Despite the skewed shot clock, the Islanders found themselves in a 2-2 tie heading into the third period. While the shot totals in the period were an even 10-10, Boston pulled away with three tallies to take a series lead.
"I didn't think we were that bad in the third, they just had a couple of opportunities and capitalized on them," Greene said. "We just have to create a bit more there… It looks a little lopsided on the scoresheet, but I don't think it was as bad as it looks."
The Islanders had a golden opportunity to pull ahead with Boston taking a too many men penalty early in the third, but could not convert. After a dicey sequence in the Islanders' zone to end the power play, Boston rode the momentum of a successful penalty kill, scoring 18 seconds after the Islanders power play expired.
On the winning goal, the Bruins worked the puck loose deep in the Islanders zone and fed McAvoy at the point and the defenseman beat Sorokin through traffic at 6:20. That seemed to jolt the Islanders, who had a grade-A look from Kyle Palmieri in the slot, but the winger put his chance over the net.
Pastrnak delivered the dagger with 4:10 remaining, making a nice move around Josh Bailey before putting his third of the night through a screen and Sorokin. Hall iced the game with an empty-netter on the power play at 18:35, giving Boston a 2-for-2 man advantage on the evening.
As disappointing as the result was, the Islanders turned the focus to Game 2 immediately after the game.
"The playoffs comes down to a chip-in, or a shot, but you just have to stay on top of them and play the way that we know got us here, execute when we can," Jordan Eberle said. "We're a veteran team, we're going to regroup from this and get ready for Game 2."