Down 3-1, this is when the Blue Jackets got their forecheck going, tilting the ice on the Lightning, forcing them to play defense, keeping the puck out of the hands of Stamkos, Kucherov and center Brayden Point, their three 40-goal scorers.
"We were smarter with our puck play and it allowed us to get a forecheck going," Foligno said. "You could just see our game starting to come from that. Our legs got going, our decisions with the puck were so much better and it just puts us in better positions to be offensive."
It still took a sprawling glove save by Bobrovsky on Stamkos at the left post as the buzzer sounded to keep the game within reach going into the third period. It was his 11th save of the second period after he was beaten three times on 13 shots in the first.
Bobrovsky made five more saves in the third and finished with 26.
"We don't have a chance if he doesn't play the way he plays that last 40," Tortorella said.
A solo rush by Savard, who went around Lightning defenseman Victor Hedman, cut the lead to 3-2 at 7:56 of the third period.
The Blue Jackets' excellent penalty kill, which was tied for first in the NHL this season with the Lightning and Arizona Coyotes at 85.0 percent, turned a high sticking double minor by Brandon Dubinsky at 9:23 into a game-changing shorthanded goal by Anderson at 11:54.
Jones capped the comeback with his power-play goal at 14:05.
"I was really proud of the group because once we got life we started to take over and started to instill our game on them," Foligno said. "It's going to be huge in this series because that's a good team, man, and they don't need much to make you pay. But we showed we can score some big goals too."