Oilers top Panthers 5-4 in overtime thriller to tie Stanley Cup final
CBC
Leon Draisaitl scored in overtime for the Edmonton Oilers to tie the Stanley Cup final series at two games apiece Thursday, in a gripping game with wild momentum swings.
Game 4 got off to a quick start, with both teams getting chances early in the first period. But the Panthers quickly turned the tide, peppering Stuart Skinner who looked sharp early on, making at least one highlight-reel save.
And then, as in Game 3, players began the march to the penalty box.
Oilers winger Evander Kane took a high-sticking penalty, and defenceman Darnell Nurse was called on a trip halfway through the penalty kill.
The Panthers' Matthew Tkachuk made the Oilers pay with a shot through traffic during the 5-on-3.
A high stick by Ekholm then led to a second Tkachuk powerplay goal with just over three minutes left in the period.
Anton Lundell added a third goal at even strength with less than a minute left in the first period on a setup from Carter Verhaeghe, who got away with high-sticking Oilers defender Troy Stecher on the play.
The Oilers went to the dressing room down 3-0, looking doomed to repeat their crushing Game 3 loss.
Coach Kris Knoblauch brought in backup goalie Calvin Pickard to start the second period, after Skinner let in three goals on 17 shots in the first.
Edmonton had two early chances in the second period before getting their first power play of the game just over three minutes in. Ryan Nugent-Hopkins, who had been a question mark coming into the game due to an undisclosed injury, capitalized to get his team on the board.
The Oilers continued to throw pucks at Panthers goalie Sergei Bobrovsky, and defenceman Darnell Nurse brought the Oilers within one, ripping a wrist shot top shelf with just over seven minutes left in the period.
Two minutes later, winger Vasily Podkolzin scored on a backhand shot to tie the game.
The Panthers returned pressure toward the end of the period, with Pickard coming up big and defenceman Mattias Ekholm blocking a Tkachuk shot on an otherwise open net with just over a minute left.
Seconds later, Carter Verhaeghe hammered Edmonton defenceman Evan Bouchard into the boards from behind, sending him to the ice. The play was whistled down with no penalty call before Bouchard got back on his skates.













