The Maple Leafs outshot the Capitals through two periods 28-25.
Now, the Capitals outshot the Maple Leafs in the third 13-7, and Andersen had to be excellent. But Marner had a chance with a toe drag into the slot and a shot, and Capitals goaltender Braden Holtby had to stay square to make a big save himself.
And the winner? Well, defenseman Martin Marincin tried to clear the puck off the glass, and Wilson knocked it down with his glove and shot it from the far side of the right circle. He had not scored in 28 previous NHL playoff games, but this shot whizzed past Andersen's glove, the same glove that had been so good all night.
"That's playoff hockey," Babcock said.
Babcock would like the Maple Leafs to do more of what Wilson did, putting the puck on net instead of overpassing, because you never know what might happen. He would like them to avoid penalties, especially to go down two men. He'd sure like them to win Game 2, not just to steal home-ice advantage, but to keep a psychological edge.
"We've got to keep it tight so they stay tight," Babcock said. "They get too loose, it'll make it too easy for them."
But this was a valuable lesson for the Maple Leafs.
"What they found out tonight is, you can skate with them," Babcock said. "You can be physical. Their [defensemen] give the puck back to you when you're physical just like if they're physical with us. I just think it's important to get a taste and understand what the game's like and what it feels like."
The vibe in the Toronto locker room was not frustration. It was more like, "Man, that was fun. Let's do it again."
"They're a heck of a team, but I also think we're no slouch either," Gardiner said. "So we're not going away."