Advertisement

Stanley Cup Final: Stars defeat Lightning in two OTs in Game 5, avoid elimination

Corey Perry of the Dallas Stars celebrates his game-winning goal against the Tampa Bay Lightning on Sept. 26, 2020.
The Dallas Stars’ Corey Perry celebrates his game-winning goal in the second overtime against the Tampa Bay Lightning in Game 5 on Saturday night.
(Bruce Bennett / Getty Images)
Share

Joe Pavelski and Corey Perry don’t want to leave the bubble just yet.

Pavelski tied it with 6:45 left in the regulation and laid out to block a shot in the first overtime before Perry scored the winner in double overtime, and the Dallas Stars avoided elimination Saturday night by beating the Tampa Bay Lightning 3-2 to force a Game 6 in the Stanley Cup Final.

“Get one, keep going,” Perry said. “We start building here, and I think we’re starting to do something special.”

Advertisement

Anton Khudobin made 39 saves, and Perry prolonged the series by scoring 9:23 into the second overtime. It was a manner of redemption for the Stars a night after they lost in OT on a questionable penalty call when Tampa Bay scored on the ensuing power play. Game 6 is Monday night.

The 36-year-old Pavelski and 35-year-old Perry have combined for the last six Stars goals.

So much for hockey being a young man’s game.

“With how they play, I don’t know if you can call them old,” Stars center Tyler Seguin said. “They seem to have the best endurance of all of us. Joe keeps getting the late goals, and Perry played a great game.”

The Stars prevailed despite going down to five defensemen for half of regulation when Andrej Sekera was injured blocking a shot midway through the first. Sekera returned for the third, a gutty performance that might have saved a team that looked to be running on fumes.

Dallas might have to dip even further into its already depleted depth in Game 6 if Sekera’s injury is severe enough to add him to the already long list of unavailable players. Forward Roope Hintz was the most recent to join that group when he was injured crashing into the boards Friday night.

Key plays from the Dallas Stars’ 3-2 victory over the Tampa Bay Lightning in two overtimes in Game 5 of the Stanley Cup Final.

The Stars didn’t have much time to regroup after that difficult loss with the first back to back in the Final since 2009 and just the second since the mid-1950s. Instead of the fatigue wearing them down, they were able to respond in a big way against a healthier opponent.

Advertisement

Pavelski again led the way. In the Final for the second time in his career after losing in 2016 with San Jose, the 36-year-old followed his two-goal performance in Game 5 with a season-saver 24 hours later by scoring on a rare juicy rebound allowed by Andrei Vasilevskiy.

The goal tied Pavelski with Tampa Bay’s Brayden Point for the most goals this postseason with 13. It was the 61st of his playoff career, the most among Americans.

Asked Friday night about tying that record, Pavelski deadpanned: “Keep it. Next question.” Thanks to another strong performance from him and fellow veteran Perry, there will be plenty more questions going into Game 6 on Monday.

A day after Angels star Mike Trout hit his first homer off Clayton Kershaw, he reflects on a sixth straight season that will end before the playoffs.

Sept. 26, 2020

Some of those belong to Tampa Bay, which blew a 2-1 third-period lead and lost for just the third time in one-goal games this postseason. How to contain a suddenly dangerous Dallas top line led by Pavelski, along with Perry, is one of them.

Another is the health of defenseman Ryan McDonagh, who was slow to get up after a big hit in the first OT. That was around the same time Pavelski blocked a point-blank shot by Point to keep the game going.

Perry finished it by putting a rebound home for his second of the game.

Notes: Khudobin became the fifth goaltender since 1956 to make 700-plus saves in a single postseason. Justin Dowling made his NHL playoff debut in replacing the injured forward Hintz. Tampa Bay again played without injured captain Steven Stamkos.

Advertisement

Up next: Monday night will mark just the second Game 6 the Lightning play in the playoffs after finishing their first two series out in five each.

Advertisement