Connor McDavid, Oilers top
Panthers, extend finals again
Send a link to a friend
[June 19, 2024]
Connor McDavid is dragging the Florida Panthers back to
Canada.
McDavid's two-goal, two-assist outing led Edmonton to a 5-3 victory
over the Panthers on Tuesday in Sunrise, Fla., as the Oilers staved
off elimination for a second time in the Stanley Cup Final.
Connor Brown, Zach Hyman and Corey Perry also scored for the Oilers,
who have won two straight but still trail the best-of-seven series
3-2.
Edmonton goaltender Stuart Skinner made 29 saves and Evan Bouchard
logged three assists, joining Larry Robinson (1978) as the only
defensemen with seven multi-assist games in a single postseason.
Bouchard now has 26 assists this postseason, the most by a
defenseman during a single playoff run.
The series returns to Edmonton for Game 6 on Friday.
"It's been a fun ride and we're glad it's going to go one more day,"
McDavid said. "But that's all we've earned here: Another day,
another flight. We'll be ready to go in Edmonton on Friday."
McDavid, who has posted consecutive four-point outings, became only
the third player in NHL history to notch 40 or more points in a
single playoff year, joining Wayne Gretzky (1985, 1988, 1993) and
Mario Lemieux (1991).
No player had ever recorded back-to-back four-point performances in
the finals before McDavid did so, and he and Gretzky (1985) are the
only players to have multiple four-point games at any stage of a
finals.
"Connor doing Connor things," Hyman told Sportsnet. "That's what
makes him special. He's able to elevate his game at the most
important times, the biggest reason obviously why we've come so far.
We're not here without him."
Matthew Tkachuk and Evan Rodrigues each collected one goal and one
assist for Florida. Oliver Ekman-Larsson also scored, and goalie
Sergei Bobrovsky stopped 19 shots.
Although the Panthers retain their series advantage, they have now
twice failed to close out the finals and claim the first Cup in
franchise history. While the Oilers are trying to become only the
second team in history to win the finals after trailing 3-0, the
Panthers are trying to avoid blowing their golden opportunity at
glory.
[to top of second column] |
Jun 18, 2024; Sunrise, Florida, USA; Edmonton Oilers forward Connor
Brown (28) celebrates scoring a shorthanded goal against Florida
Panthers goaltender Sergei Bobrovsky (72) (not pictured) during the
first period in game five of the 2024 Stanley Cup Final at Amerant
Bank Arena. Mandatory Credit: Jim Rassol-USA TODAY Sports
"Absolutely nothing has changed for our situation
in the last two games except that we learned some things," Florida
coach Paul Maurice said. "Some lessons we don't need to learn, we've
learned them enough but keep getting taught those ... but nothing's
changed for us, not one thing.
"I'm not feeling deflated. Neither is the hockey team. They're not
feeling deflated. A little grumpy."
The Oilers, coming off an 8-1 win in Game 4 on Saturday, established
a three-goal lead thanks to Brown's first-period short-handed tally
and two goals early in the second period: Hyman's power-play marker
and McDavid's first of the night.
After Tkachuk put the Panthers on the board 6:53 into the middle
frame, McDavid set up Perry's man-advantage marker that made it a
4-1 game.
Rodrigues responded 14 seconds later and Ekman-Larsson made it a
one-goal game at 4:04 of the third period, but the Panthers could
not find the equalizer before McDavid's empty-net goal iced the
clash.
Although the Oilers have the opportunity to push the series the
distance next time they hit the ice, the Panthers insist they don't
feel the pressure.
"No, it's not an elimination game for us," Tkachuk said. "Right now,
we're going up there and got a 3-2 series lead. Just got to take
care of business."
--Field Level Media
[© 2024 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]
This material may not be
published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely
responsible for this content.
|