
Arteta: Arsenal ready to 'get job done' and win title after post-Man City recharge
Arteta calls on Arsenal to take charge in title race after loss to City
The Anaheim Ducks defeated the Edmonton Oilers 7-4 in their first home playoff game in eight years, taking a 2-1 series lead. Key contributions came from Beckett Sennecke, Leo Carlsson, and Mikael Granlund.
ANAHEIM, Calif. — Beckett Sennecke and Leo Carlsson scored 42 seconds apart in the third period, Mikael Granlund had a goal and two assists, and the Anaheim Ducks celebrated their first home playoff game in eight years with a 7-4 victory over the Edmonton Oilers and a 2-1 series lead on Friday night.
Jeffrey Viel and Jackson LaCombe also scored in the third and Lukas Dostal made 20 saves for the upstart Ducks, who have poured in 16 goals in three games to take an early lead in this first-round series against the two-time Western Conference champion Oilers. Mason McTavish and Alex Killorn scored early goals.
Backed by a raucous sellout crowd hungry for Orange County’s first playoff hockey since 2018, the Ducks overcame their season-long defensive shortcomings by outscoring the powerhouse Oilers even after Connor McDavid recorded his first points of the series.
Game 4 is Sunday night in Anaheim.
McDavid had a power-play goal in the third period and an assist for Edmonton. Vasily Podkolzin, Kasperi Kapanen and Ryan Nugent-Hopkins also scored, and Connor Ingram stopped 32 shots.
The Ducks won Game 3 against the Oilers with a score of 7-4.
Beckett Sennecke, Leo Carlsson, Mikael Granlund, Jeffrey Viel, and Jackson LaCombe scored for the Ducks.
Game 4 of the series is scheduled for Sunday night in Anaheim.

Arteta calls on Arsenal to take charge in title race after loss to City
Fabrizio Romano reveals Liverpool's interest in Denzel Dumfries, who has a £21.7m release clause.

LeBron James leads Lakers to overtime win, 3-0 playoff series lead!
Shreyas Iyer's IPL Success Fuels T20I Leadership Aspirations
BCCI's Rajeev Shukla on India's Cricket Success and Future

Fitzpatricks one shot off lead in Zurich Classic pairs event
See every story in Sports — including breaking news and analysis.
Appropriately for a defense-deficient series, the Ducks capitalized on two transition sequences early in the third to take control.
Moments after Sennecke ripped a wrist shot for the tiebreaking goal and the precocious rookie’s first playoff point, Carlsson clinically finished a textbook 2-on-1 rush with Troy Terry.
McDavid trimmed the Oilers’ deficit with a fortunate deflection off Pavel Mintyukov’s stick, but the Oilers superstar short-circuited another power play later in the third by cross-checking Tyson Hinds.
Viel then flipped home a backhand with 3:03 left to cap a strong game by the Ducks’ fourth line, and LaCombe lofted home an empty-net goal all the way from the Ducks’ goal line to seal Anaheim’s first home playoff victory since May 14, 2017, in the conference finals against Nashville.
The clubs split the series’ first two games in Edmonton, but the Ducks demonstrated they could stay with the playoff-tested Oilers despite the obvious deficiencies of an inexperienced group that allowed more goals this season than any other playoff team.
Anaheim rode the wave of crowd energy and dominated play early in Game 3, putting 20 shots on Ingram in the first period. Killorn tied it for Anaheim in the second with his 39th career playoff goal.
Oilers forwards Adam Henrique and Jason Dickinson missed Game 3 with injuries.