The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Fast starters

Pundit discusses teams jumping out to two-game leads in the NHL playoffs

- Lyle Richardson Lyle Richardson is a freelance writer with Sporting News and runs the website Spector’s Hockey. His column will appear in The Guardian throughout the NHL hockey season.

Barely a week into the opening round of the 2018 Stanley Cup playoffs, five clubs – Toronto Maple Leafs, Washington Capitals, Anaheim Ducks, Colorado Avalanche and New Jersey Devils – found themselves down two games to none in their respective best-of-seven series. Meanwhile, the Los Angeles Kings face eliminatio­n after dropping three straight contests to the Vegas Golden Knights.

The Kings have faced this scenario before, overcoming a 3-0 opening-round deficit in the 2014 playoffs to defeat the San Jose Sharks in seven games. Several of their current stars, such as Jonathan Quick, Drew Doughty, Anze Kopitar, Dustin Brown and Jeff Carter, were part of that comeback. Still, they face long odds repeating that feat against the motivated Golden Knights.

As for the others, winning their next two games are crucial to their hopes of overcoming their current predicamen­ts.

Rebounding Leafs?

After suffering lopsided defeats to the powerful Boston Bruins, the Maple Leafs hope to bounce back as their series shifts to Toronto. The Bruins took advantage of the Leafs’ porous blue-line while shutting down offensive stars Auston Matthews, Patrick Marleau and William Nylander. Compoundin­g the Leafs’ woes is the loss of centre Nazem Kadri to a threegame suspension.

Psych’ed out

Suffering consecutiv­e overtime defeats to the Columbus Blue Jackets will do little to soothe Washington’s fragile post-season psyche. Despite the efforts of offensive stars Alex Ovechkin, Nicklas Backstrom and Evgeni Kuznetsov, the Capitals’ inability to hold two-goal leads against the Jackets has their followers anticipati­ng yet another playoff meltdown.

Duck-ing for cover

After being shut out 3-0 in Game 1 against the Sharks, the Ducks had a better effort in their 3-2 loss the following game. Their leading scorers (Rickard Rakell, Corey Perry, Adam Henrique, Ondrej Kase) were shut down by the Sharks in both games. If they don’t cash in soon, the Ducks could be in trouble.

Avs so close but so far

While the Avalanche face a tough opponent in the leaguelead­ing Nashville Predators, they’re not going down without a fight. Led by Nathan MacKinnon and Gabriel Landeskog, the Avalanche held a 2-2 tie with the Predators in Game 1 through two periods before losing 5-2, then overcame three two-goal deficits in their next game before dropping a 5-4 decision.

Having a Devil of a time

The underdog Devils aren’t backing against the powerhouse Tampa Bay Lightning. Despite falling 5-3 in Game 2, they outshot the Lightning 4426. While the Lightning’s scoring depth has thus far made the difference in this series, Devils forwards Taylor Hall, Nico Hischier and Travis Zajac are proving difficult to contain.

Perhaps these clubs should look to the Minnesota Wild and Philadelph­ia Flyers for inspiratio­n.

The Wild were down two games to none against the Winnipeg Jets, but rebounded with a convincing 6-2 victory in Game 3.

The Flyers bounced back from a 7-0 Game 1 defeat against the Pittsburgh Penguins with a convincing 5-1 victory in the following game. Though they suffered another lopsided loss in Game 3, they have a chance to tie the series on Wednesday.

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