After a frustrating loss to the Vegas Golden Knights in Game 1, the Colorado Avalanche we back at it two night later hoping to even up this Western Conference Finals series. An even more frustrating loss ensued as the Avalanche gave up their first third period lead and dropped this game 3-1. Vegas now takes a 2-0 series lead for a pair of games upcoming in their building.
The Game
Minus Cale Makar again, this game felt like the first meeting between these two teams. It was a cautious approach by both
sides and Vegas earned a healthy amount of the shot share. But before the end of the period Colorado would strike first. Ross Colton fired on a rebound off of a Brent Burns shot to put the Avalanche up 1-0 after 20 minutes of play.
The second period went scoreless but each team had their opportunities on the man advantage but couldn’t cash in. A Vegas four-minute power play was interrupted by their own penalty and Colorado had some good looks on the four-on-four. Vegas was held to just four shots in the period but the score was still just 1-0 Colorado.
Midway through the third period it seemed Colorado was going to nap their way to a 1-0 victory since they hadn’t lost a game all year entering the third period with a lead but Vegas found some puck luck and got back into the game. First Jack Eichel unleashed a blistering shot and found Scott Wedgewood off his angle slightly to hit the far side post and in. Then just two minutes later Ivan Barbashev found a loose puck in the slot and gave Vegas a lead for the first time in the contest.
Now scoring was an urgent matter and the Avalanche made a push and then pulled Wedgewood for the extra attacker but Carter Hart shut everything down and Vegas secured a 3-1 victory after Barbashev found the empty net for his second goal of the evening.
Takeaways
Cale Makar can’t be replaced but it’s still no excuse for $64 million worth of forwards who couldn’t find any offense in this contest. Ross Colton, the lone goal scorer for Colorado, played a team-low eight minutes of ice time. The rest had two ineffective power plays and largely didn’t shoot the puck. When Nathan MacKinnon only has one shot on goal, that’s usually a symptom of a loss.
This is the first true patch of adversity the Avalanche have faced all season long but there’s still time for them to respond. It’s an uphill climb to get back into the series, and probably would need a Game 7 victory, but it’s not supposed to be easy getting to the Stanley Cup finals.
Upcoming
The series shifts to Vegas for Game 3 on Sunday, May 24th at 6 p.m. MT on ESPN.











