Las Vegas Review-Journal

NHL Knights continue to struggle with Avs defense

- By David Schoen

DENVER — Flash back to the end of the postseason bubble. One of the primary reasons the Golden Knights didn’t play for the Stanley Cup was their inability to grind out five-on-five, inzone offense.

That same problem has arisen against the Colorado Avalanche.

The Knights saw the supply line to their offense taken away in the opener of the two-game series Thursday, as Colorado limited chances off the rush following a freewheeli­ng start for both teams.

With the teams tied in points atop the West Division entering Saturday’s finale at Ball Arena and on a collision course to meet in the playoffs, the Knights need to find a solution to the stingy Avalanche defense.

“They play a different style than most teams, and we’re going to have to adjust to it,” right wing Mark Stone said following Thursday’s

5-1 loss. “We’re not going to beat this team off the rush. They’ve got some guys who really do a good job. We have to make them come

200 feet to beat us, and I don’t think we did a very good job of that.”

The Knights have lost three of the five matchups with the Avalanche and were limited to two goals or fewer four times. The 19 shots on goal they produced Thursday was a season low.

Colorado features a mobile defense corps led by Cale Makar, Samuel Girard, Devon Toews and rookie Bowen Byram. Their skating ability allows them to kill off rushes in the neutral zone and quickly transition any turnovers into offense.

The Avalanche allow the fewest shots in the league at 25 per game.

“It’s something we’ve taken a lot of pride in as a team,” Avalanche coach Jared Bednar said. “It’s early reloads, making smart reads when a team’s leaving the offensive zone and getting numbers above the puck.

“It’s not anything that we do just against Vegas. It’s something that we try to do every night in order to make our team better, and we’ve been getting incrementa­lly better over the course of this season.”

The challenge for the Knights is similar to the playoffs when opponents limited opportunit­ies off the rush and their failure to manufactur­e offense through deflection­s or rebounds led to their ouster from the Western Conference Final.

Colorado backchecks with exceptiona­l speed and ferocity, but is undersized on the blue line.

If the Knights are able to get dump-ins below the goal line and establish a physical forecheck, they can wear down the Avalanche defense.

“If you put pucks in behind them, they don’t really want to go back and get it,” Stone said.

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