Deafening Ducks fan "army" earned its Game 3 moment

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Deafening Ducks fan "army" earned its Game 3 moment

After eight long years in the darkness, Anaheim fans roared and sent an electric charge into their team for its first home playoff win since 2017 and a single-game record for goals scored.

Deafening Ducks fan "army" earned its Game 3 moment

After eight long years in the darkness, Anaheim fans roared and sent an electric charge into their team for its first home playoff win since 2017 and a single-game record for goals scored.

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ANAHEIM, Calif. – Soak that one in, Orange Country. You earned it.

It was a game eight years in the making, and the Anaheim Ducks made each and every minute of those eight years in the wilderness worth it in a 7-4 win over the Edmonton Oilers on Friday.

It was Anaheim’s first home Stanley Cup Playoff game since April 14, 2018–a mere 2,932 days ago–and Honda Center stretched to its standing-room-sellout seams with 16,735 fans pent up on nearly nine full years of longing for a home playoff victory.

They let it all out to spur the Ducks to a dominant opening 20 minutes, where Anaheim registered 12 of the game’s first 15 shots, hit everything in sight and despite the Oilers netting the opening goal, took a 2-1 lead and a 20-7 shot advantage into the first intermission.

“We couldn’t even hear ourselves,” Jeffrey Viel said of the first-period crowd noise. “Great atmosphere. Definitely got us going right from the start.”

Edmonton negated that advantage, but that didn’t deter the rowdy patrons, which continued to spur the Ducks forward and nearly blew the roof off in the third period. Becket Sennecke put Anaheim ahead just over two minutes into the final frame, and only 42 seconds later, Leo Carlsson gave the Ducks a necessary two-goal cushion that shook the foundations of Honda Center en route to the win.

“We came out kind of humming in the third period there, and it was all because of them,” Sennecke said. “It sounded like an army out there almost. They’ve been waiting eight years for this, nine years for a win. It was pretty special.”

Anaheim had not won a home playoff game since Game 2 of the 2017 Western Conference Final, and with this win in Game 3 of the 2027 first-round, the Ducks now have a series lead for the first time since beating these same Oilers in Game 7 of the 2017 second round.

“The best experience I’ve had in Honda Center, for sure,” Carlsson said. “Helps us a lot, absolutely.”

GAME STORY: Ducks outpace Oilers in Game 3, win first home playoff game in 9 years

OILERS SIDE: Edmonton unable to keep up with Ducks in Game 3 loss

However many of those at the Pond on Friday that were also in that building in that Game 2 of the 2018 first round against the San Jose Sharks, it’s hard to imagine that any of them thought that was going to be the last Stanley Cup Playoff action they would experience for eight years.

Anaheim was the higher seed in that series, and even though they were shutout in that Game 1 and couldn’t muster anything in the third period of that Game 2, surely the Ducks would snap in and win a game in San Jose to at least force a Game 5 back in Orange County?

Sure, there were some injuries on defense, but that team still had Ryan Getzlaf, Corey Perry, Ryan Kesler, Jakob Silfverberg and Rickard Rakell up front. They went to the Western Conference Final the season before and were in their sixth straight playoff season and 11th in the previous 13 years. That group certainly had some fight in them still?

Well, that Ducks team got beat like a drum in Game 3 in San Jose, 8-1, and could only score one more in Game 4 for an ignominious sweep at the hands of their NorCal rivals.

Still, that’s just one bad playoff series. That Ducks roster still had a winning pedigree. With that veteran core and some young additions, Anaheim would make a run to the playoffs again… right?

Not quite. The Ducks finished 10 points out of a playoff spot. Getzlaf led the team in scoring with a meager 48 points in 67 games. Perry missed the first five months of the season after knee surgery and would be bought out in the summer. Kesler had eight points in 60 games, got hip surgery in the summer and never played another NHL game.

Anaheim tried again with the same core of Getzlaf, Rakell, Silfverberg, Cam Fowler, Hampus Lindholm and Adam Henrique, but not a single Duck crossed the 50-point plateau in the pandemic-shortened season.

Anaheim was the first team beyond the cutline for the makeshift Stanley Cup Playoff qualification round played in the bubble environment in August of 2020.

In the following pandemic-delayed season with the odd schedule and cobbled together division? Nothing better, as the Ducks finished 20 points out of a playoff spot and in last place in a division for the first time since 2012.

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