Not my favorite thing to mention, but when I track back to where the turning point in this series flipped to Edmonton, it was probably at the Gaudreau dive call after we were up 2 zip in the first period of the 2nd game. Then they got that shorty to add insult to injury.
From then it seemed the wind was taken out of our sails and our drive was gone.
I suppose it wasn't entirely gone, but it was sadly stricken.
Then you had the horrid start to game 4 by Markstrom with the gaff 19 seconds in or whatever that was. And then the Toffoli trip leading to a goal and Edmontons up 2 nothing half way into the first of a must win.
I think Toffoli's horrid PP involvement contributed to the souring of our top line, for real. I think with the effort Johnny puts in when possessions in their end are killed on sloppy passes to the opposition its just really hard to deal with. I don't doubt it could have affected Chucky too. And to be fair, Lindy wasn't super great all playoffs. He was decent but also underperformed.
And as good as Backlund was in games 4 and 5, he did have stretches of disappearance in Dallas series.
It seemed no one was that great over the whole playoff run.
Remarkably we fought hard in game 5 but the goal being called back on Coleman was the death blow it seemed.
I saw lack of belief, desire to keep enduring the punishment and maybe a feeling we were dealing with biased reffing all series.
Anywho. Just some thoughts.
Definitely that second period of Game 2 drastically shifted the momentum of the series. The 6-2 PP advantage that brought the Oilers back into the game.
What's extra crazy about that play you are talking about is that not only did Gaudreau get assessed a dive on a play where there was zero reason to call a dive, but on the whistle Nurse, with no provocation, went after Lindholm and started roughing him... leading to Lindholm being assessed a penalty.
So a play where the Oilers cheated in order to prevent a 2-on-1, they wound up drawing two penalties while taking one.
That same game, of course, the refs wiped out a goal for the Oilers and went upstairs to check, then in the third wiped out a Flames goal and didn't bother going upstairs.
I remember at the time thinking "no big deal, just typical Game 2 BS," but of course it looms a lot larger in retrospect.
Make no mistake, the Oilers got big performances from their forwards and never let the Flames look comfortable, and probably deserved to win, but there were two games where the refs played a big role in swinging a tight game the Oilers' way.
Tkachuk... I don't think it was just confidence. He was a non-factor in way too many games. He seemed to be playing with less edge than a regular season game. I wouldn't be surprised if he was hurt, but at the same time this is now a bit of a pattern.