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The Colorado Avalanche defeated the Minnesota Wild 5-2, taking a 2-0 lead in their playoff series. Nathan MacKinnon contributed significantly with a goal and three assists.
Ball Arena welcomed Avalanche fans (and some Wild fans) for game two of the second round series between the Colorado Avalanche and Minnesota Wild, and those supporting the home club would head to the lot happy once again.
The Avalanche scored first and last tonight, and despite Matt Boldy, Quinn Hughes, and Marcus Johanssonâs best effort, Coloradoâs star power and physicality won the night.
Nathan MacKinnon had three assists and a goal, Gabe Landeskog scored on the power play, and the Avalanche were the aggressors in the checking department.
Scott Wedgewood made some clutch saves on the kill and looked good in his 6th consecutive playoff start and victory.
On the other hand, Filip Gustavsson gave up two goals on his first two shots and didnât appear all that comfortable for the Wild.
The Avs have Minnesota in a must-win situation now after snagging a 5-2 victory.
Letâs take a deeper look at the action of game number two!
I hardly get a bold prediction right on the , but today I actually earned a ding as was indeed the first goalscorer of the evening. I mentioned on the program that I felt heâd been plenty creative and was due for a goal rather than a setup.
The Colorado Avalanche won the game 5-2 against the Minnesota Wild.
Gabe Landeskog scored on the power play, and Nathan MacKinnon had a goal along with three assists.
Scott Wedgewood made his sixth consecutive playoff start in this game.
The Avalanche currently lead the series 2-0 against the Wild.

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Nathan MacKinnon broke in and found Martin Necas on a drop pass, who broke toward the net and sent a backhand shot through traffic that beat Filip Gustavsson.
In the intermission report, Mark Messier said, âYou need a save there,â when recapping the tally that would give the Avalanche a 1-0 lead.
That lead would last all of six seconds as a broken play leading to Devon Toews and Cale Makar both covering the same Wild player.
Martin Necas was left to pick up Kirill Kaprisov, but didnât really stand a chance in that regard.
Kaprisov would break in all alone and beat Scott Wedgewood with ease. We were tied at one.
The Colorado Avalanche power play dominated the conversation throughout the regular season (not in a good way). Still, it was on point tonight, starting with the third goal of the first period logged by Gabe Landeskog.
The tape-to-tape passes from Kadri to Makar to Necas connected with Nathan MacKinnon, who one-touched a pass from the net side to Landeskog in the bumper position. Landy left no doubt with the finish. 2-1 Avalanche, and thatâs how the first period would end.
The Avalanche got an early second-period goal from deadline addition Nicolas Roy on a feed from Ross Colton to give the boys in burgundy a 3-1 lead.
Good to see Rosco get on the board for the first time this playoffs, and Nic Roy now has 4 points in the six playoff games this postseason.
Colorado hasnât lost a game all season where theyâve held the lead heading into the third, and would add another notch to that log on the back of another power play goal, this time from Nathan MacKinnon.
Nate did well to find himself some open ice and got a fortunate bounce as his one-timer went off Yakov Treninâs shin and in. The Avalanche would extend their lead to 4-1.
We saw a little pushback from the Minnesota Wild, who got a third-period goal from Marcus Johansson. I thought Johansson was among the Wildâs best players, and so I wasnât surprised that he finally broke through, bringing the score to 4-2.
In the end, a not-so-smart cross-check from Karpisov would tranquilize the Wildâs comeback effort, and inevitably, Val Nichushkin would loft a puck the length of the ice and into the empty net.
The Avalanche win 5-2 in a professional, workman-like effort and improve to 6-0 in the playoffs, taking a 2-0 series lead heading to Minnesota for game three.
The Wild have to be disappointed in a couple of things tonight, but Iâll start with the penalties they took. Ryan Hartmanâs trip in the second and Kaprisovâs cross-check to Makarâs face were killers tonight.
Hartmanâs didnât end up in a goal and neither did Kaprisovâs, oddly enough, but they did kill some much-needed momentum on completely avoidable infractions.
The Avalanche pulled the uno-reverse card and outhit the Minnesota Wild with more than a few memorable and crunching hits.
Brock Nelson caught Ryan Hartman reaching, Nathan MacKinnon bowled right over Quinn Hughes, and pasted Matt Boldy to the boards. I expect a response from the Wild in this regard in game three, so it will be important for Colorado to make the most of those three daysâ rest.
Minnesota went with Filip Gustavsson tonight as a surprise replacement for Jesper Wallstedt, and it seemed to backfire a bit.
A couple of Coloradoâs goals, youâd like your goalie to make a save, but Gustavsson hasnât had a start since March and was making a habit of giving up four or more back then, so Iâm confused as to what sort of jolt John Hines was expecting from that move.
Itâs so shockingly odd that it leads me to speculate that something was wrong with Wallstedt. It could be as simple as he just needed a night off. Speculation aside, Iâd bet the Wild go with Wallstedt for the rest of the series.
Coloradoâs top guns were flying around tonight, and when thatâs the case, they are a tough team to beat. It felt like the Lehkonen â MacKinnon â Necas line could score on any shift, and Gabe Landeskog still seems to find another level this time of year.
Colorado did recommit defensively, and outside of that lapse that led to Kaprisovâs goal, they were back to shutting things down. What you just read may be true, but make no mistake: Scott Wedgewood did his thing yet again.
The Avs will head to Minnesota for a Saturday night game three at Grand Casino Arena in St. Paul for a 7 p.m. MT start time.
Let us know what you thought of this contest in the comments!