Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Knights run out of rink

Canucks clunker: With glow-in-the-dark jerseys, team disappears

- By Ben Gotz Contact Ben Gotz at bgotz@reviewjour­nal.com. Follow @Bensgotz on Twitter.

J.T. Miller moved the puck left, right, left.

The Vancouver Canucks right wing was right in front of the Golden Knights’ net, but he had time to make a move. There was no one close enough to stop him.

Miller was patient before sliding the puck to center Bo Horvat, who promptly slammed it into the Knights’ net for a 5-0 lead with two seconds left in the second period. Some of the announced crowd of 18,004 at T-mobile Arena booed. Some sat in stunned silence. Some headed for the exits.

All reactions were understand­able. The Knights, a day after coach Bruce Cassidy said they were “outplayed” in a 4-2 home loss to Seattle, put in one of their worst performanc­es of the season against the Canucks in a 5-1 loss Saturday.

They tied a season high in goals allowed to lose to Vancouver in regulation for only the second time in 16 meetings.

T-mobile Arena started off energetic.

The Knights (16-6-1) wore their new, glow-in-the-dark Reverse Retro jerseys for the first time, and the team prepared new in-game elements for the occasion. There was a fresh intro video and the debut of a “Let’s go Vegas” chant.

The Knights’ performanc­e slowly drained the life from the building.

Vancouver’s power-play struck twice in the first period thanks to goals from right wing Brock Boeser and Miller. The Canucks (8-10-3) added another one on the man advantage with 8:27 left in the second off a one-timer from center Elias Pettersson.

Vancouver still wouldn’t let up.

Right wing Andrei Kuzmenko scored the Canuck’s first five-on-five goal with 6:41 left in the period after being allowed to skate down the slot unguarded. Horvat’s buzzer-beater was the cherry on top.

The Knights broke up goaltender Spencer Martin’s shutout with a goal from right wing Jonathan Marchessau­lt with 3:17 remaining, but that was about their only highlight. Goaltender Logan Thompson, under siege almost the entire game, allowed five goals on 36 shots to fall to 7-2 in November.

The loss dropped the Knights to 3-4-1 their last eight games, and 2-4 at home in that span.

Here are three takeaways from the loss:

1. Penalty-kill problem

The Knights didn’t only allow a season-high three power-play goals on five opportunit­ies Saturday. They allowed them in a minute.

Boeser scored 10 seconds into the Canucks’ first power play. Miller struck in five seconds. Pettersson’s goal came 45 seconds into Vancouver’s fourth opportunit­y.

The three power-play goals were a season high for the Canucks, who entered Saturday ranked fifth in the NHL. The Knights’ 22ndranked penalty kill is 5-for-9 its last three games.

2. Fight night

Two Knights vented some of their frustratio­n late in the game.

Marchessau­lt, listed at 5 feet, 9 inches, 183 pounds, fought Vancouver left wing Conor Garland, listed at 5-10, 165, 8:36 into the third period. It was Marchessau­lt’s third NHL fight and Garland’s first, according to the website Hockey Fights.

Right wing Keegan Kolesar and left wing Dakota Joshua also dropped the gloves with 6:37 left in the game. They were the third and fourth fights of the Knights’ season.

3. Knights killers

Boeser and Pettersson always seem to make an impact when the two teams meet.

Boeser’s goal was his sixth in 11 appearance­s against the Knights. Pettersson has scored seven in 11 games. The two are both on a hot streak, as well.

Boeser extended his point streak to nine games, and Pettersson stretched his to five.

 ?? ??
 ?? Ellen Schmidt
Las Vegas Review-journal @ellenschmi­dttt ?? The Canucks celebrate their fifth goal Saturday night as goaltender Logan Thompson contemplat­es what would be the Knights’ fourth loss in their past six home games.
Ellen Schmidt Las Vegas Review-journal @ellenschmi­dttt The Canucks celebrate their fifth goal Saturday night as goaltender Logan Thompson contemplat­es what would be the Knights’ fourth loss in their past six home games.
 ?? ?? Jack Eichel and the Knights didn’t do much right Saturday night at T-mobile Arena, allowing a season-high three power-play goals on five opportunit­ies and tying a season high in goals allowed.
Jack Eichel and the Knights didn’t do much right Saturday night at T-mobile Arena, allowing a season-high three power-play goals on five opportunit­ies and tying a season high in goals allowed.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States