Kings beat Blues 3-2 in OT, take 3-2 series lead

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Associated Press

Associated Press

ST. LOUIS — The Los Angeles Kings had every reason to be deflated.

Instead, they’re going home with a chance to wrap up their first-round series against the St. Louis Blues because they refused to let it a letdown linger.

Defenseman Slava Voynov scored on an odd-man rush eight minutes into overtime and the defending Stanley Cup champions, after surrendering the lead in the final minute of regulation, beat the Blues for the third straight time with a 3-2 victory Wednesday night.

“We are a resilient group,” said Jeff Carter, who had the Kings’ other two goals. “A lot of guys have been through a lot of different experiences over their careers and I think we all kind of draw off that.

“We don’t get too high, we don’t get too low, and that’s a big thing for us.”

Game 6 is in Los Angeles on Friday night and the Kings have won nine in a row at home, including the regular season.

Blues rookie Jaden Schwartz took Voynov’s winner hard, smashing his stick several times against the sideboards and glass before leaving the ice.

“We lost an important hockey game. Frustration is definitely part of it,” Schwartz said. “We live to fight another day.”

Coach Ken Hitchcock didn’t sound at all defeated, calling Game 5 the team’s best overall effort of the series and calling overtime “a crapshoot.”

“If we play like that again, I like our chances,” Hitchcock said. “All we’ve got to do is win a road game and get it back here.”

Alex Pietrangelo scored on a wrist shot from the point with 44.1 seconds remaining in regulation and goalie Brian Elliott off for an extra attacker. That forced overtime for the second time in the series, and was the third goal in the final minute of the third period in the series.

“I saw him release it,” Quick said. “Usually when you see it come off the stick you have a better chance of stopping it, but I just couldn’t seem to pick it up, so it was disappointing at the time.

“But we were able to bounce back and get one there in overtime, which was huge.”

The Kings’ Justin Williams scored in the final minute of a 2-1 overtime loss in Game 1, also in St. Louis. The Blues had a 2-0 series lead after Barret Jackman scored in the final minute of Game 2.

All five games have been decided by one goal, the only first-round series with that distinction.

The Kings ended the Blues’ eight-game home win streak in which Elliott allowed one goal each time.

Carter scored in the opening minute of the second and third periods and Quick had another strong game for the Kings, the first road team to win in the series.

Voynov scored the only goal in the Kings’ 1-0 Game 3 victory. That had been the defenseman’s lone point of the series before he joined the attack and slid the puck underneath Elliott’s pads off a setup by Anze Kopitar, confessing he’d been aiming high to the glove side.

“I think it’s very important for us to win on the road because we played so hard the last couple of games in St. Louis,” Voynov said. “So it will be a little bit easier for us to play in Los Angeles, where are fans are.”

Alex Steen’s third goal of the series tied it at 1 in the second period for St. Louis. Steen, whose short-handed overtime goal decided Game 1, twice took the puck from defenseman Jake Muzzin on the play.

Pietrangelo got the puck at the point off a clean faceoff win by David Backes and slid into the middle before threading a shot past Quick after two teammates were unsuccessful at deflection attempts.

Carter’s power-play goal capitalized on a tripping penalty to Jackman at the end of the second period. Kopitar got Elliott out of position on an odd-man rush before Carter converted a one-timer to put the Kings up 2-1.

The Blues dominated much of the scoreless opening period, responding from their fadeout while blowing a pair of leads in a 4-3 loss in Game 4. The reunited CPR fourth line of Adam Cracknell, Chris Porter and Ryan Reaves had a handful of nice scoring chances in addition to setting the tone physically.

It took the Kings just 14 seconds to take the lead in the second period, though, when Carter tapped a rebound past Elliott. Carter, among the NHL leaders with 26 goals, had no points in the first three games.

The Blues’ No. 1 line was victimized again, with Patrik Berglund and David Perron on the ice for the fifth straight goal by the Kings.

Steen tied it a little over five minutes later. Steen knocked Muzzin’s clearing effort out of the air with his stick and won a battle for the puck behind the net before wheeling around and scoring on a high shot.

Bruins 4, Maple Leafs 3

TORONTO — David Krejci scored his third goal of the night at 13:06 of overtime, giving the Bruins a 3-1 lead in their playoff series.

Krejci beat James Reimer with a shot from the faceoff circle after coming down the left wing.

The Bruins are 15-2 when leading a best-of-seven series 3-1. And Toronto is 2-12-1 in its last 15 games in Boston.

Joffrey Lupul, Cody Franson and Clarke MacArthur scored for Toronto. Patrice Bergeron added a goal for Boston, with captain Zdeno Chara collecting four assists.

Goalies Tuukka Rask and Reimer were both busy in an end-to-end overtime, with Toronto’s Matt Frattin hitting Rask’s goalpost.

Rangers 4, Capitals 3

NEW YORK — Dan Girardi and Derek Stepan scored third-period goals for the York Rangers, who squandered a two-goal lead and then held on to get even in the best-of-seven series.

Girardi ripped a shot from above the left circle, off a feed from Derick Brassard, to give the Rangers the lead again with a power-play goal 59 seconds into the third. The advantage was created by Jason Chimera’s interference penalty at the end of the second.

Stepan made it 4-2 at 6:02, scoring into a wide-open net at the end of a give-and-go play in front with Carl Hagelin, who had a goal and two assists.

Game 5 will be back in Washington on Friday before the series returns to Madison Square Garden on Sunday. The home team has won all four games in the first-round Eastern Conference matchup.

Red Wings 3, Ducks 2, OT

ANAHEIM, Calif. — Nick Bonino scored 1:54 into overtime, and the Ducks moved to the brink of the second round. Defenseman Ben Lovejoy took the puck behind the Detroit net and fed it in front. Bonino scored for the Ducks, who took a 3-2 series lead.

Game 6 is Friday night at Joe Louis Arena, where the Ducks will attempt to close out just their second playoff series victory since winning the Stanley Cup in 2007.

Johan Franzen and Mikael Samuelsson scored for the Red Wings, who had two brief leads. Jimmy Howard stopped 31 shots.

Captain Ryan Getzlaf tied it, Kyle Palmieri also scored, and Jonas Hiller made 29 saves in Anaheim’s first victory in three overtime games in the series.