Calgary Herald

Ducks stun Oilers in OT to tie series

- ROBERT TYCHKOWSKI rtychkowsk­i@postmedia.com twitter.com/sun_tychkowski

The Edmonton Oilers had the game and the series in a strangleho­ld, but somehow they were the ones who got choked out.

They were up 2-0 at home and seemingly in control with a chance to go up 3-1 in their second-round series with the Anaheim Ducks, only to let everything slip away in a crushing 4-3 overtime defeat.

They fought back to force overtime on Drake Caggiula’s goal with 1:42 left in the third period, but the Ducks landed the kill shot just 45 seconds into the extra period when Jakob Silfverber­g scored on a one-timer.

Ryan Getzlaf ran Anaheim’s show all night, scoring two goals and adding two assists in the win.

The Ducks took both games in Edmonton after losing the first two at home, and have now turned the best-of-seven into a bestof-three, with Anaheim controllin­g all of the momentum.

The Oilers still haven’t played a full 60 minutes of their best hockey in this series and the time to start is well past due.

“We have to show that we can play with them and dominate them,” Oilers captain Connor McDavid said, well aware of what was at stake. “There is a huge difference between 2-2 and 3-1.”

This was a pivotal game in and it started with the Oilers’ best period of the series, with intense pressure, two clutch penalty kills and a pair of late goals from Milan Lucic and McDavid to give Edmonton a 2-0 lead going into the first intermissi­on.

A day after Ducks head coach Randy Carlyle complained that McDavid was getting the “white-glove treatment” from the referees, Anaheim got the first two power plays of the game after centre Ryan Nugent-Hopkins got two for tripping at 4:35 and Lucic took an interferen­ce penalty away from the play at 11:03.

The penalties slowed Edmonton’s momentum a bit, but they regained it quickly and went up 1-0 on their first power play of the game when Lucic jammed one in from the side of the net at 15:30.

Just two minutes after that, McDavid scored his fourth of the playoffs on a two-on-one with Leon Draisaitl.

The Oilers were simply dominant. But as good as Edmonton was in the first, Anaheim was better in the second. They outshot Edmonton 21-5 and outscored them 3-0.

Getzlaf, who’s been a man on a mission in this series, put the team on his back with two goals and an assist in a span of 12:48 to turn an 0-2 deficit into a 3-2 Ducks lead.

Getzlaf cut the lead to 2-1 at 1:37 — after a long and very close goaltender interferen­ce challenge on Corey Perry didn’t go Edmonton’s way — then set up Rickard Rakell at 5:35 and silenced the crowd with the go-ahead goal at 14:25.

The Oilers pushed back in the third period and had their best opportunit­y to pull even with 3:46 left when Antoine Vermette gloved a puck off the faceoff to give Edmonton a last chance power play.

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