"It felt like a playoff game, for sure," Panthers forward Sam Bennett said. "There was a lot of fight in both teams. Both teams wanted to win badly. That was two good teams going at it."
Still in first place in the Atlantic Division and off to an outstanding 18-5-4 start, tonight's loss marked just the fifth time in 27 games this season that the Panthers didn't get at least a point.
"I thought we competed all night," Panthers interim head coach Andrew Brunette said of his team's strong effort on the road. "We did what we set out to and played a pretty good road game. We fell a little short. A couple bounces here or there and it could've been different."
For a matchup that featured the top-two offenses in the NHL, there were surprisingly no goals to speak of for the first 39-plus minutes of tonight's game. But with 22.5 seconds left in the second period, Andrei Burakovsky broke the stalemate when he took a pass from Mikko Rantanen and roofed a shot over Sergei Bobrovsky's blocker on the power play to put the Avalanche up 1-0.
Riding off the momentum from that icebreaker, Burakovsky then netted his second goal of the night and doubled the lead for Colorado when he took a pass from Rantanen, skated down the slot and lifted a nifty backhand shot into the cage to make it 2-0 just 2:03 into the third period.
"I thought we managed the puck very well," Brunette said. "We're not going to play a faster counter team than the one we played tonight. I thought we limited that by doing the right things. Usually when you do the right things you get rewarded, but tonight we didn't."
But trailing 2-0 late, the Comeback Cats finally started to reap some of those rewards.
Finally getting one past Darcy Kuemper, the Panthers got on the board when Joe Thornton hammered a pass from Frank Vatrano into the twine on the power play make it 2-1 at 7:41. Less than three minutes later, Brandon Montour scored to suddenly make it a 2-2 game at 10:15.
Unfortunately, that deadlock lasted only just over a minute as Burakovsky wristed in a shot from the high slot to complete his first-career hat trick and put the Avalanche back up 3-2 at 11:43.
Gaining a 6-on-4 advantage after pulling their goalie while on a late power play, the Panthers threw everything they had at Kuemper over the final minute of regulation and would have scored if not for Erik Johnson clearing a would-be goal out of the blue paint with just a few seconds left.
In the end, the Avalanche held on to secure the 3-2 win.
"Big saves, even Johnson made great save," Thornton said of the team's impressive final push. "It's unfortunate that we just didn't get a bounce. I thought we probably deserved one tonight."
Heading back home, the Panthers will host the Senators at FLA Live Arena on Tuesday.
Here are five takeaways from Sunday's loss in Colorado…