Casey Cizikas' breakaway goal 14:48 into overtime evened the best-of-7 series with Game 3 at Nassau Coliseum on Thursday (7:30 p.m. ET: NBCSC, CBC, TVAS). With the Islanders home for the next two games, and a raucous crowd of 12,000 expected at each, the complexion of the series looks much different than it would have if they hadn't recovered to win after letting a 3-1 lead slip away in the third period Monday.
"It gives you confidence," Islanders coach Barry Trotz said Tuesday. "You have a lot more confidence when it's 1-1 than when it's 0-2. … I liked our response. We went into a tough atmosphere against a very good team and we're 1-1. So I don't know if there's any momentum, but it gives you a little confidence for your group that, 'You know what? This is going to be a battle. This was fun.'"
The Islanders would've faced a difficult challenge had the Bruins completed their comeback by winning in overtime after winning 5-2 in Game 1 on Saturday. But they quickly regrouped following Brad Marchand's game-tying power-play goal with 4:54 remaining in third and pushed back.
With the help of a power play, the Islanders outshot the Bruins 7-1 over the rest of the period and 8-1 in the first 10:20 of overtime. The reward came when Cizikas capitalized on a turnover by Bruins defenseman Jeremy Lauzon and beat goalie Tuukka Rask over the left shoulder for the first Stanley Cup Playoff overtime goal of his career.
"We knew we just needed to refocus," Islanders forward Josh Bailey said. "They took advantage of some opportunities. At that point, you're in overtime, so anything can happen. You've got to refocus. I thought we did that and happy to come away with the win."