San Jose Sharks defenseman Marc-Edouard Vlasic is hot and bothered after officials failed to make an icing call on Sunday, when the visiting Colorado Avalanche won 4-3 in Game 2 to level their second-round playoff series at 1-1.
Vlasic basically kept his mouth shut about the non-call, which came late in the second period and led to the Avalanche’s go-ahead goal, but what he implied should sum up his feelings.
A whistle for icing would have been “the right call. Absolutely, I’ll take the high road and wait for the league’s apology tomorrow [yesterday],” Vlasic said after the game, in which the Avalanche came back from a 1-0 first-period deficit to score twice in the critical second period.
Photo: AP
Asked again, Vlasic basically repeated his previous statement.
Apparently, the apology reference had to do with what happened in the Sharks’ first-round series against the Vegas Golden Knights. The league apologized to the Golden Knights after officials in Game 7 mistakenly gave the Sharks a major penalty, with the ensuing powerplay fueling San Jose’s deciding victory.
On Sunday, with the scored tied 1-1, Vlasic thought he won a race for the puck with the Avalanche’s Mikko Rantanen, but officials let play continue without making an icing call. Sharks goaltender Martin Jones stopped a point-blank shot by Gabriel Landeskog, but Tyson Barrie smacked the rebound with a one-timer into the top corner to give Colorado a 2-1 lead 16 minutes, 31 seconds into the second period.
Not that Vlasic would say the play determined the outcome of the game.
“When we had a 1-0 lead, I thought we should’ve, not ended it, but poured it on and got the second and third one, and they would have been done,” he said. “We kept them in it.”
Instead, Colorado went ahead 3-1 midway through the third period and hung on, despite allowing two goals in the final five minutes.
Avalanche coach Jared Bednar did not agree with Vlasic’s cool assessment regarding the officials’ failure to call icing.
“It was the exact same as the icing here the other night [during the Sharks’ 5-2 victory in Game 1], when Karlsson had the inside track on Compher,” Bednar said. “They’re in a race, they blow it down for icing because Karlsson had the inside path. To me, on this one, I’m watching Mikko go up the ice, he’s got a head of steam, he’s getting to the right area, he’s got the inside path on Vlasic on the post. It looks to me like Mikko’s going to get there first, so they let it go.”
The series resumes with Game 3 in Denver, Colorado, today.
In New York, Warren Foegele and Nino Niederreiter each scored in the first 65 seconds of the third period to give the Carolina Hurricanes a 2-1 NHL playoff victory and a 2-0 series lead over the New York Islanders.
Additional reporting by AFP
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