News Avalanche Team Notes

5 Reasons to Give Thanks

imagn-26068690.jpg


A quick holiday break is the perfect time to give pause and reflect on what Colorado Avalanche fans have to be thankful for. Here are five reasons to give thanks over your turkey dinner.

The Captain Has Returned

It took three long grueling years of rehab but Gabe Landeskog is back as a regular player in the Avalanche lineup. Though it took him three tries to score his first goal of the season and then had a third goal called back the next game, Landeskog hasn’t lit up the scoreboard but his calming presence and leadership no doubt has helped Colorado climb to the top of the standings.

Twin MVP Candidates

Also a big help to that NHL leading record and 10-game win streak for Colorado is the continued elite play out of their superstars Cale Makar and Nathan MacKinnon. With both at the top of their game they could be in the conversation to receive the Hart Trophy for league MVP at the end of the regular season.

As Seen on TV

After five and a half long years the Avalanche finally are back on television across the front range after striking a deal with Comcast. There are still several games broadcast over the air for free and even nine Colorado Eagles games available on local television. With the Altitude streaming app still an option as well, viewer accessibility has never seen better for local fans at least.

Martin Nečas $igned

No more drama, the Avalanche eventually committed to their star winger Martin Nečas with a $92 million dollar investment in an eight-year contract which kicks in next season. To erase that worry off everyone’s minds is more than enough reason to be thankful.

Nordiques Are Back

Even if just in jersey form for nine games, it’s fun to relive a little bit of history and for the Avalanche pay homage to their roots with the throwback Quebec Nordiques Heritage Series. The beautiful blue threads will be worn next on this Saturday, November 29th against Montreal.

IMG_1947.jpeg

What are you thankful for this holiday season?

Source: https://www.milehighhockey.com/general/59221/5-reasons-to-give-thanks
 
Recap: Avs serve Sharks a shutout with humble pie

gettyimages-2248646294.jpg


The Colorado Avalanche put their home-ice point streak to the test this evening against a young, rejuvenated, and talented San Jose Sharks club. The Avalanche were looking to log their 10th consecutive victory overall, and found their game early and often. Let the good times roll!

10 👏 WINS 👏 IN 👏 A 👏 ROW pic.twitter.com/HsqJ4vanNH

— Colorado Avalanche (@Avalanche) November 27, 2025

The Game

Things started very positively for the Colorado Avalanche, who looked fresh-legged after a couple of days off, and Ross Colton and his newly shaved face tallied the first goal. The great Nate MacKinnon added a late power-play goal to put the Avalanche ahead 2-0 after one period of play.

The boys in burgundy and blue would build on that two-goal lead by notching three goals in scorching fashion. All three second-period goals came in the first five minutes of the second period. First, it was Sam Malinski putting on a snipe show, before Josh Manson did his best impression. It’s good to get some points from the back-end that’s been relatively quiet (offensively) outside of Cale Makar.

Then Joel Kiviranta scored in his first game back from injury, fresh off the draw caused by the fourth goal. It was straight-up domination at this point, and San Jose took a timeout to gather themselves amidst the 5-0 disaster. The timeout was effective in stopping the bleeding for the rest of the middle frame.

Nine seconds from puck drop to goal. pic.twitter.com/GBTNYZEyyn

— Colorado Avalanche (@Avalanche) November 27, 2025

The Avalanche and Sharks exchanged chances and power play opportunities for most of the third, but none of them tickled the twine. That is, until Nathan MacKinnon fed Artturi Lehkonen, who put away his own net-front rebound. That made it 6-0.

Takeaways

Colorado has led many games this season, and this one was no different. They have made one thing abundantly clear this season. They are great at playing with the lead. That said, I’m almost starting to worry about the lack of adversity the Avalanche have faced this season. I know that it’s awfully spoiled of me to be welcoming struggles, but something tells me it won’t be this easy in the playoffs. It would be nice to get some reps playing from behind.

Beat the guppies! pic.twitter.com/kLzXozDrL9

— Colorado Avalanche (@Avalanche) November 27, 2025

Good to see Joel Kiviranta get back on the ice and back on the board. It really does feel like this Colorado lineup is more than capable of thriving inside of the “next man up” model. It was also good to see Ivan Ivan get the call-up. He has plenty of experience, having played 40 games for the Avalanche last season.

The penalty kill was an unsung hero this evening, going a bit under the radar with the Avalanche scoring three goals in five minutes. They weren’t just perfect but also gritty and feisty—borderline postseason-level penalty killing typified by a diving clearance from Josh Manson in the middle of the third period.

Thirteen different Avalanche players logged a point in this outing, with Lehkonen, MacKinnon, and Necas logging two each.

We certainly didn’t learn this tonight, but it was most definitely reaffirmed— this Avalanche team is outstanding.

We certainly didn’t learn this tonight, but it was most definitely reaffirmed— this Avalanche team has two outstanding goalies.

If it sounds like I’m repeating myself, I’m just attempting to pay homage to MacKenzie Blackwood’s second consecutive shutout.

BACK
TO 🪵
BACK
TO 🪵
BACK SHUTOUTS pic.twitter.com/XO3udq3ORN

— Colorado Avalanche (@Avalanche) November 27, 2025

Upcoming

The Colorado Avalanche will head to Minnesota to face the Wild in a matinee contest on Friday at 1:30 p.m. MT. It should make for great visuals to complement your day-after-Thanksgiving turkey sandwich.

Source: https://www.milehighhockey.com/colo...ap-avs-serve-sharks-a-shutout-with-humble-pie
 
Open Thread: Colorado Avalanche at Minnesota Wild (1:30 p.m.)

gettyimages-2205275043.jpg


It’s the first matchup of the year between Central division rivals Colorado Avalanche and Minnesota Wild. Both teams have enjoyed strong play lately with extended win streaks as they currently hold playoff positions. Can we expect a spirited game between these two teams during this busy holiday weekend of post-turkey shopping?

Colorado Avalanche (17-1-5)​


The Opponent: Minnesota Wild (13-7-4)

Time: 1:30 p.m. MT

Watch: Altitude, Altitude+, ESPN+

Listen: Altitude Sports Radio, 92.5 FM

Colorado Avalanche​


Not only have the Avalanche won 10 games in row they are now riding a three-game shutout streak. It’s not a question of who will hand Colorado their second regulation loss on the season but who is going to score a goal on this team?

Not surprisingly the stars are leading the way for the Avalanche with Nathan MacKinnon, Martin Nečas and Cale Makar all with 30 points and are top-ten in the NHL for scoring. Inexplicably Makar has yet to score a power play goal this season, though MacKinnon cashed in on the man advantage in the previous game at least.

Joel Kiviranta entered the lineup last game after missing 17 contests with a lower body injury. Ivan Ivan was recalled for the still missing Gavin Brindley. Both combined for a goal in the Sharks game. Will that buy Ivan any favor to remain with the team?

Projected Lineup

Artturi Lehkonen — Nathan MacKinnon — Martin Necas

Gabriel Landeskog — Brock Nelson — Ross Colton

Parker Kelly — Jack Drury — Victor Olofsson

Ivan Ivan — Zakhar Bardakov — Joel Kiviranta

Devon Toews — Cale Makar

Josh Manson — Brent Burns

Samuel Girard — Sam Malinski

Minnesota Wild​


It was a terrible start to the season for the Wild who had high expectations of contending within the Central Division. After going 10-1-1 in the month of a November with a current six-game win streak they are back within striking distance of at least second place in the division.

With his new record-setting contract Kirill Kaprizov has lived up to the hype leading the team with 28 points. Minnesota is also getting big contributions from Matt Boldy who now also has produced 28 points on the season.

The Wild defensive core is led by two young guns in 22-year-old Brock Faber and 19-year-old rookie Zeev Buium. They are also contributing with 15 and 11 points respectively. What makes the Wild dangerous is they have young impact talent all over the lineup including in net.

Projected Lineup

Kirill Kaprizov — Danila Yurov — Mats Zuccarello

Marcus Johansson — Joel Eriksson Ek — Matt Boldy

Marcus Foligno — Yakov Trenin — Nico Sturm

Liam Ohgren — Ben Jones — Tyler Pitlick

Jonas Brodin — Brock Faber

Jake Middleton — Jared Spurgeon

Zeev Buium — Zach Bogosian

Goaltenders​


Beginning yet another weekend back-to-back, it’s a safe assumption that both Mackenzie Blackwood and Scott Wedgewood will split starts for the Avalanche over the next two games. Those contests are both matinees so no morning skate to provide any hints on who is in net. Presumably the “starter” will get this game since it’s an important divisional matchup instead of the Montreal game back at Ball Arena.

For the Wild, they’ve also been fortunate to have two hot goaltenders as well. Rookie 22-year-old Jesper Wallsted has put up some stellar numbers with a .935 save percentage and 1.94 goal against average to go with his 6-0-2 record including three shutouts. His partner Filip Gustavsson has performed better since as rocky start to begin the season. The Wild, like much of the league following the holiday, are on a back-to-back as well and have the same situation as Colorado with a good problem to have in choosing which goalie to go with. After Gustavsson started on Wednesday presumably Wallstedt gets in net for this big game.

Follow along in the comments below!

Source: https://www.milehighhockey.com/open-threads/59127/preview-avalanche-ready-to-down-wild-post-turkey
 
Recap: Streak over as Avalanche lose 3-2 in shootout to Wild

imagn-27695945.jpg


The Colorado Avalanche’s impressive 10-game winning streak came to an end, though their 15-game point streak remains intact.

The Avs trailed by a goal until captain Gabe Landeskog redirected a rebound in the late third period to tie the game. Colorado controlled the pace in overtime and generated the better scoring opportunities, but ultimately fell 3-2 to the surging Minnesota Wild in the shootout with Matt Boldy securing the game winner.

The Game

Nathan MacKinnon opened the scoring in the first period, notching his 19th goal of the season and 40th point overall against the red-hot Jesper Wallstedt, who had recorded three shutouts in his previous four starts. Despite the 1-0 Avalanche lead, it was a fairly even opening frame with Colorado edging in shots 14-12 and each team had an unsuccessful power play opportunity.

The Avalanche had to rally after Minnesota scored twice in the second period. Kirill Kaprizov converted both goals for the Wild six minutes a part. The contest developed into a captivating, back-and-forth offensive showcase, with both goaltenders—Wallstedt for Minnesota and Scott Wedgewood for Colorado—matching each other save for save with remarkable composure. After 40 minutes of play Minnesota held the 2-1 advantage.

It appeared that Colorado was on their way to their second regulation loss but MacKinnon set up Landeskog’s game-tying goal with less than nine minutes remaining in regulation, just moments after Landeskog had been down on the ice after taking a high stick. It was a highlight reel level of effort from Landeskog on that shift who was rewarded with the goal. As the game was tied 2-2, overtime was needed.

Evidently more than overtime was required to settle this game as neither team scored in the extra frame but Colorado created the only three shots on goal. In the shootout Mats Zuccarello and Matt Boldy scored for the Wild while Martin Nečas converted for the Avalanche and Nathan MacKinnon and Cale Makar’s shots were saved to arrive at the 3-2 win for Minnesota.

Takeaways

As the saying goes, a point is a point. Colorado may well have been on the verge of a second regulation loss in this game, but the team refused to give in. Landeskog’s goal, and the way his teammates reacted, illustrates just how much he means to both the team and the organization. You can’t win them all.

Notably, it was a very disciplined game as only two minor penalties were issued, and neither power play was able to convert on their opportunities.

Wedgewood finished the night with 35 saves on 37 shots, but seemed exhausted during the shootout, which can happen if you’ve been in a tough matchup. Wallstedt, now 7-0-2 on the season, made 39 saves, including three crucial stops in the extra period.

Upcoming

No time to think about it any longer; we have another game to witness on Saturday. The Avalanche (17-1-6) take on the Montreal Canadiens (13-7-3). Coverage begins at 1 p.m. local time from Ball Arena.

Source: https://www.milehighhockey.com/colo...ver-as-avalanche-lose-3-2-in-shootout-to-wild
 
Open Thread: Montréal Canadiens @ Colorado Avalanche (1:00 P.M.)

imagn-25117580.jpg


I regret to inform you, dear readers, that the Colorado Avalanche are not hockey gods of limitless skill and influence out to bend the NHL on a whim.

Being mere demigods with those capabilities will be just fine, and those skills will be put to the test against the visiting Montréal Canadiens this afternoon.

Colorado Avalanche (17-1-6)​


The Opponent: Montréal Canadiens (13-7-3)

Time: 1:00 P.M. MST/3:00 P.M. EST

Watch: ALT, ALT+ (Avalanche Broadcast Area), ESPN+, NHL Center Ice (Outside Avalanche Broadcast Area – US), SN+ (Canadian Broadcast Areas)

Listen: Altitude Sports Radio KKSE-FM 92.5 FM

Colorado Avalanche​


The Avalanche had their ten-game winning streak come to an end in St. Paul on Friday, losing to the Minnesota Wild by a 3-2 shootout decision. Nathan MacKinnon scored his League-leading nineteenth goal of the season in the effort, and Gabe Landeskog scored a goal that was nothing short of heroic to tie game in the third period. Although they came up short in the loss, the point they earned made them the first team in the NHL to reach 40 points in the standings. Scott Wedgewood stopped 35 of 37 shots, with Minnesota’s Kirill Kaprizov scoring both goals for the Wild.

Coming into today’s game, the Avs remain atop the standings League-wide and in the Western Conference, and while Dallas and Minnesota picked up two points on Friday (Minnesota also hosts Buffalo tonight), a win today over Montréal would give Colorado three of a possible four points during another series of back-to-back games. The Avs have a 4-0-1 record thus far in back-to-back games this month, and another win today would go a long way in maintaining a healthy lead in the Central Division. Given how Dallas and Minnesota aren’t showing signs of slowing down, the Avs would do well to keep as much distance between themselves and the rest of the teams giving chase in the Central.

Today’s game is also the second game of the Heritage Series games as part of the Avalanche 30th anniversary season, which means that the powder blue Quebec Nordiques uniform kit will be on full display in this contest. The Avs previously wore these uniforms in a 5-4 shootout loss to the Carolina Hurricanes on October 23rd; Carolina also indulged in the nostalgia wave, opting to wear their former Hartford Whalers uniforms for the occasion. While the long-standing rivalry with Montréal now only exists in the history books, seeing the fleur-de-lis in action against a former division rival will certainly be fun and nostalgic experience in its own right.

Just don’t expect a re-enactment of the Good Friday Massacre when the puck drops later this afternoon.

Today’s game is the third game across four days for the Avalanche. Fitting, since their previous victory against Montréal (a 5-4 shootout decision at the Bell Centre on March 22) also took place on a Saturday when the Avs played their third game in four nights. With Wedgewood between the pipes on Friday, it’s likely that Mackenzie Blackwood will be in goal on Saturday afternoon.

Projected Lineup​


Forwards:
Artturi Lehkonen – Nathan MacKinnon – Martin Nečas
Gabe Landeskog – Brock Nelson – Ross Colton
Parker Kelly – Jack Drury – Victor Olofsson
Joel Kiviranta – Zakhar Bardakov – Ivan Ivan

Defense:
Cale Makar – Devon Toews
Josh Manson – Brent Burns
Sam Girard – Sam Malinski

Between the Pipes:
Mackenzie Blackwood
Scott Wedgewood

Montréal Canadiens​


After an impressive start that saw them win eight of their first eleven games this season, Montréal has endured some rough stretches throughout the month of November. They lost seven of eight games played over a three week period before stringing together a three game winning streak—including a 4-1 victory over the Vegas Golden Knights at T-Mobile Arena on Friday evening—prior to today’s game against Colorado. They currently sit in second place in the Atlantic Division, only three points behind Tampa for the division lead.

The injury bug has bit Montréal over the past couple of weeks, as they’ve been missing some key personnel in their lineup. Former Avalanche center Alex Newhook underwent surgery for a fractured ankle he sustained in a game against the Dallas Stars on November 13, and will be out for four months. Prior to the injury, Newhook had been having a solid start to the season, recording six goals and six assists for twelve points on the season. Center Kirby Dach will also miss four to six weeks with a fractured foot.

Defenseman Kaiden Guhle underwent surgery for a partially torn adductor muscle on November 13 and is expected to miss between eight to ten weeks. Right wing Patrik Laine also had surgery in late October for a core muscle injury and is expected to miss between three to four months. These injuries have stunted what was a promising start to the season for Montréal, who had been looking to build on a solid 2024-2025 campaign that saw them finish with a 40-31-7 record (a marked improvement over their 30-36-8 finish the year before) and the team’s first playoff berth since the COVID-shortened 2020-2021 season that saw Montréal make their first appearance in a Stanley Cup Final since 1993.

Defenseman Lane Hutson had a breakout season last year, scoring six goals and recording sixty(!) assists during his rookie campaign. He currently leads all Montréal defensemen in points (19), which in itself is good for third overall in team scoring. His performance has certainly boosted expectations as he enters his second full season on the Montréal blue line. Noah Dobson, acquired in an offseason sign-and-trade deal with the New York Islanders, ranks second in points for defensemen (16), which also ranks him second in team assists. Mike Matheson, fresh off a five-year, $30 million dollar contract extension signed on Friday, leads all defensemen in goals (4) and ranks third in points by defensemen (15).

Cole Caufield leads Montréal in goals (14), and his 25 points rank second on the team behind captain Nick Suzuki (27). Left wing Juraj Slafkovský, the first overall pick in the 2022 NHL Draft, is tied with Suzuki and center Oliver Kapanen for second place in team goal scoring (7).

Montréal has won three of its past four matchups against Colorado, with their most recent victory coming on home ice back on January 04 (a 2-1 shootout decision).

Projected Lineup​


Forwards:
Cole Caufield – Nick Suzuki – Zack Bolduc
Juraj Slafkovský – Oliver Kapanen – Ivan Demidov
Alexandre Texier – Jake Evans – Josh Anderson
Florian Xhekaj – Joe Veleno – Brendan Gallagher

Defense:
Mike Matheson – Noah Dobson
Jayden Struble – Lane Hutson
Arber Xhekaj – Alexandre Carrier

Between the Pipes:
Jakub Dobeš
Sam Montembeault

Follow along in the comments below!

Source: https://www.milehighhockey.com/open...montreal-canadiens-colorado-avalanche-100-p-m
 
Back
Top