A Record‑Setting Depth Attack
Colorado’s second‑round matchup against Minnesota has turned into a showcase of depth. In just four games the Avalanche have piled up 20 goals, each coming from a different skater, matching a playoff record that underscores the team’s balanced scoring.
The series now shifts back to Denver’s Ball Arena for Game 5, where the Avalanche can seal the victory in front of their home crowd. A win would mark the first time they have closed out a postseason series at home since 2008, when they eliminated the Wild in six games.
Between the pipes, Mackenzie Blackwood stepped in after Scott Wedgewood’s early exit and turned in 19 saves to preserve a 5‑2 win in Game 4. The goaltending swap highlighted the team’s flexibility as the series tightens.
The physical side of the contest also made headlines when Josh Manson incurred a double‑minor penalty and was subsequently fined $5,000 for an altercation with Michael McCarron, adding a disciplinary footnote to an otherwise disciplined performance.
Minnesota will be missing two key forwards — Joel Eriksson Ek and Jonas Brodin — due to injury, a blow that could reshape the Wild’s lineup and force younger players into larger roles.
Home‑Ice History
Colorado’s recent home‑ice success is not new. The club had previously won seven of its first eight postseason games in 2001 and 2022, each leading to a Stanley Cup championship, a pattern that fuels optimism among fans and players alike.
The combination of record‑setting depth, a chance to close the series at home, and a resilient goaltending corps positions the Avalanche as strong favorites, but the Wild’s ability to adapt under pressure remains the central narrative of Game 5.