Vegas got both Reaves and Lehner back for Game 2, and that made a difference Tuesday. Reaves created energy with eight hits and Lehner made 24 saves for his fourth shutout in the playoffs. Still, the performance of the Golden Knights was a team thing.
Vegas won 61 percent of the faceoffs and had a 32-24 advantage in shots on goal. In fact, the Stars had just 12 shots on goal in the first two periods and were trailing 3-0 at the time.
"We knew we were going to come out with a big push in that first period, and I though we were OK," said Stars interim coach Rick Bowness. "The second period we got absolutely killed in the faceoff circle. They controlled the puck, and when you're doing that, you're controlling the tempo. They were able to come at us, and that took away all of our flow."
Dallas was hanging in the game thanks to a spectacular performance from goalie Anton Khudobin, but the breakdowns became too much. The Stars made a bad line change and that led to Paul Stastny being wide open in front of the net for a tap-in at the 4:53 mark of the second period. Corey Perry took a tripping penalty to create the power play on Vegas' second goal. And then Seguin made a bad read when Jamie Oleksiak activated from his spot on defense, and Vegas got a 3-on-1 for the third goal.
"Those are self-inflicted problems," Bowness said. "They played a great game, give them a lot of credit, but when you lose that many faceoffs and you take that many penalties, there is no chance you can get any flow to your game."