Nathan MacKinnon saw a team that just couldnât get up the ice with its customary speed. Couldnât generate quality scoring chances. Couldnât get in a flow.
That wasn’t them.
âWe were bad,â the Colorado forward acknowledged after a 4-1 loss to St. Louis that tied the second-round series at a game apiece. âReally bad.â
The Blues made all the right moves â from shuffling their lines to generate more offense to finding a way to clog up the middle and frustrate the Avalanche’s fast flyers.
It’s now Colorado’s move in this high stakes game of chess on ice, with the series shifting to St. Louis for Game 3 on Saturday (8 p.m. ET, TNT).
Everything’s on the table, too, for the top seed in the West. That includes line changes and possibly swapping out players.
âYouâre not going to win in the playoffs if you donât bring your best game,â Avalanche coach Jared Bednar said Friday after practice. âWe weren’t even close last night and it’s on us. …. Our best game is to be determined. Weâre always in search of the perfect game.â
First order of business: Finding a way to create more space for MacKinnon and defenseman Cale Makar to maneuver. The Blues made it awfully difficult for them through the neutral zone in Game 2. Makar has yet to register a point after a three-goal, seven-assist series in a first-round sweep of Nashville.
There’s also the curious case of Mikko Rantanen, who led the team in points during the regular season but has yet to score in these playoffs (he does have seven assists).
âDo you think Mikko is playing his best hockey that you’ve seen him play?â Bednar quizzed. âWe need him to be an impact player.â
The Avalanche potentially could shake things up, possibly insert players like forwards Alex Newhook and Logan OâConnor into the lineup.
Or they may just shuffle their lines similar to the way the Blues did before Game 2. St. Louis got instant results by pairing David Perron (two goals) with Pavel Buchnevich (two assists) and Ryan OâReilly (one assist).
Colorado may reunite the top line of MacKinnon, Rantanen and captain Gabriel Landeskog. But Bednar added he was pleased of the performance of Landeskog, Nazem Kadri and Artturi Lehkonen on a line. As for the mood of the squad, Bednar said the âguys are in good spirits.â
âThey understand it’s about us mostly â mostly about us,â he added.
Still, thereâs this always hovering over the Avs: They have lost in the second round in each of the last three postseasons. Last season, they were up 2-0 on Vegas before losing four straight.
âThereâs no reason to panic,â defenseman Bowen Byram said. âYouâre not going to win every game in the playoffs. Theyâre a good team. They know how to win. Theyâve won before. … Itâs just readjusting.â
Blues goaltender Jordan Binnington has befuddled Colorado. After stopping 51 shots in a 3-2 overtime loss in Game 1, Binnington turned back 30 on Thursday. Since 2019, when he led the Blues to the Stanley Cup title as a rookie, heâs recorded a 2.74 goals-against average.
âHe made saves when he needed to â big time,â Blues coach Craig Berube said.
Colorado’s mission is to take make sure he doesn’t track the puck as well as he has been through the opening two games.
âGoalies are so good now that if they’re going to see everything, they’re going to stop it,â Bednar said. âBreaking the goalie’s eyesight, even if it’s a moving screen, it’s uber important. … We’ve got to get into his eyes.â
Really, though, it had a lot to do with St. Louis not allowing Colorado to zip around the ice. The Blues did what most haven’t been able to do â slow them down.
They certainly wouldnât mind a repeat performance at home.
âItâs playoff hockey. Itâs going to come down to competing at a high level, winning battles, making sure youâre playing with good structure and every guy thatâs dressed needs to be at his best,â Berube said. âThatâs what we got (in Game 2). Every guy was at his best, in my opinion.â
For Colorado, a road win begins with quieting the crowd early. They won both games in Nashville by scoring first.
âWe get to go on the road and hopefully steal one there, hopefully two,” MacKinnon said. “Weâve got to forget about (Game 2) and move on and get back to the way we can play.”
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