Tuesday’s NHL playoffs: Eberle’s goal in 2OT keeps Islanders alive

Detroit News

Edmonton, Alberta – Jordan Eberle scored on a two-on-one break 12:30 into the second overtime and the New York Islanders avoided elimination with a 2-1 win over the Tampa Bay Lightning in Game 5 of the Eastern Conference final on Tuesday night.

Semyon Varlamov stopped 36 shots and Ryan Pulock also scored for the Islanders, who cut the Lightning series lead to 3-2.

Game 6 is Thursday night.

Victor Hedman scored for the Lightning, and Andrei Vasilevskiy stopped 22 shots.

The decisive goal came after the Lightning won a faceoff in the Islanders’ zone. The puck was drawn back to defenseman Kevin Shattenkirk, who fanned on a shot at the right point. Islanders captain Anders Lee raced up the wing to chase down a loose puck. Gaining the Lightning zone, he fed a pass across to Eberle, who scored driving up the right wing.

“Things happen quick out there. You’ve got to react. You see the fanned shot. You see Leesy poke it by,” said Eberle, who scored his second winner of the postseason. “You’ve played this game a long time, you know when you have odd-man rushes and an opportunity is about to come. Leesy made a heck of a play to get the puck over to me.”

Varlamov celebrated the goal by skating up the ice and then diving, head-first, and sliding into the mob of Islanders players surrounding Eberle.

“Our guys didn’t waiver – they just kept grinding,” Islanders coach Barry Trotz said. “We didn’t give up and that’s a great sign for moving forward.”

The Lightning were minus co-leading playoff scorer Brayden Point, who had a goal and assist in a 4-1 win in Game 4 after missing a 5-3 loss in Game 3 with an undisclosed injury. Tampa Bay’s other co-leader, Nikita Kucherov, was shaken up eight minutes into the second period Tuesday, but returned and had several scoring chances in the third period and overtime.

“It took the stars aligning on a fanned shot for them to get the break they got,” Tampa Bay coach Jon Cooper said. “We had opportunities to put the game away.“

Cooper called it “hard to tell right now” as to whether Point will be able to play Thursday.

The Islanders opened the scoring 15:41 in on Pulock’s power-play goal, just their second in 15 opportunities this series. With Mathew Barzal entering the Lightning zone, the Isles worked the puck to Pulock, who blasted a shot from just above the left circle that beat Vasilevskiy on the short side, with Lee screening the goalie.

The Lightning responded with Hedman tying the game 4 minutes into the second period.

Defenseman Luke Schenn caught the Islanders on a line changing in feeding a long pass to Blake Coleman, who drove up the right wing and had his shot stopped. The rebound off Varlamov’s right pad caromed to Hedman, who wristed a shot inside the left post.

The Lightning’s Carter Verhaeghe had a goal overturned 10:01 into the second period, when the Islanders challenged the play for being offside. Replays showed Tampa Bay’s Cedric Paquette clearly entered New York’s zone well ahead of the puck.

The Lightning squandered an opportunity in failing to score while getting three shots on net during a four-minute power play spanning the end of the third period and overtime. New York’s Anthony Beauvillier was issued a double-minor for high-sticking for bloodying defenseman Mikhail Sergachev’s lip while attempting to check him from behind with 1:23 remaining.

Kucherov had the best chance with a one-timer through a crowd from the right circle, only to be stopped by Varlamov, who kicked out his right pad.

Vailevskiy came up big at the other end six minutes into overtime by reaching out with his left pad and glove to foil Barzal, who was set up driving to the net.

The Lightning dropped to 4-1 in overtime games this postseason, including a 5-4 5OT win over Columbus in Game 1 of their first-round series.

“It came down to one play. It’s tough for us obviously, but this is hockey,” Hedman said. “It’s how you respond to this that’s going to define you as a team. I’m not worried about how our group’s going to respond to this.”

The Islanders are the only team left that played a best-of-five preliminary round series, and also had the disadvantage of lacking rest. They opened the conference final two days after eliminating Philadelphia in Game 7, and using their off day traveling from Toronto to Edmonton, Alberta.

The lack of preparation showed in New York being routed 8-2 in Game 1.

New York’s offense has fizzled in managing just nine goals against Tampa Bay, including a 5-3 win in Game 3. The Islanders had combined for 28 goals in their previous eight games.

“I think coming into this bubble we were pretty gassed, I’ll be straight up,” coach Barry Trotz said, before the game. “But I think as the series has gone, we’ve caught up in that area.”

Trotz did shake up his lines Tuesday, shifting Cal Clutterbuck to the Islanders’ top line alongside Lee and Barzal. Clutterbuck took the spot of Eberle, who opened the game alongside Jean-Gabriel Pageau and Matt Martin.

Conference finals

EASTERN CONFERENCE

Tampa Bay 3, (6)N.Y. Islanders 2

Monday, Sept. 7: Tampa Bay 8, N.Y. Islanders 2

Wednesday, Sept. 9: Tampa Bay 2, N.Y. Islanders 1

Friday, Sept. 11: N.Y. Islanders 5, Tampa Bay 3

Sunday, Sept. 13: Tampa Bay 4, N.Y. Islanders 1

Tuesday, Sept. 15: N.Y. Islanders 2, Tampa Bay 1, 2OT

Thursday, Sept. 17: Tampa Bay vs. N.Y. Islanders, 8 p.m.

x-Saturday, Sept. 19: N.Y. Islanders vs. Tampa Bay, 7:30 p.m.

WESTERN CONFERENCE

(3)Dallas 4, (1)Las Vegas 1

Sunday, Sept. 6: Dallas 1, Las Vegas 0

Tuesday, Sept. 8: Las Vegas 3, Dallas 0

Thursday, Sept. 10: Dallas 3, Las Vegas 2, OT

Saturday, Sept. 12: Dallas 2, Las Vegas 1

Monday, Sept. 14: Dallas 3 Las Vegas 2, OT

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