Times Colonist

Matthews helps Leafs even up series with Bruins

- JOSHUA CLIPPERTON

TORONTO 3 BOSTON 2 (Series tied 1-1)

BOSTON — Auston Matthews desperatel­y wanted to reach 70 goals in the regular season.

After posts, crossbars and plenty of terrific looks, the Maple Leafs star finished one shy.

His first of the playoffs, however, was the biggest he’s scored in quite some time.

Matthews beat Linus Ullmark on a breakaway with under eight minutes to go in regulation and added two assists Monday as Toronto topped the Boston Bruins 3-2 to even the teams’ first-round series 1-1.

“It’s just happening so fast,” said the 26-year-old sniper. “You don’t really have time to think. It’s honestly just instinct and trying to make the right play.”

The first NHLer to hit 69 goals since Mario Lemieux in 1995-96 took a lob pass from Max Domi before making a move to the forehand at 12:06 of the third period, giving the Leafs their first lead against the Bruins in the last six games — including four in the regular season.

“World class at everything he does,” Toronto captain John Tavares, who scored late in the second to tie the game 2-2, said of Matthews. “Sets the standard for us. Hell of a game. He’s driving our team.”

Domi provided the rest of the offence for Toronto. Ilya Samsonov was outstandin­g in making 27 saves after giving up 15 goals over his last three starts, including four in Saturday’s 5-1 loss to open the best-of-seven matchup.

“Really good game for us,” said the Russian. “Everybody stays strong.”

The Leafs needed to be with winger William Nylander out for a second straight game — and after facing some tough moments that included a Bruins goal late in the opening period and having two of their own denied by video review.

“Loved our resolve,” Toronto head coach Sheldon Keefe said. “There’s some things piling up that weren’t really going our way, but the guys stayed with it.”

David Pastrnak and Morgan Geekie replied for Boston. Ullmark stopped 30 shots for the Bruins, who bested the Leafs in Game 1 with Jeremy Swayman in net.

“No second guesses. He was terrific,” Boston head coach Jim Montgomery said of Ullmark. “We only scored two goals.”

Game 3 of the best-of-seven series goes Wednesday in Toronto.

The Leafs got the better of the Bruins for the first time in nine games — a stretch of more than 530 days — dating back to November 2022.

“A really good team that we’ve got a ton of respect for,” Keefe said. “They demand a lot of us, and I thought our guys were right there with them.”

After Matthews gave Toronto the lead, Boston got a power play with six minutes left, but never really threatened. The puck then stayed out on a hair-raising scramble in Samsonov’s crease in the final minute.

Boston, which topped its Original Six rival in the first round in 2013, 2018 and 2019, opened the scoring at 10:18 of the first when Geekie scored on the power play.

Toronto pushed right back just 14 seconds later.

Matthews fired a shot off the crossbar and Domi, who took a bad penalty Saturday that led to a Bruins goal, buried the loose puck before emphatical­ly motioning to the TD Garden crowd in celebratio­n.

“What it’s all about, right?” Domi said. “Had some fun out there.”

The Leafs were in good shape and poised to head to the intermissi­on all square when disaster struck.

Samsonov misplayed an easy dump-in that led to Charlie Coyle rattling a shot off the side of the netminder’s mask. After a delay to get some equipment repairs, Tavares lost the faceoff and Mitch Marner fell asleep in coverage, allowing Pastrnak to one-time a blast with 7.8 seconds remaining on the clock.

Ullmark, who got the start despite Swayman’s 35-save performanc­e in Game 1 to continue Boston’s crease rotation, made a terrific glove stop on Calle Jarnkrok in the second that was confirmed after review to make sure the puck didn’t cross the line.

Hurricanes 5, Islanders 3

RALEIGH, North Carolina — Sebastian Aho and Jordan Martinook scored nine seconds apart late in the third period to help the Carolina Hurricanes complete a comeback from three goals down to beat the New York Islanders 5-3 on Monday night, taking a 2-0 lead in their first-round playoff series in improbable fashion.

Aho struck first by redirectin­g Andrei Svechnikov’s shot at the right post behind Semyon Varlamov with 2:15 remaining to tie the game at 3. After an Islanders giveaway on the ensuing faceoff, Martinook raced down to beat Noah Dobson to the puck along the boards and then pushed it toward the same post with a wraparound attempt from behind the net.

The puck banged off Varlamov’s left skate and slipped into the net for the 4-3 lead with 2:06 to go, sending the Hurricanes players mobbing a jumping Martinook amid a roof-blowing roar from a shocked home crowd.

Jake Guentzel added an empty-net goal in the final minute to seal this one, which ended with frustratio­ns flaring for the Islanders, several scrums between the teams and multiple players taking early walks to the locker-room.

The series shifts north for the next two games, with Game 3 set for Thursday.

Golden Knights 4, Stars 3

DALLAS — Las Vegas captain Mark Stone scored quickly after missing two months, Tomas Hertl had a nifty goal in his playoff debut for the Golden Knights and the reigning Stanley Cup champions opened defence of their title with a 4-3 win over the top-seeded Dallas Stars.

Jonathan Marchessau­lt got his franchise-record 36th postseason goal for Vegas, while Brayden McNabb scored on a 50-foot sniper shot from against the boards in the second period. Jack Eichel and Noah Hanifin, a trade-deadline acquisitio­n like Hertl, both had two assists.

 ?? CHARLES KRUPA. THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Maple Leafs goaltender Ilya Samsonov makes a pad save on a shot by Bruins centre John Beecher during the second period of Game 2 in Boston on Monday.
CHARLES KRUPA. THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Maple Leafs goaltender Ilya Samsonov makes a pad save on a shot by Bruins centre John Beecher during the second period of Game 2 in Boston on Monday.

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