Two: Moving from Close to Closing Out
Kraken center Chandler Stephenson has been part of two Stanley Cup-winning teams, most recently, and in a primary role, with Friday’s opponent. Like any tested veteran, he recognizes teams go through rough patches and endure losses when one or two mistakes might be the difference. While talking with media, he calmly insisted he and teammates are “not far” off, citing the final 40 minutes in Boston and getting within a goal at Colorado despite allowing a “lethal” Avalanche power play group too many opportunities.
“This group still feels good and that huge,” said Stephenson. “We're just gripping our stick a little bit too tight right now ... The vibes, energy [in Thursday’s practice and off-ice] are good. It's obviously tough when you lose, a tough road trip, but we’ve got a homestead here to turn things around.”
For his part, Dan Bylsma provided an explanation that he’s talked with Oliver Bjorkstrand, who was a healthy scratch in Denver and he expects a “great response” from the Kraken all-star Friday night.
Speaking of great responses, Kraken fans will no doubt happily welcome back Daniel Sprong (acquired late Friday afternoon from Vancouver for future considerations). Fans haven’t forgotten his career year in 2022-23 when Seattle pushed within one playoff game of reaching the Western Conference final. Sprong, first acquired by the Kraken at the inaugural season trade deadline, notched 21 goals and 25 assists for 46 points in 66 regular season games, averaging just 11.5 minutes per game. He ranked top five in shots on goal despite lesser ice time.
One note: Joey Daccord will clearly be starting in goal against Vegas. Philipp Grubauer suffered an accident at home that Bylsma said will sideline the veteran goaltender for at least Friday’s game. Ales Stezka was called up from AHL Coachella Valley to back up Friday.
Three: Know the Foe: Vegas 1-3-1 on Road, But Win Was Recent
After notching eight straight home wins and no losses, Vegas won its first road game Wednesday, a 4-2 decision in Edmonton. Former Ron Francis' fifth-round draft choice in Carolina days, defenseman Noah Hanifin, scored twice, and superstar center Jack Eichel had a three-point night (1G, 2A). “I was starting to get in our heads a little bit [about four road losses],” said Hanifin, who, look out, always seems to play well against Seattle. Hanifin now has three goals and two assists in the last two Vegas games, both wins, while averaging 24 minutes of time on ice.
Eichel has 19 points (4G, 15A), while right wing Mark Stone, fully healthy, is the team leader with 21 points (6G, 15A). VGK has seven players already with double-digits scoring. Vegas goaltenders have an overall .893 save percentage but are benefitting from fewer shots on goals than more than 25 other NHL clubs and the most goals scored by any team in the Pacific Division. Hanifin now has three goals and two assists in the last two Vegas games, both wins, while averaging 24 minutes of time on ice.