At the onset of the series, the Islanders said they weren't looking to get into a special teams battle with the Florida Panthers, but they certainly found themselves in one on Tuesday - and came out on top.
The Isles power play went 2-for-7, equaling both their season high in goals and total opportunities. There was a time during the season when the Isles, who were 31st in power-play opportunities, couldn't buy a man advantage, but not on Tuesday.
"Creating penalties, and drawing penalties comes from being on the right side of the puck," Ebrele said. "Being in front of guys and forcing them to get their stick in or force them to take a tripping penalty. Not only that, but you have to keep the momentum and obviously the power play getting two tonight was big."
Each team scored a power-play goal in the second period, with Aleksander Barkov sniping a screened Varlamov 16 seconds into a Brock Nelson hooking minor to make it 2-1 at 7:54.
The Islanders responded as Pulock blasted a shot five-hole on Bobrovsky to make it 2-2 at 13:48. Pulock's goal was the result of a mid-game adjustment from Trotz, who put Pulock in Josh Bailey's spot after the Isles went 0-for-3 with the man advantage in the first period.
The Isles netted a second power-play goal in the third period, as Beauvillier's shot caromed off Eberle's shin guard at the side of the net at 10:29.
While the Panthers power play officially went 1-for-3, Hoffman's goal came four seconds after a Beauvillier penalty expired before he could meaningfully enter the play, so the Isles still need to be wary of Florida's weapons.
"In playoff games when things are really tight you need your special teams to win you games and so far we've been on top of that," Eberle said.