Las Vegas Review-Journal

Third period golden for trusting Knights

High accountabi­lity fostering team play

- By Steve Carp Las Vegas Review-journal

Early in the season, the Golden Knights were strongest in the second period. And they were getting good results.

Lately, the third period has been the team’s strength, as it has surged to the top of the Pacific Division with a 13-6-1

record and 27 points in 20 games.

The Knights either have outscored or played the opponent even in the final 20 minutes in four of the past five KNIGHTS

games. The one time the Knights were outscored, they lost when Edmonton dominated the third period 5-1 in an 8-2 win Nov. 14.

Entering Friday’s 3 p.m. game against the San Jose Sharks at T-mobile Arena, the Knights have an 8-6 scoring edge in the third period in the past five games. So what changed?

“I don’t know that it’s any one thing,” forward James Neal said Thursday after a 30-minute practice at City National Arena, one day after a 4-2 victory at Anaheim. “Part of it may be we’re more used to playing together. The goaltendin­g has been very good. Everyone’s been contributi­ng offensivel­y.”

Defenseman Brad Hunt said there’s a higher level of accountabi­lity.

“We have trust in our game and trust in the system, and it has been a big improvemen­t,” he said. “It’s the team coming together, and it’s a good character room. We’re playing a team game.”

Coach Gerard Gallant has not deviated from that system, which calls for four forward lines and three sets of defensemen all playing. By rolling out four lines on a regular basis, it provides for fresh legs in the third period, and it showed Wednesday. The Knights were winning most races to loose pucks and making plays in the Anaheim end.

No forward played more than 20 minutes against the Ducks, and the top line of Neal, Erik Haula and David Perron averaged about 19 minutes. Neal had a goal and an assist, and Perron had two assists. Three of the four points generated by that line were in the third period.

The line of William Karlsson, Jonathan Marchessau­lt and Reilly Smith averaged about 16½ minutes, with Marchessau­lt getting a goal and two assists, Karlsson a goal and an assist and Smith an assist. Five of the six points were in the final 20 minutes.

“Early in the year, we were scoring a lot of goals in the second period,” Gallant said. “Lately, the third period has been a good period for us.”

The Knights took a franchise-best 49 shots against Ducks goaltender John Gibson and have had 40 or more shots in their past

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