Ducks knot series with OT victory

The Canadian Press
Donna Spencer

EDMONTON–Ducks’ captain Ryan Getzlaf was a one-man wrecking crew in Anaheim’s 4-3 overtime win over the Edmonton Oilers last night.
Getzlaf scored twice and assisted on two goals, including Jakob Silfverberg’s OT winner just 45 seconds in, to even up their best-of-seven series at 2-2.
“If he keeps doing this, we’re going to have fun time here,” Silfverberg said.
“He’s one of the best players in the league and when he plays like he did tonight, with that aggressiveness and physicality, he kind of pushes the whole team to move forward with him.”
Game 5 goes tomorrow night in Anaheim, with the series returning to Rogers Place for Game 6 on Sunday.
“We haven’t accomplished anything yet,” Getzlaf stressed. “All we did was get our home-ice [advantage] back.
“We’ve got to take this one, breathe, breathe, the next day-and-a-half here, and get ready for Game 5.”
The road has been kinder than home ice so far in this series. Anaheim won two in a row in Edmonton after the Oilers opened with a pair of victories at the Honda Center.
“We’re going into a building where we have had success before,” noted Oilers’ captain Connor McDavid.
“We’re comfortable playing there.
“You never want to play a series where you lose both at home, but that is the case both teams find themselves in,” he added.
“Now it is a race to two [wins].”
Rickard Rakell also scored for the Ducks while John Gibson made 29 saves for the victory.
Drake Caggiula, Milan Lucic, and McDavid replied for the hosts, with Cam Talbot stopping 35 shots in the loss.
Oilers’ coach Todd MacLellan had called Getzlaf “the head of their snake” prior to the series.
With his team trailing 2-0 after the first period, the 31-year-old from Regina sparked a comeback–scoring 97 seconds into the second and then producing a go-ahead goal at 14:25.
Caggiula scored late in the third to send the game into an extra period.
Getzlaf’s pass from the boards to a wide-open Silfverberg for a one-timer ended it quickly.
Getzlaf’s four-point night gives him four goals and four assists in the series. With his 35th and 36th career playoff goals, he surpassed Teemu Selanne as the franchise all-time leader.
“When he’s your centrepiece, and he’s doing what he’s doing and accomplishing what he’s doing, you’d have to scratch your head and really dig deep into the archives of when he’s played better,” said Ducks’ coach Randy Carlyle.
“He’s been an energized player since our five-day break,” he noted.
“Whatever he had on that five-day break, we’re going to find out and give him more of it.”
“I feel good right now, I’ll put it that way,” said Getzlaf. It’s a fun time of year.
“I love playing right now.”
Edmonton unsuccessfully challenged goaltender interference on Getzlaf’s goal at 1:37.
The Oilers contended Corey Perry bumped Talbot as he was beaten five-hole on a wrist shot.
Gibson held off the Oilers over the first 10 minutes of the game, when they outshot the Ducks 8-3.
McDavid was the most dangerous player in the opening minutes with a pair of scoring chances.
Elsewhere in the NHL playoffs, Pittsburgh beat Washington 3-2 to lead that series 3-1.