"They had a huge push at the start of the third period, and [Anderson] makes four or five huge saves to keep the (3-2) lead," Senators forward Mark Stone said. "That could be the difference in the series; just getting that one huge performance from him might have sealed the deal for us."
It was another business-as-usual approach for Anderson, who made it a point to credit his teammates for blocking 20 shots.
"It's huge to see that effort; it elevates your game knowing that these guys are battling and they are paying the price," Anderson said. "In the first period when [Bobby Ryan] laid down there, when [Stone] laid down, words can't express my thoughts. You know your guys are battling and everyone works a little harder for each other when guys do that type of play."
Ryan finished with three blocked shots, including diving back-to-back blocks against Rangers defenseman Ryan McDonagh six seconds apart midway through the first period.
"We've tried to be good in front of him all year, we've tried to take a little bit of the workload, and it hasn't always been the case," Ryan said. "Those [McDonagh shots] are two point-blanks right down the middle if we don't get someone in front of them. You always want to reward him because you know he's back there, he's going to make that first save and bail you out numerous times.
"He did it in the third period, so to take a little bit off of him means a lot to all of us."
Anderson stopped all nine shots he faced during four power-play opportunities for the Rangers, had the secondary assist on the decisive goal by captain Erik Karlsson in the second period, and made the big saves in the final five minutes of the third with the Senators clinging to a 3-2 lead.
Never did he appear rattled at any point in the game.