Daily Press (Sunday)

WESTERN CONFERENCE PREVIEW Building momentum

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Kraken, respective­ly.

Injuries then led to the Avs setting a franchise record for players used in a season. Captain Gabriel Landeskog was not one of them, missing the entire season (and the upcoming postseason) with a right knee that has been surgically repaired twice.

Star power is still on the Avs’ side with MacKinnon and Rantanen up front and reigning Norris Trophy winner Cale Makar on the back end. In net, the franchise made a savvy move to acquire Alexandar Georgiev from the Rangers for third- and fifth round picks in July just before Cup-winning goaltender Darcy Kuemper left in free agency for Washington.

The 27-year-old MacKinnon had a careerhigh 111 points this season, and the six-time All-Star might be in his prime. Rantanen scored a career-high 55 goals, ranking third in the league and surpassing his previous career high for points by 19 with 105. Makar, who has been out for two weeks with a lower-body injury, was limited to 60 games due to injuries and is day to day going into the playoffs.

The Kraken seem to be at a disadvanta­ge in net, where Martin Jones and Philipp Grubauer split time and each allowed nearly three goals a game. The Kraken will also be without Burakovsky for the beginning of the playoffs because he needed surgery to address a lower-body injury. Burakovsky, who had 39 points in 49 games, has not played since Feb. 7.

Here’s a look at the other first-round matchups:

The Western Conference’s top-seeded team and Pacific Division champion Golden Knights will host the wild-card Jets in Game 1 on Tuesday night.

Vegas, which made the playoffs in its first five seasons before falling short last year, set a franchise-record with 111 points. Jack Eichel was the team’s leading scorer. They’re

Golden Knights-Jets:

also led by first-year coach Bruce Cassidy. The Knights are hopeful captain Mark Stone can return from a back injury that has kept him out of the lineup for three months.

Oilers and Kings, the secondand third-place teams in the in the Pacific, will face off in the first round for the second straight year starting Monday night in Edmonton. Connor McDavid and Co. outlasted the Kings in Game 7 last year.

The 26-year-old superstar may not let the rematch linger long. McDavid led the league with 64 goals and 153 points, racking up 25 more points than No. 2 on the list, teammate Leon Draisaitl, and 40 more than the NHL’s third-leading scorer, Boston’s David Pastrnak. McDavid, the MVP frontrunne­r, is motivated to do more this postseason after being swept by Colorado in the Western Conference finals last season.

Kings are led by Anze Kopitar, who had a 74-point season at the age of 35. But to keep up with the high-scoring Oilers, the Kings need some banged-up players to return.

Oilers-Kings:

Stars and Wild, after finishing second and third in the Central Division, will meet in Dallas for Game 1 on Monday night.

Under first-year coach Peter DeBoer, young winger Jason Robertson scored 40-plus goals for the second straight season and 33-year-old winger Jamie Benn turned back the clock with a 78-point season.

The Wild, meanwhile, want to snap a skid of six straight opening-round exits and advance for the first time since 2015. The Wild may rotate goalies between 38-yearold, three-time Cup winning goaltender Marc-Andre Fleury and 24-year-old Filip Gustavsson.

Stars-Wild:

AP Sports Writer Pat Graham in Denver and AP freelance reporter Jim Diamond in Nashville, Tennessee, contribute­d to this report.

 ?? MARK HUMPHREY/AP ?? Avalanche center Nathan MacKinnon leads the defending Stanley Cup champions into their title defense on Tuesday.
MARK HUMPHREY/AP Avalanche center Nathan MacKinnon leads the defending Stanley Cup champions into their title defense on Tuesday.

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