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    Monday, April 29, 2024

    NHL roundup

    St. Louis' Vladimir Tarasenko crashes into the Predators' Pekka Rinne and Mattias Ekholm during the first period in Game 3 of an NHL Stanley Cup second-round playoff series Sunday in Nashville, Tenn. The Predators won, 3-1, to take a 2-1 series lead. (Mark Humphrey/AP Photo)

    Predators 3, Blues 1

    Cody McLeod scored the game-winner early in the second period, and the Nashville Predators beat the St. Louis Blues 3-1 Sunday to grab a 2-1 lead in their Western Conference semifinal.

    Nashville finally had a chance to show how it would react to its first loss this postseason.

    Returning home, they put their deep scoring on display and bounced back with a big victory.

    Cody McLeod scored the game-winner early in the second period, and the Predators beat St. Louis on Sunday to grab a 2-1 lead in their Western Conference semifinal.

    “It shows a lot of character coming off a loss last game,” Predators goalie Pekka Rinne said. “We knew that coming in it’s a huge game. Responded really well. It’s a good feeling obviously, but you already start thinking about the next one and trying to keep this momentum going.”

    Defensemen Ryan Ellis and Roman Josi also scored, and Colton Sissons added two assists. The Predators outshot St. Louis 34-23, and they now are 6-1 this postseason.

    Nashville coach Peter Laviolette said it was good to be home before a standing-room only crowd coming off a 3-2 loss in Game 2 on Friday night.

    “It was awesome today,” Laviolette said. “That’s a credit to our fans and the energy that comes into this building. You guys see that and get to experience it just like we do, so that’s a real positive for us. Nobody likes losing, probably on any team, and you look for a response, and I thought the response was good today.”

    Alexander Steen scored for the Blues, who lost for the first time on the road this postseason.

    Blues goalie Jake Allen kept St. Louis in this game before being pulled by coach Mike Yeo for the extra attacker with more than 4 minutes remaining and took his timeout with 1:25 left.

    “We had a decent start, but once they started to get to their game we didn’t seem to have an answer for it,” Yeo said. “They upped their game, they took their game to another level and we didn’t match it.”

    Rinne finished with 22 saves, including a flurry of stops to preserve the win.

    Game 3 is Tuesday night.

    With a national TV audience, Nashville had plenty of stars on hand for the matinee ranging from Dallas Cowboys quarterback Dak Prescott to country star Luke Bryan and Tennessee Titans Pro Bowl running back DeMarco Murray. Country group Little Big Town became the latest to sing the national anthem, and Lee Greenwood sang during the second intermission.

    St. Louis came in undefeated on the road this postseason after winning three in Minnesota in the first round, while the Predators won both games in Nashville while sweeping Chicago. The Blues also had won nine of their last 10 road games overall.

    Something had to give in this game.

    The Predators never got the man advantage in Game 2, and they got their first nearly midway through the first period.

    Just after the power play ended, Ellis gave Nashville a 1-0 lead with his slap shot from near the blue line at 10:34 off assists from Filip Forsberg and P.K. Subban. Ellis now has a point in six straight playoff games, extending his franchise record for a defenseman and also leading the Predators.

    “It’s the consecutive penalties that are getting us into trouble,” Blues captain Alex Pietrangelo said.

    McLeod gave Nashville a 2-0 lead with his first goal of the postseason just 2:29 into the second period with a backhander past Allen. McLeod became the 13th Nashville player to score this postseason, a goal that even got Laviolette to smile on the bench.

    “Anytime we can be a plus line or chip one in, it’s going to obviously help,” McLeod said. “Fidds (Vernon Fiddler) did that in Game 1, so yeah, so far, so good. We just have to make sure we continue to play strong defense and chip one in every once in a while.”

    St. Louis, which took eight of the first 12 shots, went without a shot in the second period until Steen tipped in a shot by Pietrangelo at 12:59 to pull the Blues within 2-1.

    The Blues had a chance to tie it up late in the second with a 2-on-1, but Rinne stopped the shot from David Perron from the slot. Nashville outshot St. Louis 18-4 in the period.

    Blues defenseman Robert Bortuzzo had a shot go off the post within the first five minutes of the third. Josi scored on a slap shot with 5:49 left to prompt yet another standing ovation by the standing-room only crowd.

    Ducks 6, Oilers 3

    After scoring three goals in the first 12 minutes, Anaheim let Edmonton tie the score midway through the second period. The Ducks then pulled away for a crucial win.

    Jakob Silfverberg scored twice to lead Anaheim to a victory over Edmonton, cutting the Oilers’ series lead to 2-1,

    “It’s about getting ourselves back in the series, giving us a chance,” said Ducks captain Ryan Getzlaf, who had a goal and an assist. “You never want to fall down 3-0 in any series. It’s a long climb. We take this one, learn from what we did right and wrong and get ready for the next one.”

    Rickard Rakell got Anaheim on the scoreboard 25 seconds in, and Chris Wagner and Ryan Kesler also scored. John Gibson stopped 24 shots. The Ducks had lost the first two games of the series at home.

    Just 48 seconds after Connor McDavid scored his first of the series to tie the score and rally Edmonton back from a 3-0 deficit, Wagner put the Ducks back ahead by firing a shot that deflected off Talbot’s arm and in at 9:28 of the second period.

    Silfverberg knocked in a feed from Josh Manson at 4:56 of the third to make it 5-3. The Oilers challenged the play for offside, but the goal stood after a video review.

    “It’s one of those, your eyes are telling you it’s offside, but if you’re the linesman you’re going ‘I don’t know for sure’ and the call on the ice stands,” Oilers head coach Todd McLellan said. “It’s disappointing because they likely know it’s offside, but they can’t confirm it. Let’s not kid ourselves. That wasn’t the backbreaker. The backbreaker was the 25 seconds in.”

    Kesler swept in a rebound with 9 ½ minutes left to cap the scoring.

    “The thing we’re doing properly is responding to adversity,” Getzlaf said. “We’re not getting out of sorts. There’s going to be ups and downs through every playoff game, every series and it’s about controlling our emotions and using it to our advantage.”

    Patrick Maroon and Anton Slepychev also scored and Kris Russell had two assists. Cam Talbot finished with 22 saves.

    “Whatever luck we may have had in Game 2 definitely wasn’t there tonight,” McDavid said. “We did a good job battling back to tie it up, but ultimately we definitely didn’t deserve to win that one.”

    Game 4 is Wednesday night.

    Talbot was stellar in Game 2 with 39 saves, but the Ducks got to him early scoring on two of their first three shots of the game.

    Rakell got a long pass from Getzlaf behind the Edmonton defense and scored on a breakaway 25 seconds in for the fastest playoff goal to start a game in franchise history.

    Silfverberg got his stick on a loose puck to make it 2-0 at 5:33 when Oilers defenseman Adam Larsson failed to clear it away from Talbot.

    Getzlaf beat Talbot with a wrist shot from the hashmarks with 8:09 remaining in the first. Getzlaf had corralled Darnell Nurse’s clearing attempt around the boards to gain possession of the puck.

    “Tonight, it really showed we have to come out with that attack mentality,” Silfverberg said. “It’s something we’ve been talking about the two previous games.”

    Russell finally gave the Rogers Place crowd something to cheer about when his shot from the point deflected off Ryan Nugent-Hopkins and Maroon and past Gibson with 40 seconds left in the opening period.

    The Oilers pulled to 3-2 at 1:28 of the second when David Desharnais’ centering pass from beside the net deflected off Slepychev’s skate and in.

    McDavid tied it at 8:40 as he spun and cut back to lose defender Sami Vatanen and rifled a shot over Gibson’s left elbow.

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