But the way they played the past two games, the way they coughed up the last one, the way coach Jared Bednar spoke afterward, suddenly it feels like they're in trouble against the Vegas Golden Knights.
"We're going to have to compete way harder than that in order to beat them, and the sooner we realize that …" Bednar said after a
3-2 loss
at T-Mobile Arena on Friday. "If we haven't already, we're late to the party."
The Avalanche blew out the Golden Knights 7-1 in Game 1. At that point, after sweeping the St. Louis Blues in the first round, they had won five straight games by three goals or more.
In retrospect, it was fool's gold and might have even made them overconfident.
RELATED: [Complete Golden Knights vs. Avalanche series coverage]
Colorado had six days to recover for Game 1 while Vegas had one day after a seven-game series against the Minnesota Wild, and this was no mismatch. These teams tied atop the NHL standings with 82 points each in the regular season, with the Avalanche winning the Presidents' Trophy thanks to the regulation-wins tiebreaker (35-30).
The Avalanche won 3-2 in overtime in Game 2, but Philipp Grubauer had to make 39 saves and needed help from his goalposts. They were outshot 31-12 in the second and third periods combined.
One game is one thing. When a team wins the Stanley Cup, it often looks back on a win here or there stolen by the goalie.
But two straight games? That's a trend. At least the makings of one.
Grubauer made 40 saves and needed help from his goalposts again in Game 3. The Avalanche were outshot 43-20, including 14-3 in the first period and 19-8 in the third. Though they led 2-1 with less than six minutes left in the third, they gave up two goals in a 45-second span.
Just like that, the complexion of this best-of-7 series changed.
"I mean, for five periods straight now they've been far more competitive than we have, and to dissect the game any further than that is a waste of time," Bednar said. "It's a waste of time."
Asked if he was surprised the Golden Knights had more will, Bednar didn't balk.
"Yeah, I am, because we have a chance to take a stranglehold in the series," Bednar said. "… It isn't always pretty. It's not going to be, especially when you're a couple of the top teams in the League. You're not going to go out and dominate a team -- or shouldn't, OK? But tonight they did, and then the last 40 minutes the other night they did. So it's too long now. It's too long."
Asked if the competitiveness falls primarily on the leaders, again, Bednar didn't balk.
"Yeah, it starts there," he said. "It starts there. I mean, I don't know. I haven't seen the stats but go ahead and check the numbers on our top guys tonight and see what they did compared to their top guys. It's not close. The hardest-working player we have right now, OK, is Phillipp Grubauer."