In addition to his goal, the 23-year-old centerman logged 9:30 minutes, fired off two shots and was 10-for-16 (63%) in the faceoff circle as he skated on a line alongside Andrew Cogliano and Logan O'Connor.
"I liked him a lot," Avalanche Head Coach Jared Bednar said of Meyers. "He's a strong skater, [has] a great motor, and was in pursuit of the puck all night. He has pretty good details to his game. He's just learning our structure and I thought he was good."
The 5-foot-11, 194-pound left shot extended Colorado's lead 4-0 over the Canes early in the second period and 25 seconds after J.T. Compher buried his second power-play goal of the night. The play unfolded as O'Connor sent a pass from below the goal line to the net front, where put in the loss puck that was fumbled around by roofing a backhanded shot over Carolina netminder Frederik Andersen.
As Meyers skated over to the Avalanche bench to go down the handshake line after lighting the lamp, he was halted along the way and seized with hugs from his new enthusiastic teammates.
"We were all happy," Bednar said. "You could see our bench, we were all happy for him. It's a big deal to play your first NHL game. It's not easy to get here then, to be able to play real well. He was good in the faceoff circle, he was going to the net hard, he was playing the right way. He was doing exactly what we wanted in the play."
The reaction from Colorado's bench was just a microsim of the warm welcome Meyers had received from the organization as he recalled a classy move by the team's captain on his first day of practice that set the tone.