Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Golden Knights strike early against Stars, take Game 3

- STEPHEN HAWKINS AP SPORTS WRITER

NHL PLAYOFFS

GOLDEN KNIGHTS 4, STARS 0

DALLAS — The Vegas Golden Knights kept their composure and got the best payback after an ugly hit early against their captain.

They have a 3-0 series lead in the Western Conference Final and are now just one more win away from making it to another Stanley Cup Final.

Ivan Barbashev scored a power-play goal after Dallas Stars captain Jamie Benn was ejected because of his hit on Mark Stone less than two minutes into the game. That was the second of three goals the Golden Knights had in the first 7 1/2 minutes, leading to an exit for goalie Jake Oettinger as they won 4-0 in Game 3 on Tuesday night.

“You keep your composure,” said Alex Pietrangel­o, who added a goal midway through the second period.

After the two captains collided near the blue line and Stone fell to the ice, Benn lunged forward with both hands on his stick and made contact near Stone’s neck as he was sliding over the center line.

“We’re upset when we see that, he’s our captain,” coach Bruce Cassidy said. “But at the end of the day, they make a call that gives us a chance to make them pay for the penalty. And we did with one goal anyway, so we’ve seen doubled our lead. … Do it the right way. That’s been our mindset all along.”

While Oettinger had the shortest start of his career, Vegas goalie Adin Hill stopped 34 shots in his first career postseason shutout.

After four consecutiv­e comeback victories in these playoffs, including two overtime wins at home to start the best-of-seven series, the Golden Knights were in control all of the way in this one.

Game 4 is Thursday night, when Vegas will have the opportunit­y to advance to its second Stanley Cup Final in the franchise’s six seasons.

The Golden Knights were Western Conference champions during their inaugural 2017-18 season, then lost the Cup Final in five games after winning the opener against the Washington Capitals. Vegas missed the playoffs for only time last season, before coach Pete DeBoer was fired before becoming the Stars coach.

Johnathan Marchessau­lt scored only 71 seconds into the game, which was only 42 seconds before Benn was assessed a game misconduct after a five-minute major for cross-checking.

“Let’s put it this way. He made a mistake. He feels really badly about it. I don’t think anyone in the building feels worse than he does about it,” DeBoer said. “I’m not going to pile on, he’s been a leader here for his entire career, and leads every day on and off the ice. … Fortunatel­y Mark Stone’s OK, and we’ve got to live with the consequenc­es.”

The Stars played the end rest of the game without Benn, who could also face an NHL suspension after the league reviews the play.

Just before Benn’s early exit, he had a wrister that was stopped by Hill but was initially still loose under the goalie as Benn tried to get his stick back on it.

The goal by Barbashev, who later had two assists, was one of only three shots the Knights got on net during the five-minute penalty. His 30-foot wrister for a 2-0 lead came after a Ty Dellandrea’s short-handed break was blocked. Nicolas Roy took the rebound the other way and passed to Barbashev.

“What goes unnoticed in there is the save by Adin Hill on the shorthand 2-on-1 … and we come down and score,” Cassidy said. “That 15 seconds of hockey is a huge impact of the game.”

Oettinger was pulled and replaced by Scott Wedgewood after William Carrier’s backhander made it 3-0 with 12:50 left in the first period.

The 24-year-old Oettinger has now lost three starts in a row. He has lost four of five, the win being when he had 22 saves for the Stars in their 2-1 win in Game 7 of Western semifinal against Seattle.

Wedgewood stopped 10 of 11 shots, with Pietrangel­o’s goal coming just a second after the end of a power play as Miro Heiskanen was coming out of the penalty box.

Stars center Max Domi got a game misconduct with 21 seconds left in the second period. After his cross-check against Nicolas Hague, Domi started throwing punches.

“I think you guys know exactly what was being discussed,” Hague said when asked about what led to that incident. “There’s no reason for me to get involved in anything. It is what it is, and we got a big win.”

 ?? (AP/LM Otero) ?? Vegas Golden Knights right wing Jonathan Marchessau­lt (center) celebrates his goal against the Dallas Stars with teammates Nicolas Hague (left) and Ivan Barbashev during the first period Tuesday night in Dallas. The Golden Knights won 4-0 to take a 3-0 lead in the NHL Western Conference final.
(AP/LM Otero) Vegas Golden Knights right wing Jonathan Marchessau­lt (center) celebrates his goal against the Dallas Stars with teammates Nicolas Hague (left) and Ivan Barbashev during the first period Tuesday night in Dallas. The Golden Knights won 4-0 to take a 3-0 lead in the NHL Western Conference final.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States