NHL News

Stanley Cup Playoffs Daily: Rantanen pushes Flames to the brink

Now that the Tampa Bay Lightning are out, the field is wide open — and yet things are tighter than ever, with three of the six remaining series tied (pending the result of Thursday’s Carolina HurricanesWashington Capitals clash in Raleigh).

Here’s a recap of last night’s action (check out replays of every playoff game on ESPN+), and what to watch for tonight, in today’s edition of ESPN Stanley Cup Playoffs Daily:

Jump ahead: Last night’s games | Three Stars
Play of the night | Today’s games | Social post of the day


About last night …

Game 4: Boston Bruins 6, Toronto Maple Leafs 4. (Series is tied, 2-2). Now that Tampa Bay is eliminated, you can tell that teams in the Eastern Conference know a trip to the Stanley Cup Final is totally within reach. That explains the frenetic third period pace. Auston Matthews has officially broken out, now recording his first career playoff multi-goal game. The Leafs’ comeback was fun, but the night belonged to Boston’s offense, and the re-emergence of David Pastrnak.

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1:35

The Bruins hold off the Maple Leafs 6-4 despite a two-goal third period from Toronto to even the series at 2-2.

Game 4: Dallas Stars 5, Nashville Predators 1. (Series is tied, 2-2). Talk about flipped narratives. The Predators have been a team of superior defense and goaltending all season. The Stars are known for their offensive deficiencies. So of course a Dallas rout chased last year’s Vezina Trophy winner, Pekka Rinne, out of the game. In an encouraging development, it wasn’t top line-or-bust for the Stars; they got secondary scoring thanks to Mats Zuccarello and Roope Hintz.

Game 4: Colorado Avalanche 3, Calgary Flames 2 (OT). (Avalanche lead, 3-1). What a series this is shaping up to be. We now know the Avs have a propensity for late-game theatrics, thanks to their second OT victory of the series. The Flames defense is doing their goaltender no favors, as Mike Smith has faced a ridiculous 102 shots over the last two games in regulation. The encouraging news: Smith bounced back from his Game 3 shellacking, so there’s hope for a series comeback.

And a great moment in the crowd during this game, as Cale Makar continues to make new fans in his new NHL home:

Three Stars

1. Mikko Rantanen, RW, Colorado Avalanche

Who would have thought that this series would be the most thrilling of them all? It was yet another overtime game, which meant somebody had to be the hero. And after Nathan MacKinnon scored the game-winner in Game 2, this time it was linemate Rantanen ending the affair 10:23 into the extra session.

2. David Pastrnak, RW, Boston Bruins

Pastrnak didn’t quite look like himself the first three games of this series. Perhaps it was lingering effects of his thumb injury? The day began with Pastrnak being taken off the top line. It ended with him scoring two goals — his first two of the playoffs. Pasta is back.

3. Roope Hintz, LW, Dallas Stars

Hintz broke the scoring open with a first period goal, but wasn’t done there. The rookie from Tampere, Finland scored again. He had no playoff points before tonight, and just one multi-goal game this entire season. He scored on one of the three power-play goals for the Stars.

Play of the night

Earlier in the Avs-Flames game, a gorgeous pass from MacKinnon and a well-executed tip by Rantanen, which tied the game late in the third:

Dud of the night

Nashville’s first period gets the nod here. The Preds were down four goals by the end of the first, and to put it plainly: they just stunk. There were times this season where we questioned whether the Predators actually looked like a contender. Wednesday was another one of those nights.

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0:40

Stars jump on top of Nashville early scoring four first period goals in 5-1 win over the Predators.

On the schedule

Washington Capitals at Carolina Hurricanes, Game 4, 7 p.m. ET. Washington leads the series, 2-1.

After a 5-0 statement in Game 3, the Hurricanes have made this a series. However, they’ll have to battle without two of their leading scorers, Andrei Svechnikov and Micheal Ferland. Svechnikov is in concussion protocol after his fight with Alex Ovechkin. Coach Rod Brind’Amour indicates that Ferland could be out a while. The Caps are veterans of long playoff runs, and know they can’t get rattled by one off night. Ovechkin said he spent the first of the two off days not doing anything, and not thinking about hockey.

St. Louis Blues at Winnipeg Jets, Game 5, 8:30 p.m. ET. Series is tied, 2-2.

We thought Winnipeg might be one of the toughest road environments in the postseason, but that hasn’t been the case. Instead, the Blues won their first two in the White Out — then Winnipeg bounced back with two wins in St. Louis. The Jets have started to look like their best selves lately, with Dustin Byfuglien, Kyle Connor, Patrik Laine, Mark Scheifele and Blake Wheeler all producing.

Vegas Golden Knights at San Jose Sharks, Game 5, 10 p.m. ET. Vegas leads the series, 3-1.

Martin Jones looks as shaky as he’s been all season, which is saying something. It’s clear Vegas has his number, too. Jones is last among goalies this postseason with a .838 save percentage and whopping 5.33 goals-against average. And yet, coach Peter DeBoer is sticking with him for what could be a decisive Game 5. In the other net, Marc-Andre Fleury looked quite solid in Game 4, stopping all 28 shots. But just as important for Vegas: the offense is clicking.

Social post of the day

The Ryan Reaves versus Joe Thornton chirpfest continues:

Quotable

“If I had just traded Panarin for picks, and Bobrovsky for picks, everybody in our fan base and city would’ve said, ‘F—ing Blue Jackets, that’s all they ever do is trade for picks and they tell us we’re going to be good in the future, just wait, be patient.’ No, we wanted to send a message to the fan base and the locker room at the deadline that we’re serious about winning. If it doesn’t translate to winning, hey, I’ll take responsibility.” — Blue Jackets GM Jarmo Kekalainen, summing up what the Blue Jackets’ first-round upset means to Columbus. (Via Alex Prewitt)

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