Final Nov 14
WIN 1 +130 o6.5
TB 4 -155 u6.5
Final OT Nov 14
PHI 5 +165 o5.5
OTT 4 -200 u5.5
Final Nov 14
NJ 6 +135 o6.0
FLA 2 -160 u6.0
Final Nov 14
SJ 2 +325 o6.5
NYR 3 -425 u6.5
Final OT Nov 14
STL 3 +150 o6.0
BUF 4 -180 u6.0
Final Nov 14
BOS 2 +150 o6.0
DAL 7 -180 u6.0
Final Nov 14
MON 0 +220 o6.0
MIN 3 -270 u6.0
Final OT Nov 14
NAS 2 +165 o6.5
EDM 3 -200 u6.5
Final Nov 14
CHI 1 +135 o5.5
SEA 3 -160 u5.5
Final Nov 14
NYI 5 +160 o6.0
VAN 2 -190 u6.0
Winnipeg 2nd Central52-24-5-1
Colorado 3rd Central50-25-5-2
TruTV, Sportsnet, ALT, TNT

Winnipeg @ Colorado preview

Ball Arena

Last Meeting ( Apr 26, 2024 ) Winnipeg 2, Colorado 6

After a less-than-ideal start to the playoffs for the Colorado Avalanche, they now are in control of a first-round Western Conference series against the Winnipeg Jets.

Colorado lost the series opener 7-6 behind shaky goaltending from Alexandar Georgiev. That setback is all but a memory now with a chance for a 3-1 series lead when the Avalanche host the Jets for Game 4 on Sunday afternoon.

The Avalanche rolled to a 6-2 victory in Game 3 at home on Friday.

Jets defenseman Brenden Dillon has been ruled out for Sunday's game due to a hand injury.

Dillon sustained a laceration on his left hand in a fracas after time expired in Game 3 Friday. He was tangled up with Avalanche forward Brandon Duhaime at the bottom of a scrum, got up and skated to the locker room with blood dripping from the back of his hand.

"Scary, scary situation there," Jets defenseman Josh Morrissey said of Dillon after the game. "I don't really have anything to say, but we're all really concerned for him and just hoping everything's OK."

Colorado has used its relentless speed to create offensive chances and force the Jets to scramble in their own zone. The constant pressure has allowed the Avalanche to rally to win the last two games, including Friday night's five-goal outburst in the third period.

"We gave them a lot of time on the power play, and they've got a bunch of elite players on that unit, and they capitalized," Morrissey said. "So, we got to do a better job of trying to stay out of the box."

Colorado has looked more like the team that rolled to the Stanley Cup title two years ago than the one that flamed out in the first round to the Seattle Kraken last season.

The difference has been the additions of Casey Mittelstadt, Ross Colton, Miles Wood and 39-year-old Zach Parise, who signed in February for one last shot at a ring. The four have combined for six goals and five assists in the series, taking the pressure off the top line.

"Last year, we had no goals outside of our top three forwards and defensemen," Avalanche coach Jared Bednar said. "We're a deeper team. There's no question about it."

Wood and Colton were acquired in the offseason, and young, talented defenseman Bowen Byram was sent to Buffalo for Mittelstadt, who has given Colorado a legitimate No. 2 center that was missing since Nazem Kadri left in free agency.

The depth has paid off. After scoring just four goals in three regular-season games against the Jets, Colorado has 17 in this series.

Jets coach Rick Bowness is not panicking about being down in the series.

"There's three series out East that are 3-zip. We're 2-1," he said. "They won a game in our rink. We have to come in here and win a game in their rink. It's as simple as that. Our focus now is getting ready for Sunday afternoon."

--Field Level Media

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