New Jersey added a pair of shorthanded goals in the final minute to make the final score look worse than the result actually was.
"To be honest, I thought we pretty much controlled that game right up to the power play right before they scored their first goal, and even then that was a gift," Tampa Bay head coach Jon Cooper said. "We've done that on a couple of occasions now in this playoff. We just pass the puck and get the primary assist giving it to their best player. We know better. Even after that we kind of weathered the storm. We score that goal early in the third, but putting us down 5-on-3, that was another mental error on our part that we kind of got out of. We got out (of the 5-on-3) tied. Again, don't mind our game. I think we had that crazy scramble there in front where blown away we didn't score, and we come out of it taking another penalty. It was just too many self-inflicted wounds, and eventually they scored."
That's the thing about Game 3: Despite the loss, the Lightning liked a lot about what they were able to do in the contest. Facing a desperate Devils team down 2-0 in the series and playing in front of their home fans for the first time, Tampa Bay weathered the early push it expected from the Devils and came out of the opening period with more shots on goal and a scoreless game.
Alex Killorn scored a power-play goal right out of the first intermission, 42 seconds into the second period, to give the Bolts the opening goal for the third-consecutive game to start the series. Even after New Jersey tied the game on Taylor Hall's second marker of the postseason midway through the second period, the Lightning continued to control play for good stretches of the gmae and owned a 28-21 shots advantage through 40 minutes.
"We were skating. We got the puck. We were taking strides before looking to make a play," Bolts forward J.T. Miller said when asked what he liked about his team's play in Game 3. "We were getting behind them, getting pucks to the point, getting traffic to the net. It's a simple game sometimes when things are working like that, and I think for 50 minutes of that game we were doing that. Obviously penalty troubles kind of swung the momentum for them and the game didn't finish how we wanted to."