When Chet made it back to his seat, he was unwelcome.
"Everybody around me, the girlfriends and the wives, are saying, 'You need to go back out, because we did better when you were out,'" he said, smiling. "But I stayed."
Chet saw Logan tie the game 3-3 at 12:53, giving him six goals, tying Hertl and Golden Knights forward Mark Stone for the most in the Stanley Cup Playoffs. He has 89 points (40 goals, 49 assists) in 103 NHL playoff games.
Then forward Kevin Labanc gave the Sharks a 4-3 lead at 13:21.
"It was total bedlam and chaos," Chet said. "I mean, we were doing group hugs and jumping up and down just like kids. It was unbelievable."
And it wasn't over yet.
* * * * *
John Goodrow sat in one of the end zones. When Pavelski went down, he worried the game would get ugly. But sitting behind him was Ed Dillon, the father of Sharks defenseman Brenden Dillon. Ed was more optimistic.
"Ed said, 'Well, five-minute penalty, we can get as many goals as we want,'" John said.
The Sharks got four. But then, right in front of them, Golden Knights forward Jonathan Marchessault tied the game 4-4 with 47 seconds left.
"It was just, ugh, deflating," John said. "Not demoralized, but just deflating at that point."
Goodrow is the Sharks' fourth-line center. He didn't play from the 10:00 mark of the second period until the 16:49 mark of the third, then had three shifts late in the period. He didn't play again until the 14:04 mark of overtime, then didn't take another shift until 18:01.