Albuquerque Journal

Golden Knights forwards finally end goal drought

Vegas evens series with Dallas with big thanks to shutout by Lehner

- ASSOCIATED PRESS

EDMONTON, Alberta — After running into a hot goalie late last round and being shut out in the opener of the Western Conference final, pressure mounted in the minds of the Vegas Golden Knights in Game 2.

When Paul Stastny scored to end a lengthy goal drought by Vegas forwards, the entire mood changed. William Karlsson and Tomas Nosek made it three goals in less than 10 minutes, Robin Lehner stopped all 24 shots he faced and the Golden Knights rediscover­ed their winning ways and beat the Dallas Stars 3-0 Tuesday night, evening the series.

“We were snake-bitten for a while there and think everybody was gripping their stick a little tight,” forward Chandler Stephenson said. “We’re at our best when we have that swagger and we’re making plays and tough to defend. It was nice to get that mojo back tonight and even the series.”

Stastny’s second-period goal was the first by a Vegas forward with an opposing goalie in net in 276:24, dating to Game 4 against Vancouver last round. His and Karlsson’s were the kind of goals the Golden Knights became accustomed to scoring — ones that are difficult or impossible for someone like Anton Khudobin to stop.

After getting flustered by hot Vancouver Canucks goalie Thatcher Demko and failing to crack Khudobin in a hard-hitting Game 1 that was played at the Stars’ pace, Vegas finally looked like the team that earned the top seed in the West and steamrolle­d through the first round and halfway through the Vancouver series.

“That first goal relieved a little bit of pressure,” coach Peter DeBoer said. “We got our game back, and I think once we got that first goal, I think we looked like we normally do, which was making plays and finding space and sticking pucks in the net.”

The return of enforcer Ryan Reaves was just one element of that. With Reaves suspended a game for an illegal check to the head, DeBoer didn’t start his physical fourth line as he had in 34 consecutiv­e games since the All-Star break in January.

William Carrier, Nosek and Reaves started and came out hitting. Reaves hit Dallas captain Jamie Benn twice in the first 30 seconds, and the Golden Knights dictated the physicalit­y the way the Stars did two nights earlier.

Game 3 is Thursday night. The Tampa Bay Lightning and New York Islanders play Game 2 of the Eastern Conference final Wednesday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States