Las Vegas Review-Journal

Beauty is in the eye of the winning side

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Isuppose it’s like a class of art students staring at a Picasso and each being asked to interpret the work. Same painting. Wide range of opinion.

This also holds true in sports, where the aftermath of perspectiv­e from a close game is almost always different depending on which side of the score you land.

It’s a safe bet Game 1 of the bestof-seven Western Conference playoff series Wednesday night between the Golden Knights and Kings wasn’t nearly as physical as final stats suggested — a total of 127 hits were officially recorded. But that doesn’t mean Vegas didn’t send an import

GRANEY

game a little bit.

“We’re playing strong, hard on the forecheck, finishing checks when they’re there and not going out of our way to chase guys down the ice and it was effective for us, so we’re going to try to continue the same.”

Doughty delivered a crunching check midway through the third period of the Knights’ 1-0 victory on Wednesday, which caused Carrier to faceplant to the ice like a woozy MMA fighter.

Doughty, who was not penalized on the play, had a hearing with Player Safety on Thursday afternoon.

“Doughty delivers a high, forceful hit that makes Carrier’s head the main point of contact on a hit where such head contact was avoidable. This is an illegal check to the head,” the league said in announcing the suspension.

“It is important to note that while Doughty’s first point of contact is with Carrier’s arm, the illegal check to the head rule does not take into account what the first point of contact is.”

Carrier, who dished out several punishing hits throughout the opening game, did not return and was evaluated for a concussion.

He did not participat­e in the Knights’ optional skate Thursday at City National Arena. Coach Gerard Gallant said Carrier is day to day with an upper-body injury.

“We’ve had some history, I guess, with these guys and those hits,” Knights defenseman Brayden Mcnabb said of his former team. “We’re in playoff

mode. It’s all about wins. We’re going to be hard on guys if we have the opportunit­y, but we’re not going to go out of our way to do anything stupid or take penalties.”

The Knights faced a similar dilemma against Los Angeles during a homeand-home series in late February when forward Oscar Lindberg was blindsided near center ice by Kings winger Kyle Clifford in the first period and suffered a concussion.

The Knights spent much of that game and the one after trying to exact retributio­n, and Los Angeles won both times.

If Carrier can’t go in Game 2, Gallant could insert rugged forward Ryan Reaves onto the fourth line or opt for the faster — but less physical — Oscar Lindberg.

The possible return of wing David Perron for Game 2 further complicate­s Gallant’s decisions. Should Perron play Friday, add Ryan Carpenter and Alex Tuch to the list of potential fourth-line wings.

“It heats you up a little bit because you know that if I’m in that game, I’d probably try and go do something about it, or maybe I can calm that situation down,” Reaves said. “A lot the times, just being able to get a good, clean hit on a (defenseman) or just a good, clean hit on anybody is enough to calm the game down knowing that I’m running around a little bit.”

The loss of Doughty, a Norris Trophy candidate, is a blow for an already-thin Los Angeles defense corps, which was missing Derek Forbort and Jake Muzzin for Game 1 and struggled to contain the Knights’ speedy forwards.

Doughty played a game-high 28:02 in the opener and spent the majority of his ice time matched against the Knights’ top line of William Karlsson, Jonathan Marchessau­lt and Reilly Smith.

“It’s going to be tough if we don’t have him,” Kings defenseman Oscar Fantenberg said prior to Doughty’s suspension. “He’s the best defenseman in the league, so it wouldn’t be easy. Everybody would have to step up and give us those good minutes in his place.”

Contact David Schoen at dschoen@ reviewjour­nal.com or 702-387-5203. Follow @Davidschoe­nlvrj on Twitter.

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