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Vegas Golden Knights, Vancouver Canucks trade figurative punches in NHL playoff series

The Vegas Golden Knights’ Reilly Smith, left, jumps as the puck passes Vancouver Canucks goalie Jacob Markstrom in the third period of Game 2 of their NHL second-round playoff series on Tuesday in Edmonton, Alberta. (Jason Franson/The Canadian Press via AP)

Vegas won its second-round opener against Vancouver by scoring five goals. The Canucks returned the five-goal favor in Game 2.

The tone is set for a high-scoring series, and good luck figuring out who’s got the edge heading into Game 3 today (9:45 p.m., NBC Sports Network).

“Getting ready for the next game is all a part of playoff hockey,” Vancouver coach Travis Green said. “Sometimes you’re going to play a hell of a game you’re going to lose and you’ve got to go out and do it again. Sometimes you’re going to play not close to good enough hockey to win and you’ve got to raise your game.”

Vegas went into Game 1 with a goalie controversy of sorts when Marc-Andre Fleury’s agent posted an illustration of the goalie with a sword in his back on social media. Robin Lehner shook off the distraction and stopped 26 shots in the Golden Knights’ 5-0 victory.

The Canucks flipped the ice in Game 2, revving up their offense for a 5-2 win. Jacob Markstrom bounced back to stop 38 shots after being pulled in Game 1, Bo Horvat scored twice and the Canucks skated freely through the Golden Knights most of the night.

“We definitely gave them a lot of room,” Vegas center Jonathan Marchessault said. “They’re skilled players and they were coming into the zone like it was nothing. It’s too easy. We make life easy out there for them, so it’s on us to go back to how structured we were in the first game.”

Game 3 in the Edmonton bubble will hinge on which team can make the biggest adjustment and slow the other down.

Of course, after two five-goal games, it could end up 1-0.

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New York Islanders vs. Philaelphia Flyers (7 p.m., NBC Sports Network)

The Islanders won the opener 4-0 behind Semyon Varlamov, who stopped 29 shots. Philadelphia chased Varlamov before the first period in Game 2, but had to hold for a 4-3 overtime win Wednesday after after blowing a three-goal lead.

Philippe Myers scored the winner in overtime, tying the series at 1-1 and giving the Flyers a huge sigh of relief with a short turnaround before Game 3 in the Toronto bubble.

“Every game is important, but tonight was probably the most important game of the season,” Flyers center Kevin Hayes said. “We responded. I thought our team played well. It’s huge. It’s a back-to-back game, you have an overtime win. we’re feeling good about ourselves, but they’re obviously going to come hard tomorrow.”

Varlamov had been sharp, becoming the first Islanders goalie to post consecutive playoff shutouts while stretching his scoreless streak to 136 minutes, 20 seconds. In Game 2, he allowed three goals on 10 shots and was replaced late in the first period by Thomas Greiss, who stopped 18 shots.

Now New York must decide whether to start Varlamov again or bring back Greiss for Game 3.

“I was looking for a spark,” Islanders coach Barry Trotz said.

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