
McNabb’s Timely Strike Evens the Score (Image Credits: Pixabay)
Vancouver – The Vegas Golden Knights delivered a gritty 2-1 victory against the Vancouver Canucks on Tuesday night at Rogers Arena. This win propelled Vegas into a tie for first place in the Pacific Division alongside the Edmonton Oilers, with just four games left in the regular season.[1][2] The outcome marked Vegas’s fourth consecutive triumph and extended their dominance over Vancouver, sweeping the season series.[3]
McNabb’s Timely Strike Evens the Score
The first period passed without a goal as Vegas outshot Vancouver 10-2. Carter Hart stood firm in net for the Golden Knights, while Vancouver’s Nikita Tolopilo turned aside chances from Mark Stone and Brandon Saad.[1]
Vancouver struck first in the second period. Max Sasson wristed a shot past Hart at 12:50, putting the Canucks ahead 1-0 on their fifth shot of the game.[1] Vegas responded swiftly. Defenseman Brayden McNabb tied it at 1-1 at 15:46 with a wrist shot from the left circle that beat Tolopilo high.[1] The goal came amid traffic, screened effectively by Tomas Hertl.
Smith Delivers Game-Winner in Third
Tension built in the third period as both teams traded chances. Vegas maintained pressure, limiting Vancouver to minimal shots – no attempts until late.[1]
Cole Smith broke the deadlock at 12:13. His shot from the right circle deflected off a defender and slipped under Tolopilo’s pad, securing a 2-1 lead for Vegas.[1] Assisted by Nic Dowd after a neutral-zone steal, the tally marked Vegas’s 100th third-period goal this season – the most in the NHL.[2] Vancouver pulled Tolopilo late for a 6-on-4 advantage but mustered only one shot.
Hart, Defense Stifle Struggling Canucks
Carter Hart earned his third straight win, facing 11 shots and allowing just one goal for a stellar performance.[2] Tolopilo stopped 26 of 28 shots for Vancouver, but the Canucks managed a season-low 11 shots total – the fewest any Vegas opponent has recorded in franchise history.[1][2]
Vegas controlled play throughout. Here are key shot totals by period:
| Period | Vegas | Vancouver |
|---|---|---|
| First | 10 | 2 |
| Second | Heavy edge | Low |
| Third | Dominant | 0 until late |
The Golden Knights killed penalties effectively, preserving their lead in the closing minutes.
Tortorella Era Off to Perfect Start
John Tortorella improved to 4-0-0 since replacing Bruce Cassidy on March 29.[1] Vegas extended a points streak to six games (4-0-2) in that span and now holds a 36-26-16 record with 88 points.[3]
Vancouver fell to 22-47-8, mired in last place with one win in their last 10 outings. The loss highlighted their struggles, as Vegas claimed seven straight victories over them dating to last season.[2]
Pacific Showdown Looms Large
The victory tied Vegas with Edmonton atop the Pacific Division. The Oilers hold the tiebreaker via more regulation wins, but four games remain for high stakes.[1]
- Vegas faces Seattle next on Thursday.
- Edmonton also has four games left.
- Playoff positioning hinges on these final matchups.
- Golden Knights’ third-period scoring leads the league.
- Sweep completes season series dominance over Canucks.
This result keeps Vegas in prime position for a division title push.
Key Takeaways:
- Vegas 2-1 win catapults them into first-place tie.[2]
- 4-0 under Tortorella; 100th third-period goal scored.
- Hart masterful on 11 shots; Canucks held to franchise-low 11 SOG.
Vegas now eyes the stretch run with momentum. The Pacific Division race promises drama until the final buzzer. What do you think of the Golden Knights’ surge? Tell us in the comments.