Miami Herald

Avalanche wins battle of attrition, advances to Stanley Cup Finals

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The Colorado Avalanche didn’t need to be fully healthy to sweep the Edmonton Oilers in the Western Conference final

With Nazem Kadri out with an injury, Colorado’s Mikko Rantanen shifted to center to take his spot and was on the receiving end of a few chops on the back of his leg from Edmonton’s Duncan Keith that sent him to the ice.

Rantanen rose to his feet, shoved Keith and got back in the play. He later scored a goal in a backand-forth Game 4 of the Western Conference final that the Avalanche won to sweep the Oilers out of the playoffs and move on to play for the Stanley Cup.

Artturi Lehkonen scored 1:19 into overtime as Colorado rallied for a 6-5 victory late Monday.

The Avalanche didn’t make it through the series unscathed, but with Edmonton star Leon Draisaitl skating on one good leg and defenseman Darnell Nurse playing through a hip injury, Colorado was able to advance to face the New York Rangers or back-to-back defending champion Tampa Bay Lightning in the Cup Final next week.

“It’s a battle of attrition,” said Jared Bednar, in his fifth season as Colorado’s coach. “No one gets through it without suffering a bunch of ups and downs and ebbs and flows to series, to injuries, facing adversity, and it seems that the teams that get through that the best are usually the ones that are standing at the end — or at least getting in the finals.”

After finishing off Connor McDavid and the Oilers in four games, the start of that final series is at least a week away, if not more. While Kadri’s left thumb injury makes him a long shot to return, the extra time off could allow the Avalanche to get starting goaltender Darcy Kuemper and other players healthy before facing their biggest playoff task yet.

The West final extending to five or more games would have risked more injuries for Colorado after winger Andre Burakovsky missed time blocking a shot and each shift was another opportunit­y for an extra whack at areas without padding. The Avalanche certainly won’t scoff at the benefit of rest.

“A week off is going to help us with the bangedup players we have,” Rantanen said. “But we’re used to it. After first round, we had a week off, too, so it’s nothing new to us.”

Being in the final is new for this core of Nathan MacKinnon, captain Gabriel Landeskog, Rantanen, Norris Trophy finalist defenseman Cale Makar and grizzled blue liner

Erik Johnson. The organizati­on hasn’t reached this point since 2001, when it won its second championsh­ip in six years.

The Avalanche gathered around the Clarence Campbell Bowl — the trophy for winning the West — but they didn’t parade it around the ice.

“Everyone’s obviously happy for the opportunit­y that’s in front of us, but I don’t get the feeling that anyone’s satisfied,” Bednar said. Everyone’s happy and it’s good … but our guys are already kind of focused and we’ll be itching to go at some point soon here.”

First, the Rangers and Lightning need to settle the Eastern Conference final to see who is up next for Colorado, which has home-ice advantage regardless.

“From that series, it doesn’t matter at all,” Rantanen said. “Whoever comes, that’s who we play. We don’t care at all.”

ELSEWHERE Bruins:

Coach Bruce Cassidy, who led Boston to the playoffs in all six seasons since taking over in 2017, has been fired. Under Cassidy, the Bruins reached the Stanley Cup Final in 2019, had the best record in the league the next year and at least 100 points in each of his four full non-pandemic seasons behind the bench. This season they lost in the first round of the playoffs to Carolina.

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