Hyman scores overtime winner in Game 4 comeback win

LOS ANGELES -- Zach Hyman scored at 10:39 of overtime, and the Edmonton Oilers rallied for a 5-4 win against the Los Angeles Kings in Game 4 of the Western Conference First Round at Crypto.com Arena on Sunday.

Hyman took a stretch pass from Evan Bouchard, skated into the left circle, and scored on a wrist shot that went under the right arm of Joonas Korpisalo.
His goal came after Evander Kane tied it 4-4 at 16:58 of the third period with a wrist shot of his own from the left circle.
The best-of-7 series is tied 2-2. Game 5 will be in Edmonton on Tuesday.
"Playoff hockey, obviously, you got a short period of time to make an impact or else you're not going to be playing for long, right?" Hyman said. "You don't score every game in hockey, and you just got to keep shooting, keep taking it to the net, keep trying to get the puck back."

EDM@LAK, Gm4: Hyman fires the OT winner into the net

Leon Draisaitl had two goals and an assist, Bouchard had a goal and two assists, and Connor McDavid had three assists for the Oilers, who are the No. 2 seed from the Pacific and were trailing 3-0 after the first period.
"We are a very, very resilient group, and we're not going to quit ever, no matter what," Draisaitl said. "So, really proud of the guys, but that's only two (wins). It's first to four."
Jack Campbell made 27 saves after replacing Stuart Skinner, who allowed three goals on 11 shots, at the start of the second period.
"Not at easy situation," Draisaitl said of Campbell. "Hasn't been an easy year for him, but the way he showed up tonight was really, really great, and we're very fortunate to have him."
Viktor Arvidsson had a goal and an assist, and Kevin Fiala had two assists in his return from a lower-body injury for the Kings, who are the No. 3 seed from the Pacific. Korpisalo made 37 saves.
"We can be frustrated tonight, but tomorrow's a new day and we've got to get ready for Game 5," Los Angeles captain Anze Kopitar said. "The first period was obviously really good and the second period was not good, so there's no secret to that. We'll have to correct that going forward."
RELATED: [Complete Oilers vs. Kings series coverage]
Fiala had missed the final six games of the regular season and the first three of the series. He was originally injured on a knee-on-knee hit from Colorado Avalanche forward Andrew Cogliano on March 9.
"You can always improve," Fiala said. "I felt OK. Like you said before, I hadn't played in three weeks, so it's not going to be the best, but it was OK."

EDM@LAK, Gm4: Draisaitl one-times a PPG for second

Gabriel Vilardi gave the Kings a 1-0 lead at 9:25 of the first period, putting Fiala's rebound into an open net after a kick save by Skinner.
Arvidsson made it 2-0 at 16:48, spinning past Vincent Desharnais and beating Skinner between his legs with a wrist shot from the left circle.
Kopitar pushed it to 3-0 with a power-play goal at 18:11. He took a touch pass from Fiala at the edge of the crease, cut back to his backhand, and scored past the outstretched left pad of Skinner.
It was the first three-goal lead of the series for either team.
"We played good," Kopitar said. "Obviously, it was the second period that hurt us, and it is what it is."
Bouchard cut it to 3-1 at 4:55 of the second with a power-play goal, scoring on a slap shot through traffic off a pass from Draisaitl.
Draisaitl then cut it to 3-2 at 9:41 with a one-timer off a pass from McDavid before tying it 3-3 at 19:49 with another one-timer, this time on a power play.
Matt Roy put Los Angeles back ahead 4-3 at 4:28 of the third, scoring five-hole on Campbell with a backhand after Arvidsson found him charging in on net.
"There's a lot of momentum swings," Hyman said. "I think that's what playoff hockey is, the nature of playoff hockey and the game today. They're up 3-0, and then we tie it up. … Some things you can't control, and you have to give yourself the best opportunity, put yourself in the best position that you don't have to worry about those bounces as much."
NOTES: All three of Draisaitl's points came in the second, the sixth time he's had three points in a period in a playoff game. That is tied with Paul Coffey and Maurice Richard for second in NHL history, trailing Wayne Gretzky (12 times). … Bouchard is the first Oilers defenseman to begin the playoffs with a four-game point streak (two goals, five assists) since Charlie Huddy in 1988. … McDavid has five points (two goals, three assists) in his past two games.