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Who else but Connor McDavid? His stunning goal makes it 4-2 Oilers.
That own goal has so thoroughly crushed the souls of Stars fans that even the traditional third-period Garth Brooks sing-along sounded sad.
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Kane restores a two-goal lead for the Oilers. That one seemed lucky, a bank job off Lindell.
Own-goals and bad bounces have plagued the Stars throughout these playoffs, and that might prove to be the costliest one yet. Evander Kane banks a puck in off Esa Lindell's skate from behind the net. DeSmith had no idea where it was.
Stuart Skinner did everything right on that play (he read the pass across, beat the pass on his skates, set his feet for the shot) and then somehow let that shot from the outside slip underneath his pads. Very disappointing for him and the Oilers, especially considering how well he has played tonight.
That was a bit of a softy for Skinner. Is his superhuman run over? The Stars are wearing the color of kryptonite, after all.
Skinner will want that one back. It's not over yet.
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Jason Robertson didn't hear no bell. His second of the game cuts the lead back to one goal just 38 seconds into the third period, and the Stars are very much alive.
This is the same building where the NHL had to end the second period of a Western Conference final game 21 seconds early back in 2023 after fans threw trash on the ice. Vegas Golden Knights goalie Adin Hill was welcomed back to the ice by a flying bucket of popcorn after the intermission on that night.
The Stars seem to be considered those in the stands could become unruly. For the second straight intermission, the NHL Fan Code of Conduct — which, among other things, reminds fans not to throw objects onto the ice — has been shown on the video board.
For the Oilers to come out of that period with a two-goal lead feels like stealing. Credit to Stuart Skinner for holding down the fort, and the Edmonton defenders for a couple of huge blocks amidst the chaos.
Jesse Granger: Not a fan of the goalie change.
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What a move that was by Connor McDavid on the breakaway. Even with the back pressure from Roope Hintz, he sold the backhand deke so well and Casey DeSmith bit on it hard. You know what would've been nice? Having a top-five goalie in net to face the nearly impossible task of stopping that chance.
Give Roope Hintz some credit. He managed to keep up with the ridiculous speed of Connor McDavid there. But you have to basically tackle him to have any chance of stopping him.
A Mattias Ekholm shot block leads to a Connor McDavid breakaway. Oh my goodness, what a finish!
That was an absolute barrage by the Stars, leading up to the penalty and during the power play itself. Skinner has stood strong and made a couple of key stops, but with pucks flying at the net at this rate, one is going to eventually find the net.
The ice has been tilted heavily in the Stars' favor this period. It feels like the Oilers just need to get to the intermission and regroup.
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And Roope Hintz buries a power-play goal. Just like that, it's a one-goal game. Stuart Skinner has been sensational, but the Stars have been pouring it on this period.
Monster shift from the Robertson-Johnston-Bourque line (a big stop by Skinner on Bourque) leads to extended zone time for the Stars and an interference penalty on Mattias Ekholm. Another big power-play opportunity for Dallas.
To his credit, Casey DeSmith has made a couple of big saves here in the second period. To say benching Oettinger is bewildering is not a mark against DeSmith, a perfectly cromulent backup goaltender. But that Skinner goal will haunt the Stars if they end up losing this one by a goal or two.