Kraken let massive opportunity slip away as Avalanche dominate to force game seven 

By Charles Hamaker 

Seattle, WA – With a chance to advance to the second round of the Stanley Cup Playoffs with a victory, the Seattle Kraken fell flat on their face in front of their raucous home crowd at Climate Pledge Arena. The Kraken failed to mitigate the intensity and aggression displayed by an Avalanche team with their season on the line and already down numerous starters due to various reasons, and Colorado pushed through. With their backs against the wall, the defending Stanley Cup Champions showed why they secured the Central division in the western conference and their loaded top line pushed the pace all night. Now, the fate of both teams' seasons hangs in the balance of game seven on Sunday.   

It’s a seven-game series. Right. And they deserve tonight. They deserve tonight’s win. They played well. They were a little bit better than we were. We couldn’t push our way back into the game, so now we got to reset. Good travel day tomorrow and get after it like, this is it now, right? It’s all on the line. 
— Dave Hakstol, Seattle Kraken head coach, on tonight's loss.

Game six saw plenty of physicality between the Kraken and Avalanche, just as we’ve witnessed all series long (Photos by Liv Lyons)

Colorado comes out with intensity 

The Avalanche had to come out in this game swinging and bring the fight to the Kraken, and that they did. Seattle had been the better team early in nearly every game of this series, and Colorado knew that if they were to take game six on the road they’d need to get off to a good start. Avalanche head coach Jared Bednar decided to load his top line, placing Artturi Lehkonen, Nathan MacKinnon, and Mikko Rantanen together to really put pressure on the Kraken. It appeared Colorado were going to find an early score to begin this game, as Bowen Byram used numerous Seattle skaters in front of Kraken goaltender Philipp Grubauer as screens to find the back of the net. Seattle’s head video analyst Tim Ohashi had the team challenge the goal for offsides and they won, taking the goal off the board, but the Avalanche were not deterred in their intensity.   

I don’t think there was anything different. I really don’t. I mean, they played with good pace. They’re a good forecheck, you know, a good forechecking team. They transition and come at you with pace. But I don’t think there was anything different to it.
— Dave Hakstol, Seattle Kraken head coach, on if the Avalanche did anything different on the forecheck.  

After the Kraken seemed to respond with a goal that counted, putting the Avalanche in a deficit, Colorado roared back and struck in a crucial moment before the intermission. In the dying seconds of the first frame, the Avalanche built from their defensive zone with speed as Nathan MacKinnon facilitated a pass from a faceoff circle to teammate Devon Toews who was jumping into the play. Toews shot was stopped initially by Grubauer, but remained free as it bounced in front of the crease. No Seattle stick could clear the puck in time, allowing Colorado’s Evan Rodrigues to poke the loose puck over to teammate Mikko Rantanen for the easy tap in. Just like that, there was no lead heading into the first intermission, and the Avalanche had broken through.  

Colorado’s Mikko Rantanen (#96) scored the first goal of the night for the Avalanche (Photo by Liv Lyons)

I don’t think that contributed to it. I mean, that doesn’t carry from one period to the next, I don’t believe. But we made a mistake, it was a little bit of a chaotic period, but we were in a good spot with a one goal lead, and that’s a tough goal to give up. And right at the end of the period, we got caught on a back check and ran and beat our guy off the bench. Coming off the bench, he beat him to the net.
— Dave Hakstol, Seattle Kraken head coach, on the Rantanen goal before the first intermission and it potentially affecting momentum.  
A lot of pace in the first period, back and forth, both ways up and down the rink. Second period, they tilted the game their direction in terms of they got on top of us with their forecheck, which it starts momentum, and we weren’t able to break that enough. So you start defending, you end up defending and end up in that period killing six minutes in penalties, and now you’re coming off of that and fighting for energy and fighting to turn around the momentum at the same time, we weren’t able to do that in that second period.
— Dave Hakstol, Seattle Kraken head coach, on his assessment of the loss.  

Kraken defenseman Vince Dunn’s first period goal had Climate Pledge Arena rocking (Photo by Liv lyons)

Early response pressure by Kraken isn’t sustained 

A big reason for the success of Seattle in this series against the defending Stanley Cup champions has been their quick starts and waves of pressure generated against Colorado. The Kraken were able to find a faint hint of that in this game, thanks to Vince Dunn’s one-timer goal to open the scoring in the first period. Just over a minute after the Avalanche “goal” by Bowen Byram was overturned, Seattle had a zone entry that saw rookie forward Tye Kartye send a puck towards Colorado goaltender Alexandar Georgiev. Georgiev made the right leg pad save, and teammate Erik Johnson attempted to clear the puck up the boards for a change. In the right place, at the right time, was Kraken defenseman Vince Dunn, who immediately took his shot and slammed a one-timer past Georgiev cleanly to open the scoring.  

 

The vibes were good inside of Climate Pledge Arena following the Dunn goal, the 17,151+ fans waving their rally towels and erupting in immediate succession. It appeared that Seattle was again going to muster up that pressure that they had generated early in each game of the series to this point, but it turned out to be a blip on the greater scale of Colorado’s most complete game of the series. After a first frame that saw them register ten shots on goal, the Kraken were only able to muster four shots in five-on-five play in the final two periods. In total, Seattle registered 13, but both of those numbers are truly inexcusable when it comes to trying to close out a series against a team that’s down numerous notable players and when the chance to advance is in your home building.  

I thought we played a lot on our heels tonight. We expected them to give the game to us and didn’t really play with pressure. And obviously a good team like that or play with desperation, they’re going to come at you in waves. I think obviously that we were in the box a lot too. It gives their power play a lot of opportunity and that just creates momentum and then tires us out. So, I mean, accustomed to a lot of that stuff. 
— Jordan Eberle, Seattle Kraken forward and alternate captain, on what changed after his team scored first.

Seattle Kraken forward Jordan Eberle tries to get a shot past Colorado Avalanche goaltender Alexandar Georgiev in the crease (Photo by Liv Lyons)

Seattle’s effort suspect in loss 

A noticeable issue in this loss was the effort displayed by the Kraken, and while not everyone on the team can be held responsible in that regard, most of Seattle’s skaters didn’t look up to the task tonight. Again, it needs to be stated that the Colorado Avalanche are the defending Stanley Cup Champions and won the Central division. While they are missing some notable faces, from last year’s cup winning team and this regular season, they’re still a very capable group. While a large factor in tonight’s loss for the Kraken was that Colorado just looked more prepared to play, therein lies another issue. Seattle as a unit didn’t look like they were ready to go for the full 60 minutes, and it almost appeared that they were okay with this game heading back to Colorado for game seven.  

We kept trying to find a spark and we couldn’t. Like I said, I thought we were just playing a little bit too timid. And we got a team who’s obviously on the brink. They’re going to play with a lot of desperation and we knew they were going to get their best. So obviously disappointing. But at the end of the day, seven game series, we had a chance. 
— Jordan Eberle, Seattle Kraken forward and alternate captain, on the frustration of not finding their footing.

Seattle Kraken forward Brandon Tanev’s effort was one that was not questionable (Photo by Liv Lyons)

First playoff series in franchise history will be decided in game seven 

This game now must head back into the barn of the defending Stanley Cup Champions and be decided in one winner take all game with everything on the line. The Kraken played very well throughout much of this series, and to an extent even tonight’s game was different since Moneypuck.com had the expected goals at a similar number for this result. Considering that they have won twice in Colorado in this series, it isn’t extraordinary to believe that they can do what it takes to take this series in game seven and advance. It certainly won’t be easy, once again the season is on the line, and we saw tonight what the Avalanche can do with their backs against the wall. While Seattle defenseman Vince Dunn said that the team needs to play like it’s any other game, head coach Dave Hakstol went in the other direction to express how his team must bring it on Sunday.  

An odd sequence happened in the third period of the game when Avalanche forward Artturi Lehkonen went airborne up and over Kraken goaltender Philipp Grubauer, taking his mask off in the process (Photos by Liv Lyons)

Quick notes 

  • Vince Dunn’s first-period goal made the Kraken the second team this postseason (Tampa Bay) to have 14 different goal scorers. Seattle is one of six teams since 1994 (including Tampa Bay) to have 14 goal scorers in a first-round series according to NHL Stats. 

  • Dunn's goal in the first period was his first goal of the playoffs. 

  • The Kraken became the first team in NHL history to open the scoring in each of a franchise’s first six playoff games, according to NHL Stats. The Kraken also become the first-ever team to score in each of the first six games against the reigning Stanley Cup Champions. 

  • The Kraken went a perfect 5-for-5 on the penalty kill tonight and have now killed off eight consecutive penalties dating back to Game 4 April 24. 

  • The team is 16-for-17 when playing shorthanded this series. 

  • Tonight marked the second instance this post season in which a team has been perfect on the penalty kill in a game where they have taken five or more penalties. The other was the New Jersey Devils, who went a perfect 5-for-5 on the penalty kill against the New York Rangers on April 22. 

Colorado forward Nathan MacKinnon and Seattle forward Yanni Gourde, alternate captains for their respective teams, chase the puck (Photo by Liv Lyons)

What’s next? 

Tonight’s game six result sets up a winner take all game seven on Sunday, April 30th with a puck drop time of 6:30PM PST. Instead of handling business and advancing to the second round in their own building, the Kraken couldn’t put it together against this inspired Avalanche team and the series will meet its end in Colorado at Ball Arena. While Seattle has showed throughout the course of this series that they belong and that they’ve been the better team, the lack of effort and drive to close tonight’s game out raises the question if perhaps the experience of the Avalanche is pushing through. The Kraken will look to bounce back from this poor performance and make history in game seven this Sunday.  

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