Game 3 could tilt the Stanley Cup Final series

Florida Panthers’ Tomas Nosek (92) checks Edmonton Oilers’ Viktor Arvidsson (33) during the second period in Game 2 of the Stanley Cup Finals on Friday night in Edmonton, Alberta.

Jason Franson/The Canadian Press via AP

Florida Panthers goalie Sergei Bobrovsky (72) stops Edmonton Oilers’ Connor McDavid (97) during the first overtime period in Game 2 of the Stanley Cup Finals on Friday night in Edmonton, Alberta.

Darryl Dyck/The Canadian Press via AP

SUNRISE, Fla. — After going the distance in the Stanley Cup Final last year with the Florida Panthers beating the Edmonton Oilers by a goal in Game 7 and being one win apart during the regular season, not much is separating these two NHL powerhouses so far in their championship series rematch.

This final is just about as close as can be through two games, with each team winning once in overtime and knowing full well one puck off the post or into the net could have dramatically changed the situation. That remains the case going into Game 3 tonight at Florida, with the very real chance that a couple of bounces and small adjustments could tilt the series one way or the other.

“It’s just the back-and-forth punches of a heavyweight tilt,” veteran Oilers forward Adam Henrique said after practice Sunday. “Every shift matters so much because it might be a 1-0 game and a 2-1 game, and those mistakes that could either cost you or pay dividends for you and keeping that pressure high — that can be the difference.”

This has been a different final than many in the recent past, in part because there’s no underdog in it who no one expected to get this far, the opponents know each other well and the teams are nearly at full strength. That has made for some quality hockey where the goals have piled up and yet the defense and goaltending have at the same time been stellar.

“Everything is contested all over the ice, so you’re having more events and it’s more intense, but what a wonderful thing to be able to say that in the final,” Panthers coach Paul Maurice said on Sunday. “Both teams are competing defensively.”


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