Stars ended their longest scoring drought of the NHL playoffs, but now theyâre facing elimination
Stars ended their longest scoring drought of the NHL playoffs, but now theyâre facing elimination
DALLAS (AP) â By the time Wyatt Johnston ended the longest scoring drought of the playoffs for the top-seeded Dallas Stars, there wasnât much time left to avoid facing elimination on the road in the Western Conference Final.
Bring it on, Tyler Seguin said after a 3-1 home loss to Edmonton on Friday night that gave the Oilers a 3-2 lead as they headed home with a chance to move on to the Stanley Cup Final.
âThis is the fun part,â Seguin said of Game 6 on Sunday night. âHeck of a challenge in front of you. The whole season, going to that rink. Weâve taken pride in how weâve been on the road all year, so letâs do it.â
Johnstonâs goal ended Stuart Skinnerâs shutout bid with 5:51 remaining. It was the first score in nearly 109 minutes for Dallas since taking an early 2-0 lead in Game 4 in Edmonton.
In between, the Oilers scored eight times and now have control of the series when it appeared the Stars might bring a 3-1 lead back home after the quick start in Canada two nights earlier.
âAt the end of the day, it doesnât really matter whatâs happened up until this point,â said Johnston, who scored his team-leading 10th goal of the postseason. âTheyâve done a good job these last two games. I donât think weâve done our best. All that matters is making sure weâre ready to go next game.â
There are things to fix for one the NHLâs best offenses in the regular season.
Matt Duchene had a clear shot on a rush but decided to pass, which was intercepted. Captain Jamie Benn tried to corral a puck for what could have been a good scoring chance, only to have it slide off his blade.
Jason Robertson, who had his first career playoff hat trick in a Game 3 win at Edmonton, had just one shot Friday night. Seven of the two-time 40-goal scorerâs shot attempts were blocked.
Even standout defenseman Miro Heiskanen had a rare costly error, sending a puck over the glass for a delay of game penalty that led to Edmontonâs 2-0 lead on the second quick power-play goal from Ryan Nugent-Hopkins.
âWe havenât had our best other than probably Game 3 in this series,â Duchene said. âThe nice thing is weâre still in the series and weâve just got to win one at a time here.â
The Oilers answered the quick 2-0 Dallas lead in Game 4 and were even before the first intermission.
When the Stars fell behind by the same score barely a minute into the second period in Game 5, they gave up their first even-strength goal four minutes later.
After two periods, Dallas had 10 shots, its fewest through 40 minutes in these playoffs.
The Stars doubled that total in the final period and had several great scoring chances that Skinner stopped. But just like Johnstonâs goal, it was too late.
âFirst two periods werenât good enough,â Duchene said. âWe have to generate more. Third period, we had some looks, but youâre down three by then. Thereâs no time to sit on it.â
Not with the Stars at risk of losing in the West final for the second year in a row.
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AP NHL playoffs: https://apnews.com/hub/stanley-cup and https://www.apnews.com/hub/NHL