New York Post

NOT OVER YET

- By ETHAN SEARS esears@nypost.com

To see how much the Islanders still believe in themselves, and to understand how much extending the season means to a group that has been through everything together, look no further than the mob scene that coalesced at the blue line at 5:40 p.m. Saturday.

The Islanders, every one of them, spilled off the bench and surrounded Robert Bortuzzo, whose shot from the blue line was tipped in by Mathew Barzal 1:24 into the second overtime period to keep the season alive with a 3-2 victory. One giant group hug to propel them back to Raleigh, N.C., for Game 5 on Tuesday night.

Only four other teams in NHL history have come back from a 3-0 deficit to win a playoff series, but this 81:24 ulcer-inducing marathon of a hockey game has the Islanders believing, even if nobody else does.

“You have no idea how proud I am of this group,” coach Patrick Roy said. He later added: “It never really crossed my mind that’d be the end of our season.”

“Great shot by Bobby, trying to find it at an area where there are some bodies,” Barzal said following a starring two-goal performanc­e. “Lucky bounce.”

“It’s hard to explain, really,” Anders Lee said. “Season’s on the line. And we laid it all out there.”

Stefan Noesen tied the game for Carolina on a power-play goal with just under six minutes left in regulation to send the game to overtime and it felt like you could write the script of heartbreak from there. But the Islanders delivered their fans a core memory instead.

Both teams retreated into conservati­sm during a high-tension first extra period, playing dumpand-chase hockey with defensemen hanging back to avoid getting caught out.

Semyon Varlamov and Frederik Andersen both stood up to what pressure came, with Andersen turning aside Lee’s twoon-one chance and Kyle Palmieri’s wraparound attempt and Varlamov stopping Andrei Svechnikov’s deflection late in the period.

Finally, in double overtime, Barzal ended it.

Barzal brought the building alive 10:10 into the second period with an individual effort to produce a goal and tie the game at 1-1 out of nowhere — cutting back along the right wall and ripping a shot from above the circle.

Suddenly, the Islanders were defending with desperatio­n and energy and with the crowd behind them. After a series of calls went against them late in the second, the Islanders finally got one at the period’s expiration as Sebastian Aho tripped Alexander Romanov.

They took advantage in short order, with Jean-Gabriel Pageau jumping on Noah Dobson’s rebound 1:48 into the period for the Islanders’ first lead since Game 2, but handed it right back after Bortuzzo tripped Jaccob Slavin to set up Noesen’s tying goal.

The 35-year-old Bortuzzo, a former Cup winner with the Blues, redeemed himself with a blast from the blue line that caught Barzal’s stick.

“That line was flying all night, pushing their D back, so if you can support them, sometimes they over-backcheck,” Bortuzzo said. “That puck squirted out. Got some good wood on it. Obviously, got a fortunate bounce.”

 ?? Michelle Farsi ?? MAT’S ALL, FOLKS: An exuberant Mathew Barzal celebrates after he tips in the puck for the game-winning goal in double-overtime Saturday afternoon to beat the Hurricanes.
Michelle Farsi MAT’S ALL, FOLKS: An exuberant Mathew Barzal celebrates after he tips in the puck for the game-winning goal in double-overtime Saturday afternoon to beat the Hurricanes.
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