Vegas Taking In The Ocean Breeze Won’t Make Tonight’s Game Easy-Peasy


By STEPHEN WHYNO | Associated Press

FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. (AP) — The sour taste in the aftermath of their Stanley Cup Final Game 3 loss is gone for the Vegas Golden Knights, who quickly moved on to enjoying the nearby ocean breeze.

They’re breathing easily up 2-1 on the Florida Panthers in the series, knowing fully they’ve been the better team so far. Taking a day away off the ice and away from the rink — but not too far away from hockey on this big a stage — the Golden Knights are calm, cool and confident going into Game 4 Saturday night with another chance to move toward hoisting the Cup.

Vegas Golden Knights head coach Bruce Cassidy speaks during a post game news conference following Game 3 of the NHL hockey Stanley Cup Finals, Friday, June 9, 2023, in Sunrise, Fla. The Florida Panthers defeated the Vegas Golden Knights 3-2 in overtime. (AP

“We’re not going to change a lot. We don’t need to,” coach Bruce Cassidy said from his team’s beachfront hotel Friday morning. “We’re not going to beat ourselves up over (Game 3). We’re going to do what we’ve always done. We’re going to work to get better and keep growing our game and hopefully be better.”

The Golden Knights have only lost consecutive games once on this playoff run, when they were up 3-0 on Dallas in the Western Conference final. What followed was their best performance of the entire season.

That’s still the blueprint, which could come in handy since that was also a road game. But there are still elements of what Vegas is doing entirely within this series that give players confidence, everything from going a surprising 6 of 17 on the power play and a perfect 12 of 12 on the penalty kill to solving Sergei Bobrovsky early and even Ivan Barbashev hitting the post late in the third period Thursday.

“We certainly feel the first three games there’s been way more good than bad,” Cassidy said. “The guys know what’s at stake. It’ll be predominantly what we’ve been doing, 90% of how we want to play.”

The other 10%, the adjustments that make up the chess match during any playoff series, is also easy to identify. Forward Keegan Kolesar, whose crunching hit on Matthew Tkachuk knocked Florida’s leading scorer out for a big stretch of Game 3 because of concussion protocol, pointed to the Golden Knights giving up three goals at even strength as an anomaly.

Florida Panthers left wing Matthew Tkachuk speaks during a post game news conference following Game 3 of the NHL hockey Stanley Cup Finals, Friday, June 9, 2023, in Sunrise, Fla. The Florida Panthers defeated the Vegas Golden Knights 3-2 in overtime. Tkachuk tied the game in the third period. (AP Photo/Rebecca Blackwell

“That’s not like us,” Kolesar said. “That’s something that we’re going to have to clean up. We’re not going to beat ourselves down on it. We know we’ll be better from it next game, but there’s just little critiques that we can probably do to help ourselves out.”

They can also go back to making it a priority to create South Florida rush hour-like traffic in front of Bobrovsky, who returned to his second- and third-round form in a major bounce back from getting pulled in Game 2, stopping 25 of 27 shots.

Bobrovsky’s brilliance is just one reason the Panthers are riding high after Carter Verhaeghe’s goal got them back in the series and made them 7-0 in overtime this postseason. There’s also Tkachuk’s latest playoff heroics: setting up new dad Brandon Montour’s goal early in Game 3, scoring with 2:17 left in regulation to tie it and screening Vegas goalie Adin Hill to pave the way for Verhaeghe to find the net.

Coach Paul Maurice said the win gave his team a chance, and that’s enough for him right now. He shook off any notion the Panthers might have found control of the series — saying they didn’t even feel that way when they were on the way to beating Toronto in five games and sweeping Carolina.

“The picture that just came into my head was a frog reaching up and choking an alligator or something, ‘I’ve got him where I want him,’” Maurice said. “No, we’re scratching and clawing shift by shift. We’re not looking for control.”

Veteran Vegas defenseman Brayden McNabb agreed with the notion that he and his teammates have control after establishing it earlier in the series.

“Go win Game 4, it’s 3-1: That’s a pretty big lead,” McNabb said. “They got a little momentum off winning last game. It ends after the game. Both teams have a chance to regroup. We know what’s at stake for Game 4, and it’s a big game for us.”

Source: Associated Press. AP Sports Writer Tim Reynolds in Sunrise, Florida, contributed to this report.

Brock Boeser Pots 3-Assists, Canucks Stay Undefeated With 5th Straight Win

2022.23

Vancouver Canucks’ Andrei Kuzmenko (96) scores against Dallas Stars goalie Matt Murray (32) as Esa Lindell (23) defends while Ryan Suter (20) and Canucks’ J.T. Miller (9) watch during the first period. (Darry Dyck/The Canadian Press via AP)

By Associated Press

March 14, 2023

VANCOUVER, British Columbia (AP) — Guillaume Brisebois scored his first NHL goal and the Vancouver Canucks (29-32-5) beat the Western Conference-leading Dallas Stars (37-18-13) 5-2 on Tuesday night for their season-high fifth straight victory.

Brisebois scored at 4:09 of the third to make it 4-2.

“I’m really happy about it, but I’m not satisfied with it,” Brisebois said. “I think I have to build on that. And I think that’s going to build a little bit of confidence. But I’ve still got to play really hard and prove myself every day.”

Guillaume Brisebois #55 of the Vancouver Canucks holds up his first NHL goal puck after their NHL game against the Dallas Stars. (Photo by Jeff Vinnick/NHLI via Getty Images)

The 25-year-old defenseman has played 22 NHL games — 12 this season.

“I’ve got affection for those guys,” Canucks coach Rick Tocchet said. “Those guys are trying to make the NHL, right? And they bought in right away. They’re not perfect, nobody’s perfect. But the next shift or the next practice, they pick themselves up. I love that about them.”

Phillip Di Giuseppe, Andrei Kuzmenko, Anthony Beauvillier and J.T. Miller also scored for Vancouver, and Brock Boeser had three assists. Thatcher Demko stopped 25 shots in the finale of a six-game homestand.

Thatcher Demko #35 of the Vancouver Canucks makes a save on a shot by Jamie Benn #14 of the Dallas Stars during the second period. (Photo by Derek Cain/Getty Images)

Wyatt Johnston and Jamie Benn scored for Dallas, and Matt Murray made 15 saves in his second NHL start. The Stars lost for the first time on a six-game trip that ends with games in Edmonton on Thursday night and Calgary on Saturday night.

“There’s no quit in our group,” Stars coach Peter DeBoer said. “I didn’t think we had our best stuff tonight and I anticipated that with kind of the road we’ve been on here for the last week but still a winnable game.”

Di Giuseppe opened the scoring at 1:35 of the first period. Kuzmenko made it 2-0 at the six-minute mark with his 33rd goal of the season.

Johnston scored for Dallas at 48 seconds of the second. Beauvillier countered with 8:07 left in the second, and Benn got his 29th for Dallas on a power play with five seconds to go in the second.

Brisebois scored early in the third, and Miller connected with 3:02 left.

UP NEXT

Stars: At Edmonton on Thursday night.

Canucks: At Arizona on Thursday night.