Bjorkstrand said coach Dan Bylsma’s line juggling in the Sunday loss at Dallas jumpstarted the success of the Stephenson line against Nashville.
“We had few pairs [two of the three linemates] together last game, so we got familiar with each other,” said Bjorkstrand. “I think today we naturally clicked.”
Stephenson and Schwartz have known each other since childhood when Schwartz played youth hockey with Stephenson’s older brother, and Chandler tagged along for pickup games. They have paired together since the regular-season start, albeit with Bjorkstrand subbing in for Andre Burakovsky (who moved to a line with Matty Beniers and Eeli Tolvanen for this Nashville matchup).
“It’s obviously still a work in progress,” said Schwartz after the Kraken’s morning skate. “We've had some chances, but obviously, they haven't gone in. We’ve got to be better individually and produce more. There's been some good things and some things we can work on. With Bjorkstrand, it just a little bit different look offensively.”
Let’s agree the move produced a rousing first success and the look was both different and dangerous for Nashville.
Bylsma Praises Execution, Penalty Kill, Daccord’s Resilience
Dan Bylsma talked Tuesday morning about how a win against Nashville marked a winning trip and good feelings among teammates heading into five at home between Thursday and Oct. 26. He could barely express all that he liked about the effort here in Nashville.
“I think you saw a lot of good in a lot of different areas,” said Bylsma. “We talked about our execution and our cohesiveness, playing connected. That was evident [on the Bjorkstrand goal to make it 2-0]. It starts with coming out of the D-zone. Schwartz makes a wall play and Chandler’s speed produces a two-on-one. It's necessary for us to get some rewards for playing the right way and doing the right things. That kind of execution is great to see and you saw all over the game in a lot of different ways.”
Bylsma pointed out how the Yanni Gourde line’s forechecking led to a late-first-period Brandon Tanev goal to retake the lead, 3-2, at the first intermission. He mentioned how forechecking from Jared McCann and Shane Wright led to key insurance goals in the third period. He particularly liked the work of the penalty killers when the game was still in doubt in the middle period.
“The game was tight at that point in time,” said Bylsma. “It's four-on-three; it's a huge opportunity for them. Our guys came up big with some block shots, Rig [Jamie Oleksiak] in there, and Joey had to make some big saves.”
Bylsma called out Joey Daccord’s “next-play mentality in his career and in every game” when the goaltender stayed the course mentally when the Predators came back from 2-0 and 3-2.
“He never gives up,” said alternate captain Jaden Schwartz about Daccord during his post-game Kraken Hockey Network interview with KHN reporter Piper Shaw. “He made three or four huge saves.”
Schwartz added that the Kraken benefitted from solid goaltending all trip and it was unfortunate “we couldn’t get a win for Grubi” Sunday in Dallas.
Get Lead, Lose Lead, Regain Lead, All in 20 Minutes
The Kraken raced out to a 2-0 lead on young defenseman Ryker Evans’ first goal of the season (and second in his first 40 NHL games) and veteran Oliver Bjorkstrand scoring on a wicked wrist shot with assists from his new linemates, Chandler Stephenson and Jaden Schwartz. But Nashville answered back with a pair of scores later first period in what was a back-and-forth contest all night long. The first period ended with 13 Kraken shots on goal and 12 for Nashville. The second period finished with 12 more Predators shots and 11 for Seattle, adding up to 24 apiece in the first 40 minutes.
Typical of this game’s seesaw nature, the first period ended with Seattle going up 3-2 on Brandon Tanev’s first goal of the season and another strong shift of many so far this year from the fourth-line of Tanev, Yanni Gourde and Tye Kartye. Tanev tipped in a Brandon Montour laser from the right point. But late second period, former Carolina D-man and free agent signee Brady Skjei scored his first goal with his new team to make it 3-3 at the second intermission. Skjei’s turnaround shot on a rebound deflected off Daccord’s but unluckily angled inside the right post.
Ryker Strike: Evans Scores First Goal
Young Kraken defenseman Ryker Evans picked an opportune time to score his first goal of the season, and teammate Vince Dunn picked a pretty good moment himself to break his stick on a shot from the left point at the blue line. With the Kraken maintaining puck possession in the Nashville zone three-and-a-half minutes into the game, Dunn quickly skated off, and Evans jumped out to speed to the vacated left point. Adam Larsson saw an open Evans and sent the puck his way. Evans delivered without breaking stride.