winner this season? He's given
up nine goals and has a .830 save percentage. Tampa is in trouble. The only
silver lining? Columbus went up 2-0 in Washington last year on the road. But
those games weren't nearly as lopsided.
GAME 2: NEW YORK ISLANDERS 3, PITTSBURGH
PENGUINS 1 (ISLANDERS LEAD SERIES, 2-0). In
Game 1, the Islanders outgunned the Penguins. In Game 2, they won the way they
had so many other teams during this stunningly successful season under coach
Barry Trotz: With fantastic goaltending and timely offense. Robin Lehner made
32 saves, including 15 in the third period. Also in the third period: Jordan Eberle and Josh Bailey scoring
less than four minutes apart to break the 1-1 tie. It was a brutal, physical
game, but the Islanders won the war of attrition for the 2-0 series lead. They
also shut down Sidney Crosby again,
leaving the Penguins star scoreless in the series.
GAME 2: ST. LOUIS
BLUES 4, WINNIPEG JETS 3
(BLUES LEAD, 2-0). Rookie sensation goalie Jordan Binnington let Ryan O'Reilly's
third-period goal stand and closed the deal with 15 saves in the final
frame. Oskar
Sundqvist had two goals for St. Louis, helping to counter a
goal and an assist for both Blake Wheeler and Mark
Scheifele, as well as another Patrik Laine goal
for Winnipeg. The Blues are 11-2 in series when leading 2-0 in the postseason,
but have lost two of the last three in which they've been in that position.
"You've got to win four games to win a series," Wheeler said.
"I've never met any team that won two to win a series. So, we're
alright."
GAME 2: VEGAS GOLDEN
KNIGHTS 5, SAN JOSE
SHARKS 3 (SERIES TIED 1-1).This was a wild one, and
not without controversy. The Knights scored three goals in the first 6:11 of
the first period, chasing goalie Martin Jones.
The Sharks roared back with three goals in 2 minutes and 9 seconds to tie the
game 3-3 by the first intermission. Then, to start the second, it
appeared Brent Burns scored
the go-ahead goal for the Sharks ... but it was disallowed because the
officials felt that San Jose's Logan Couture interfered
with Vegas goaltender Marc-Andre
Fleury, bumping into him near the top of the crease as the puck
flew into the net. They went one step further, and gave Couture a two-minute
minor for interference, which eliminated any chance for the Sharks to use a
coach's challenge on the play. Mark Stone scored
his third of the playoffs on the ensuing power play to give Vegas the lead, and
they rode that momentum shift to victory.
THREE STARS
1. MATT DUCHENE,
C, COLUMBUS BLUE
JACKETS. The 28-year-old center has played 727
regular-season games since coming into the NHL as a 19-year-old in 2009. Yet
Game 2 against the Lightning was just the 10th playoff game of his career. He
hadn't scored a goal in the playoffs until his second-period tally to give the
Jackets a 3-0 lead. He finished with a goal and three assists. Considering the
pressure he's under -- the playoffs, the all-in investment in him at the trade
deadline, free-agency looming this summer -- it was an exhilarating
performance.
2. RYAN O'REILLY,
C, ST. LOUIS
BLUES. Ryan O'Reilly might not have the renown to be
a Hart Trophy finalist this year, which is a shame, as Game 2 of this series
reminded us. O'Reilly's goal at 3:46 of the third period gave the Blues a lead
they would not relinquish.
3. MARC-ANDRE
FLEURY, G, VEGAS GOLDEN
KNIGHTS. The last time Fleury surrendered four or
more goals in four straight games was February 2007. He entered Game 2 having
given up a four-spot in all three games since returning from injury and it
appeared he might do it again when the Sharks answered the Knights' 3-0
first-period lead with three goals of their own before the first intermission.
But Fleury made 25 saves in the final two periods and 34 for the game, settling
the Knights down.
PLAY OF THE NIGHT
Like a thunderous, highlight reel dunk at the end of a
blowout basketball game. The Lightning stopped playing, so the Blue Jackets put
on a passing clinic that ended with Duchene feeding Artemi
Panarin for the goal.
DUD OF THE NIGHT
Nikita
Kucherov. The NHL's leading scorer in the regular season, Kucherov
has zero points in the Lightning's two losses to Columbus. They've been waiting
for him to make an impact ... but probably not like this. Kucherov has a
heading on Saturday with the NHL Department of Player Safety after this hit
with Blue Jackets defenseman Markus
Nutivaara in a prone position. Kucherov received a game
misconduct in the third period. Is a suspension for Game 3 next?
ON THE SCHEDULE
TODAY
CAROLINA
HURRICANES AT WASHINGTON
CAPITALS, GAME 2, 3
P.M. ET. CAPITALS LEAD 1-0.
The Capitals hold the lead on the "Bunch of Jerks"
after holding off a furious third-period rally in Game 1. Was that rally, and
the Hurricanes' significant edge in shot attempts, enough to give Carolina the
confidence it needs to beat the Capitals for the first time this season?
"We're here. We can play with them," defenseman Jaccob Slavin said
DALLAS STARS AT NASHVILLE
PREDATORS, GAME 2, 6
P.M. ET. STARS LEAD 1-0.
The Stars used an outstanding performance from rookie
defenseman Miro
Heiskanen and solid goaltending from Ben Bishop to
take Game 1. But mostly, the Predators were just misfiring. "I think you
guys know when we're on the attack and on our toes, we're playing good hockey.
We just lost a little bit of focus through the course of the game. That's
all," said Coach Peter Laviolette. "So it's not like we have to
reinvent the wheel here."
TORONTO MAPLE
LEAFS AT BOSTON BRUINS, GAME 2, 8
P.M. ET.LEAFS LEAD 1-0.
The Leafs had a couple of advantages heading into this
series: Their forward depth and speed, most notably. It was in display in their
Game 1 win, and Bruins coach Bruce Cassidy thinks the best way to counteract
that is to not let them have the puck. "I think that's where we weren't
hard enough to be honest with you. I give them credit, they won a lot of pucks,
got out of their end in a hurry," he said. "They win it from us and
bang, they're gone. That's where they were better than us in areas and
converted." Bruins winger Jake DeBrusk is
questionable for the game; if he can't go, veteran David Backes draws
in.
COLORADO
AVALANCHE AT CALGARY FLAMES, GAME 2, 10:30
P.M. ET.FLAMES LEAD 1-0.
The most talked about goalie entering
this series was Colorado's Philipp
Grubauer, whose play down the stretch got them into the postseason.
The most talked about goalie after Game 1? Mike Smith,
the 37-year-old netminder for the Flames who was spectacular in their
series-opening win and turned the critics in the crowd into fans chanting
"Smitty!" in his honor. "I haven't quite heard anything like
that before in my career," Smith said. "It gives you some confidence
when you hear your name getting chanted."
SOCIAL POST OF THE
DAY
Down 5-1 in Game 2, Victor Hedman reminds Columbus they were up 2-0
last year against Washington. Hey, when you're down 0-2 to a huge
underdog, you hold on to whatever you can for hope. Lightning defenseman Victor Hedman decided
to hold on to the fact that the Blue Jackets blew a 2-0 series lead to
Washington last season.
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