They zoomed out to start the season and, at one time, were the envy of the NHL – a young, talented team building on a previous playoff appearance, with the potential No. 1 pick in the draft coming and a couple other studs in the system.
The Colorado Avalanche goes into the All-Star break an object of pity, a skittering, bumbling team that has the worst record in the league since Dec. 3.
What happened? Honestly, it beats me. This extended Avs skid probably hit a new low Wednesday night, with a sluggish, passion-free 5-2 loss to the division rival Wild at the Pepsi Center.
These are my takeaways:
- The game turned on a couple of things: the tripping call Ian Cole took on Jason Zucker to give Minnesota 5-on-3, which they promptly scored on with an Eric Staal marker. The other was a double-minor for high-sticking to Tyson Barrie later in the second, which seemed to exhaust everybody to the point they gave up a goal with 23 seconds left in the second, giving the Wild a two-goal lead.
- The defense and goaltending were, to be charitable, very spotty again. Philipp Grubauer did nothing to re-establish himself as a potential No. 1 goalie. Tough to defend against two 5-on-3s, but some of the other goals it just seemed like Grubauer was a half-second slow in his reaction times.
- The biggest surprise for me in this slide? I’d have to go with how invisible Sam Girard seems most nights now. Seems like he’s lost the confidence to carry the puck as long as he used to. Where are the spin-o-ramas that always got him out of any potential harm’s way? Why does he seem a step slower than he once was? His giveaway in the first period led to a Wild goal.
- Avs only had 11 shots in the final two periods. For a team playing from behind, that’s embarrassing.
- What is up with this team’s discipline? So many penalties, and bad ones. The Avs entered this game as the team with the most penalty minutes in the NHL, at 486, an average of 10.3 a game. How does a team with no fighters, not many truly physical guys, have the most PIMs in the league???
- Why is it that every time an Avs player loses a stick, it’s in the back of the net, or so it seems? I didn’t know why Matt Calvert got rid of his stick on the first of those 5-on-3s. He blocked a shot with it, and apparently it had a crack on it. But the stick still looked good enough to play with – it wasn’t in pieces, but Zach Parise pointed out to the refs that it had a crack, and the rule is you can’t play with a broken stick. It’s now essentially a 5-on-2.5, and the puck winds up in the back of the net with Calvert unable to get a stick on the crossing pass in front to Eric Staal.
- Nathan MacKinnon just hasn’t been good enough. One goal in the six games before the break. Too many soft plays with the puck in the neutral zone. Taking too long to make decisions on the power play.
- Ryan Graves waaaay overstayed his shift on the goal that made it 4-2 at the end of the second. He was too gassed to move much toward the end of it, and the puck wound up in the back of the net partially because of that. Otherwise, I thought he was good.
- The whole Avs team was mostly on the same side of the ice prior to that Jared Spurgeon goal that tied it 2-2 in the first. Where is the discipline, to know you can’t all bunch up like that? Spurgeon had a clear lane down the other side when he got the puck.
- There are four other Western teams within one or two points of the Avs in the race for the spot the Avs still hold – the second spot in the Wild Card race.
- Someone on twitter pointed out that maybe the Avs’ own first-round pick might be a higher one than that of the Ottawa Senators – which they own. Hey, it might. Colorado only is nine points ahead of Ottawa. Forget about trading that pick, I’d say. I don’t think the Avs ever would have, but now you have to war plan for maybe that pick being the real lottery pick.
- Jared Bednar looks really frustrated. He seems to have lost something in his connection to his players. He seems genuinely mystified as to why his players seemingly just don’t care enough right now, or why they keep making the same mistakes over and over again.
- Has he “lost the room” or something like that? Oh, I’d doubt that. He’s not a ranter or raver in the room. A player currently on the team told me he rarely yells in the room. I don’t think he rubs players the wrong way with his actions. But right now, the players just don’t seem too inspired. Is this a coaching problem? I don’t know. But to me, Bednar does not seem like the problem. I think this is on the top guys, not doing enough right now, goalies not making saves and guys taking too many stupid penalties. The players need to get away and relax these next nine days. They also need to look in the mirror and ask themselves if they really want this bad enough entering the final 32 games..
NOTES AND QUOTES FROM AVS PR
The Avs are now 1-2-0 against the Wild this season with one more game remaining in the 2018-19 series, on March 19 at Minnesota. The Avalanche finished 1-for-2 on the power play and is now 4-for15 (26.7%) with the man advantage over their last four games. Overall, Colorado is 47-for-187 (25.1%) on the power play this season, the
sixth-ranked unit in the league.
INDIVIDUAL NOTES
Carl Soderberg reached a new career high with his 17th goal of the season, surpassing his previous career high of 16 set both last season and in 2013-14 with Boston. He has tallied eight points (6g, 2a) over his
last eight outings and is tied with Mikko Rantanen for the team lead in goals in the month of January (6).
Tyson Barrie notched his sixth goal of the season and the 67th of his career. He’s just one goal shy of matching John-Michael Liles for second on the franchise’s all-time list of goals by a defenseman. Barrie’s 39 points in 2018-19 is tied for seventh among NHL blueliners.
Mikko Rantanen tallied an assist and now has 74 points (23g, 51a)
this season, ranked second in the league behind Tampa Bay’s Nikita
Kucherov (78 points). His 74 points is the most by any Avalance player
before the All-Star Break, surpassing Joe Sakic’s 72 points in 2000-01.
Matt Calvert tallied an assist and has recorded seven points (2g, 5a)
over his last 10 outings.
Patrik Nemeth matched a career high with six hits (also: Dec. 19, 2018
vs. Montreal).
Nikita Zadorov played a season-high 25:53.
QUOTES
Colorado LW Gabriel Landeskog
On The Avs’ Performance: “Obviously, we’re not making any excuses, believe me, we need a whole lot
better from everybody to win hockey games, but it’s unfortunate when they get two 5-on-3s and they
miss that one. It ends up in the back of the net unfortunately. We need to be better. We have two leads
to begin the game and we can’t build on them.”
On Playing Against Minnesota: “Usually we play good against them and I thought we did tonight too
for two periods, and then there was nothing in the third for us. We weren’t able to get goals, we weren’t
able to generate any shots. Wild fans or not in the building, it doesn’t really matter to me. It’s a division
matchup and we have to be able to win these.”
Colorado C Carl Soderberg
On Tonight’s Game: “We have to look at it. Obviously, they get the third goal and then we have to chase
in the third and give up some chances.”
On The Timing Of The Break: “I think it doesn’t really matter. Maybe it’s good for us to get a break and
forget about all of the losses and come back fresh hopefully. But at the same time, I think we just have
to dig in and play a little bit better and that’s what we want to do.”
Minnesota C Mikko Koivu
On Shot Blocking: “We talked about it at intermission. Seels (Minnesota D Nick Seeler) first and then
Marcus (Minnesota LW Marcus Foligno) as well in the same shift, so I think the message in the room
was just, if that doesn’t get you going as a team and as a player, I don’t think there’s nothing better
than that. For sure that was a booster for the third period and brought this team together tonight.”
On Scoring After The Blocked Shots: “Well that’s why we scored. We block those shots and we go the
other way and we score. No one thinks about it that way, but that’s the story of the last two minutes
there.”
On His Shot Blocks: “Just kind of doing everything I can to get in front of it. Thankfully they hit me in
pretty decent spots, but we ended up getting the win which was most important tonight. Especially
going into break on a high note, feeling good about ourselves.”
On Tonight’s Game: “I think everyone was going tonight, everyone was doing their job and playing well
and playing for the guy next to him, so that’s how we’re going to be successful moving forward.”
- Happy break, people.
- And, hey, it’s Thursday. Get your $1 Dunkin’ iced or hot coffee using your Dunkin’ app. Avs fans get this deal every Thursday in the regular season.

0 Comments (19 conversations)
gerontion
They might as well just keep tanking. Despite their great start to the season, this is obviously not a Cup contender. Even if they somehow manage to squeak into the playoffs they will be destroyed. Hopefully they will get two top 10 picks down the road, possibly top 5.
BHGodlyGovt
I mean, yeah, Grubi was maybe a tad slow in his reaction timing tonight, but definitely nowhere close to as bad as Varly was the other night. Also, the team in front of him really never gave him the chance to gain confidence, which I think definitely influenced some of the slower reaction times. Overall, though, he definitely does not have the same speed that Varly did a couple of years ago. Still don’t think that you can say with near total certainty that any of the goals were his fault, which you definitely couldn’t say about Varly last game.
jpwheels
Varly and Grubi have been getting a lot of heat lately, and rightly so. Their play has been mostly bad to very bad fr far too long. But goaltending wasn’t the problem tonight. The inability of the guys in front of him to make the right, simple plays put Grubi in no-mans land.
I like Bednar. I think he has been very good for this team. I also don’t think he’s the problem. But he’s clearly struggling to find a solution too. I’m starting to wonder if a more experienced coach would be able to get the players to play with more focus/responsibility/accountability.
DP10
You gotta give AD credit on one thing. He really was the first one to call out the Avs’ decline back in early/mid December.
The deficiencies of the Avs have been well documented. The question now left to ask is whether our expectations need to adjusted more fundamentally. Right now, it is very hard to imagine how this team will make the playoffs. If that is the case, some tough questions need to be asked about why the coaching staff wasn’t able to develop this team further and why, in fact, they have regressed so much.
Justin
Poor performance by the whole team, but everyone has an off night. The goaltenders have been bad for almost two months now (including tonight, I was at the game and saw 1 spectacular save for Grub), and poor goaltending is systemic in that the players loose confidence when they know their netminders aren’t up to the task, take less chances, etc. They need to bring in Francous (sp?), or make a big trade for a real goalie (I don’t think Bob is the answer either).
Adrian Dater
AuthorI definitely don’t think Bob is the answer.
ljp78
AD, do you feel that the Avs are becoming sellers? Or will Sakic just wait things out like he normally does?
Adrian Dater
AuthorI mean, so much depends still on what the record is close to the deadline. But if they become sellers, I’m sure Colin Wilson becomes a possible rental for someone. Maybe Varly too.
bjjones05
If someone would want Varly after the stretch he’s just gone through…
T.Manchester
They are still in the race. Do they look like shit? Yes. Is it a problem? Yes. But do you really want to mail in the rest of the season?! There are still 32-ish games left. That’s 39% of the season! Still time to right the ship.
Bob_W
Just as an eye test it seems a lot of the penalties they take are the kind you see when players are using their sticks instead of moving their feet(hooking, holding, interference). There is a reason these types of penalties are called “lazy penalties” and they may be an indication of what is wrong over-all. We all cringe and roll our eyes when we see Gabe Bourque on the roster but if every player on the team played with the intensity and energy he plays with I believe the record would be much better.
Nels
There are so many great suggestions here (the article and comments). I just have to add this one:
What about trades?
Throw in a piece or two for any of these if you don’t think it’s enough (like Ghetto, Nieto, etc…):
Varly & 2nd & 3rd for Quick?
EJ for Dougie Hamilton
Jost & Kerfoot for Nylander
Barrie for Ferland (and we sign him)
Girard and Grubauer for JT Miller
Then your team looks like this next season and beyond and you have a chance of not wasting the Top Lines glory days:
Top Line
Nylander-JT Miller/Sodo-Ferland
Kaut-Bowers-Compher
whoever-whoever-Greer
Hamilton-Z
Cole-Makar
Timmins-Graves-Meloche-Nemeth/Barbs
Quick
Francouz
Still have 2 firsts and a third in 2019, plus all other prospects currently in the system and all picks in coming years.
ThePhotoGorilla
Obviously, the goalie struggle is real. But I also think people have to keep in mind that Varly and Grubs are 2 different types of goalies. Varly is (maybe was…?) the athletic, quick goalie that could stand on his head and make saves like few others. Grubs is the technical one, always working to be in the proper position with the correct technique to make the save. The defense the Avs have, while better, still isn’t great and they are not adapting to the goalie type playing behind them.
I will also agree that Beds is not likely the problem, but he clearly lacks a solution to whatever motivation issues this team is having right now.
hockeyhacker5
I liked the article, but no way is this rock bottom, even if it feels like it. The Avs are still in a playoff spot, but only because Vancouver, Anaheim, and Arizona all lost their last game. Two other teams are within three points. They could fall to 13th in the conference within days after the All Star break if they don’t start winning. They are closer to last overall in the NHL than they are to Vegas in 5th in the West. If I was Sakic, I’d be talking to Quenneville.
mladen
I agree. this season is gone. Glad to see Graves brought up which probably means he is here for the season. Trade one of the goalies and bring up Pavel.
KCRybek
Such an immature team- of course they were more focused on the upcoming break than getting a massive win. Just like they cared more about coming home than beating a dreadful Ottawa team last week
Joel2133
uh well ya, half the team can’t even drink legally
SRbell8
Every player should have to switch to a wood stick on the penalty kill. You’ll never break a good Ol 5030 with the Jagr curve..might shoot it over the glass though. Also is it an issue that Bednar doesn’t get emotional enough, like you don’t got to constantly be giving everyone grief but I mean coaches gotta yell and give players shit from time to time.
ahinton54
Coach “Xanax” drives me freaking crazy.
Cerveau
Based on their record this year, the current Avs roster is capable of beating any team in the league (and likewise any team is capable of beating them).
IMHO the problem is not about who is on the team, it’s about poor preparation and stupid mistakes by every last member of the team.
Every other team I see, even the mediocre ones that don’t have half the talent still seem to be becoming well oiled machines that know how to capitalize on their strengths even if their players don’t have half the talent.
The Avs seem to be still floundering in that regard… like they’re trying too much, too hard without yet being good at a basic set of their own routines.
Case in point: Ryan Graves. He’s good but not great.
But he’s impressing everybody.
Why?
Because he’s keeping things simple, and doing what he knows how to do well.
The other thing is that other teams have been able to adapt to the Avs… and maybe that’s been easy because the Avs have been so effective at shooting themselves in the foot, like botching all these cross ice passes that turn into giveaways that end up in our net.
So, who’s to blame?
IMO both the coaches and the players.
The coaches for not adequately drilling the players, and the players for trying to get ahead of themselves.
jpwheels
Agreed, very good points…
Eve
This team isn’t tough enough; the defense makes too many mistakes for the goalies we have; and MacKinnon gets frustrated and then starts making bad passes; and they all just start to fall apart. Makeup of team isn’t good don’t know how that’s on Bednar
Eve
By tough enough I mean emotionally, mentally and physically. I don’t think Landeskog has looked so good these last couple of games either. I think he’s worn out trying to make this group work.
TN.Avsfans
I believe MacKinnon has been saving himself for all star game. He wants to be sure he shines when the big spotlight is on him. I think his ego is ruining his game to many people have told him how great he is.
GWood
It’s probably a good thing that Bednar doesn’t rant and rave, but at the same time, he needs to shout some guys down at full force after repeated/stupid mistakes. Cameras or no cameras. This has gotten ridiculous. Seems like the boys are too comfortable with Bednar and think of him as a peer. Bad formula.