WINNIPEG, Manitoba (AP) â Kyle Connor scored 6:52 into the third overtime period, lifting the Winnipeg Jets to a first-round series sweep of the Edmonton Oilers with a 4-3 victory Monday night.
Mark Scheifele scored twice and Mason Appleton added a goal for the Jets, who eliminated the Oilers in the playoffs for the first time. It was the longest game in Winnipegâs history.
âIt was our mentality the whole overtime to just get pucks on net,â Connor said. âSo shot that one and yeah, that one feels pretty good.â
Between periods, the Jets cracked jokes, chugged water and snacked on bananas and energy bars.
âYouâve got to keep it light because itâs obviously a very tense situation,â captain Blake Wheeler said. âBut weâve had a good vibe in our room all year so you just try to keep it light and keep everyone loose and keep everyone hydrated â and tell the young guys like Kyle to get going and put an end to this thing.â
Connor Hellebuyck made 37 saves for Winnipeg, which will face the winner of the other North Division series between Toronto and Montreal. The Maple Leafs took a 2-1 series lead Monday night with a 2-1 victory.
So before the next round, the Jets will get some much-needed rest after playing three straight overtime games â including two on back-to-back nights. The long game Monday had weary players gasping for air when they headed to the bench.
Connor McDavid, Ryan Nugent-Hopkins and Alex Chiasson scored for Edmonton, which hasnât won a playoff series since 2017.
âI give our players credit, they battled hard,â Oilers coach Dave Tippett said. âThatâs not an easy game. We didnât get the result we wanted last night, you come in here and weâve got to play a back-to-back. We had a lot of players play very well. Itâs just disappointing we couldnât get the win.â
Mike Smith stopped 39 shots for the Oilers, who had high hopes for the postseason after finishing second in the North Division ahead of third-place Winnipeg. Edmonton also won the regular-season series 7-2.
âIt took all pieces of our game,â Jets coach Paul Maurice said. âI think the idea going into the series was that the regular season was a tell somehow, and I didnât feel that way. I think (Edmonton) is a very, very good team … (with) the two best offensive players in the world (in McDavid and Leon Draisaitl). In a bunch of those games, it was very, very close. And much like the series, right? Theyâre all one-goal games. And there was a piece to our game that got better in each one of those.â
Maurice called back-to-back games in the postseason âegregious.â Asked to describe his emotions, he said: âWell, exhaustion tonight.â
The Jets struck first on a power-play goal by Scheifele at 6:16 of the first period.
Just 1:17 later, McDavid â the NHLâs leading scorer in the regular season â got his first goal of the series when he scored on a wraparound after a give-and-go with Draisaitl.
The Jets regained the lead off Appletonâs deflection of Josh Morrisseyâs shot at 15:55 of the first.
Nugent-Hopkins tied it again at 3:44 of the second, scoring on a backhand into the top corner.
The Oilers took their first lead at 16:37 of the second on Chiassonâs power-play goal. But it was short-lived as Scheifele connected for his second goal of the night on a slap shot at 6:01 of the third.
TV cameras caught McDavid shaking his head in frustration on Edmontonâs bench.
âI think weâre a group that expects more from ourselves. Weâre a group that we want to push and continue to grow,â McDavid said. âAnd obviously we didnât do that in the playoffs. Weâre still sour. I donât think anyoneâs going to deny that.â
NOTES: Wheeler took a shot in the groin late in the third and headed straight to the dressing room bent over in pain. He was back on the ice for overtime. âIâve got three beautiful kids, weâre not having any more, so what the hell,â he said with a laugh. … Oilers defenseman Darnell Nurse logged 62 minutes, 7 seconds, the third-most in NHL history since statisticians starting tracking playing time. … It was the Jetsâ first series win since 2018, when they beat Minnesota in five games and then Nashville in seven before losing to Vegas in the conference finals. … This was the first postseason series between the teams since 1990, when Edmonton won in seven games in the Smythe Division semifinals.