Edmonton’s Leon Draisaitl on Monday knocked Florida’s Aleksander Barkov out of the game. The Panthers made sure they responded by landing the bigger blow, and the Stanley Cup Final took a heated turn.
Evan Rodrigues had a pair of third-period goals, while Niko Mikkola and Aaron Ekblad also scored as the Panthers used yet another airtight finishing kick to pull away and beat the Oilers 4-1 for a 2-0 lead.
Sergei Bobrovsky stopped 18 shots for Florida, who were 1-8 all-time in Cup Final games before this series started and now are two wins away from capturing their first championship. The score through two games: Florida 7, Edmonton 1.
Photo: AFP
“A six-man job against the best players in the world,” Ekblad said.
However, the win came with a price for Florida as the Panthers lost Barkov, their captain, when Edmonton forward Draisaitl launched toward him midway through the third period and hit him in the head. Barkov remained down for some time, needed help getting to the bench and went down the tunnel to the locker room for further evaluation.
Florida coach Paul Maurice offered no update on Barkov’s condition, and was far more tight-lipped than he tends to be after wins.
“This isn’t The Oprah Winfrey Show,” Maurice said of the Barkov hit. “My feelings don’t matter.”
Mattias Ekholm scored and Stuart Skinner stopped 25 shots for the Oilers, who now have to buck some serious history.
Edmonton have only successfully rallied from a 2-0 deficit in a best-of-seven series once — against San Jose in round 2 of the 2006 playoffs, and teams that start the Stanley Cup Final down 2-0 have come back to win only five times in 54 previous situations.
“I think we feel that we came here and played well enough that we should have a split,” Oilers coach Kris Knoblauch said. “It doesn’t always happen.”
The series resumes tomorrow with Game 3 in Edmonton.
“We can certainly be better,” Draisaitl said. “It starts with me... I certainly have a lot more to give. Not my best tonight. Obviously, owning that.”
Draisaitl was given only a minor penalty for roughing on the hit that knocked Barkov from the game. Rodrigues got a tip-in goal to make it 3-1, the first power-play score Edmonton allowed in their past 34 times being down a man.
Connor McDavid had a chance to get Edmonton within one on a breakaway with about 6 minutes left. He got stopped by Bobrovsky, and then he and Matthew Tkachuk tussled a bit along the boards after the play — the Panthers still steaming over the hit on Barkov.
“I have no response or comment on that,” Tkachuk said when asked what he thought of Draisaitl’s hit on Barkov and if he had a level of concern that Florida’s captain could miss time.
Emotions were high all night.
Edmonton’s Warren Foegele was ejected in the first period for a knee-on-knee hit that knocked Florida’s Eetu Luostarinen from the game briefly; that ejection, plus an injury to Oilers defenseman Darnell Nurse left them with only 11 forwards and five defensemen for much of the game.
Rodrigues scored early in the third period off a turnover for a 2-1 lead, setting the tone for yet another Florida comeback.
The Panthers — who trailed 1-0 after 20 minutes — are now an NHL-best 5-2 when trailing after one period in the playoffs.
Ekblad sealed it with an empty-netter with 2 minutes, 28 seconds left.
“It’s supposed to be hard. It’s supposed to be difficult,” McDavid said. “I’m excited to see what our group’s made of.”
Florida, for the first time, are now two wins from the Stanley Cup.
“It’s special,” Rodrigues said. “Trying to embrace it. Trying to stay in the moment. That’s two big wins for our team, but I think we’ve already turned the page and are getting ready for Game 3.”
Taiwan kept their hopes of advancing to next year’s World Baseball Classic (WBC) alive with a 9-1 victory over South Africa in a qualifier at the Taipei Dome on Saturday, backed by solid pitching. Taiwan last night played against Nicaragua. As of press time, Nicaragua was leading 6-0. Bouncing back from Friday’s struggles on the mound, when Taiwanese pitchers surrendered 15 runs to Spain, Team Taiwan on Saturday kept the visiting team in check, allowing just one run in the bottom of the fourth inning. Starting pitcher Sha Tzu-chen struck out one and allowed no hits, except for a hit-by-pitch over
Taiwan kept its hopes of advancing to the 2026 World Baseball Classic (WBC) alive with a 9-1 victory over South Africa in a qualifier at the Taipei Dome last night, backed by solid pitching. Bouncing back from Friday’s struggles on the mound, when Taiwanese pitchers surrendered 15 runs to Spain, Team Taiwan kept the visiting team in check, allowing just one run in the bottom of the fourth inning. The win was crucial for Taiwan, as a loss would have eliminated the team from contention for the next WBC. Starting pitcher Sha Tzu-chen (沙子宸) struck out one and allowed no hits, except for
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