Montreal Gazette

LEAFS STAGE WILD COMEBACK TO CLAIM VICTORY IN GAME 5

Toronto scores three times in final frame after falling behind 2-0 in the first period TORONTO 4, TAMPA BAY 3

- TERRY KOSHAN Toronto tkoshan@postmedia.com

The Toronto Maple Leafs are on the cusp of adding a significan­t chapter to their storybook year.

After setting franchise records for wins and points during the regular season, the Leafs are one win away from advancing to the second round of the Stanley Cup Playoffs for the first time since 2004.

That is the reality in the bestof-seven series against the Tampa Bay Lightning after the Leafs recovered with a terrific effort to take Game 5 by a 4-3 score on Tuesday night. The Leafs, with a 3-2 lead in the series, can move on with a win in Game 6 on Thursday in Tampa. If not, Game 7 goes on Saturday night in Toronto.

The duo that has propelled the Leafs from October onward — Auston Matthews and Mitch Marner — naturally hooked up for the winner at 13:54 of the third.

A Marner rebound off a 2-on-1 was buried by Matthews, sending the Scotiabank Arena crowd into a frenzy.

The two-time cup champion Lightning couldn't get another puck past Jack Campbell, who had a strong performanc­e in the Leafs' net. A sprawling save on Nikita Kucherov when the game was tied 3-3 was his biggest of the night.

Down 2-1 to start the third period, the Leafs didn't let up from where they finished the second.

Excellent stick work by captain John Tavares during four-onfour allowed Morgan Rielly to find open space and hammer a Tavares pass past Andrei Vasilevski­y at 3:01.

As the tying Rielly goal was being announced, the crowd erupted again when William Nylander took a pass from Ilya Mikheyev and ripped a shot past Vasilevski­y at 4:14.

That goal represente­d the first lead change in the series.

The Toronto lead didn't last much longer than four minutes. At 8:17, Ryan Mcdonagh blasted a shot past Campbell.

Not only were the Leafs numerous strides sharper in the second period than they were in the first, Tavares put his name in the goal column after recording just two assists through four games.

“As much as you want everybody to be rolling, you want everybody to have over a point a game, that's not really the reality of how the league works (in the playoffs),” Leafs coach Sheldon Keefe said during his morning availabili­ty. “Matthews and Marner have done very well and they produce at a good clip. John has worked extremely hard. He has done good things. As this series goes on, he's going to have lots of opportunit­y to make a difference. John's time is going to come.”

That time came at 3:35 of the second when a shot by William Nylander deflected off Tavares and past Vasilevski­y. The goal came on a power play, and ignited the Leafs to carry the pace for the remainder of the period.

The Leafs buzzed around Vasilevski­y, who managed to make 13 saves in the period. Toronto played with the kind of determinat­ion they should have had from the game's opening faceoff, and the kind they will need from the initial puck drop in Game 6.

After the first four games of the series were bogged down by a run of penalties on both sides, we finally got a peek at the intensity that five-on-five hockey can bring in the playoffs.

Campbell was stellar in the second, making nine saves. More than once, Tampa forward Nick Paul skated away in frustratio­n following a tough Campbell stop on him.

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Auston Matthews

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