The Record (Troy, NY)

Ducks make record rally, Perry scores in 2OT to top Oilers

- ByGregBeac­ham

ANAHEIM>> Corey Perry and RyanGetzla­f have been preparing for these moments for their entire adult lives. Nearly 14 years after the Anaheim Ducks drafted them together, they’ve built a mental connection that remains indelible through any playoff pressure or defensive determinat­ion.

So when Getzlaf found the puck and a sliver of space on the boards in the second overtime of a crucial playoff game Friday night, Perry’s feet moved before his thoughts.

“Right to the net,” Perry said. “He had eyes up, and he had time, and I was yelling for that puck the whole way.”

After the unpreceden­ted comeback required just to get back into Game 5, the Ducks finished it off with one more moment of hardearned grace from their dynamic duo.

Perry scored 6:57 into the second OT after the Ducks rallied from a threegoal deficit in the final minutes of regulation, completing a spectacula­r 4-3 victory over the Edmonton Oilers and seizing a 3-2 lead in their second-round playoff series.

Anaheim became the first team in Stanley Cup playoff history to force overtime or win a playoff game after trailing by three goals with less than four minutes left in regulation, according to the Elias Sports Bureau.

While the Oilers cried foul over a no-call of goalie interferen­ce on Rickard Rakell’s tying score with 15 seconds left in regulation, the Ducks celebrated their third straight win — and the first home victory for either teamin the series.

Perry, who finished with a goal and two assists, collected that pass from Getzlaf and waited out a sprawling CamTalbot, who made 60 saves.

“That’s will,” said Getzlaf, who has scored 15 points in a spectacula­r postseason. “We willed it through, and did whatever we had to do. We scratched and clawed at the end and found a way to get ourselves back in that game and give ourselves an opportunit­y.”

Game 6 is Sunday in Ed- monton.

Getzlaf got the first goal of the comeback with 3:16 left in regulation, and Cam Fowler scored 35 seconds later before Rakell put the tying goal through a crowd of prone players to cap a stunning sequence — all with goalie John Gibson pulled for an extra attacker.

On his 24th birthday, Rakell slipped a puck under a crowd that included a horizontal Ryan Kesler making some contact with Talbot. Video review found no goalie interferen­ce because Kesler had been shoved into Talbot by Darnell Nurse, and the Ducks celebrated madly.

“I don’t even know what goalie interferen­ce is anymore, to be perfectly honest,” Edmonton forward Milan Lucic said. “It’s an absolute joke that especially two really good referees can’t make the right call at the right time.”

Leon Draisaitl, Connor McDavid and Drake Caggiula scored during a dominant second period, but the Oilers coughed up a big late lead despite solid play by Talbot.

Talbot acknowledg­ed his own frustratio­n over the no- call, but said: “At the same time, we had a 3-nothing lead with 3 1/2 minutes to go. We had every opportunit­y to win that game. ... They get a lucky bounce there, and it just started to unravel from there. We did a good job battling back in overtime, got a few good chances, but weren’t on top of things.”

Gibson made 35 saves, helping the Ducks move one win away from their second trip to the Western Conference finals in three seasons.

After a disastrous start to the series in Anaheim, the Ducks returned home with confidence and two gritty road wins, including an overtime victory in Game 4.

Edmonton appeared to be ready to run away with Game 5 in the second period. After Draisaitl’s opener, McDavid capitalize­d on a two-man advantage by adroitly batting a puck out of midair for the fifth goal in his first Stanley Cup playoff run. Caggiula put the Oilers up 3- 0 with a score off a 4- on-1 rush midway through the period. COLUMBUS, OHIO>> Spinning that little track ball on video golf is all about the thumbs and wrists, so it’s not a shock that Andy Haas has developed a touch of carpel tunnel syndrome from doing it all these years.

For most of his adult life, Haas has been living the dream of many — making a pile of money playing a video game. That was his job. Going to bars and banging

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