CEDAR PARK, Texas — The Toronto Marlies are one victory away from claiming their first Calder Cup.
Defenceman Calle Rosen scored twice as part of a three-goal second period and Andreas Johnsson had a goal and two assists as Toronto beat the Texas Stars 6-2 on Saturday in Game 5 of the American Hockey League championship series.
"When you have a championship team you feel like every guy out there is making a difference," Johnsson said. "And that’s the way I feel about this team."
Trevor Moore, Colin Greening and Carl Grundstrom also scored for the Marlies, who can win the Calder Cup at home on Tuesday. Garret Sparks made 23 saves for the win.
Johnsson’s three-point effort gives him the AHL playoff scoring lead with 20 points in 14 games.
Gavin Bayreuther and Sheldon Dries scored for the Stars. Mike McKenna gave up five goals on 22 shots and was replaced by Landon Bow at the start of the third period. Bow made seven saves in relief.
Toronto came out fast and found itself ahead 2-0 less than three minutes into the game.
Johnsson opened the scoring on a breakaway with his team-leading eighth post-season goal at 1:32, beating McKenna on his left side.
Moore — despite being draped by a Texas defender — won the puck just outside the crease following McKenna’s block off a Mason Marchment shot, then slid the puck into the goal only 47 seconds later.
It marked the first time of the series the Marlies held a two-goal lead.
"For us to come out with that type of start fueled us all the way through the game," said Marlies coach Sheldon Keefe said. "Since Game 4 ended, as a staff all we’ve focused on and talked about how we’re going to score more goals. To get the two early … it was huge. Especially when you’ve played three games that (scoring) has been so hard to come by."
Texas cut its deficit in half early in the second when Bayreuther beat Sparks on a slap shot from just inside the blue line that went over the Toronto goaltender’s left shoulder.
The Marlies answered a few minutes later as Greening took a quick three-foot pass from Chris Mueller just outside the crease and slid the puck past McKenna.
It ended a strange sequence where Mueller had gotten hit by Timothy Liljegren’s shot, but he quickly found the puck and delivered it to Greening, who was skating by.
The Marlies only took another 1:02 to go ahead 4-1, as Rosen scored arguably the most impressive goal of the three games in Texas, when he received a pass from Johnsson, juked a defender and blasted a shot over McKenna’s left shoulder.
Rosen scored again later in the frame, going coast to coast and beating McKenna to the lower-left corner with a wrist shot from 30 feet out to put Toronto ahead 5-1 and turn the game into a rout.
"Our response after (the Texas goal), to me, is a championship-caliber response," Keefe said. "If you want to be a team that’s going to win, play deep into the playoffs and have a chance to win the Calder Cup, you need to have those types of moments and we had it. We’ve had it throughout the playoffs to get to this point."
It marked the Swede’s third goal in three games after he scored the game-winner in Game 3. He entered the stretch of the series here in Texas with only one playoff goal.
"I always know that I can be a good hockey player and physically I’m feeling good and we have a good team to help me out," Rosen said. "I’m just trying to work on my strength and that’s my skating."
Grundstrom finished a pass across the ice from Miro Aaltonen at the 11:07 mark of the third for the Marlies’ sixth goal.
Seconds later, Dries cleaned up a loose puck just outside the crease to score for Texas.
Texas had a potential goal by Travis Morin called off late in the third due to the puck being tipped with a high stick.
Game 7, if needed, would be Thursday at Ricoh Coliseum as the best-of-seven series follows a 2-3-2 format.
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