Sergei Bobrovsky made 35 saves as the visiting Florida Panthers defeated the Toronto Maple Leafs 3-2 on Thursday to take a 2-0 lead in their second-round playoff series.

Anton Lundell, with a goal and an assist, Aleksander Barkov and Gustav Forsling scored for Florida.

Ryan O’Reilly and Alexander Kerfoot replied for Toronto, which blew an early 2-0 lead. Ilya Samsonov stopped 26 shots.

The best-of-seven series now shifts to Sunrise, Fla., for Games 3 and 4 on Sunday and Wednesday with the Leafs facing a steep climb.

Up 2-1 following a spirited, chippy first period, disaster struck for Toronto early in the second.

Barkov tied things just 19 seconds in on a shot from well out Samsonov should have stopped for his second goal of the post-season.

Things got even worse 47 seconds after that thanks to some sloppy play with the puck in the defensive zone when Mitch Marner flipped an ill-advised pass to Auston Matthews, who in turn couldn’t get it out of their end.

Florida quickly countered, with Forsling finishing off a setup from Matthew Tkachuk — his fourth of the series — for his second and a 3-2 lead.

WATCH | Forsling scores go-ahead goal for Panthers in Game 2 win:

Forsling’s 2nd period goal proves to be the winner, Panthers take Game 2

Gustav Forsling’s second period goal put Panthers ahead for good as Florida defeated Maple Leafs 3-2 and lead the series 2-0.

The shell-shocked Leafs took a while to recover before Nylander hit the post with a shot that also hit Bobrovsky in the back and stayed out. Florida defenceman Brandon Montour then found iron on Samsonov at the other end.

Leafs captain John Tavares had a great chance in front before Josh Mahura took a Nylander shot off the visor that left a trail of blood on the ice as he exited for the locker room. The Panthers defenceman returned for the third after getting repairs.

Toronto came out for the third with plenty of urgency, but couldn’t solve Bobrovsky, who has started to rediscover his Vezina Trophy-winning form in these playoffs after losing the starting job late in the regular season to third-stringer Alex Lyon.

Tavares was stopped in alone on the Florida goaltender and Nylander hit another post. The Leafs winger was also denied in tight with five minutes left in regulation.

The home side continued to press with Samsonov on the bench for an extra attacker, but couldn’t find a way past Bobrovsky.

A group of hockey fans cheer and wave towels in the air while standing together on a city street.
Fans react during Game 2 at the Maple Leafs’ tailgate outside Scotiabank Arena in Toronto on Thursday. (Nav Rahi/CBC)

Toronto dropped the series opener 4-2 at Scotiabank Arena, but got off to a flying start Thursday when Kerfoot popped home the rebound of a Luke Schenn point shot for his second at 2:20 of the first to ignite the rink — and the throng of fans outside the building watching on Maple Leaf Square’s big screen.

Unable to connect on two early power plays in Game 1, the Leafs made it 2-0 on a man advantage at 5:10 when Marner dangled around the offensive zone and found O’Reilly to bury his third on a one-timer.

A group of male ice hockey players huddle up on the ice while celebrating as fans of the team clap and cheer behind the glass.
Ryan O’Reilly is congratulated by teammates after scoring a goal during the first period on Thursday. (Heather Waldron/CBC )

The hard-hitting Panthers, who upset the record-setting Boston Bruins in seven games to make the second round, stayed on message and started to push back as the period wore on, including Sam Bennett putting Matthew Knies in a headlock and slamming him to the ice.

The Toronto rookie finished the period, but didn’t return for the second thanks to an undisclosed injury.

Florida responded at 11:13 when Lundell scored his first after linemate Eetu Luostarinen crushed Leafs defenceman Timothy Liljegren behind Samsonov’s net and Tavares fell.



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