Las Vegas Review-Journal

Handicappe­r says Knights’ bettors better savor Game 5

- SPORTS BETTING

SIMPLY put, it’s the Golden Knights’ turn. Starting with the Knights’

7-0 thrashing of the San Jose Sharks in Game 1 at T-mobile Arena, the teams have alternated wins in the Western Conference semifinals.

The Sharks edged the Knights 4-3 in double overtime in Game 2 before falling 4-3 in overtime in Game 3. San Jose bounced back to tie the series with a 4-0 victory in Game 4 to set the stage for Friday night’s pivotal Game 5 in Las Vegas.

Those subscribin­g to the ever-popular zigzag playoff betting theory might blindly back the Knights in this one. But handicappe­r Dana Lane is taking the Knights for other reasons, including their vaunted home-ice advantage.

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teams. It’s a tight series,” Knights forward Pierreedou­ard Bellemare said. “You’re kind of a fool if you come to round two and think it’s going to go easy. If all the series would be easy, what would be the fun of being in the postseason, right?

“It has to be somehow tied. It has to be somehow crazy. There has to be some kind of adversity to make it worth. Nothing easy is fun.”

The Knights and Sharks played three one-goal games during the regular season and have been closely matched through four postseason games.

Fleury and San Jose counterpar­t Martin Jones have one shutout apiece, while each team has a 4-3 overtime victory on the road.

The Knights have outscored San Jose 14-11 in the series; the Sharks own a plus26 advantage in shots on goal (156-130), which is owed to their wide margin in Game 2.

“They’re playing good. They’re skating fast and they’re getting the pucks in when they need to,” Knights forward Cody Eakin said. “We could probably do a better job of valuing the lines, getting it in and getting our forecheck going.

But it’s a back-and-forth game. It’s not always going to be perfect. It’s not always going to be pretty.

“We’ve just got to maintain our consistenc­y in our systems, getting the pucks in, instead of trying to make that extra play, make that extra hit.”

The Knights’ forecheck was noticeably lacking in Wednesday’s 4-0 loss at San Jose in Game 4, and they struggled to establish it for long stretches in Game 3.

Bellemare said the Sharks were smarter with their dump-ins and placed them in areas that allowed San Jose’s forwards to win back possession of the puck.

He added that the Knights’ forecheck was unable to prevent San Jose from making defenseman-to-defenseman passes to start its breakout.

“It’s about playing fast. When you don’t play fast, you give San Jose’s defense a chance to break out, and that’s what happens,” Knights coach Gerard Gallant said. “They played fast (Wednesday) night, and we didn’t have a chance to break out. It all goes hand in hand. When our forecheck

is good we play a real good game. When we’ve got some energy and our feet our moving, we’re a good team.

“When 10, 15 percent don’t show up and don’t forecheck like the rest of the guys, that makes the biggest difference in the world. San Jose had 20 guys competing and playing hard (Wednesday) night and that’s why they were the better team. We didn’t have quite that every shift and that’s why we lost, and still played OK.”

This is the fifth time in Fleury’s 14-year career he has started a Game 5 with the series tied at 2.

He is 3-1 with a 2.74 goalsagain­st average, with his only loss coming in the 2009 Stanley Cup Final against Detroit. Fleury won the next two games of that series to help Pittsburgh capture the Stanley Cup.

“They played well (Wednesday) night, and we weren’t good,” Knights defenseman Brayden Mcnabb said. “But we’ve responded well with losses, and there’s no sense of panic in here.

It’s best-of-three now with home ice, and we’re comfortabl­e being at home.”

Contact David Schoen at dschoen@reviewjour­nal. com or 702-387-5203. Follow @Davidschoe­nlvrj on Twitter.

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