After
a dominant win in Game 4
, the Islanders were in tough to start Game 5. The Penguins opened the scoring, but in a foreshadowing moment, Anthony Beauvillier scored with 54.4 seconds to play in the first period.
The Islanders resolve was really tested in the second period, where they were outshot 20-4 by the Penguins, managing to come out of the barrage down 2-1 thanks to a Herculean effort by Ilya Sorokin. Trotz says greatness is born of longevity, but Sorokin stole what is the first of hopefully many pivotal playoff games for the Islanders on Monday.
"The first two periods were not pretty and he allowed us to hang around," Trotz said. "It all goes up front on Ilya. We don't have a chance if he doesn't have an outstanding game in the first two periods.
They had taken a big punch from Pittsburgh and found themselves still very much in the game going into the third period, armed with the belief that they could come back, just like they did in a
4-3 OT win in Game 1
. They also had their Game 3 experience to fall back on, where they rallied twice, first from 3-1, then again from 4-3, putting a scare into the Pens, before ultimately falling 5-4.
By the time Jordan Eberle had sent the Islanders to OT, Trotz was feeling confident in his group. The veteran coach has plenty of rallies in his 20+ years of coaching - including a handful of dramatic ones from the Isles in his three-year tenure - and felt like his team had it in them to finish the job.
"We got stronger because it wasn't easy," Trotz said. "It wasn't going our way and instead of trying to shift the blame or anything we just dug in. That's to me what good teams do, when you're not at your best, you find a way to hang in there, find a way to win and that to me shows a lot of character to our group. I always complement our group on character and that's one of our strengths."