The Kraken couldn't solve a rookie goalie for five-and-a-half periods over the last two games. The goaltender is one in the same American Hockey League call-up Logan Thompson in net for Vegas, who made 26 saves for his seventh win in his first 11 NHL starts.
Kraken center Alex Wennberg broke the scoreless string mid-third period with assists from Jared McCann and Will Borgen. McCann, who brawled in the second period, is now tied with Yanni Gourde for the team lead in scoring (goals and assists).
"Frustration," said McCann, when asked what led him to fight, admitting it is not the strongest part of his game. "I'm obviously not very good at it."
His teammates appreciated McCann's performance on all levels, clear from the banging of sticks against the boards at the Kraken bench.
"To see a guy like 'Canner' do that, he has such a great heart," said rookie forward Kole Lind, who scored his first NHL goal late in the third period. "I can watch and learn from him.
"Guys competed hard throughout the hockey game," coach Dave Hakstol said. "I thought it was important to get that push in the third."
Hakstol said Vegas' second and third goals were results of Kraken mistakes, including defenseman Jamie Oleksiak falling while clearing the puck near Seattle's net. If you take out those mistakes, he said, the game looks more competitive than the final score. Hakstol added he thought his squad cut down significantly on turnovers from Wednesday's loss.
"It's cliché," McCann said post-game. "We just have to stay positive. It's been a tough year, we have to grind it out and play for each other."
Seattle efforts to get the margin down to a one-goal deficit were hampered by an inadvertent delay-of-game penalty on alternate captain Adam Larsson with less than six minutes remaining, though fellow D-man Carson Soucy did fire off a wicked wrist shot on a shorthanded attempt that challenged the rookie Thompson.
Vegas 27-goal scorer Jonathan Marchessault tallied his second empty-net goal in the two-game set to make it 4-1 at the 17:44 mark of the third period.
Not a squad to quit, playing to the end, Seattle answered back with the rookie Lind scoring his first NHL goal at 18:22 of the third period to make it 4-2. Skating and wheeling to the slot with time and space, Lind ripped a quick-release snap shot that he has been flashing since his recent call-up from AHL Charlotte.
Vegas forward William Karlsson scored a second empty-net goal with 31 seconds remaining to make it a 5-2 final.