Drouin assures win for Avalanche

  

After an embarrassing loss by the Colorado Avalanche to the Columbus Blue Jackets two nights ago, they needed a pick me up win. What began as a pushover start for the Avalanche against the Minnesota Wild quickly became a grind. Colorado, who needs points to gain the first place position in the division, desperately needed the victory tonight. Jonathan Drouin secured the victory, but the Wild were determined not to go quietly into the night. Here are my takeaways from the 5–2 victory over the Wild.

Takeaways

— Jonathan Drouin has become one player that the Avalanche can depend on. With his two goals tonight, both assisted by his pal Nathan MacKinnon, were key in the game. In both goals, Drouin went down low and got dirty in the crease. With the second goal, Drouin positioned himself for a perfect tip in from a MacKinnon slap shot. Drouin can do the dirty dangles or the dirty work down low, he will be worth an extension next season.

— Justus Annunen played well, winning his seventh of the season. The first goal by the Wild that came in the first period and from behind the net caught him off guard. Beyond that, his mobility and vision were excellent. Annunen was seeing high danger situations that he had not seen in games like against Chicago, where he had two consecutive shutouts. This was the best I had seen him move post-to-post since before his injury with the Eagles earlier in the season that kept him out for six weeks. Annunen’s .957 save percentage kept the Avalanche in the game.

— The line of Drouin, MacKinnon and Mikko Rantanen has become a thing in Colorado. The trio has been together for 44 games during the season. It was a line that I had talked about even before training camp started. They have scored 29 goals together in 574 scoring chances while on the ice. So on average they have created over 13 scoring chances per game by themselves. And of all the scoring chances, 110 of them were high danger chances. This line is dangerous.

Conclusion

The Avalanche will need to keep themselves out of the penalty box as they head to Edmonton tomorrow night. The Oliers have the second best power play in the league with a 27 percent success rate. Colorado had four penalties in the second period alone tonight, surprisingly allowing one goal. The Avalanche will have to keep up the aggressive offense against a faltering Edmonton defense and keep them on their heels. The Central Division playoff race is all but set, with the Avalanche only three points out of first behind the Dallas Stars.

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