Colorado's best period of the night was probably the third when it had a 13-6 edge in shots, but the damage was already done from a lackluster start.
"We got outworked form the drop of the puck," Bednar said. "It's a desperate hockey team over there. They know the importance of these two points, and we weren't ready to compete at a level that you have to be ready to compete at in order to win a hockey game."
The Avalanche only managed two goals on its three-game road trip and was in danger of being shutout for the second time on the trek until Landeskog redirected a shot past Connor Hellebuyck with 16 seconds left in regulation.
Colorado's only other score this past week came on Rene Bourque's early tally in the third period of a 2-1 loss at the Ottawa Senators on Thursday.
That kind of offensive output isn't going to cut it in the final five weeks or Sunday when the Avs head into the second half of their ninth back-to-back set of the year.
"We just got to make sure that we try to turn the page as best as we can here in the next 20-something hours," Landeskog said. "Come out and make sure that we're hungry, and make sure that we prove to ourselves and our fans that the Avalanche that showed up here at the MTS Centre wasn't the Avalanche that we want to be and that we should be."
Saying that is all well and good, but Colorado won't be able to remove the sour taste of Saturday if the players don't actively make the change themselves.
"We got a game tomorrow, but it's just not, 'Let's forget about it and move onto tomorrow,' because that's going to be the same thing tomorrow," Beauchemin said. "Everybody's got to look at themselves in the mirror and think about what can be done here."