8 Minutes That Silenced the Loudest Fans in Hockey (haula)

WINNIPEG -- It seems like destiny, right?

On Friday, a Dustin Byfuglien whiffed puck sits right where a hard-charging Reilly Smith can skate into it, partial break, bar down, Vegas goes up 3-1 in the Western Conference Final. This afternoon, Ryan Reaves -- who hasn't scored in three-and-a-half months -- deflects home the game-winner.

The expansion Golden Knights are going to the Stanley Cup Final.

Winning Play

In the first two games, fueled by a rocking, expectant Bell MTS Place, the Jets soared at the drop of the puck.

In the first period of Game One, they bombed Marc-Andre Fleury with three goals. 5:40 into Game Two, they had fired off six scoring chances.

So naturally, the Golden Knights would race out to a 7-1 shots advantage and a 1-0 lead in Game Five.

"The biggest thing in our game tonight was the first eight minutes of the hockey game," stressed Gerard Gallant. "When you're coming on the road, you're playing against a great team like Winnipeg, I thought those first minutes were huge for our confidence."

Vegas's vigorous start clearly shook the crowd's confidence.

His partner Craig Simpson agreed, "Not much energy in here."

With that in mind, let's look at the eight minutes that silenced the loudest fans in hockey -- and perhaps its most dangerous team.

After a puck battle, Connor wins it back to Mark Scheifele, who misses a slashing Blake Wheeler. Karlsson was bearing down on the centerman. Brayden McNabb accepts the deposit and doesn't miss his breakout, lasering a pinpoint pass between Connor and Jacob Trouba. Marchessault pedals into the zone and fires from the top of the circles into Connor Hellebuyck.

This set the stage for a much-sharper Vegas squad to take over.

Smith knows exactly what Jack Roslovic wants to do from behind the net, not flashing his stick until Roslovic shows his hand. He then completes a nifty, surprising bounce pass to Marchessault to reset.

Cody Eakin looks up, sees David Perron streaking up, and completes a perfect bounce stretch pass. Vegas's No. 57 goes to work on Winnipeg's No. 57 for their first scoring chance of the contest.

The fourth line gets it deep and Tomas Nosek draws a slash from Byfuglien. While the ensuing Knights' power play wasn't particularly dangerous, what's important is the end of it, and the Jets' inability to make a full change.

Deryk Engelland hits Tuch for a stretch pass, which the winger tips in, taking advantage of the change. Connor Hellebuyck plays it to Morrissey, who is now clocking over a minute on this shift. A hard-charging Ryan Carpenter gets a piece of a possibly-fatigued Morrissey's pass, possibly with his skate, which Tuch gathers into his wheelhouse.

The Golden Knights weren't done. Here's 200 feet of quality hockey from the fourth line against Winnipeg's top trio.

These eight minutes represented some of the best of Vegas hockey:

• Every Vegas Line Was Rolling

"Each line on the ice showed a way. On the bench, everyone was conscientious of what was going on, what we had to do to be a little more successful," Bellemare indicated. "We just kept rolling, rolling. The coach gave us the trust. And it paid off."

• Precision Feeds Transition

There were missed passes here, but also a number of pinpoint ones to spring the attack, particularly McNabb to Marchessault, Eakin to Perron, and Engelland to Tuch.

• Counterattack Off Turnovers

Nosek mugging Kulikov would set up Bellemare, while Smith's forecheck would lead directly to Marchessault's post.

• Forecheck, Forecheck, Forecheck

Carpenter on Morrissey, Nosek on Kulikov jump to mind.

• Staying on Top Defensively

The opening shift and Nosek's work on Morrow are great examples of that.

• Protecting the House

Smith's read on Roslovic's pass is both a great defensive read and an example of how dedicated the Knights are to defending the slot area.

As Gallant has pointed out many times, playing fast isn't just about scoring, it's also about defending fast.

After a one-sided Game One loss, a defiant Marchessault said, "It definitely gets loud out there. It's fun for the home team -- but I think it's fun for us too. To shut that crowd down would be great."

"The Golden Misfits" did just that, with a burst of brilliance which frankly, isn't surprising anymore.

Pluses

I wrote about VGK's smothering third period here:

Minuses

I still can't believe it.

***

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