NHL

Tuesday's NHL playoffs: Flyers stave off elimination with 4-3 win over Islanders

Associated Press

Toronto — The Philadelphia Flyers and their big boy pants are sticking around the Toronto bubble for at least one more game.

Scott Laughton scored on a redirect in overtime after Philadelphia blew a late two-goal lead, helping the Flyers stave off elimination with a 4-3 win over the New York Islanders on Tuesday night.

Philadelphia Flyers center Sean Couturier (14) tries to hold onto the puck under pressure from New York Islanders center Casey Cizikas (53) and teammate Matt Martin (17) during the second period.

The Flyers pulled it out after blowing a late two-goal and coach Alain Vigneault called on his top players to “put on their big boy pants” for Game 5.

“The big boy pants is something they’re aware of,” Vigneault said. “They don’t need me to motivate them. They’re a group the motivates themselves. They've got a lot pride and a lot of compete.”

Claude Giroux and James van Riemsdyk responded their coach’s urging with their sticks, scoring their first postseason goals after New York went up 1-0 on Josh Bailey’s first-period goal. Matt Niskanen added his first playoff goal early in the third period to put the Flyers up 3-1.

The scrappy Islanders made a big push late, though, tying it on goals by Brock Nelson and Derick Brassard 93 seconds apart.

“The third period we were coming,” Islanders coach Barry Trotz said.

Flyers goalie Carter Hart, who stopped 29 shots, made some spectacular saves in overtime and Laughton redirected Ivan Provorov’s at 12:20 to pull the Flyers within 3-2 in the best-of-seven second-round series.

Game 6 is Thursday in the Toronto bubble.

“In games like this, you need everyone pulling the rope and moving in the right direction,” van Riemsdyk said. “Everyone did their job and played their role tonight.”

The Islanders put themselves in position to clinch the series with consecutive wins with different goalies in Games 3 and 4.

Semyon Varlamov returned to the crease after Thomas Greiss stopped 36 shots in Game 4 and was sharp early as the Flyers controlled play much of the first period.

The Islanders opened the second period on a power play after managing four shots in the first and immediately capitalized. Bailey scored on a wraparound through a pile of bodies in the crease, a goal upheld upon review for goaltender interference.

The Flyers withstood another New York push in the second and Giroux scored late, redirecting a shot by Phil Myers through Varlamov’s legs for his first goal in 26 playoff games.

Van Riemsdyk gave the Flyers their first lead since early in Game 3, one-timing a pass from Laughton past Varlamov’s glove side 21/2 minutes later.

Niskanen made it 3-1 following a New York turnover in the third period, beating Varlamov with a slap shot from the right circle.

The Islanders weren’t done fighting.

Nelson seemed to catch Hart off guard with a one-timer between the circles with 4:14 left in regulation and Brassard sent it to overtime with a goal off a nifty feed by Cal Clutterbuck.

Varlamov stopped 29 shots, but had no chance on Laughton’s redirect through traffic.

“We came back in the game, we showed some character and it could have gone either way,” Brassard said. “It wasn’t our night and we’ll focus on what we need to do in the next couple of days.”

More NHL playoffs

Vancouver 2, Las Vegas 1: Elias Petterson scored the go-ahead goal early in the third period, Thatcher Demko made 42 saves in his first NHL playoff start and the Canucks staved off elimination by beating the Golden Knights in Game 5 of their second-round series.

Western Conference top-seeded Vegas outshot Vancouver 43-17 and only cracked Demko once, on a highlight-reel goal by defenseman Shea Theodore in the second. Brock Boeser also scored for the Canucks and got the primary assist on Pettersson’s goal by taking the shot the 21-year-old Swede deflected past Robin Lehner.

Because of Demko’s dominant performance in net and timely scoring, there will be a Game 6 on Thursday night at Rogers Place. The Canucks joined the Dallas Stars and Philadelphia Flyers as teams down 3-1 this round to force a Game 6.

The winner of this series will face the winner of Stars-Avalanche in the Western Conference final.

Conference semifinals

EASTERN CONFERENCE

(6) N.Y. Islanders 3, (1) Philadelphia 2

Monday, Aug. 24: N.Y. Islanders 4, Philadelphia 0

Wednesday, Aug. 26: Philadelphia 4, N.Y. Islanders 3, OT

Thursday, Aug. 27: Philadelphia vs. N.Y. Islanders, ppd.

Saturday, Aug. 29: N.Y. Islanders 3, Philadelphia 1

Sunday, Aug. 30: N.Y. Islanders 3, Philadelphia 2

Tuesday, Sept. 1: Philadelphia 4, N.Y. Islanders 3, OT

Thursday, Sept. 3: N.Y. Islanders vs. Philadelphia, TBD

x-Saturday, Sept. 5: N.Y. Islanders vs. Philadelphia, TBD

(2) Tampa Bay 4, (4) Boston 1

Sunday, Aug. 23: Boston 3, Tampa Bay 2

Tuesday, Aug. 25 : Tampa Bay 4, Boston 3, OT

Wednesday, Aug. 26: Tampa Bay 7, Boston 1

Friday, Aug. 28: Tampa Bay vs. Boston, ppd.

Saturday, Aug. 29: Tampa Bay 3, Boston 1

Monday, Aug. 31: Tampa Bay 3, Boston 2, 2OT

WESTERN CONFERENCE

(1) Las Vegas 3, (5) Vancouver 2

Sunday, Aug. 23: Las Vegas 5, Vancouver 0

Tuesday, Aug. 25: Vancouver 5, Las Vegas 2

Thursday, Aug. 27: Las Vegas vs. Vancouver, ppd.

Saturday, Aug. 29: Las Vegas 3, Vancouver 0

Sunday, Aug. 30: Las Vegas 5, Vancouver 3

Tuesday, Sept. 1: Vancouver 2, Las Vegas 1

Thursday, Sept. 3: Las Vegas vs. Vancouver, TBD

x-Friday, Sept. 4: Vancouver vs. Las Vegas, TBD

(3) Dallas 3, (2) Colorado 2

Saturday, Aug. 22: Dallas 5,Colorado 3

Monday, Aug. 24: Dallas 5, Colorado 2

Wednesday, Aug. 26: Colorado 6, Dallas 4

Friday, Aug. 28: Colorado vs. Dallas, ppd.

Sunday, Aug. 30: Dallas 5, Colorado 4

Monday, Aug. 31: Colorado 6, Dallas 3

Wednesday, Sept. 2: Colorado vs. Dallas, 8 p.m.

x-Friday, Sept. 4: Colorado vs. Dallas, TBD