It has been a tough season for Seattle Kraken fans, no doubt, and they have endured some difficult nights at Climate Pledge Arena. But those in attendance Saturday were rewarded for sticking with their team, as Seattle showed emotion and resilience, feeding off the impressive energy in the building for a 6-3 win over the Vancouver Canucks.
Eeli Tolvanen scored twice, Brandon Montour had a goal and an assist, and Shane Wright and Vince Dunn each recorded two assists, while Andre Burakovsky, Oliver Bjorkstrand, and Matty Beniers added a tip-in goal apiece.
“Just the bounce back from the game in St. Louis… I think they didn’t need to hear from me about the game in St. Louis and the compete level,” coach Dan Bylsma said. “A good bounce-back message for the guys as well, just getting to the net front, going to the inside, fighting and battling to get there.”
Here are Three Takeaways from a fun-to-watch 6-3 Kraken win over the Canucks.
Takeaway #1: Burakovsky was great
On the long list of frustrations Kraken fans have felt this season, Andre Burakovsky’s inconsistent play has surely been noted at times. But the winger had one of his best performances of the campaign Saturday, standing out in a very good way.
He only ended up with one banger of a goal, but he led all players with six shots on goal and seemed to be skating with more confidence than we’ve seen from him during some stretches of this season.
“I thought [Burakovsky] was flying tonight,” Wright said. “I thought he was really moving well, skating well, and when he’s possessing the puck like that, he’s cutting back and using his skills, that’s when he’s at his best.”
Burakovsky opened the scoring at 5:47 of the first period after Wright strung together several good plays in a row—first winning a race to a loose puck in the neutral zone, then burning around Pius Suter to create a 2-on-1. He followed that up with a perfectly sauced backhand pass over Filip Hronek’s stick, laying it right in Burakovsky’s wheelhouse.
BURKY MAKES IT WORKY! 🚨
— Sound Of Hockey (@sound_hockey) March 2, 2025
Great speed and backhand sauce from Shane Wright to win a race for a loose puck and set up Andre Burakovsky.
1-0 #SeaKraken pic.twitter.com/XYjLJgzB2C
For his part, Burakovsky did exactly what he was supposed to do on the play, staying wide enough to create space for the pass and opening himself up to rip it past Kevin Lankinen. The goal set the tone for an all-around impressive night for the winger.
He also started the play that led to Oliver Bjorkstrand’s tip-in goal, which tied the game 2-2 at 4:11 of the second period. On that goal, it was just good, hard forechecking from Burakovsky that allowed Wright to pick up a loose puck and find Montour at the point.
“Offensively, starting with the goal in the first, Shane Wright making the great pass to him and scoring the goal,” Seattle coach Dan Bylsma said. “He didn’t factor in on the Bjorky goal, but he was a factor on the Bjorky goal, winning the puck in the offensive zone and hanging onto it… He was dangerous, he was good with the puck, he was on the puck in the offensive zone and noticeable tonight.”
Takeaway #2: Lots of tip-in goals
The Kraken scored three times in the second period to put themselves in the driver’s seat heading into the final frame, and oddly enough, all three goals in that middle period were scored in similar fashion.
Bjorkstrand tipped Montour’s shot, Beniers tipped Dunn’s shot, and Tolvanen tipped Ryker Evans’ shot—all three going past Lankinen’s glove.
“That’s one thing that we try to harp on is getting forwards to the net,” Montour said. “Obviously, it’s tough when goalies can’t see it or we get good tips, and we had a few goals like that.”
The redirections in this game highlighted the importance of creating traffic in front of NHL netminders, who—almost every time—will stop the shots they can see. Add a deflection and a change of direction a few feet in front of the goalie, and your chances of sneaking the puck by increase.
“In an effort to try to score more goals, that’s where you’ve got to go,” Bylsma said. “You’ve got to go to the inside, and also that takes intent, it takes courage to go there.”
My personal favorite of the three was the Beniers goal, because Matty won the face-off clean back to Dunn, then beelined straight for the slot, where he somehow got a piece of a Dunn rocket slap shot before a huge celebration.
MATTY MAGIC! 🚨
— Sound Of Hockey (@sound_hockey) March 2, 2025
He gets a tip off Vince Dunn’s slap shot after his own clean face-off win.
3-3 #SeaKraken pic.twitter.com/W7mMJ0Wt81
Takeaway #3: A glimpse of a good team
At this stage of the season, it’s almost frustrating to see the Kraken play a game like this—battling for every puck, getting contributions from everyone, and not letting goals against sink them. It’s frustrating because it makes you wonder why they haven’t been able to string together more efforts like it this season.
I asked Bylsma about the unpredictability of the team after the game, and here’s what he said: “I just think that’s the challenge for this team. It’s a challenge for our team being consistent every night, and I’m not going to— I’m going to pat them on the back for the compete and the effort tonight.”
Still, it really is fun to see them play like that, even though we’re in “meaningless games” territory—at least from Seattle’s perspective. Here’s hoping for several more of those down the stretch, because that was one of the more enjoyable nights at CPA in quite a while.
Bonus Takeaway: Joey went for a goalie goal
With Lankinen pulled for an extra skater with more than three minutes left, and Seattle enjoying a two-goal cushion, you knew Joey Daccord had a shot at the empty net on his mind. Indeed, Nils Höglander gave him a golden opportunity by tossing a soft floater into his catch glove, which Joey quickly settled onto the ice and prepped to fire.
Daccord got the shot up in the air and appeared to have it on line, but he may not have gotten great wood on it. Tyler Myers easily gloved it, thwarting what would have been an unforgettable moment for Daccord and Kraken fans.
Joey went for it! Looked like it was on line, but it got gloves down. #SeaKraken pic.twitter.com/t8GBCVzYJp
— Sound Of Hockey (@sound_hockey) March 2, 2025
I also asked Bylsma what it will take to get Joey “off the schneid,” and the coach said, “He’s got to learn to shoot it harder. It was a muffin he shot. We’ve more guided him to not always looking for the opportunity to shoot it and try to get the goal, but today was a good opportunity to do it. After the game, I said, ‘You’ve got to work on your shot, because that was a muffin.’”
Incredible stuff from Bylsma, who remains one of the funniest personalities in the sport.





After four seasons, this was the first Canucks @ Kraken game I’ve attended that felt like a genuine rivalry (though possibly in part for non-hockey-related reasons). The singing of the national anthems was louder than I’ve ever heard before at CPA.
I concur with Darren that it was refreshing to see Burakovsky play like he belonged on the ice.
Q: Why don’t Kraken fans boo Tyler Myers the way they boo Cale Makar? IMHO he deserves it at least as much.
Because he hit Matty B and that made him miss his first season, first invite to the all star game
PAX… I think you misread that… why DON’T Kraken fans boo Tyler Myers?
dglasser was assuming everyone already knew the context.
Better yet why wasn’t some “hockey version” of biblical retribution rained down on Myers? You don’t need a tough guy to skate “unannounced” toward him and punch him in the face.
This team has needed this version of Burakovsky in the worst way all season. Now he turns up just ahead of the TDL?
One thing that’s helped Burakovsky was breaking up him and Stephenson – their on-ice impacts at even strength when on the same line are just atrocious. Each has been a bit better since being split apart.
I think a big mistake made early in the season was focusing on the wrong essential pair.
The key bad decision was holding onto a belief that Stephenson needed to be paired with Schwartz, apparently on the basis that Schwartz played with Stephenson’s older brother as a kid. Keeping the two of them as a package meant there had to be an odd man to complete the line. That left Burakovsky to complete the line, even though it clearly wasn’t working.
However, keeping Schwartz and Stephenson together meant splitting up the proven pair of Bjorkstrand/Tolvanen in order to separate Stephenson from Burakovsky, which made things worse.
So, I’d say that the turning point was the near-instant chemistry of Schwartz and Kakko causing the breakup up the Schwartz/ Stephenson pair, which then gave the opportunity to separate Burakovsky from Stephenson while keeping Tolvanen and Bjorkstrand together.
All that said, with Eberle back, Burakovsky remains the odd man out, since I assume Eberle’s time on the fourth line is temporary. And, unlike Eberle, who is going to put in the his best effort whether it’s the first or the fourth line, Burakovsky isn’t going to do the same.