The bright side is that his one above-average game in that stretch was Game 7 versus Seattle, which is as high pressure as it gets. Since then, however, he’s had just one quality start in his last nine outings. ![]() Jake Oettinger rose to the occasion in Round 1, giving his team a chance to win in five out of six games with quality starts. So has the goaltending, and that’s contributing to the jump up on the concern-o-meter. Not capitalizing on a strong game has set the Stars back. Vegas had a hot start to the game and a strong finish to bookend Game 2, and that was enough to take a 2-0 series lead after some iffy play in between. WITH JUST OVER 2 MINS TO GO, IT'S TIED □ /StNpALXzws The progress they seemingly made at five-on-five didn’t pay off, when a Ryan Suter blunder led to Jonathan Marchessault’s tying the score late, which forced overtime. The problem is, unlike rounds 1 and 2, the Stars didn’t tie the series after losing in overtime in Game 1. So is the fact Jason Robertson has scored in two straight games after being held out of the goal column for eight straight. The fact there was clear progress between games 1 and 2 is something to build on back on home ice. ![]() Though both teams were scoreless in those minutes, the Stars out-attempted Vegas 8-3, out-chanced them 5-1 and earned about 86 percent of the expected goals share. The Stars had the majority of expected goals share in each period of regulation, and the Robertson line managed the Karlsson matchup much better. That lackluster five-on-five start is something Dallas managed to rebound from in Game 2, without controlling home ice. A better third period and a late tying goal from Jamie Benn kept the Stars in the game to force overtime, when they lost. Vegas was the better team, as they earned almost 64 percent of the expected goals share and outscored Dallas 4-2 there. The Golden Knights had the edge in shot attempts (16-7), scoring chances (7-4) and expected goals share (about 72 percent).įalling short at five-on-five extended past that one matchup, though. Though Dallas outscored Vegas 2-1 in that time, it doesn’t reflect how lopsided their minutes were. Jason Robertson and the Stars’ top line went head-to-head with William Karlsson’s. It’s the first time Dallas opened a series on the road, and that didn’t do them any favors with Vegas’ getting last change in Game 1. Now after losing their first two games in the Western Conference final, Dallas gets one more bump up to a six.Ī sluggish five-on-five game to start the series contributes to that. Fast-forward to Round 2, and their 2-1 series deficit moved up a notch to a 5/10. ![]() In our ultra-reactionary Game 1 concern-o-meter in Round 1, they found themselves at a 4/10. The Stars are no stranger to this list and have bounced back both times they’ve been mentioned. So what better time to measure the level of concern each trailing team should have at this point in the conference finals? Dallas Stars
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