NHL

Colorado Avalanche at Anaheim Ducks

· National Hockey League
Final
5 - 4

Avalanche fight back for critical 5-4 OT win over Ducks

Mikko Rantanen had two goals and two assists, and J.T. Compher also scored to help Colorado move two points ahead of Dallas atop the Central Division. The Stars hold the potential tiebreaker with more regulation wins, which made MacKinnon’s one-timer from the left circle in the extra period that much more important.

“Well, it’s a good spot to be in with three games left or whatever, but there’s still work to be done because we’ve seen the standings flip flop all year long,” Avalanche coach Jared Bednar said.

Pavel Francouz made 19 saves in his first start in nearly two months. He had not played since Feb. 7 because of a lower-body injury.

Frank Vatrano had two goals, Adam Henrique and Brett Leason also scored, and the Ducks picked up a second point in two nights to give up ground in the race for the NHL’s worst record and the best odds to win the draft lottery. Lukas Dostal allowed five goals on 46 shots.

“Our guys are full of fire,” Ducks coach Dallas Eakins said. “They’re working hard for each other, and they’re trying to support each other, and they’ve competitive people.”

Colorado squandered a two-goal lead in the second period before rallying back from a two-goal deficit in the third. Rantanen reached 100 points on the season when he cut it to 4-3 on the power play midway through the period, and MacKinnon’s one-timer with the man advantage tied it up 4-4 with 4:32 remaining.

“If you’re drawing penalties, you have your top five guys on the ice at one time and they can start feeling it. Eventually, I think, skilled players and talented players are going to find a way to break through,” Bednar said.

Anaheim scored twice in a 2:07 span of the third, going in front 3-2 on Vatrano’s wrist shot through traffic at 5:18 and making it 4-2 when Leason scored off the rush.

Eakins was pleased with the spirit on display coming to the end of a disheartening season, and not just from the youngsters that the Ducks hope will be cornerstones for years to come.

“Our veteran players, a guy like Frankie has a career year in points,” Eakins said. “Cam Fowler, career year in points. (Henrique) comes back, he’s got 20 (goals) again. ... There’s a lot of good going on, quietly, that is really going to pay off for the future.”

That seemed like it might be enough to punish the Avalanche, but Colorado’s power play eventually was able to make up for a wasteful start. They failed to cash in on two lengthy 5-on-3 looks and a double minor against Derek Grant for high sticking in the first period.

The Avalanche ended up 3 for 8 on the power play.

“Their power play is deadly,” Eakins said. “They’ve got some really super high-end talent. ... You give them that many cracks on a power play, they’re gonna get you sooner or later.”

ROAD TRIPPING Colorado won its 10th straight road game, their longest run since leaving Quebec after the 1994-95 season. Five of those wins have come in California, with the Avalanche having racked up 11 consecutive wins in the Golden State.

Game notes
Ducks D Drew Helleson made his NHL debut. He was a second-round draft pick by Colorado in 2019 and sent to Anaheim last year as part of the trade for D Josh Manson. ... Avalanche D Bowen Byram (illness) missed his second straight game. ... Ducks F Max Comtois is out for the final three games of the season because of an upper-body injury.

UP NEXT

Avalanche: Host Edmonton on Tuesday night.

Ducks: Host Vancouver on Tuesday night.

Regular Season Series

COL wins series 2-1

Scoring Summary

Goal 1st Period 10:15 J.T. Compher Goal (17) Wrist Shot, assists: Valeri Nichushkin (29), Erik Johnson (8)
Goal 2nd Period 13:58 Mikko Rantanen Goal (53) Backhand, assists: Samuel Girard (30), Devon Toews (39)
Goal 2nd Period 15:15 Frank Vatrano Goal (21) Slap Shot, assists: Trevor Zegras (40), Ryan Strome (25)
Goal 2nd Period 18:09 Adam Henrique Goal (22) Backhand, assists: Cam Fowler (36)
Goal 3rd Period 5:18 Frank Vatrano Goal (22) Snap Shot, assists: Troy Terry (36), Kevin Shattenkirk (22)
Goal 3rd Period 7:25 Brett Leason Goal (6) Tip-In, assists: Derek Grant (13), Jayson Megna (6)
Goal 3rd Period 12:09 Mikko Rantanen Goal (54) Snap Shot, assists: Nathan MacKinnon (68), Devon Toews (40)
Goal 3rd Period 15:28 Nathan MacKinnon Goal (38) Slap Shot, assists: Mikko Rantanen (47), Valeri Nichushkin (30)
Goal 4th Period 4:15 Nathan MacKinnon Goal (39) Slap Shot, assists: Devon Toews (41), Mikko Rantanen (48)

Statistics

https://a.espncdn.com/combiner/i?img=/i/teamlogos/nhl/500/col.png&h=100&scale=crop&w=100&location=originCOL https://a.espncdn.com/combiner/i?img=/i/teamlogos/nhl/500/ana.png&h=100&scale=crop&w=100&location=originANA
14 Blocked Shots 15
9 Hits 11
7 Takeaways 4
46 Shots 23
3 Power Play Goals 0
8 Power Play Opportunities 3
37.5 Power Play Percentage 0.0
0 Short Handed Goals 0
0 Shootout Goals 0
36 Faceoffs Won 33
52.2 Faceoff Win Percent 47.8
10 Giveaways 4
3 Total Penalties 8
6 Penalty Minutes 26
Anaheim Ducks Anaheim Ducks Injuries
NAME, POS STATUS DATE
Troy Terry, RW Out Mar 9
John Carlson, D Out Mar 8
Petr Mrazek, G Injured Reserve Feb 18
Colorado Avalanche Colorado Avalanche Injuries
NAME, POS STATUS DATE
Logan O'Connor, RW Injured Reserve Mar 8
Gabriel Landeskog, LW Out Mar 8
Artturi Lehkonen, LW Out Mar 3

Game Information

Honda Center

Location: Anaheim, CA
Attendance: 13,992 | Capacity:

2025-26 Central Division Standings

TEAM W L PTS OTL
Colorado 43 10 95 9
Dallas 39 14 88 10
Minnesota 37 16 85 11
Utah 34 25 73 5
Nashville 28 27 64 8
Winnipeg 26 26 62 10
St. Louis 25 29 59 9
Chicago 24 29 59 11

2025-26 Pacific Division Standings

TEAM W L PTS OTL
Anaheim 35 25 73 3
Vegas 29 21 72 14
Edmonton 31 25 70 8
Seattle 29 24 67 9
San Jose 30 25 66 6
Los Angeles 26 23 66 14
Calgary 25 31 57 7
Vancouver 19 37 46 8
Full Standings