Blackhawks at Maple Leafs | Recap

TORONTO -- Auston Matthews and Dakota Joshua scored eight seconds apart late in the third period for the Toronto Maple Leafs, who rallied for a 3-2 win against the Chicago Blackhawks at Scotiabank Arena on Tuesday.

“It’s nice you come in the locker room (in the second intermission) and guys are staying positive, holding each other accountable. Just had to go out and compete a little harder, play the right way, keep things simple, and I thought we just grinded out that third period,” Matthews said. “We were able to get a couple goals to tie it up, and 'Dak' finished it off there.”

CHI@TOR: Matthews and Joshua score within 8 seconds to give Maple Leafs the lead

Matthews tied it 2-2 with a power-play goal at 16:51. William Nylander knocked the puck off Chicago forward Ilya Mikheyev’s stick behind the net, where it was picked up by Matthews and shot over goalie Spencer Knight’s glove from below the right hash marks.

Joshua then put the Maple Leafs in front 3-2 at 16:59. He lifted the stick of Blackhawks defenseman Louis Crevier and got to the rebound of Troy Stecher’s shot from the neutral zone, lifting it over Knight’s glove from the slot.

“It’s more of a lesson that when we play our game things go the right way, and when we are not on our game it goes the wrong way. Pretty simple lesson,” Joshua said. “It’s cliché, but it’s a full 60-minute game and that’s what we need to win.”

Matthews had a goal and an assist, Nylander had two assists, and Joseph Woll, who missed the previous four games with a lower-body injury, made 23 saves for the Maple Leafs (15-12-5), who are 5-1-2 in their past eight games.

“You build your game throughout the game, it adds up,” Toronto defenseman Oliver Ekman-Larsson said. “That’s why we have to get the puck deep to make it hard on their defensemen. I thought it paid off at the end. It’s a big win.”

Wyatt Kaiser and Jason Dickinson scored, and Knight made 24 saves for the Blackhawks (13-14-6), who are 1-5-0 in their past six games.

“Obviously, it’s a gut punch at the end,” Chicago coach Jeff Blashill said. “We played a really good game and probably deserved a win for 56 minutes, I guess. Credit to them. That goal by Matthews on the power play was a miscue by us, but Nylander makes an unreal play and Matthews makes an unreal play and then it was an unfortunate bounce there on the winning goal. The reality is, if we play like this on a consistent basis we’re going to win lots of games. You have to understand the process and go back at it. We have to do a good job of having a short-term memory.”

Ekman-Larsson started the comeback at 9:59 of the third period, cutting it to 2-1 when his shot from the point deflected off Crevier in the slot.

“You kind of feel like you’re in control most of the game,” Kaiser said. “It’s the game of hockey. It’s a little crazy, so just try to manage that and not get too high or too low.

“That’s the way it goes sometimes. We’ve been on both sides of it where sometimes it goes your way, sometimes it doesn’t. Just have to put it in the past and move on.”

The Blackhawks went up 1-0 at 10:21 of the first period. Dominic Toninato won a face-off in the left circle back to Kaiser at the blue line, and the defenseman skated into the slot before scoring with a wrist shot past Woll’s glove.

CHI@TOR: Kaiser scores opening goal after a face-off

Chicago appeared to score at 11:27, but the goal was overturned after the Maple Leafs successfully challenged for goalie interference on Dickinson.

Dickinson, however, did push it to 2-0 at 14:58 when he scored on a short-handed 2-on-1 with Mikheyev. Nylander turned the puck over to Crevier at the offensive blue line, allowing Dickinson and Mikheyev to break out.

“Giving up a short-handed goal and giving up a face-off goal, they shouldn’t happen,” Toronto coach Craig Berube said. “We get outmuscled around our net. It’s just simple things. That’s why I was (ticked) off.

“The two or three mistakes we made, that’s what upsets you. There’s no need for it.”

Loud boos were heard from the crowd at Scotiabank Arena throughout the second and early in the third period.

“If I was a fan, I wouldn’t have been too happy with the performance either, so no surprise there. But at the end of the day, it was nice to pull it out for them,” Joshua said. “Nobody wants to get booed in their own building, but they have every right to feel that way with what we were putting out there. Glad we could fix it for tonight and we have to keep it moving.”

NOTE: Blackhawks defenseman Artyom Levshunov was a healthy scratch after being late to practice in Chicago on Monday.

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