"I don't think there's any secret. It's just luck of the draw, I guess," Trocheck shrugged. "I've gotten some greasy ones against them this year."
The official scorers awarded Trocheck with a second power-play goal in the first minute of the third period, but the team seemed pretty adamant on the ice that it was Hamilton's goal. Sure enough, the scoring change was made after the game, and Trocheck was given the primary assist on the tally.
Trocheck has now tallied a least a point in each of his last 11 games played (6g, 9a). He ranks tied for the team lead in goals (15) and is tied for second on the team in points (31).
Power Play
After just one power play in each of their last four games, the Canes went 2-for-4 on the man advantage with two critical game-tying goals. Trocheck had the first late in the second period to tie the game, through Aleksander Barkov quickly answered with his second of the game shortly after to put the Panthers ahead 2-1 heading into the intermission.
The Canes had almost 80 seconds of power play time to begin the third period, and they wanted to make it count.
"These guys know they're never out of a game, and that's what I love about them," Brind'Amour said. "You go up and down our lineup, everybody plays hard."
"The mindset was to get some momentum and get some shots. Hopefully we score on the power play and tie the game, and we did," Aho said. "That gave us a lot of confidence and momentum, and we took off. It was a solid, solid period for us."
Dougie Hamilton's wrist shot from the point had eyes through traffic and the reaching sticks of Trocheck and Staal to beat Bobrovsky and tie the game at two.