Lightning romp Islanders in dominant victory to open East final
Tampa offence led by Brayden Point with 5 points in series opener
Braydon Point and the well-rested Tampa Bay Lightning resembled a refreshed team eager to come off an extended break after switching cities in the NHL playoff bubble.
The New York Islanders, on the other hand, looked predictably travel- and game-weary.
Point scored twice and added three assists in an 8-2 romp over the Islanders to open the Eastern Conference finals on Monday night. Nikita Kucherov had four assists, and scored his 34th career playoff goal to move one ahead of Martin St. Louis for first on the franchise list.
The Lightning showed no signs of rust following a near week-long break after eliminating the Boston Bruins in their second-round series with a 3-2 double-overtime win on Aug. 31. They instead resembled a refreshed team by scoring three times on nine shots to build a 3-1 lead by the 10:46 mark of the first period, and matched a franchise record for most goals scored in a playoff game.
The Islanders, by comparison, came out flat, looking like a team that spent Sunday flying to Edmonton, Alberta, from Toronto, a day after a 4-0 win over Philadelphia in Game 7 of their second-round series.
WATCH | Rob Pizzo recaps Lightnings' blowout win:
"Let's be honest, this is a one-off. They had to grind through a seven-game series and then travel and play and change time zones," Lightning coach Jon Cooper said.
"Now we're on even terms. There's no travel. Everyone gets the same rest," he added. It's easy to say now that the game turned out the way it did. Bottom line is, you've got to take advantage of a tired team. Let's be honest, this was a one-off."
Point and Kucherov's five-point nights set a franchise playoff record. Yanni Gourde scored twice, Victor Hedman had a goal and two assists and Ryan McDonagh and Ondrej Palat also scored for the second-seeded Lightning.
Andrei Vasilevskiy made 23 saves, and the Lightning have won five straight, matching their longest playoff run since 2015.
Game 2 is Wednesday.
Thomas Greiss, who stopped 16 shots in earning his first post-season shutout on Saturday, was yanked after giving up three goals on nine shots. He was replaced by Semyon Varlamov, who gave up five goals on 25 shots.
Jordan Eberle briefly tied the game at 1 with a power-play goal for New York, the only remaining team that played a preliminary round elimination series. Nick Leddy's third-period goal briefly cut the Lightning lead to 6-2.
Islanders captain Anders declined to use the team's short turnaround as an excuse.
"We've been through travel and transitions like this regular season playoffs, all before, so it just takes a few minutes to get your legs going a little bit and then you settled in," Lee said. "I don't think that was indicative of the whole game."
The eight goals allowed matched a franchise low, following an 8-3 loss to the New York Rangers in the Islanders' second playoff game on April 10, 1975.
"Every time we made a mistake, they scored," Islanders coach Barry Trotz said.
The opening goal reflected the disparity in rest between the two teams.
Point opened the scoring 74 seconds in by bursting up the left wing, getting a step a around Ryan Pulock, driving to the net and wrapping the puck around Greiss.
Hedman said the goal provided the Lightning an immediate lift.
"Obviously, we haven't played for a week, and we were thinking how the start was going to be, and then Pointer does that," Hedman said. "I think he set the tone from the start."
After Eberle scored, the Lightning struck for two goals on consecutive shots, coming 2:34 apart.
Hedman, from the blue line and set up by Point's no-look pass, blasted a shot inside the left post with Greiss screened by Tampa Bay's Alex Killorn for a power-play goal. Then McDonagh beat Greiss high on the short side from the left circle.
Point extended his point streak to seven games, in which he's combined for four goals and 12 assists. He also has a point in 13 of Tampa Bay's 14 playoff games this year.
Isles' frustration
The Lightning piled on by scoring twice in the second period, including a delayed goal scored by Gourde following an NHL video review as play progressed. The horn was blown 14 seconds after Gourde's shot crossed the goal line and bounced off Islanders defenceman Andy Greene's stick, which was in the net.
Islanders checking-line forward Cal Clutterbuck briefly returned to the bench but did not play in the third period. He limped off midway through the second period, after taking Mikail Sergachev's slap shot off his right ankle.
Trotz had no update on Clutterbuck's status.
Frustration also set in late in the second period, when New York's Mathew Barzal angrily slammed his stick on the glass following a missed scoring opportunity.
No positive COVID-19 tests for 6th straight week
The NHL had no positive COVID-19 tests for the sixth straight week, the league announced Monday.
A total of 2,534 tests were administered from Aug. 30-Sept. 5, with all 52 members of each club's traveling parties, including players, tested daily.
The number of tests administered dropped from 4,644 two weeks ago as teams were eliminated from the Stanley Cup Playoffs and left the bubbles in Edmonton and Toronto.
Just four teams — the Vegas Golden Knights, Dallas Stars, Tampa Bay Lightning and New York Islanders — remain in the Stanley Cup playoffs, all of them now housed in Edmonton as the season nears its end
With files from Field Level Media