The Edmonton Oilers were a desperate team and it showed as they beat the Vancouver Canucks by a 3-2 margin at Rogers Place in Edmonton on Tuesday night to tie their best-of-seven second round series at two games a piece.
It simply boiled down to effort ā and the Canucks didnāt have enough players matching the Oilers in that department.
āWe need five or six guys to get going here. Itās the Stanley Cup playoffs. We canāt play with 12 guys, so weāve got to figure it out quick. Obviously, itās a tough one. Edmonton came to play ā they wanted it more early,ā Vancouver head coach Rick Tocchet said afterwards.
J.T. Miller didnāt play at the level most of us are accustomed to but you can classify that as an exception and not the norm. The playoffs are a grind, both mentally and physically, so you can give Miller a mulligan for game four.
The same cannot be said for Elias Pettersson, who again was the target for Canuck Nation on social media after the game. Vancouverās $11.5 million dollar man has been a non-factor with just one goal in 10 playoff games.
Never mind the lack of production, itās the lack of compete that has Canuck fans fuming and his coach frustrated.
āHeās got to get going. I donāt know what else to say,ā said a disappointed Tocchet when questioned about Petterssonās play.
The Canucks looked listless for most of the night as Edmonton took a 2-0 lead into the third but got some juice when Conor Garland took a tip pass from Elias Lindholm and made his way to the slot where he let go a wrist shot that beat Oilers netminder Calvin Pickard to make it 2-1 at 6:54 of the third.
From there on in, the Canucks had the Oilers on their heels and tied the game when Dakota Joshua got credited for a goal with 1:41 remaining in the third period. Joshua, Lindholm and Oiler defenseman Darnell Nurse were all in front of the crease when Brock Boeser took a shot that deflected off Joshuaās skate.
Overtime loomed but the Canucks wound up making up several mistakes that allowed Evan Bouchardās shot from the blueline to elude all the traffic in front and beat a screened Arturs Silovs with :39 seconds remaining in the third.
āItās a will to get the puck. Itās not Xās and Oās. There are times where you know where the puck is going to go. You just have to get there before the other guy and I think we are pausing. Some guys are playing pause hockey and you canāt win if you have five or six passengers or seven. Thereās at least half a dozen passengers tonight. Quite frankly, thatās what it was,ā said Tocchet.
The Oilers opened the scoring at 11:10 of the first on the power play with Miller in the box for a high-sticking infraction on Leon Draisaitl. Draisaitl made him pay with a sharp angle shot from the right side after Conor McDavid darted to the middle and drew three defenders to him before passing it off to Draisaitl, whose one-timer was very similar to the goal he scored in the second game.
The Oilers took a two-goal lead when Ryan Nugent-Hopkins took advantage of a 2-on-1 with McDavid and beat Silovs with :40 remaining in the second period.
Some of Canuck Nation blamed Canuck defenseman Noah Juulsen for the odd-man rush as he stepped up and delivered a big hit on Edmontonās Mattias Ekholm. It was obviously the wrong decision but you canāt be too critical of Juulsen for a couple of reasons. One, it was his first game in nearly three weeks so timing may have been an issue. Second, and more importantly, he made the mistake going 100% which you can never be overly critical of a player.
āThe second goal at the end of the period was a killer. You canāt do that,ā said Tocchet, who also praised Juulsen for his overall performance.
Another area of concern has to be special teams.
The Canucks received a four-minute power play when Edmontonās Evander Kane was called for high-sticking on Vancouverās Tyler Myers at 14:12 of the first. With an opportunity to tie the game - and possibly take the lead ā Vancouverās power play was abysmal and managed just one shot during the four minutes. The power play actually gave the Oilers momentum and took it away from Vancouver.
āIt just wasnāt good enough. They know it. I donāt think they worked hard. They mismanaged the puck. Itās a four-minute power play. You have to have a work ethic. You have to hold pucks and I just donāt think we did,ā said Tocchet.
āIām just going to be honest with you. Iām tired of talking about it. Iām just going to tell you the same thing,ā said a clearly frustrated Miller when the subject of the power play was broached.
Meanwhile, the Oilers power play continued to operate a peak efficiency with the Draisaitl goal, going one-for-two on the night and is now five-for-ten on the series.
The series is now a best-of-three with Vancouver holding home-ice advantage with game five on Thursday night in Vancouver at Rogers Arena.
Hopefully, the Canucks wonāt have any passengers on Thursday.
If they do, it might be the last home game of the season.
OVERTIME
* Silovs made 27 saves for Vancouver while Pickard, making his first-ever playoff start in place of Stuart Skinner, stopped 19 shots for the Oilers.
* It was the eighth straight one-goal game playoff game that the Canucks have been involved in. The Canucks record in those games is 5-3.
* Tocchet hinted at making one or two possible lineup changes. Look for Nils Hoglander to be possibly re-inserted with Sam Lafferty a potential scratch. Lafferty didnāt see the ice in the last half of the third period and finished with a team-low 7:23 of ice time.
Veteran B.C. sports personality Bob āthe Mojā Marjanovich writes twice weekly for Black Press Media.
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