Las Vegas Review-Journal

Shuffling of forward lines appears to be over

Top-six combinatio­ns played most of game

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

Pete Deboer’s latest experiment with his forward lines is done.

The Golden Knights coach went back to his tried-and-true, top-six combinatio­ns for Wednesday’s rematch against the Minnesota Wild at T-mobile Arena, the same ones he used in the third period of Monday’s come-from-behind win.

That meant Max Pacioretty, fresh off a two-goal effort, was back on the top line with center Chandler Stephenson and right wing Mark Stone. The Misfit Line of William Karlsson centering Jonathan Marchessau­lt and Reilly Smith also was reunited.

“There’s a fine line there,” Deboer said. “Players and coaches, we’d love to have the same combinatio­ns the entire year. I think a coach, when things get stagnant or your team hasn’t had momentum for a large chunk of a game or games, we only have so many tools in order to spark a team.”

Deboer switched up the forward lines and defense pairs entering the series finale against Colorado on Feb. 22 hoping to snap a two-game losing skid. The Knights responded with a 3-0 victory and stuck with the lineup for Saturday’s 3-2 overtime win at Anaheim.

But the lines didn’t produce much offense.

In the win over the Ducks, the Knights had fewer shot attempts, scoring chances and high-dangers chances during five-onfive play, according to Naturalsta­ttrick. com. And Minnesota led 4-2 after two periods Monday before Deboer’s changes up front.

Stephenson, Stone and Alex Tuch had a plus-one goal differenti­al, but the Knights were outshot 21-9 at five-on-five and allowed 60 percent of the scoring chances when they were on the ice.

The trio of Pacioretty, Smith and center Cody Glass fared slightly better, as

KNIGHTS NOTEBOOK

the Knights had 50 percent of the shot attempts and a 5-2 advantage in high-danger chances. They didn’t produce a fiveon-five goal, however.

And the third line that featured Karlsson, Marchessau­lt and Nicolas Roy produced 45 percent of the shot attempts at five-on-five, though Marchessau­lt scored in Colorado and Karlsson tallied twice in Anaheim.

“I don’t think it was anything that was like a panic,” Stephenson said. “When they change the lines, some games you aren’t scoring. Little stretches where you might not score that many goals or the offense just isn’t there. You just need a little shakeup.”

Helmet talk

The Yelp reviews on the Knights’ gold helmets remain mixed, to say the least. Marchessau­lt was asked about the chrome buckets, and his long pause before answering said it all.

”It’s my organizati­on. I’m not going to say they have something bad,” Marchessau­lt said. “But I honestly don’t mind them. At first they were a little tough for the eyes.”

Marchessau­lt called the gold jerseys that the Knights wore Wednesday “flashy,” but prefers the reverse retro jersey with the secondary logo.

“The red one is really nice,” he said. “I like the retro phase the NHL is going through this year. Our organizati­on did a great job to make us look nice on the ice.”

Silver Knights add goalie

Goaltender Billy Christopou­los signed a profession­al tryout agreement with the Silver Knights. He appeared in 11 games with the ECHL’S Indy Fuel.

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