The Islanders didn't allow themselves to get deflated. Instead, they tried to generate a response.
"We had some good looks on the 5-on-3 and couldn't get one," Eberle said. "Then, obviously, they make it 2-0. You just try to find one."
And 1:46 later, they did.
Following Cirelli's tally, Barzal immediately pushed the pace, as the dynamic centerman blitzed his path up ice transporting the puck from the Islanders zone and into Tampa's end. As he entered, both Bolts forward Alex Killorn and defenseman Ryan McDonagh closed on him, so Barzal dropped his pass back to Eberle. From atop the left circle, Eberle darted to the high slot and snapped his signature backhand past Andrei Vasilevskiy's blocker to make it a one-goal game.
"We needed it," Islanders Head Coach Barry Trotz said of Eberle's goal. "The first period, I felt pretty good. They ended up scoring, but I felt good. The way we were playing, I felt that we were going to be fine. They made it 2-0. Then, the game teeters a little bit, if they make it 3-0 it gets pretty daunting. But that was a big goal for us. We're back to square one as we were down a goal after the first period."
The Islanders responsive icebreaker not only zapped any momentum Tampa had obtained following Cirelli's breakaway, but ushered a noticeable jolt that revved up the Islanders for the remainder of the period.
While the Bolts were fortunate enough to survive the Islanders commanding push after Eberle's tally at 14:22 in the frame, the Islanders didn't let up. They stormed out to take the third, with Barzal taking the lead.
In the opening minutes of the third period, Barzal was electric, skating and pelting the Bolts with chance-after-chance and his linemates followed suit.
"I thought that was Mat's best game of the series," Trotz said. "He was using his skill set, he was making good decisions and he was playing all 200-feet of the ice, which is big. He was a factor."