After the opening goal, Driedger tightened up, looking in position and poised, managing to get his body and equipment in front of 14 straight saves to end the first period.
The second period featured more key saves from Driedger, who faced 30 shots by the 33rd minute of the game. One of the best stops was a close-in save on Canucks veteran J.T. Miller less than two minutes into the middle period. Not only did Driedger make the stop, he gathered in the rebound for a whistle and denied a second scoring chance.
Two minutes later, Vancouver's Travis Hamonic tied this PNW affair at two goals apiece. He scored on a near-side shot that beat Driedger between the legs (a goal the Kraken keeper said post-game he would like back, along with the first goal).
Driedger appeared to be indicating a video challenge for goaltender interference might be in order since Vancouver forward Matthew Highmore was pestering Driedger net-front. Kraken TV analyst JT Brown surmised the replay would show Kraken defenseman Jeremy Lauzon shoved Highmore into the crease.
Vancouver's third goal, late second period, resulted from Vancouver young star Elias Pettersson sending the puck toward the net from a bad angle to the right of Driedger, who blocked the shot but couldn't control the rebound. Rookie Vasily Podkolzin was there for a rebound score, his eighth of the year and second against Seattle. Kraken defender Adam Larsson, on the scene at the crease, couldn't find a way to clear the puck or lift Podkolzin's stick.
Vancouver finished the night with 46 shots on goal. Driedger made 41 saves (14 in the first period, 16 in the second and 11 in the third) while Demko notched his third victory over the Kraken.