Lodi News-Sentinel

Déjà vu for Sharks in loss to Kraken

- Curtis Pashelka

SAN JOSE – The San Jose Sharks – for the third consecutiv­e game — were not ready to play from the opening drop of the puck on Monday.

It proved costly, as the Seattle Kraken most of their damage in the first 20 minutes and handed the Sharks a 4-2 loss before an announced crowd of 11,559 at SAP Center.

The Sharks, coming off a 4-0 win over the St. Louis Blues on Saturday, allowed goals to Matty Beniers, Oliver Bjorkstran­d, and Shane Wright and never recovered, as they lost for the 10th time in 11 games.

“You have to be engaged physically if you’re going to give yourself a chance, and we weren’t anything like that in the first 20 minutes,” Sharks coach David Quinn said. “It got better in the last 40, but not to the level that we need it to be.”

Monday’s game represente­d a chance for the Sharks to win back-toback games for the first time since Jan. 22 and 23, when they beat the Los Angeles Kings and

New York Rangers to extend their then-winning streak to three games.

Even after the slow start, the Sharks only trailed 3-2 going into the third period.

With the Sharks down by two, Mikael Granlund controlled the puck behind the Seattle net and sent it back to the point for Calen Addison. The puck then found its way over to Marc-Edouard Vlasic, who fired the puck toward Kraken goalie Philipp Grubauer.

The shot was tipped by Klim Kostin past Grubauer, giving him his seventh goal of the season and his fourth since he came to the Sharks on March 8 from the Detroit Red Wings for defenseman Radim Simek.

It was a good way for the Sharks to mostly erase a terrible start, as they allowed three goals in the first 17:06, including one 29 seconds into the game.

“All year, I think our resilience is something that we pride ourselves on,” Sharks defenseman Kyle Burroughs said. “Being able to climb back and never say die and keep fighting.”

The Sharks turned the puck over in their own zone, and after he found a soft spot in the Sharks’ end, Beniers took a pass from Bjorkstran­d and fired it past Mackenzie Blackwood for a 1-0 Kraken lead.

Bjorkstran­d and Wright also scored in the first period for the Kraken, goals sandwiched around a power play marker by Fabian Zetterlund at the 14:19 mark.

Blackwood, making his fourth straight start, made seven saves in the first period and eight more in the second. He finished with 29 saves.

Blackwood had to be terrific in the first period in the Sharks’ last two games as well, as the skaters in front of him could not generate many offensive opportunit­ies. In the first period of both games, they were outchanced, per Natural Stat Trick, 22-5.

“There’s a pattern going on now where we’ve gotten off to bad starts the last three games,” Quinn said. “We have to do a better job of being ready to go at the drop of the puck.

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