Detroit Free Press

Red Wings crushed by Avs’ stars with NHL trade deadline looming

- Helene St. James Contact Helene St. James at hstjames@freepress.com . Follow her @helenestja­mes .

DENVER — The Detroit Red Wings scored first and converted on a power play, but their opponent’s superstars superseded everything.

With their current captain sitting in the press box and the franchise’s former captain watching from the visiting team’s management suite at Ball Arena on Wednesday, the Wings were, for the second straight game, shown up by one of the elite teams in the NHL. The Colorado Avalanche’s top line and top defenseman piled up points as the Wings gave up a season high in goals in a 7-2 loss, their third in a row.

“Certainly a tough one,” coach Derek Lalonde said. “I just don’t like how we gave their top guys two easy ones in the second period, because they were buzzing. That second period got out of hand there.

“I think we got overmatche­d and overwhelme­d a little bit. We let their big guns have too easy of a night.”

Defenseman Ben Chiarot called it, “just a bad game all around for us.”

It speaks to how well the Wings (33-23-6) have performed that it is their longest losing streak since before Christmas. It comes with general manager Steve Yzerman facing Friday’s 3 p.m. trade deadline to decide whether to make any changes to a team that has put the Wings on a path to advance to the playoffs.

“There’s no shame in losing to Florida and this team back to back,” Lalonde said. “But now we’re looking at three straight losses. Bottom line is, if we’re going to stay in this battle, we have to stop the bleeding.”

It was the first of at least two week’s worth of games the Wings are without the services of Dylan Larkin, who suffered a lower-body injury in the loss to the Florida Panthers.

Alex Lyon did what he could to withstand the Avs, but with them leading 5-2 after two periods, the Wings took the opportunit­y to give James Reimer some looks. Jonathan Drouin scored on him to pull the Avs ahead by four goals. By that time, Nathan MacKinnon already had four points, and Cale Makar, three goals. Jean-Luc Foudy added his first career NHL goal with 4:35 to play as the Wings gave up a season high 54 shots.

“We just gave them too many easy chances to a really good team,” defenseman Moritz Seider said. “They just skated up the ice and overwhelme­d us with a lot of speed. We just didn’t stay in the fight.

“It’s frustratin­g because you come out and you do the right things early on, but we just can’t do it for a full 60 right now.”

Lyon gets a workout

Robby Fabbri picked up his 16th goal of the season 1:48 into the game when he was in position in front of Alexander Georgiev’s crease to redirect Alex DeBrincat’s shot, giving the Wings an early boost on their power play. Makar evened that out within 4 minutes when he fired a shot through traffic. Lyon spent the next 10 minutes doing acrobatics to keep his teammates in it, as the Avalanche rolled out one attack after another, dominating zone play. Halfway through the period, shots favored Colorado, 10-2. It wasn’t until the second half the Wings were able to sustain offensive pressure

again.

Building another lead

David Perron picked up his 13th goal of the season when he made it 2-1 at 13:30 of the first period. Andrew Copp won a draw against Ross Colton, and the puck came back to Olli Määttä, who sent a shot on net. Georgiev saved that and Copp’s attempt. Perron was next, first trying a backhand and then converting on his own rebound. That gave the Wings their second lead. Nathan MacKinnon, who assisted on the first goal to draw his home point streak to 31 games, converted 6 seconds into a Colorado power play to make it 2-2.

Top-tier contributo­rs

Colorado’s top line — MacKinnon, Mikko Rantanen and Artturi Lehkonen — and its top defenseman, Makar, kept inflicting damage. Lehkonen was able to get time and space in front of Detroit’s net to hand the Wings their first deficit, 3-2, near the midpoint of the second period. MacKinnon assisted on that, which gave him his 68th point during his home point streak, and 108 points on the season. Makar contribute­d his second of the game, off a Patrick Kane turnover, at 16:12 — from Rantonen and, naturally, MacKinnon. With Jake Walman in the penalty box and 34 seconds left in the second period, Makar scored again to earn his first career hat trick.

 ?? RON CHENOY/USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Wings center Robby Fabbri shoots and scores on Avalanche goaltender Alexandar Georgiev in the first period on Wednesday in Denver.
RON CHENOY/USA TODAY SPORTS Wings center Robby Fabbri shoots and scores on Avalanche goaltender Alexandar Georgiev in the first period on Wednesday in Denver.

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