Post Tribune (Sunday)

Oilers’ Keith turning back clock in playoffs

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Duncan Keith had been here before.

Well, maybe not exactly here, breaking down a wild 9-6 loss to open the Oilers’ second-round playoff series against their bitter rival. But the veteran defenseman has seen pretty much everything over his 17 NHL seasons.

The morning of Game 2, and with his team already wobbling against a physical, grinding opponent, Keith cut a calm figure.

“We’ve got a fairly good understand­ing that it’s one game, it’s early in the series,” the 38-year-old said. “But we need to have a response.”

Keith was a huge part of the Oilers’ solution against the Flames’ relentless, high-pressure forecheck on Friday night. He also chipped in with a goal and two assists as the Oilers rebounded from another early deficit to down the Flames 5-3 and even the first postseason Battle of Alberta in 31 years.

It was the Winnipeg native’s first three-point playoff performanc­e since May 2015, when he was in the process of winning a third Stanley Cup with the Blackhawks.

“Just unfazed,” Oilers winger Zach Hyman said. “Somebody’s who’s seen it all, has done it all.”

“Such a veteran presence back there, such a big voice in the room,” added Edmonton captain Connor McDavid, the beneficiar­y of a slick Keith feed to spark the comeback while down 3-1 in the second period. “He’s been great for us.”

Horse racing: Early Voting held off hard-charging favorite Epicenter to win the Preakness Stakes. Early Voting stalked behind the leaders for much of the race before moving into the lead around the final turn. The Preakness was run without Kentucky Derby winner Rich Strike after his owner prioritize­d extra rest. Early Voter went off at 5-1. Epicenter finished second for a second consecutiv­e Triple Crown race. Trainer Chad Brown won his second Preakness after doing it with the same owners in 2017 with Cloud Computing.

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