The New Jersey Devils proved in Game 3 of their first-round playoff series with the heavily favored Tampa Bay Lightning that they are not a team simply content with reaching the postseason.
After climbing back into this best-of-seven Monday with a gritty 5-2 victory over the Lightning Billy Price Jersey , the Devils are talking tough, even though they still trail the series 2-1.
“We showed it’s going to be a series,” said Devils forward Blake Coleman. “It’s going to be a dogfight.”
Such sets the stage for what should be an intriguing Game 4 at the Prudential Center on Wednesday night.
The Lightning won the first two games of this series in Tampa, 5-2 and 5-3, and twice led Game 3 by the scores of 1-0 and 2-1 early in the third period. However, the Devils unloaded 20 shots in the final period, took advantage of an uncharacteristically undisciplined Lightning squad, and scored four times — twice into an empty net — to secure the organization’s first playoff victory in six years.
“We did it to ourselves,” said Lightning coach Jon Cooper.
That feeling is the prevailing sentiment around the Lightning heading into Game 4. Lightning players and coaches firmly believe that, as the Eastern Conference’s top seed and far more experienced team in the series, what happens on the ice is largely on them, not the Devils.
“It’s not one game [url=]Tyler Boyd Jersey[/url] , it’s a series,” said Lightning defenseman Victor Hedman, who logged more than 28 minutes in the Game 3 defeat. “We’re still on top and got to refocus and regroup to get ready for the next one.”
Special teams have been a big part of this series, so far. The Lightning handed the Devils seven power plays Monday, and the Devils tied the game in the third period on a Will Butcher 5-on-3 power play goal. On the flip side, the Lightning also scored two more power play goals, giving them five in nine opportunities in the series.
“They have such a lethal power play that if you give them one, two, three, four, five opportunities a night, they’re going to make you pay Cooper Kupp Jersey ,” said Devils alternate captain Taylor Hall. “On the other side, our power play didn’t really come through when we wanted it to — though we got the one on the 5-on-3 that got us back in the game — but we have to regroup and figure out what we have to do against their penalty kill.”
Hall, coming off a Hart Trophy-worthy regular season, turned in a brilliant performance Monday and has five points in the first three games of the series. He tied the game with his second goal of the series in the second period, then assisted on Butcher’s game-tying tally and made a gorgeous rush up ice before setting up Stefan Noesen’s eventual game-winner at 12:55 of the third period.
“He’s so consistent, does it every night,” teammate Marcus Johansson said of Hall, who had a career-high 93 points in 2017-18. “He scores big goals, creates a lot of offense for him and his linemates. I’m really impressed with the way he’s been playing all year.”
After shaky goaltending from Keith Kinkaid in the first two games of the series, the Devils switched to Cory Schneider in Game 3 and he stopped 34 of 36 shots, making a stunning save on a Ryan McDonagh breakaway with the score tied in the third period.
“Me and (Brian Boyle) looked at each other halfway through the game and said this is the Cory we know,” shared Coleman Jarvis Landry Jersey , who scored one of two empty-net goals for New Jersey near the end of the game.
Despite the rousing finish and gutty effort by the home team, the Lightning are still up a game and in the driver’s seat heading into Game 4. A win Thursday and they head back to Florida one victory away from advancing to the second round.
Considering they did not trail for a single second over the first 172 minutes, 55 seconds of the series, the Lightning have plenty of reason to be confident ahead of Wednesday’s much-anticipated clash.
“We still feel like we’re in a good spot in the series,” said McDonagh. “If we keep ourselves within our system and playing the right way, we feel we’ve got a good chance.”
The Lightning could be without two of their top forwards on Wednesday, however. Ryan Callahan, who missed Game 3 with an upper-body injury, did not practice Tuesday and neither did Tyler Johnson, who scored goals in each of the first two games down in Tampa, but needed a maintenance day Tuesday for unspecified reasons.
Former NFL player and general manager Matt Millen says he is being treated for a rare disease that has robbed his heart of most of its normal function.
The 60-year-old Millen told the Morning Call in Allentown, Pennsylvania that he has been diagnosed with amyloidosis Tyler Eifert Jersey , a life-threatening illness that may force him to seek a heart transplant. Millen said he has been receiving chemotherapy once a week to treat the condition that left his heart functioning at just 30 percent.
Millen played 12 seasons as a linebacker in the NFL for the Raiders, 49ers and Redskins – and won four Super Bowl rings.
He later served as Detroit’s general manager and has also spent three decades as a broadcaster. Millen told the Morning Call he plans to return to the booth in the fall.
Millen’s heart issues began in 2011, when he first felt chest pain while exercising. Heart tests, including a cardiac catheterization, showed nothing wrong.
Amyloidosis often goes undiagnosed because its symptoms mimic those of more common diseases. But Millen’s symptoms grew worse over time, and he visited doctors for six years before finally getting diagnosed with the rare disease last July.
”I know what you have,” Millen recalled the doctor telling him, ”and you’re not going to like it.”
Millen’s case reached the point where he was risking the kind of heart failure that would eventually require a transplant. Millen spent the week before the Super Bowl undergoing tests at the Mayo Clinic in Minnesota.
”When a bump comes up in the road, you deal with it,” Millen said. ”It’s ridiculous to feel sorry for yourself. I’m thankful for what I have, and I’ll take what I get.”