Las Vegas Review-Journal

Fluery, Tuch come through; Knights even four-game set

Deboer says team goal was to send message with win

- By David Schoen

Somewhere between Lake Tahoe and Denver, Golden Knights coach Pete Deboer found a blender for his lineup and turned it on puree.

The one spot he didn’t mess with was goaltender, and Marc-andre Fleury came through again Monday.

Fleury made 34 saves for his third shutout — and second in the past eight days — to help the Knights defeat the Colorado Avalanche 3-0 at Ball Arena in Denver.

“He’s been unbelievab­le,” winger Jonathan Marchessau­lt said.

“He’s been a great leader for everybody, and we definitely want to battle for him because he battles for us. It’s been a treat to see him do well.”

Winger Alex Tuch maximized his move to the top line with two goals. Marchessau­lt also scored as part of a three-goal second period, as the Knights won for the first time in franchise history in Denver in five games (1-3-1).

The Knights (11-4-1, 23 points) leaped over St. Louis for first place in the West Division and moved four points ahead of Colorado by earning a split of the four-game series.

After playing well during the final two periods of Saturday’s outdoor game at Lake Tahoe,

the Knights proved they can go toe to toe with a fellow heavyweigh­t after fattening their record on the bottom half of the division.

“We wanted to send a message, and I thought our guys did that,” Deboer said.

“I think there was some question after the first three games of the series whether we could (play with Colorado). We were looking for a response that way, and I thought we got that.”

Fleury, who blanked the Avalanche in the opener of the series, made his seventh straight start and matched Anaheim’s John Gibson and Semyon Varlamov of the New York Islanders for the league lead in shutouts. It was the 64th of his career, moving Fleury into a tie with Henrik Lundqvist for 16th all time.

He had 15 saves in the third period, including a desperatio­n stop on Joonas Donskoi after a wild sequence with 8:30 remaining. He also was tested late in the first period and stacked his pads to get a piece of Nazem Kadri’s shot from point-blank range with 34 seconds left.

“I think maybe because I was deeper I could get there a little quicker and not have to cover as much distance to get there,” Fleury said. “It gave me a little more time to react and throw the pad in the air.”

Deboer changed all four forward lines, including a promotion to the first line for Tuch, and the defense pairs to shake up an offense that produced eight goals the past five games.

Following a goalless first period, Tuch came through against the Avalanche’s top-ranked penalty kill when he sliced through the defense and flipped a shot past Philipp Grubauer’s glove at 2:53.

Tuch notched his seventh goal, one behind last season’s total, less than four minutes later when his threw a backhand on net and the rebound went off Colorado defenseman Bowen Byram’s skate, ricochetin­g into the net.

Marchessau­lt added his sixth goal at 11:06 when he skated down the slot and sent a shot between Grubauer’s legs.

“We definitely weren’t happy with the results of the last couple games,” defenseman Shea Theodore said. “I think we were due for a full 60-minute effort. I thought a lot of guys stepped up tonight.” Contact David Schoen at dschoen@reviewjour­nal.com or 702-387-5203. Follow @Davidschoe­nlvrj on Twitter.

 ?? David Zalubowski The Associated Press ?? Marc-andre Fleury keeps his focus as Colorado Avalanche center Nathan Mackinnon swings at the puck in the third period.
David Zalubowski The Associated Press Marc-andre Fleury keeps his focus as Colorado Avalanche center Nathan Mackinnon swings at the puck in the third period.
 ??  ?? Alex Tuch, promoted to the top line, scored twice in the second period as the Golden Knights evened their four-game series with Colorado on Monday night.
Alex Tuch, promoted to the top line, scored twice in the second period as the Golden Knights evened their four-game series with Colorado on Monday night.
 ?? David Zalubowski The Associated Press ?? Golden Knights center William Karlsson uses his reach to keep the puck away from the checking of Colorado’s Andre Burakovsky in the first period.
David Zalubowski The Associated Press Golden Knights center William Karlsson uses his reach to keep the puck away from the checking of Colorado’s Andre Burakovsky in the first period.

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