A fracas ensued and penalties were doled out, including a slashing minor for Mrazek, perhaps a first for him since he didn't make contact?
"I don't think so. Maybe. Who knows?" Mrazek said, and then paused. "Did I get a penalty for that? Oh, wow. I didn't even know."
The Canes couldn't convert on their ensuing power play, and the chippiness? Well, it continued later in the period, with Thornton, regularly parked at the top of the crease, exchanging barbs, both physical and verbal, with Mrazek. The two teams then came together at the end of the second period before being separated.
Not much spilled of the physicality spilled over into the third period - there were two points on the line in a 2-2 game, after all - but the emotional undertones remained.
"You feel like you're in the game, and you want to make the saves for the guys and get the win," Mrazek said.
3. Shining in the Shootout
So, that's what Petr Mrazek did. After Logan Couture netted a game-tying goal late in the second period, one that could have been a momentum-swinger, Mrazek was perfect the rest of the way.
He finished the night with 28 saves in 65 minutes of regulation and overtime hockey and then posted a clean sheet in the shootout. Kevin Lebanc's shot hit the goal post before Mrazek blockered away Erik Karlsson's try and then shut the door on Logan Couture.
Mrazek dropped to a knee to pump his fist in celebration.
"I like shootouts. It's fun. The fans enjoy it. For the goalies, I think it's fun, as well," Mrazek said. "I like the battle."
"He's competitive," Brind'Amour said. "He does not want to let that thing in."
Andrei Svechnikov, the Canes' third shooter, went forehand-backhand-forehand for the game-deciding goal in the shootout.