Ryan Getzlaf (2-2-4) established and matched NHL career highs for goals and points in a playoff game, capping the night with the assist on Jakob Silfverberg's goal 45 seconds into overtime, to help the Ducks overcome a multigoal deficit and late tying goal by the Oilers to even their Western Conference Second Round series at two games apiece.
* Getzlaf scored his 35th and 36th NHL playoff goals to surpass Teemu Selanne (35) for first place on the Ducks' all-time list. Getzlaf also holds Ducks records for postseason assists (76) and points (112) in 112 games.
* Getzlaf ranks second in the League with 13 points (seven goals, six assists) in eight playoff games, including eight points (four goals, four assists) during the second round and five multipoint games overall. His four-point game Wednesday was the second such output of his NHL playoff career; he had four points (one goal, three assists) against the Calgary Flames in Game 1 of the 2015 Western Conference Second Round. Corey Perry (two) is the only other player with multiple four-point playoff games for the Ducks.
* Silfverberg, who scored the fourth game-winning goal, and first in overtime, of his NHL playoff career, tied the mark for second-fastest overtime goal in Ducks playoff history, six seconds shy of the franchise record of 39 seconds set by Steve Thomas in Game 4 of the 2003 Stanley Cup Final against the New Jersey Devils.
* Getzlaf and Silfverberg, who has a goal in each of his past four games (5-1-6), share second in the League with seven goals this postseason, one behind the Pittsburgh Penguins' Jake Guentzel.
* The Ducks tied a series at 2-2 after losing the first two games for the fourth time in eight instances; they also did it against the Devils in the 2003 Stanley Cup Final, against the Los Angeles Kings in the 2014 Western Conference Second Round, and against the Nashville Predators in the 2016 Western Conference First Round. However, the Ducks never have rallied to win any of the previous seven such series.
* Elias notes that when teams are tied 2-2 in a best-of-7 Stanley Cup Playoff series, the winner of Game 5 holds an all-time series record of 196-54 (78.7 percent), including a 3-0 mark in 2017.