CALIFORNIA – Let’s call this what it was: a killer loss. This was a game the Avs kinda-sorta had to have, to keep in step with team 7,8 and 9 in the West. As it stands, the Avs are now No. 10 in the West, after a 2-1 loss to lowly Anaheim.
Let’s do the grades:
Mikko Rantanen (C+) – Four shots on net, good effort. But the fact is, he didn’t get anything on the score sheet and was part of a very ineffective power play early on. As I’ve said recently, I think he’s playing hurt with a lower-body injury.
Nathan MacKinnon (C) – The rumor before the game was he was almost a scratch with the flu. He didn’t seem belabored out there when the puck dropped. But the results just weren’t there. No points, two shots on net. Ever since that game in Nashville, it seems like he’s overcomplicating his game again.
Gabe Landeskog (B-) – Effort was certainly there, with six shots on net. It’s just that nothing would go in.
Alexander Kerfoot (D) – His careless pass from the neutral zone to the Ducks zone was picked off by Brendan Guhle, who then caught Kerfoot flat-footed with a pass to Jakob Silfverberg and an odd-man rush that was finished off by Silfverberg for the first goal of the game. He’s got to be smarter than that.
Carl Soderberg (B-) – Set up Brassard for the only goal of the game. He gave the usual Carl-sized effort, though he wasn’t all that good 5-on-5.
Derick Brassard (B-) – He’s got two goals in his first three games as an Av. This was a pretty easy one, a one-timer off the pass from Carl. He had two shots on net overall. But, he lost five of six faceoffs.
Gabriel Bourque (F) – His contributions today, in 4:18 of ice time, included the penalty that allowed Anaheim to get the game-winning goal on the power play.
Colin Wilson (F) – No shots, no points, bad puck-possession numbers (7 Corsi for, 13 against).
Sven Andgrighetto (D) – One shot on net in the eight-plus minutes he played. Just seems like he never took it to the next level this season, after a pretty good 2017-18.
Tyson Jost (D) – Seems like his game is receding again a bit. Just wasn’t a factor in any manner today. No shots, no points, in 11:36.
Matt Calvert (D) – Barely noticed him all day. Seemed to just be out there, skating around.
J.T. Compher (B-) – Assisted on the Brassard goal, won more faceoffs than he lost. Be nice to see him elevate his scoring more, but he’s still had a pretty good year to this point.
Erik Johnson (B+) – Played a fine game, with five hits and five blocked shots. The puck-possession numbers say he had a tougher game, but in this case that’s deceptive.
Sam Girard (C) – Great breakup of a breakaway by Daniel Sprong in the third period, to keep it a one-goal game. But the fact is, it was kind of a tough day for No. 49 otherwise. Puck-possession numbers weren’t good and his offensive game was lacking.
Ian Cole (F) – Cost his teammates with an unnecessary kneeing major of Devin Shore. That put his team down to only five D the rest of the game. He will likely be suspended for that hit.
Patrik Nemeth (C) – Just kind of your average game in a losing effort. I always admire Nemeth’s work ethic. But on days like today, you wish there could be a little more in the form of tangible results.
Tyson Barrie (C-) – No goals in 16 straight games now for Barrie. He had good puck-possession stats (26 Corsi for, 14 against). Trouble is, he didn’t get anything accomplished on the scoreboard with all that puck possession.
Nikita Zadorov (B) – I thought he was fine. Four hits, even on the plus-minus, decent Corsi numbers.
Philipp Grubauer (B) – Only saw 23 shots. The first goal was probably very stoppable, but the Kerfoot giveaway and flat-footedness played the bigger role in that goal. The other was a power-play goal, and it’s always tough to blame the goalie there.

0 Comments (4 conversations)
SparkleTindi
Is it just me or was that loss both boring and agonizing? Almost like playing the Wild in the bad times.
I know Bednar wants to spread out the offense but with two lackluster games in a row, will we see more of the original top line to try and kickstart things again?
IdAvsFan
I think if you look back on the last 5 games you’ll see that breaking the big line up and adding in the young hungry guys like Graves is a better mix than being a single line again
TheHoppyHacker
I love the players’ grades write-ups, but wish you would add the coaching staff to the grades. We have a young, yet very creative, talented core of players. Yet we are too easy to coach against, and have significant coach-driven issues – long stretches of an anemic PP, recurring abnormally long shifts, frequent too-many men penalties, no adjustment to the opposition during the period and frequently not over a period break, the team not ready to start but gets aggressive after falling behind, playing down to competition, etc. etc. etc. etc. We all tend to focus on individual performance including the role of our captain, but too much of the overarching issues point towards coaching. Please add the coaching staff, and perhaps a second grade for Landy-as-captain, to the grades.
ProfessionalBenchWarmer
Not that it matters too much but Brassard has 2 goals in *4* games, not 3.
But thanks for doing the grades! Always enjoy reading them.
Rich
This team definitely lacks energy and hunger needed without the two young kids Graves & Greer on the ice. I just hope both have done enough in the minds of the coaching staff and front office to have made an impact on the team going into next year. Each player brings a special something that this team severally lacks…