"It was a crazy game, but we never stopped believing. We just went to work," Aho said. "You could feel the bench when we got one goal. OK, now we can get another one. That feeling, it's a great feeling to have."
2. That Third Period
Where to even begin with the final 20 minutes of regulation?
"It was a crazy Vegas show third period," Williams said. That seems like a fair place to being. "Up, back, the other way. Happy we came out with the win."
After a shoulder shrug of a first 40 minutes, the Hurricanes seemed to have a renewed energy and a confident swagger in the third period.
"We were a different team," Haula said. "We played well, played how we wanted to play."
"We got outplayed in the first, outplayed a little bit in the second," Williams said. "Maybe it was human nature, but they let off the pedal just a bit, and we were able to just get some momentum and get some goals."
Aho helped shave the deficit to a goal 79 seconds into the third period and were then set up with a four-minute power play and a golden opportunity to tie the game. Instead, not even a minute after Aho tallied, Chandler Stephenson raced down the ice on a shorthanded breakaway and restored Vegas' two-goal advantage.
That could have been a dagger.
But, the Canes answered back with three straight goals, including two on the power play, in just under 10 minutes.
Haula got the first power play goal, 1:59 after Stephenson's shorthanded marker.
"Little sparks can get your team going," Haula said.
Then, Haydn Fleury netted lucky number three of the season (and his career), a wrist shot from the point that had eyes and eluded Marc-Andre Fleury. The Canes were successful in challenging the no-goal ruling on the ice, as it seemed the officials mistook Fleury using his glove hand to peer around Warren Foegele as goaltender interference. In the end, the right call was made.