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    PA Stats Inc
    Nov 14, 2008, 04:31

    EDMONTON, Alberta (Ticker) -- Nik Antropov snapped a tie with 61

    seconds remaining in the second period and Matt Stajan notched

    three assists for the third time in his career as the Toronto

    Maple Leafs recorded a 5-2 triumph over the Edmonton Oilers on

    Thursday.

    Defenseman Tomas Kaberle, rookie Nikolai Kulemin and Mikhail

    Grabovski each netted a power-play goal as Toronto went 3-for-4

    with the man advantage.

    Blue-liner Ian White also scored and Vesa Toskala turned aside

    23 shots for the Maple Leafs.

    "I think as a group, we know we need everyone going every

    night," Stajan said. "You can't look over at one or two guys

    and expect them to win you a hockey game. ... Everyone's

    contributing in their own way and we're winning hockey games,

    and that's the key to our success right now."

    "If the power play is clicking, there's more than a 50 percent

    chance that you're going to win the game," Antropov said.

    "That's what happened to us."

    Captain Ethan Moreau scored and Sam Gagner recorded his first

    goal of the season for Edmonton, which returned home after

    playing 12 of its first 15 games on the road.

    "It was obviously a weight off my shoulders," Gagner said of the

    goal. "There's still a long ways to go this year, and I have to

    find a way to have a more consistent effort every game and try

    to create my own bounces. But it was definitely a good

    feeling."

    Ales Hemsky and defenseman Denis Grebeshkov notched two assists

    apiece and rookie Jeff Drouin-Deslauriers made 24 saves as the

    Oilers saw their modest two-game winning streak come to an end.

    "We were definitely concerned coming off our long road trip with

    our start to this game, but we came out energized and ready to

    go," Edmonton defenseman Steve Staios said. "It seems it is

    that first period when you are coming off a long trip that does

    you in, but it was the rest of the game that did it to us

    tonight."

    "You never like to win a couple games and then come back with a

    loss like that," Gagner said. "We have to find that consistency

    where we play the same way every night. I think we are getting

    closer and closer to finding that. And hopefully, we get there

    in the near future."

    With the game even at 2-2, Stajan set up his third goal of the

    second period with time winding down.

    The 24-year-old gathered the puck behind the end line and

    backhanded it to Antropov in the slot. The Russian made no

    mistake as he quickly unleashed a shot past Drouin-Deslauriers

    for his seventh goal of the season.

    Stajan had assisted on power-play goals by Kaberle and Kulemin

    earlier in the session that gave the Maple Leafs a 2-1

    advantage.

    "They're putting the puck in the net for me when I'm giving it

    to them," Stajan said. "I'm getting some power-play time and

    everything's rolling.

    "When you get an opportunity, you try and make the most of it -

    and (when) things start going in, you start playing with

    confidence. I think our line, we're rolling and we're playing

    with confidence. It's resulting in a lot of goals, and we know

    we've got to do that on a nightly basis to give ourselves the

    chance to win."

    White extended the lead to 4-2 at 5:05 of the third by taking a

    feed from Jason Blake in the slot and beating Drouin-Deslauriers

    for his second tally of the campaign.

    Blake then set up an unmarked Grabovski in the slot with 6:38

    remaining in the contest. The 24-year-old slipped the puck past

    Drouin-Deslauriers for his eighth goal.

    "I give (the Maple Leafs) credit because they are a hard-working

    group that is structured - and we lack that structure in our

    game right now," Edmonton coach Craig MacTavish said. "That's

    why we got pounded."