Ok, that’s enough winning for now, Seattle Kraken.
After cementing themselves as a non-playoff team with an epic post-Olympic collapse, the Kraken were within striking distance of a top-three spot in the NHL Draft Lottery. But then they rattled off two straight wins and climbed out of the bottom five. From a draft-positioning perspective, Seattle really needed to lose to the Calgary Flames on Saturday to give itself a shot at the top three, but alas, the team put together a decent performance against a terrible team and came away with a solid victory.
HOW DARE THEY?!
The stars had oddly aligned for a stinker of an outing, with all three of the Kraken’s regular goalies unavailable—both Philipp Grubauer and Joey Daccord have gotten injured in the last few games, and Matt Murray is currently away for personal reasons. So in came the AHL tandem of Nikke Kokko and Victor Ostman, and Kokko was tabbed to make his first start in the NHL.
“I thought we defended well,” coach Lane Lambert said. “With Nikke [coming in and making his first NHL start], I thought our guys did a really good job and made a concerted effort to give him as much help as possible. And when we needed him, he made some good saves for us.”
Hey, the Kokko angle is a fun story, and winning vibes are always nice, even if we should be rooting for losses at this point.
Here are Three Takeaways from a 4-1 Kraken win over the Flames.
Takeaway 1: Kokko plays well, goes for a goal
Kokko looked really solid in his first full NHL game; he was calm and confident throughout and really never in scramble mode. Part of that was strong defense in front of him and an inept opponent that appears to have mastered the “tank” game.
But Kokko did get tested a number of times and came up with 26 saves on the evening.
“I feel great,” Kokko said. “I was little bit nervous before game but when I… came to rink and started doing my routine and warm ups, then I enjoyed.”
Kokko has a hilariously cocky persona, and although his English is still a work in progress, his sense of humor shines through when you talk to him.
He raised eyebrows when he very clearly took a shot at the open net in the closing minutes, when Seattle led 3-1. The shot got knocked down and very nearly ended up as a goal against. When I asked if he was trying to score, he said, “Maybe,” and got a big laugh from the assembled media.
But he also told Piper Shaw in front of the whole arena that he had, in fact, tried to score and that, “I try to score before Joey [Daccord].”
Hall of Fame moment. Joey catching strays 💀 https://t.co/9p92qYgp26
— Piper Shaw (@PiperShawTV) April 12, 2026
Could you imagine if he had hit that in his first game?! Joey would have been devastated.
“He was awesome,” Freddy Gaudreau said. “I don’t think I’ve ever seen a goalie that almost scored in his first game, but that would have been awesome. But he played an unbelievable game. He gave us confidence just by his energy. He was solid, he was poised, so it was awesome to see that.”
“I think I have only one good try [at a goalie goal so far this season],” Kokko said. “It was good [the Flames] don’t score that.”
Takeaway 2: Strong second period
After a really quiet first period, the Kraken scored three goals in the second, finally winning the “race to three” that Lane Lambert has talked about recently. It’s the second game in a row that they’ve scored three or more goals after failing to reach that number in the six games prior. Lo and behold, they’ve won both of these games.
“Sometimes you get a lead, you get comfortable,” Matty Beniers said. “I think it’s important to keep pushing. You can really kill teams’ momentum, you can kill their will early on in games when you get that third goal.”
The three in this one came courtesy of Gaudreau, Chandler Stephenson, and Beniers, who hit the 20-goal milestone for the third time in his career.
Beniers’ goal was a beauty, and it likely sealed the outcome of the game. With the clock ticking down in the second, he said he heard Stephenson yelling from the bench that there were five seconds left. From the right circle, he let a shot rip that snuck under the bar and gave Seattle a 3-1 lead heading to the locker room.
MATTY MAGIC! 🚨
— Sound Of Hockey (@sound_hockey) April 12, 2026
Goal No. 20 on the season for Beniers, who takes a pass from Ryker Evans in the right circle and snipes it with four seconds left in the 2nd.
3-1 #SeaKraken pic.twitter.com/sVUf4kCum8
From there, Kokko shut down the limited pushback from Calgary, and the Kraken rolled to a victory.
Takeaway 3: Nice chemistry from Kakko, Gaudreau, and McCann
There’s been a ton of line juggling down the stretch, while Lambert has tried to find combinations that could produce some offense. In this one, he put Gaudreau between Kaapo Kakko and Jared McCann, and I thought the line looked dangerous every time it was out there. Gaudreau, in fact, ended up with two great looks on one shift in the first period.
He also connected with Kakko for his sixth goal of the season, less than a minute after the Flames had taken a 1-0 lead.
FREDDY G! 🚨
— Sound Of Hockey (@sound_hockey) April 12, 2026
This line has shown some chemistry. Believe that's the third time Kakko has set up Gaudreau, and this time he converts.
1-1 #SeaKraken pic.twitter.com/2LuIWLxdEY
“Sometimes, you just play with players, and it feels like you think what they’re thinking,” Gaudreau said of his linemates. “And I felt that way [tonight].”
I’d like to see them stick with that trio for a bit, even if just to find out if it can work again next season.
Ok, let’s get back to losing now.



Go Kraken!!!
Go Kraken!!!
Nice to see kokko get the win but….
I’m really not sure what this team is doing we literally lost two spots in the draft the last few games. It’s not the players fault they obviously want to win every game they play, why is Botterill not demanding that LL call up a few more rookies and getting their feet wet for the last 4 games.
The fans would love a chance to see a little more of our future play and we clearly don’t need the wins. This is not good team management in any way whatsoever, we clearly have a few vets that will not be here next season and management has to know who they are. Sit them and let us see the future. This is making zero sense.
Would love to see OFM and Catton get more than 10 min of ice time in a completely meaningless game.
Yes exactly, what are they thinking.
I don’t think it is LLs decision about whether or not to call somebody up, I believe that is usually the GM. That said, I agree, let’s call up more kids and get them some ice time. I don’t blame the vets for trying to win, that’s what they should be doing, and that’s what we’ve all been criticizing them for not doing and not showing enough drive to work hard and grind out the Ws, so not fair to criticize them when they actually do that and win. That said, remove them from the equation, bring the kids in and get them some ice time, and don’t hurt your draft standing in the meantime…
If they’re not careful they could still accidentally end up ahead of the amazing San Jose Sharks. It’s really too bad Kokko didn’t get absolutely lit up playing behind a tank lineup. After all, he’s only No. 15 on Scotty Wheeler’s Kraken Prospect Board. Obviously possibly upping your draft position by one spot and your lotto odds by 1% are worth hanging that guy out to dry in his NHL debut.
“Nice to see Kokko get the win but…” in my fantasy GM league I don’t actually have to manage, I just have to pretend.
Well actually we could easily pass St. Louis, SJ and the panthers, if we try hard enough. That’s no even counting the two teams we passed already in the last two games. I have no problem winning if it matters but it’s also would be nice to take a look at our future. Obviously the team wanted to win for Kokko and I’m not saying we should have sat back and watched 8 goals get ripped past him but common at least try and win with our youth instead of these dinosaurs that are not going to be around next season anyway.
Thanks, John! Good read! Isn’t this a pretty deep draft so a few lost spots shouldn’t make too much difference. We’re not getting McKenna, so after #2 is the drop off that big?