Hockey

Huberdeau's OT winner helps Panthers erase 4-goal deficit to overcome Maple Leafs

Jonathan Huberdeau scored his second goal of the game in overtime and also had three assists, helping the Florida Panthers overcome a four-goal deficit to beat the Toronto Maple Leafs 7-6 Tuesday night.

Florida forward earns 102nd point of season with game-winning tally in extra frame

Panthers forward Jonathan Huberdeau is surrounded by teammates after scoring in overtime during a 7-6 win over the Maple Leafs on Tuesday. (Rebecca Blackwell/The Associated Press)

Jonathan Huberdeau scored his second goal of the game in overtime and also had three assists, helping the Florida Panthers overcome a four-goal deficit to beat the Toronto Maple Leafs 7-6 Tuesday night.

The Atlantic Division-leading Panthers trailed 5-1 midway through the second period before roaring back. Sam Reinhart scored twice, Aleksander Barkov had a goal and three assists, Claude Giroux got his first goal with Florida and Radko Gudas also scored.

Huberdeau took a pass from Barkov in overtime and poked it past Jack Campbell for his 102nd point this season. The Panthers improved to 49-15-6, setting a franchise record with their 104th point.

"A lot of milestones, but it's cool doing that when we win," Huberdeau said. "It's been a fun year. It's been fun, but we haven't done anything in the playoffs."

Each team turned to its backup goalie as the sides combined for 84 shots on goal. Sergei Bobrovsky allowed four goals on 14 shots for Florida before Spencer Knight relieved in the second period and stopped 19 of 21 attempts.

"It's exciting to come back again," Barkov said. "But we've got to work so we're not down 5-1 or 6-2. We've got to figure out how to manage the game the right way."

WATCH | Huberdeau scores game-winning goal for Panthers in extra frame:

Huberdeau scores in OT after Panthers erase 5-1 deficit against Maple Leafs

3 years ago
Duration 1:22
Jonathan Huberdeau scored twice, including the game-winner in overtime, as the Florida Panthers rallied to defeat the Toronto Maple Leafs 7-6. Huberdeau also became the first player in Panthers franchise history to record 100 points in a season.

The Panthers came back from a four-goal deficit for the second consecutive game.

"It was a frenzied game," interim coach Andrew Brunette said. "I'm sure their coach is scratching his head a little bit, too. It was one of those games, it's fun for the fans, probably fun for the players in a lot of ways, but not as much fun for us."

Erik Kallgren turned away 20 of 23 for Toronto before taking a puck off his mask late in the second. Campbell replaced him and stopped 22 shots.

Mitchell Marner had two goals and an assist, and John Tavares, Jake Muzzin, Colin Blackwell and William Nylander also scored for the Maple Leafs. Auston Matthews had three assists.

Toronto tied a franchise record last achieved in 1983-84 by scoring five or more goals for the sixth straight game.

"We go from having a chance on a breakaway to go up 6-1 to taking a too-many-men-on ice penalty right after. That starts the snowball," coach Sheldon Keefe said. "We had pretty terrible penalty killing. I'm not going to focus on all that stuff, I'm going to focus on the fact we played a good hockey game today."

WATCH | Marner flashes quality with short-handed tally:

Mitch Marner scores shorthanded beauty in Leafs' loss to Panthers

3 years ago
Duration 1:50
Mitch Marner had two goals and two assists, including his third shorthanded goal of the season, followed by a power-play goal 37 seconds later, to reach a career-high 31 goals on the season. Despite his heroics, the Florida Panthers beat the Toronto Maple Leafs 7-6 in overtime.

Barkov put Florida ahead 6-5 with his 34th of the season with 11:59 to play, but Tavares tied it with a power-play goal with 3:54 left.

Huberdeau also had a tying power-play goal 2:45 into the third, making it 5-all, after Reinhart, Gudas and Giroux scored in the second. It was Giroux's first goal since being acquired from Philadelphia on March 19.

The Maple Leafs scored three goals in 2:04 of the second to chase Bobrovsky from the game. Marner scored short-handed, then on a power play, before Blackwell stretched the lead to 4-1. Muzzin added on with 11:20 left in the second period.

Marner's two goals came 37 seconds apart, the shortest span between a power-play and a short-handed goal in NHL history.

"Disappointed to lose that game," Maple Leafs centre Jason Spezza said. "You don't want wild swings in a game where we had control."

Bobrovsky has been pulled from two straight starts since a 37-save shutout March 31 against Chicago.

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