The Kraken once again lived up to what centerman and alternate captain Yanni Gourde calls "doing the right things" in recent games, defeating division leader Edmonton and its high-powered offense in a 4-3 Friday night thriller at Climate Pledge Arena.
The Kraken, now 9-13-2, have a four-game standings points streak, winning three of four games and losing in a shootout. It adds up to seven of a possible eight points and a much brighter outlook on competing for a playoff spot.
What's more, look at the top of the standings in each conference. In the East, Seattle has beaten Washington (Metropolitan Division leader) and Florida (Atlantic Division leader), plus Carolina when it was leading the Metro. In the West, Edmonton is now in the Kraken's 'W' column and same for Central division leader Minnesota (a Seattle victory earlier in the season).
The Kraken opened the scoring at Climate Pledge Arena less than a minute into the game.
Yes, Edmonton's and the NHL's leading scorer, Leon Draisaitl, knotted things seven minutes into the period.
But by first period's end, the Kraken were back ahead on the strength of an Adam Larsson goal scored with five of his former Edmonton teammates on the ice and the rest in nearby front-row bench-view seats.
Yes, Edmonton defenseman Evan Bouchard tied up the game again, 2-2, scoring eight minutes into the second period on a long Oilers puck possession in the Seattle end. The replay appeared to show at least one and possibly two screens on Kraken goalie Philipp Grubauer's sightlines to the puck.
But by second period's end, the Kraken rebounded with two goals. It's what Kraken coach Dave Hakstol calls "tilting the ice."
"We were competitive all night," Hakstol said after the game. "We managed the puck well and put ourselves in good spots ... we had contributions from everybody in the lineup."
Hakstol is an even-keeled leader, but he did add some levity to assistant coach Paul McFarland taking a puck to the forehead during the game. Hakstol said NHL Network was on in the victorious locker room and added he didn't understand how McFarland wasn't "First Star" because never left the bench or missed a play.
"I'm 'glad' that one hit him," said Hakstol, ending his remarks. "I didn't see it."
By game's end, the Kraken earned every decimal of the two standings points. As usual, the Kraken crowd was Seattle-worthy loud and once again resoundingly entertained. The final minute was basically a 6-on-4 Edmonton advantage (empty net and questionable penalty call on Larsson) with the world's best two scorers on the ice for the division leaders.
The last four-plus minutes was not for the faint-hearted. Somebody check if former NHL Seattle senior advisor of hockey operations and current Oilers coach Dave Tippett even took stars Draisaitl and Connor McDavid off the ice in those final minutes.