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DALLAS --Captain Jamie Benn was assessed a game misconduct, goaltender Jake Oettinger was pulled, forward Evgenii Dadonov was injured and the Dallas Stars' chance to get back into a series was squandered.

"Yeah, I'm not sure you could script much worse," Stars coach Peter DeBoer said after their 4-0 loss to the Vegas Golden Knights in Game 3 of the Western Conference Final at American Airlines Center on Tuesday.

"I actually liked our energy. I loved us on the penalty kill. Even though we gave up the first goal and Jamie took the penalty, I thought we had the legs and the energy and attitude to kind of survive it and we didn't. So, that's the unfortunate part of it. Now we're in a big hole and we've got to find a way to win a game on Thursday."

Indeed, the Stars will try to stave off elimination in Game 4 here Thursday (8 p.m. ET; ESPN, ESPN+, CBC, SN, TVAS).

Benn was assessed a five-minute major and a game misconduct after he cross-checked Golden Knights forward Mark Stone after the latter hit the ice 1:53 into the game. The penalties were upheld upon an official's video review.

Benn declined to speak to the media after the game. DeBoer said twice he was not going to pile on his captain regarding the penalties.

"I believe Mark Stone is OK and we will live with the consequences, whatever they are," DeBoer said. "We lived with them tonight and we'll live with them going forward if there's any supplemental discipline. It's a reactionary sport, it's a heat-of-the-moment sport. There's a lot of stuff going on there on the ice. I'm not judge and jury and I'm not going to play that tonight."

Neither were Benn's teammates. Asked if he was disappointed in Benn, forward Joe Pavelski was not.

"You guys ask if I'm disappointed in a guy who I have so much respect for and battles so hard? I've got no problems with [Benn]," Pavelski said. "You know what? We needed to be better from there, and we weren't."

Nevertheless, it was the first of several blows for the Stars that led to a disastrous evening. The Golden Knights, already leading 1-0, capitalized on the five-minute power play when Ivan Barbashev scored for a 2-0 lead at 5:57.

Less than two minutes later, William Carrier scored on a backhand at 7:10 to make it 3-0, and Oettinger was pulled after allowing three goals on five shots. Scott Wedgewood made 10 saves in relief.

"He's been the backbone all year, so much confidence in him," Dallas forward Tyler Seguin said of Oettinger. "When goals go in, there are five of us on the ice that could've helped stop it. We'll look at the clips, we'll flush it and we'll be ready for the next game."

Marchessault scores in 4-0 Game 3 shutout win

Things got worse later in the first when Evgenii Dadonov sustained a lower-body injury in a collision with teammate Roope Hintz. He did not return, leaving the Stars to play the rest of the game with 10 forwards. DeBoer didn't have an update on Dadonov after the game.

Then, forward Max Domi, who has 11 points in 16 games this postseason (three goals, eight assists), was assessed penalties for cross-checking and roughing, as well as a 10-minute game misconduct with 22 seconds left in the second period. Indeed, it was a far cry from the first two games of this series, which were closely contested and each requiring overtime. But this one was over long before that.

The response the Stars needed wasn't there, nor was the discipline. Now they're in an even deeper hole, one that's going to be that much tougher to escape.

"Either way, losses, you don't like them this time of year," Pavelski said. "We've got to go play hockey. We've got to go out, reestablish some momentum for us, work as a four-line team like we've done all year and lay it on the line.

"Find a few goals along the way and try to get a win."