TORONTO (Ticker) -- Curtis Joseph was closing in on history.
He'll gladly settle for a commanding three games to none lead in the
Eastern Conference quarterfinals.
The Ottawa Senators finally solved Joseph, tallying twice in the final
3:09 of regulation to force overtime, but defenseman Cory Cross scored
2:16 into the extra period to give the Toronto Maple Leafs a 3-2
victory.
Ottawa goaltender Patrick Lalime made a blocker save on Nik Antropov's
wrist shot from the top of the right faceoff circle. But Cross was
unchecked at the top of the left circle, got the rebound and slapped a
shot over Lalime's glove for his first career playoff goal.
"I was just ecstatic and just jumped in the air," said Cross, who had
three goals in 41 games during the regular season. "I saw Bryan McCabe,
I thought he was going to kill me coming off the bench. So I just dove
and got out of the way. Just the sense of exhilaration, it's
unbelievable."
Toronto can eliminate the Senators from the playoffs for the second
straight year at home on Wednesday night.
Joseph was protecting a 2-0 lead late in the third period as he tried
to become the first goalie in 56 years to record three straight playoff
shutouts. But Marian Hossa got his first career playoff goal with 3:09
left to end Ottawa's postseason scoring drought at 223 minutes, 41
seconds -- all against Joseph.
"It's OK. Those are things you don't think about," Joseph said. "The
biggest thing is you want to keep the gap between your score and theirs
as big as possible."
Daniel Alfredsson silenced the crowd at Air Canada Centre with 36
seconds to play, skating out of the left corner and wristing a shot
from the top of the circle that made it through three teammates and
eluded Joseph.
"Finally. That's the best feeling for the Senators. It was great,"
Hossa said. "We got the confidence. We went out there and they scored
(in overtime). That's playoff hockey. We just have to recover for Game
Four."
Asked about the mood in the locker room before overtime, Cross said,
"Obviously, we were a little down. For them to get two goals like that,
it takes some steam out of you. We talked about coming back and showing
up a good overtime. We just kept positive."
Alfredsson tested Joseph again just over 90 seconds into overtime, but
Cross was the hero as the Maple Leafs extended their playoff overtime
winning streak to six games.
"It's a bad break from the standpoint that we had an opportunity to
score just before they scored, Alfredsson all alone, and that's usually
how it happens in overtime," said Senators coach Jacques Martin. "They
just took a shot, Patrick made the save and the rebound just came
across his stick."
"We were close tonight," Lalime added. "I don't know if we had many
scoring chances in the first period, but in the third, we got a few
chances and all of a sudden, the tempo changed. I think we know what to
do now."
The return of center Radek Bonk, left wing Andreas Dackell and
defenseman Jamie Rivers did not reverse the fortunes of the Senators,
whose postseason power-play drought reached 27 chances.
"You have to give credit. Their (penalty-killing) did a good job,"
Hossa said. "We need to create more shots on the power play than we
did."
In contrast, the Maple Leafs used the power play to build a 2-0 lead.
With Ottawa's Rob Zamuner in the penalty box for goalie interference,
McCabe flipped a shot from the right point that hit teammate Mats
Sundin's skates at the side of the net and deflected between Lalime's
pads. It was Sundin's second goal of the series after he scored in
overtime to win Game One.
Rivers was penalized for interference 7:24 into the second period and
Antropov scored 54 seconds into the ensuing power play. His rising slap
shot from the right circle appeared to handcuff Lalime, hitting the
goalie on the right arm and dribbling into the net.
Joseph made 26 saves while Lalime stopped 24 shots and remained without
a postseason win