The Jerusalem Post

Lightning dominate early, hold on late to tie Cup Final

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The Tampa Bay Lightning doubledipp­ed on the power play during a three- goal first period and rode a 27- save performanc­e from goaltender Andrei Vasilevski­y to claim a 3- 2 victory over the Dallas Stars late Monday night in Edmonton to even the Stanley Cup Final at one win apiece.

Brayden Point, Ondrej Palat netted man- advantage markers while Kevin Shattenkir­k also tallied to give the Lightning a 3- 0 lead that was too much for the Stars to overcome.

Game 3 of the best- of- seven championsh­ip series will be played Wednesday, and the Stars are well aware their lack of discipline can't continue against Tampa Bay's high- octane attack.

“It's where we lost the game,” Stars forward Mattias Janmark said. “We've taken way too many penalties in the playoffs.”

The three- goal outburst in just under four minutes was enough for the Lightning, who built on a dominating third period in the opener, even though Dallas claimed the first game of the series 4- 1.

Point started the scoring with his team's first power- play goal in five outings. After taking Nikita Kucherov's pass, he fired a one- timer that went off the stick of Stars defenseman Esa Lindell and into the top corner at 11: 23. It snapped Tampa Bay's 0- for- 15 slump with the man- advantage and marked the first time in seven games the Lightning opened the scoring.

“Scoring that first goal is big,” Point said. “That's all we're thinking about.”

Palat netted Tampa Bay's second powerplay goal of the night, a tally set up by a brilliant cross- ice pass from Nikita

Kucherov at the 14: 22 mark, and Shattenkir­k completed the goal rush 54 seconds later when his long shot ricocheted off Lindell's knee before finding the twine. At that point, Dallas had fired only two shots on goal.

Kucherov and Victor Hedman both collected a pair of assists for the Lightning.

However, Dallas was the better team after the first intermissi­on and was rewarded with 5: 17 remaining in the middle frame when Joe Pavelski put his team on the board by deflecting a point shot for the power- play marker. Pavelski was denied on a breakaway shortly after, a key save by Vasilevski­y, who has won all six games following a loss during this year's postseason.

Janmark had an easy redirectio­n tally set up by John Klingberg to make it a onegoal deficit at 5: 27 of the third period, but that's as close as the Stars could make it as the Lightning clamped down defensivel­y. Dallas managed only two shots on goal after making it a 3- 2 game.

Vasilevski­y wasn't busy in the first and third periods, but he made the difference in the middle frame by stopping 17 shots.

“He's been huge for us. Best player every game,” Palat said of Vasilevski­y. “The first game we didn't help him much, but tonight he was awesome.”

With the series now into a new phase, a huge key will be which team can control the game in the manner it wants. Tampa Bay plays an up- tempo, puck- moving style, while Dallas relies more on a counteratt­ack.

“It's a couple good teams that have something of a foundation to winning games and how to play,” Pavelski said.

Anton Khudobin stopped 28 shots for the Stars, who were also dealt a blow to their lineup with forward Blake Comeau knocked from the game in the second period after he was on the receiving end of a hard hit from Ryan McDonagh.

Although he's close to returning from injury and took part in the morning skate, Tampa Bay captain Steven Stamkos didn't play. The star center has yet to skate in a game since the league restarted. However, Jan Rutta, who last played August 5, and Carter Verhaeghe dressed in place of Luke Schenn and Zach Bogosian. ( Reuters)

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