The season keeps moving along for the Western Hockey League, which capped off a November full of standings shuffling and big-time performances all around. For the Everett Silvertips, contributions from up and down the lineup continued to spring them forward, while the Seattle Thunderbirds’ scoring inconsistencies have seemingly set them back.
Everett Silvertips
Everett hosted the rival Portland Winterhawks on Friday at Angel of the Winds Arena, looking to avenge Sunday’s loss in Portland. The Silvertips started slowly by giving up the first three goals of the game and trailing 3-0 after the first period. Goaltender Tyler Palmer was pulled for Ethan Chadwick after the frame.
The Silvertips responded, and the ice tilted drastically in the second, with Everett scoring six unanswered goals and completely shutting the door defensively en route to a 6-3 win. Teague Patton had a natural hat trick in the second, while Nashville Predators prospect Austin Roest scored the game winner in the third.
Everett’s win improved the team to 11-2-1 on home ice this season, trailing only the Wenatchee Wild for the best home winning percentage in the WHL.
The Silvertips followed that up with a night in Kamloops, beginning a five-game road trip across British Columbia and Alberta. Scoring opportunities were plentiful for both sides all night as both the Blazers and Silvertips would tally three goals during regulation. In overtime, it would be Silvertip forward Dominik Rymon going top shelf to seal the game for Everett, 4-3 the final.
Continuing through B.C., Everett headed up to Prince George for a pair with the top team in the Western Conference. The Silvertips didn’t capitalize on a solid performance from Palmer Monday night, a 3-1 loss, but they did pull through in front of Chadwick on Tuesday. Two-point efforts from Julius Miettinen (1-1—2) and Austin Roest (2-0—2) helped in taking down the Cougars 4-3 and keeping Everett near the top of the conference standings.
For everything that went right for the Silvertips this month, it’s been about the opposite for the Thunderbirds. On Friday they took on the Saskatoon Blades, coming off being shut out in their previous two games. The offense continued to be lackluster, only managing to squeak one by Blades goaltender Evan Gardner and leading to a 3-1 loss. Before the third-period goal from Antonio Martorana, the T-birds went their previous 10 periods of hockey without scoring a non-empty-net goal. That’s over three games worth of hockey.
Not much changed on Saturday when Seattle traveled up to Kelowna. Even with the T-birds putting 45 shots on Rockets netminder Jari Kykkanen, only two found their way through. A continued struggle throughout the month of November for the T-birds was the inability to score in bunches, as just twice across 10 games did they net more than two goals in a period. Seattle’s 4-2 loss capped off its month at 3-6-1, and it continued to fall in the Western Conference standings.
U.S. Division performer of the week
If Spokane is going to turn around its season, it’s going to be on the back of its goaltending, specifically 18-year-old Dawson Cowan. Cowan appeared in three games for the Chiefs this week, only allowing four goals on the 106 shots he faced versus Victoria, Portland, and Saskatoon.
Oh, and he was credited with a goal on Sunday in Portland, the first of his career.
Cowan’s performance was enough to be named WHL Goalie of the Week. The Manitoba native will be eligible for selection at the 2024 NHL Draft.
Kraken CHL highlight
With the Seattle Kraken having four second-round selections in the 2023 NHL Draft, there was speculation they would pick a defenseman with at least one of those selections. Where did they turn? Lukas Dragicevic of the Tri-City Americans, who became the first Kraken prospect to play in the U.S. Division. Many Kraken fans were elated to know they would get to see his development on a nightly basis.
Dragicevic’s play in transition and offensive awareness for a defenseman is a large reason why the Kraken selected him No. 57 overall in 2023. Dragicevic currently leads all Tri-City defensemen in points and is continuing to find creative ways to spring the offensive play.
Everett continues its Canadian road trip in Edmonton and Red Deer on Saturday and will then be idle until the following Friday. Seattle remains at home this week, taking on Kelowna once again on Saturday. They then welcome the Victoria Royals to accesso ShoWare Center on Tuesday.
That game was an emotional roller coaster for Kraken fans, no doubt, and although Seattle came out on the losing end against the Maple Leafs, it was a much better performance than Tuesday’s game at the Chicago Blackhawks.
“In the first period, they had some opportunities and some zone time,” Kraken coach Dave Hakstol said. “But outstanding second period, better third period, a ton of character coming back and tying up the hockey game.”
Though he was still under a .900 save percentage on the night, Philipp Grubauer had a much better outing than in Chicago and rewarded Hakstol for his decision to throw him back in the net after a poor performance. He helped Seattle weather an early storm, and eventually his mates were able to turn the tides of the game.
Here are our Three Takeaways from a 4-3 Kraken shootout to the Toronto Maple Leafs.
Takeaway #1 (Darren): Offensive talent gap
When Seattle plays against teams with elite offensive talent, it tends to be a stark reminder that the Kraken have to get strong performances from everybody in their lineup to be successful. You never know which of the Maple Leafs’ stars are going to have a big night, and on Thursday, it was Mitch Marner who had a hat trick by the end of the second period and added a shootout goal to close out the win.
If the Kraken hadn’t come back to tie this game, we would have been calling for drastic measures from Seattle’s front office; some sort of personnel improvement à la an Eeli Tolvanen-style waiver claim or an Oliver Bjorkstrand-style trade. The offensive gap just seemed too big to overcome in this game, even though the Kraken were playing well.
To the team’s credit, they stuck with it, peppered Joseph Woll with 29 shots in the second and third periods, and dominated overtime, only to get stonewalled (stone…Wolled?) on several occasions.
To a shootout we go!
Goodness, the #SeaKraken had so many incredible looks in OT, but couldn't get one past Joseph Woll.
Seattle’s players and netminder should feel much better about themselves after this game than they did Tuesday. This was a solid effort against a good team that very well could have gone their way.
Takeaway #2 (Darren): Alex Wennberg’s outstanding play
Alex Wennberg’s play on Jared McCann’s tying goal (his second of the game) is a prime example of why Wennberg is a valuable player, even though fans get frustrated with his unwillingness to shoot. He took a nothing play and turned it into something by carrying the puck into the offensive zone 1-on-4. He carried it to the corner, battled through a check, and bought just enough time to let the Kraken complete their line change.
In came McCann, and Wennberg threaded the needle through five Toronto defenders.
I just love the way he uses his body to shield Simon Benoit from the puck and doesn’t panic and throw it away, even though he’s facing a full boat of blue sweaters with zero support.
“He’s got great vision,” McCann said. “I just tried to get open for him. He makes everybody look at the puck, right? He’s just got that ability, and he opens up a lot of lanes for guys.”
Wennberg certainly did that in this case.
We also have to give credit to McCann here, who gets the pass and does not hesitate in whipping it past Woll for his second goal of the game and team-leading 11th of the season.
Takeaway #3 (John): That’s a big point
This felt like an important point in the standings. One thing the Kraken did well in November was accumulate points, even though they never really got on the roll we were expecting, and Thursday’s shootout loser point was another example of that.
At the time of the Thanksgiving holiday, the Kraken had points in eight out of 11 games and had put themselves in a wild card slot in the standings. Since Thanksgiving they had regulation losses to Vancouver and, most recently, Chicago. A regulation loss to Toronto would have marked the first time this season the Kraken would have gone three games without a point.
It would have felt devastating to start a road trip with two losses, knowing this team has a very thin margin of error to keep its playoff contention hopes alive. The reality is a point is a point, no matter who it comes against, and a point on Tuesday against the Blackhawks counts the same as the point the boys got tonight against Toronto.
Now the Kraken have two winnable games in front of them to close out this road trip with a game against Ottawa on Saturday and against Montreal on Monday. These are not easy games, but the Kraken now have a shot at coming away with five points on this four-game road trip.
That is not the way the Seattle Kraken wanted to start their four-game road trip, dropping a frustrating 4-3 result to a bad Chicago Blackhawks team on a day rife with bizarreness and distractions for that franchise. Seattle practically refused to take advantage, and instead spotted the ’Hawks two separate two-goal leads thanks to some ugly plays and poor goaltending.
“Our puck play was pretty sloppy through the first two periods,” coach Dave Hakstol said. “That caused us a lot of problems against that team.”
The sloppy puck management proved costly. It was one of those nights where it seemed like each mistake was ending up in the back of Seattle’s net with Philipp Grubauer—in his first game back from injury—allowing four goals on the first 15 shots he faced in the game.
The Kraken pushed in the third period and got themselves back within one, but any comeback hopes came up short when a full minute of 5-on-3 time went by the boards in the third period without a goal, and then the Kraken failed to establish any threatening offensive-zone possession in the end-of-game 6-on-5 scenario.
Like we said, it was a frustrating night. Here are our Three Takeaways from a 4-3 Kraken loss to the Blackhawks.
Takeaway #1 (Curtis): Kraken lost their structure in the first two periods
Most of the first two periods were difficult to watch for anyone interested in scheme discipline and sound hockey from the Kraken. Rather than trusting their breakouts and structure, the Kraken tried to press the play as a group of disconnected individuals. They settled for one-on-one matchups, swiped at the puck rather than playing their check straight up, cheated for offense, and launched hope passes through the neutral zone trying to spring an odd-man rush.
They looked like a team that believed they were better than their opposition and didn’t respect the matchup enough to bring their typical disciplined style. This could be a carry-over of bad habits from the San Jose game, or it could have arisen in the first few minutes of the game when the play did seem tilted in Seattle’s direction. The Kraken were winning the one-on-one battles and getting quick and easy chances on Chicago’s goal.
Whatever the reason, Seattle’s carelessness cost the team dearly as Chicago took full advantage. In one particularly egregious sequence in the second period, Yanni Gourde’s forward line all got caught cheating up ice when the puck was loose and in dispute at Seattle’s defensive blue line. This allowed a two-on-two break in by Chicago and clean look for (Spokane-native) Tyler Johnson, which he buried.
3-2 Blackhawks. Tyler Johnson, the man from Spokane.
It’s not acceptable that the Kraken would beat themselves this way, and Hakstol was none too pleased postgame. “When you have shifts that are not crisp, are not sharp, you’re not taking care of the puck and giving opportunities, you’re going to have some ugly things happen,” Hakstol said.
Losing to the lowly Blackhawks is a nadir of the 2023-24 season thus far.
Takeaway #2 (Curtis): Special teams struggles continue
The final score very easily could have looked even worse for Seattle, but for two remarkable goal-saving efforts from Jamie Oleksiak and Adam Larsson on the penalty kill. Chicago’s anemic power play generated a handful of dangerous chances including in scrambles at the net front. Oleksiak and Larsson both blocked point-blank rebound shots that otherwise seemed ticketed for an empty cage behind Grubauer.
While Chicago did not score on three power plays, Seattle’s penalty kill continues to concede high-danger net-front opportunities at a concerning rate. It is an area that the Kraken need to improve to have any hope of climbing the Western Conference standings.
Perhaps even more significantly, the Kraken power play failed to deliver for the second straight game despite again having many opportunities at important inflection points in the game to deliver. Late in the third period, trailing by only one goal, the Kraken had more than a minute of 5-on-3 time after earning two consecutive power plays. Yet, the Kraken failed to get even one shot on goal in that time.
“[A]s a power play unit, what you want to be able to do is capitalize at key times of the hockey game,” Hakstol said postgame. “You’re not always going to be at your best, but you have to find ways to capitalize at a key time in the hockey game. We had a couple of those opportunities today and I was disappointed we came up short [and] weren’t able to capitalize–the 5-on-3 being one, but there was a couple of other spots that I would pinpoint as well as critical opportunities for us.”
The Kraken are now 0-for-9 on the power play over their last two games–both losses.
Takeaway #3 (Darren): Jaden Schwartz injured
Throwing a big dash of salt into the festering wound that was this game, Jaden Schwartz left after one shift in the third period and was quickly ruled out with a lower-body injury. We didn’t see anything obvious on the broadcast that would have caused the injury, but in the below clip, you can see that he’s floating around, in and out of the frame, and not skating with his normal stride.
Here's Jaden Schwartz's last shift before he left with a lower-body injury. Nothing obvious causing the injury, but he isn't skating with his normal stride. #SeaKrakenpic.twitter.com/AA5XnXiI0W
At the very end, Schwartz appears to be limping as he struggles back onto the bench.
Losing Schwartz for any period of time could be disastrous for the Kraken. They’re already banged up with Andre Burakovsky still in a red non-contact jersey, working his way back from a long-term upper-body injury, and Brandon Tanev missed Tuesday’s game with the lower-body injury he suffered thanks to a big Nils Hoglander hit in Friday’s game.
Those are two injuries to key players, but Schwartz would arguably be an even bigger loss. He has been one of Seattle’s best players this season, serving as one of a very select few that consistently gets to the top of the crease to create havoc for opposing defenses and goalies.
Seattle needs Jaden Schwartz in its lineup. Keep your fingers crossed for good news in the coming days on this front.
In last week’s Monday Musings, I mentioned that getting three out of a possible six points in the week would be fine, and that is exactly what the Seattle Kraken did. Could it have been better? Of course, but the Kraken are playing well enough to be a borderline playoff team right now, which is a significant improvement from where they were a few weeks back.
The team will certainly need to get to another level, but for now, they have 11 points over the last 10 games, which is better than Anaheim, Vancouver, and Vegas. The team just feels more stable than before and no longer has me freaking out from any individual loss.
The Vancouver game that the Kraken lost 5-1 was, in my opinion, much closer than the scoreboard showed. I probably lowered my expectations heading into that game since I figured Vancouver was still ornery about the Kraken win in Vancouver just a week earlier and would come out blazing. It was not the Kraken’s best effort, but they were in a one-goal game until Sam Lafferty tipped one past Joey Daccord with about 10 minutes left in the game. That appeared to be the moment the wheels came off the tracks a bit for the Kraken.
Physicality and enforcement
There is a noticeable number of fans requesting the services of an enforcer to deal with the physicality teams are imposing on the Kraken right now. I personally don’t see the need for it, though I know plenty of you will tell me I am wrong. This year’s team is roughly built the same way as last season’s team, and I don’t think Seattle has the luxury of placing an anchor in the lineup just so the team can have a more physical presence.
If the team feels this is something it needs to address, the most likely scenario would be to call up John Hayden from the Coachella Valley Firebirds. In a scenario where Hayden draws into the lineup, who would you take out? Pierre-Edouard Bellemare leads the centers in face-off percentage and penalty-kill time. Kailer Yamamoto has three goals and has the second-most power play time of the forward group. Tye Kartye has three goals and plays with a more physical style already.
I thought maybe Hayden could be called up to slot in for Brandon Tanev, though Andrew Poturalski actually got the callup. Tanev took a clean, hard hit from Nils Hoglander on Friday night, which is coincidently one of the hits a lot of fans are upset about. I took more exception to the Tyler Meyers high hit on Oliver Bjorkstrand in the third period, though.
Side note, did you know the Kraken are tied for fourth in the league with seven games with a fighting major?
Let’s get quizzical. Name the seven players for the Kraken with fighting majors this season (answer at the bottom of the post).
Other Kraken musings:
With the 7-1 victory on Wednesday night against San Jose, the Kraken logged their sixth victory against the Sharks. That is the most against any opponent in the team’s two-plus seasons of existence. The Kraken have beaten the Predators the second most out of any opponent with five wins, and then there are seven other teams they have beaten four times in their existence.
It was crazy to see the Canucks win 5-1 at Climate Pledge on Friday then lose in regulation to the San Jose Sharks a day later. Those were the same San Jose Sharks that were dominated by the Kraken last Wednesday.
The Kraken goal differential is a -15 right now. Teams that are a zero goal differential or better have a good chance at making the playoffs.
The Kraken’s overtime loss to the Calgary Flames last Monday was the sixth Kraken loss in overtime or shootout this season. They only had six overtime or shootout losses over the entire 2021-22 season and eight all last season. I have no idea if that is good or bad. It is just an observation.
Tucker Robertson, a fourth-round pick of the Seattle Kraken in the 2022 NHL Entry Draft, scored his first career AHL goal on Saturday in a 4-2 win for the Coachella Valley Firebirds over the Bakersfield Condors.
There’s an expression I use in my life, “Don’t make a decision until you have to,” but I am starting to wonder who comes out of the lineup when Andre Burakovsky is cleared to play. He has been skating with the team in a red non-contact jersey lately. Could Kartye be the odd man out, or will there be a new roster scenario the team needs to deal with by then? How long might Tanev be out?
It is incredible how lean the Kraken keep their roster, with the only healthy scratch on Friday night being Jaycob Megna. This has to be a strategic decision to accrue salary cap space.
Player performance
David Goyette (SBY/SEA) – The center selected in the second round of the 2022 NHL Entry Draft has three goals and four assists over his last four games playing for the Sudbury Wolves in the OHL.
Lukas Dragicevic (TCA/SEA) – A defenseman picked in the second round of the 2023 NHL Entry Draft might have started the season a bit cold, but he is really starting to heat up. Dragicevic has seven assists over his last four games for the Tri-City Americans including this dandy of a sequence:
Alex Lyon (DET) – The Detroit goaltender got two starts and two wins for the Red Wings this past week. Lyon was the third-string goalie in Detroit and did not get into a regular-season game until Nov. 17. If his name sounds familiar, Lyon helped propel the Florida Panthers into the playoffs last season with a great stretch run.
Chart of the week
After starting ice cold, the Seattle Kraken shooting percentage has rebounded and is on the right track.
Goal of the week
Andrei Svechnikov scores the game-winning goal in Carolina after taking a puck off the ear.
The Kraken hit the road for four games over the next eight days with a stop in Chicago on Tuesday, then on to play the Eastern Canadian teams for the final three games. This should be a good test. Four points should be the minimum and five points should be the realistic target. Like last season, this team has a better road record than home record.
Chicago has a record of 3-7-0 over their last 10 games and is averaging just 2.6 goals on the season. They are now without the services of Corey Perry and Taylor Hall.
Seattle will face Toronto on Thursday, who is never an easy out, so I anticipate that game to be the biggest challenge of the four games. The Kraken will close out the trip with games against Ottawa and Montreal on Saturday and Monday respectively.
One area I am focused on over this road trip is the power play. It has been one of the bright spots of the season for the Kraken, but it has cooled off or is looking like it could cool off.
Answer to let’s get quizzical: The Seattle Kraken players with fighting majors are Tanev, Jamie Oleksiak, Jared McCann, Jordan Eberle, Tye Kartye, Vince Dunn, and Yanni Gourde.
If you have any questions, comments, or areas you would like me to explore, let me know in the comments section.
At Friday’s morning skate, Kraken coach Dave Hakstol said this: “Most importantly, it’s the start of the hockey game. The beginning of the game gives us an opportunity to build a 60-minute performance.” But after a 5-1 loss to the Vancouver Canucks, the Kraken bench boss was not happy with the way his group got out of the gates.
“It’s not an effort issue, it’s a readiness issue,” Hakstol said after the game. “They were the more ready team at the drop of the puck, and you saw that in our execution in the first five minutes of the hockey game. Once you start that way, it’s really hard to catch up in terms of your overall performance.”
Hakstol didn’t mince words in his evaluation. “We had too many guys below the bar tonight, and that’s the bottom line,” he said. “This is not a part-time league. It’s a full 60-minute league.”
Here are our Three Takeaways from a 5-1 Kraken loss to the Canucks.
Takeaway #1 (Curtis): Slow start on the power play
Like so many Americans, the Kraken were a step slower than usual on this day after Thanksgiving, at least to start. Vancouver piled up the first four shot attempts at even strength and seemed to be outworking the boys from Seattle.
Fortunately for the Kraken, though, the team drew the first penalty at 3:23 in the first period, a holding call against Nils Hoglander behind Seattle’s net (Rick Tocchet must have loved that).
And the calls against the Canucks didn’t stop there. J.T. Miller tripped Jaden Schwartz three minutes later, and then Tyler Myers got his stick into Jordan Eberle’s face (with a double-whammy friendly fire on Miller) at 11:33 in the period for a double-minor penalty.
Tyler Myers high sticks Eberle and draws blood for a four-minute penalty and ALSO catches JT Miller.
These plays–none of which were particularly “earned” by Seattle–gifted the Kraken eight minutes of first-period manpower advantage time.
These power plays should have been enough to give the Kraken a jolt and get them on the board. Coming into the game, the Kraken were tied for seventh in the league with a 25 percent conversion rate on the man advantage. And the Canucks’ penalty kill has struggled, conceding goals on 23.4 percent of opponent opportunities, 10th worst in the league.
Unfortunately for the Kraken, just the opposite happened. On the team’s first power play, the group seemed disorganized and sluggish, conceding two breakaway counterstrikes to the Canucks penalty killers–the second of which found the back of the goal off Teddy Blueger’s stick.
What a terrible power play that was for the #SeaKraken.
They gave up two short-handed breakaways in a row. Daccord stopped Dakota Joshua on the first, but Teddy Blueger scored on the second. Justin Schultz turned it over at the red line.
“The first foot out there, we gave up two short-handed breakaways,” Hakstol said. “Obviously not good enough.”
The second power play seemed to start well when Matty Beniers rifled the puck past Canucks goaltender Thatcher Demko, but the play was ruled offside on the zone entry after a successful Vancouver challenge. From there, the Kraken could never quite find an opening against Demko over the remaining five-plus minutes of power-play time in the first period. The result was a net minus-one on the scoreboard in eight minutes five-on-four.
Kraken defenseman Vince Dunn agreed with Hakstol’s assessment. “It’s awful on all of our parts. Both units will have to take a look at where we were going wrong and come to a quick fix… The foundation of what we were doing out there was not executed well. We made things a lot more complicated than we needed to.”
Takeaway #2 (Darren): Missed opportunities in second period
I agree, Curtis, that the first-period power-play miscues were a big issue on this night. But it’s funny to think that if the Kraken hadn’t been offside some 18ish seconds before Beniers scored an apparent equalizer, we wouldn’t be having this conversation. The negated goal changed that narrative dramatically and probably altered the course of the game. Such is life.
The other thing that altered the course of the game was Seattle’s inability to score in the opening eight minutes of the second period, when the Kraken came to life and tilted the ice. In that time, they put eight shots on Thatcher Demko without allowing a shot to Vancouver, and they had a few great looks that Demko shut down.
When a team has a stretch like that, it has to capitalize, because the momentum will eventually swing back the other way. Sure enough, a sloppy-looking play in Seattle’s end led to Conor Garland whacking a loose puck toward Joey Daccord, and Dakota Joshua cleaning up the rebound to make it 2-0.
#SeaKraken can't find the handle on a loose puck in the slot, and it eventually ends up in the back of their net.
Tye Kartye scored the Kraken’s lone goal of the night (his first goal in exactly a month), but Seattle didn’t build off of it in the third period, and Vancouver eventually ran away with it.
Takeaway #3 (Darren): Tanev hurt, late response
With 2:46 left in the first period, Tanev got caught off balance in the neutral zone and got lit up by Hoglander with a high, hard (clean) hit. Hoglander had the puck, turned it over to Tanev, and the moment Tanev touched it, Hoglander crushed him. Tanev slammed to the ice with all his weight coming down on his left leg and had to get helped to the bench by linesman Brian Gibbons.
Visibly in pain, Tanev stayed on the bench for the remainder of the first and came out to test the leg at the start of the second. But he determined he couldn’t go, went back to the dressing room, and was officially ruled out with a lower-body injury.
A second issue happened in this game that was arguably worse than the hit on Tanev, when Tyler Myers—the same guy that injured Matty Beniers with a cheap shot last season—delivered a high hit on Oliver Bjorkstrand in the third period and appeared to make contact with his head. Sam Lafferty scored to make it 3-1 just moments after this hit that shook up Bjorkstrand.
Before I make this point, I want to be clear that I’m not a big proponent of fighting. I think it’s fine in some scenarios, but if it got removed from the game altogether, I wouldn’t be sad about it. I also don’t think signing or trading for a tough guy or calling up John Hayden is the end-all answer for the lack of response a lot of people think it would be. (Although, to be fair, Hayden did drop the gloves with the 6-foot-8 Myers in pre-season.)
I do think it’s important, though, that players stick up for one another and minimally show opposing teams they’re not willing to accept their teammates getting hurt, regardless of if the hit that causes the injury is technically clean or dirty.
I asked Hakstol if he wants to see a physical response when a key player gets injured on a big hit, and he said, “Depends on the situation. I won’t get into that one.” Fair enough. It’s a sticky subject, and getting into the details of how he wants his team to respond doesn’t benefit Hakstol or his players.
Without trying to guess how I think Hakstol wants his team to handle these issues, the way I view it is that having a physical response doesn’t have to mean somebody squares off in a bare-knuckle boxing match at center ice. But there should be *some* immediate reaction that makes a guy like Hoglander think twice about taking the exact same run at Brandon Tanev that Brett Howden took at him on opening night in Vegas. (I will refrain from saying somebody should immediately jump Myers in this scenario, because I wouldn’t want to go after a guy twice my size either.)
After all, Howden’s hit cost Tanev the first month of the season, and the pesky forward has been showing just how important he is to this team in his seven games since returning from that injury. Now he’s potentially gone again, and still, nobody immediately went after Hoglander, just like how nobody went after Howden, nobody went after Andrew Mangiapane when he smashed Jared McCann’s face into the ice, and nobody went after Jacob Trouba when he cost Andre Burakovsky six-to-eight weeks on the shelf.
It is worth noting that Kartye did seem to be challenging Hoglander late in the game when he got his 10-minute misconduct, and Yanni Gourde dropped the gloves with Blueger. Were those instances related to the hits on Tanev and Bjorkstrand? Perhaps. But those challenges came at the very end of the game when Seattle was already down 5-1.
Anecdotally, I seem to recall that last season almost anyone on the team (heck, Ryan Donato seemed to do it semi-regularly, and he is not known for his toughness) would jump on an offending player, sometimes getting his own clock cleaned in the process. What happened to that mindset? It’s not about having guys that will stand toe-to-toe and get their faces punched in, but rather having a pack mentality that simply doesn’t accept opposing teams taking liberties with your players.
The Thanksgiving holiday, for the NHL at least, often is used as a benchmark for projections going forward into the rest of the season. This is no different for the WHL, as teams this time of year look to find more consistency in their games going into the more strenuous months of the schedule. And of late for the Seattle Thunderbirds and Everett Silvertips, finding this consistency has been either hit or miss.
Weekend skirmishes
The Silvertips and Thunderbirds renewed acquaintances for the first time this season, meeting twice for a home-and-home Friday and Saturday. Luca Hauf gave the T-Birds the early lead on Friday, but four unanswered goals from the Silvertips, including two from Dominik Rymon, pushed Everett to the 4-1 victory.
The scene shifted to Kent on Saturday, with Everett starting Tyler Palmer for the second night in a row. The results would not follow the Tips to accesso ShoWare Center however, as T-birds netminder and Buffalo Sabres prospect Scott Ratzlaff stopped 42 of 43 Silvertips shots on goal. Performances from Eric Alarie (1g-2a—3p) and Sawyer Mynio (1g-1a—2p; GWG) helped lead the T-birds to a 4-1 win of their own.
Everett finished off its action-packed weekend with a Sunday showdown against the Portland Winterhawks. Despite an injury to Winterhawks starter Jan Spunar in the first period, two goals from Carter Sotheran brought them to a 6-4 victory. The Hawks have been simply dominant whenever the Silvertips have come into Veterans Memorial Coliseum, having won 12 consecutive regular-season and playoff games, a streak dating back to November, 2021.
Weekday Melees
The T-Birds began another back-to-back on Tuesday in Tri-City, which turned out to be a night they would rather forget. Despite putting 34 shots on goaltender Lukas Matecha, none found their way through. Tri-City forward Jordan Gavin’s three-point night helped the Americans steam past the T-birds, 5-0. Gavin’s big night extended his point streak to four games, recording 10 points (5g-5a—10p) during that span.
Finishing off the back-to-back, Seattle hosted Kelowna in Kent Wednesday night. The T-birds struggled to find the back of the net once again, with 36 shots on goal on the night and only one squeaking past Rockets netminder Jari Kykkanen. The goal was courtesy of Eric Alarie. Despite the offensive struggles of late for the Birds, one would be all they needed on this night as Ratzlaff stopped all 19 shots he faced. An empty netter sealed the 2-0 win for Seattle, and Ratzlaff collected his seventh career WHL shutout.
Taking I-5 north Wednesday night, Everett looked to bounce back after the weekend mishaps, and early on, they were in the driver’s seat against the Saskatoon Blades. Despite an early goal from the Blades, Silvertips forwards Austin Roest (2) and Dominic Rymon continued their goal-scoring prowess, giving Everett an early 3-1 lead after one period, a lead they would not relinquish. Palmer stopped 26 of 28 shots on net by the Blades, helping Everett ease its way to a 6-2 victory. With their fifth-straight home victory, the Silvertips improved to 10-2-1 at Angel of the Winds Arena this season.
U.S. Division performer of the week
Buffalo Sabres prospect Matt Savoie made a big impact for the Wenatchee Wild this week, who won all three games played. In his first full week back in the WHL, he contributed 8 points (4g-4a—8p) in those three games against Spokane, Prince Albert, and Saskatoon.
Kraken prospect highlight
What more is there to say about Jagger Firkus? The highly touted forward from the Moose Jaw Warriors fell to the Kraken in the second round of the 2022 NHL Entry Draft, and since the selection, he has been sensational for the Warriors. In just 21 games so far this season, Firkus leads the WHL with 22 goals and 43 points, averaging just over a goal per game. This production is garnering some national attention, as Firkus appeared at No. 48 in TSN’s Top 50 Under-24 rankings this week.
Other notable players with P.N.W. roots that made appearances: Matty Beniers, Dustin Wolf (formerly with Everett), and Kevin Korchinski (formerly with Seattle).
The week ahead
Saskatoon continues its biannual U.S. Division journey, continuing through Seattle, Portland, Tri-City, and Spokane. Seattle will be idle starting after Saturday’s game in Kelowna. Meanwhile, Everett takes on Portland once more before heading up to Kamloops and Prince George.
That was a markedly easy win for the Seattle Kraken over the San Jose Sharks in the season’s first battle of the sea creatures. The Kraken came out flying, scored four goals in the first, and for much of the game the Sharks looked like they didn’t even belong on the same ice.
“We were ready to go at the drop of the puck,” Kraken coach Dave Hakstol said. “We came out, we scored early, but just the way we played from the drop of the puck, I thought, really, it put the momentum where we needed it to be.”
It was a big night offensively for several Kraken players, especially Oliver Bjorkstrand, who had a goal and three assists, and Eeli Tolvanen, who had two goals and one assist. Their line with Yanni Gourde combined for four goals and nine total points on the night. Brandon Tanev, Jared McCann, and Adam Larsson also had goals, and Jamie Oleksiak had two assists.
Here are our Three Takeaways from a 7-1 Kraken shellackin’ of the Sharks.
Takeaway #1 (Darren): Good Kraken or bad Sharks?
It was hard tell if this game was a product of the Kraken putting together an exceptional performance or if it was more about a bad Sharks team playing even worse than usual. We think it was a mix of the two.
Seattle really did overwhelm the Sharks and managed to pen their inferior opponents into their zone for long stretches of the first two periods. When that happened, the San Jose defenders would all collapse down into a clump in front of the goal, leaving oodles of space for Seattle to work around the perimeter.
Case in point, this Yanni Gourde goal that made it 4-0:
GOURDE GOAL! 🚨
It's wild how much time and space Seattle has in the offensive zone so far. Look how deep all five Sharks players collapse.
Yanni banks it off Kahkonen and in from a sharp angle.
We asked Tolvanen if he sensed there was more time and space in the offensive zone in this one. “Oh, yeah,” Tolvanen said emphatically. “I think we did a really good job changing. They had tired guys out there, and we were able to change, then we’d get fresh guys out there. So I think that’s going to make it easier, and you don’t get tired when you play in the offensive zone.”
The Kraken had a whopping 82 percent of the shot quality in this game, another indicator that both teams very much got what they deserved.
From the San Jose perspective, their coach and players were seething after the game, and coach David Quinn said the effort was “embarrassing.”
“We weren’t ready to play,” Quinn said. “Two breakaways in the first minute and a half – just absolutely embarrassing. We lost every single battle, got beat off the walls, and every time there was a 50-50 puck battle, we were fishing for pucks and got on the wrong side of it.”
He had very strong words throughout his presser, which tells us this level of ineptitude was appalling, even for a historically bad team.
Still, take nothing away from Seattle, because the team did exactly what it was supposed to do against a bad team.
Takeaway #2 (Curtis): Best defense is a good (puck control) offense
Not to be lost in the Kraken’s scoring outburst was the team’s defensive performance. Seattle suppressed San Jose’s offense Wednesday night to an extent quite literally unprecedented in franchise history.
The Kraken allowed the Sharks only 14 shots on goal, which is tied for fewest in franchise history–matching the total Ottawa had on April 18, 2022. And the shots tended to be of the low-danger variety. According to Natural Stat Trick, San Jose generated shot quality expected to create just .75 goals. This is .31 goals lower than Seattle’s stingiest defensive performance before Wednesday night–a Dec. 29, 2021, 3-2 loss to the Philadelphia Flyers.
Of course, the Sharks have struggled to score this season. Entering Wednesday night, the Sharks had scored just 27 goals, by far the fewest in the league. Stung by poor finishing and perhaps some bad luck, the Sharks had generated shot quality expected to create 45 goals over 18 games (2.5 per game). The team’s weakest offensive showing came Nov. 10 against Vegas, when San Jose was shut out on shots worth 1.43 expected goals.
In other words, when looking at shot quality, Wednesday’s offensive showing from San Jose was almost 50 percent worse than the team’s previous worst in the 2023-24 season. That says something for Seattle’s defensive effort, even over a struggling Sharks team.
How did Seattle achieve it? Kraken defenders turned in strong work defending the high-danger areas of their own zone, conceding only two shot attempts from the slot all game.
But, more importantly, Seattle prevented San Jose from logging much time in the offensive zone in the first place. As Darren noted above, Seattle dominated possession through the neutral zone and into the Kraken offensive zone. One sequence in particular in the second period stood out when the Kraken kept the puck in the San Jose defensive zone for almost two full consecutive shifts. The sequence did not directly lead to a goal but it helped stretch out 18 minutes in the second period during which San Jose didn’t get even a single shot on goal.
As the saying goes–the best defense is a good offense. For the Kraken on Wednesday, it was.
Takeaway #3 (Darren): Top three lines all going
With a huge night from the Tolvanen/Gourde/Bjorkstrand line, all three of Seattle’s top-three forward lines are working well together right now. That third line was the big producer Wednesday, but the top two also chipped in on Larsson’s goal (Eberle and McCann assisted), and Tanev had the early icebreaker after a nice breakout pass by Alex Wennberg.
“I think we’re feeling it,” Bjorkstrand said of his line. “Maybe a few lucky bounces off the glass, but we like playing together, and I think it just kind of went our way today.”
We’ve also really liked the Jaden Schwartz/Wennberg/Tanev line, which has been excellent since Tanev returned from injury.
“It might be a bit of an odd look on a line chart when [Tanev] is on the right side there with Wenny,” Hakstol said. “But it’s been a good fit because he brings that pace, he gets you up ice, he gets you into the offensive zone.”
Seeing all three lines cooking at once gives reason for optimism that the Kraken can continue to build. The players are saying all the right things right now, recognizing that their game has improved since a miserable start to the season, but they don’t seem satisfied with where they sit.
* * *
While the Kraken won Wednesday night, Pacific Division competitors Edmonton, Calgary, Vancouver, and Anaheim all lost. This puts Seattle is in a playoff spot on Thanksgiving, an important checkpoint on a team’s playoff chances. Can Seattle keep building on these good feelings to climb more securely into that playoff picture? What do you think?
The full uniforms that will be worn by the Seattle Kraken and Vegas Golden Knights in the Discover Winter Classic were OFFICIALLY unveiled Wednesday, and we like what we’ve seen… at least for Seattle.
While past uniform (and team name) rollouts have been kept under lock and key until the Kraken could unveil them in their own way, this one went a bit differently. After six days of perplexing “unofficial” rollouts featuring players from the Utah Jazz (why not?) and Dallas Cowboys (of course!) and media personalities of AEW Wrestling fame (obvi!), Seattle’s uniforms were finally displayed in all their glory at Kraken Community Iceplex on Wednesday.
The Kraken Winter Classic kits were revealed in conjunction with the team’s morning skate prior to their game against the San Jose Sharks on Wednesday night.
Kraken Winter Classic jerseys
We had already gotten a good look at the fronts of the jerseys before Wednesday, but it is exciting to see Jordan Eberle, Jared McCann, and Oliver Bjorkstrand sporting them in their full equipment.
On the backs of the jerseys, large red numbers are overlaid on the “ice blue” and cream stripes that wrap around the center of the jerseys. Sometimes numbers on stripes can be hard to see from a distance, but we think there will be enough contrast to read them even from the stands on a gray afternoon at T-Mobile Park on New Year’s Day.
The jerseys have interesting details. The crest, numbers, and lettering are all a felted material with two-to-three layers of “red alert” and cream colors that create a classic look and feel. We especially like the crest, on which the negative-space tentacle on the team’s primary logo has been replaced with an askew and raised “Kraken” wordmark that has each letter individually stitched onto the larger ‘S’ emblem.
You can get a good look at the raised lettering and felted material here:
On the inner collar of the jersey, there’s an offset “1917” written in block letters, a nod to the Seattle Metropolitans team that inspired the jerseys and became the first U.S.-based team to win the Stanley Cup that year.
Helmet, gloves, pants, and socks
We are THRILLED to share that neither team will wear brown pants—a worn-out trend of past outdoor games—though it does appear the Golden Knights will be wearing brown leather gloves. We will let that one slide.
Seattle will stick with “deep sea blue” for their pants, helmets, and gloves, but the number stickers on their lids will be red, as will the lettering on their gloves. Both are a slight change from what the team wears normally, with the light-blue-on-navy look.
The Kraken will wear socks that are a continuation of the repeating barber-pole pattern in their jerseys.
Golden Knights Winter Classic uniforms
We’ve only seen the full kit of the Golden Knights in the below infographic after the jersey was “leaked” on the aforementioned AEW channel.
We initially hated the Vegas jerseys, but seeing them on a player and as part of the full kit, we hate them less. They feature a more muted gold color, and a big, strange ‘V’ on the chest.
What do you think?
Jersey releases are always polarizing. Some people love them, and some people hate them, no matter the team and look.
Kraken coach Dave Hakstol seemed to like them. “I think they’re cool, they’re good,” Hakstol said. “They’ve got a real cool old-school vibe, and all the feedback and reviews that I’ve heard from all different ages has been awesome.”
What do you think? Let us know in the comments!
Darren Brown
Darren Brown is the Chief Content Officer at soundofhockey.com and the host of the Sound Of Hockey Podcast. He is a member of the PHWA and is also usually SOH’s Twitter intern (but please pretend you don’t know that). Follow him @DarrenFunBrown and @sound_hockey or email darren@soundofhockey.com.
For some reason, this 4-3 Seattle Kraken loss to the Calgary Flames in overtime didn’t sting *quite* as badly as the loss to the Edmonton Oilers on Nov. 15. Trying to wrap our heads around why that is, we think it’s because Seattle was coming off a big 60-minute win against the Canucks on Saturday, and this was the fourth consecutive game in which the Kraken earned a point. Plus, this was a one-goal lead instead of the two-goal lead the Kraken held against the Oilers before Evander Kane took them to the woodshed that night.
Perhaps the Kraken have given fans just enough good feelings lately to be more tolerant of late-game slip-ups. Still, victory was again right there for Seattle, but Andrew Mangiapane—the guy who smashed Jared McCann’s face into the ice on Nov. 4—tied it at 15:53 of the third, and Rasmus Andersson won it in overtime.
Worth noting, the Kraken have still never beaten the Flames at home and are now 0-5-1 at Climate Pledge Arena.
Here are our Three Takeaways from a tough 4-3 Kraken overtime loss to the Flames.
Takeaway #1: Grubi down?
Philipp Grubauer didn’t have a great first period, allowing two goals on seven shots, including a Jonathan Huberdeau power-play wrister from beyond the top of the left circle that squeezed under his arm. Joey Daccord took the ice to start the second, and our initial thought was that coach Dave Hakstol had just given Grubi a quick hook because he didn’t seem to be tracking the puck.
But then Grubauer didn’t emerge from the tunnel for a few minutes, and that made it clear his exit from the game was out of necessity.
Hakstol confirmed the departure was due to injury but wouldn’t give any more specifics on what happened, other than saying a couple plays contributed to the goaltender’s injury. We’re thinking one of those may have been the negated goal by Martin Pospisil early in the first, when Pospisil ran over Grubauer. We heard there was a second shot that caused Grubauer to hunch over a bit, but we didn’t notice that one.
In any case, Grubauer stayed on the bench for the remainder of the game, so at first glance, the injury didn’t seem too serious. We shall see.
Daccord played well in relief, stopping the first 16 Calgary shots he faced before Mangiapane tied it. He did overcommit on the overtime goal, which led to Andersson going for the wraparound on the other side, but that was his only real mistake of the game (and to be fair, he recovered in time to make the initial save and got no help on the rebound).
Seattle’s puck management was sloppy in the first period, and that led to a 2-1 deficit after 20 minutes. The team came out flying in the second period, though, and tilted the ice as much as we’ve seen all season, firing 17 pucks at Dan Vladar, scoring twice, and grabbing 80 percent of the shot quality in the frame.
Jordan Eberle tied it 2-2 for Seattle at 8:21 of the second with a backhander that somehow squeezed through the pads of Vladar. Then Jared McCann gave the Kraken a 3-2 lead at 10:25 with a great tip of an Adam Larsson shot out of the air.
MCCANN CAN! 🚨
What a tip on an Adam Larsson blast.
Also… Somebody call the factory for MacKenzie Weegar! He takes out his frustration on the post.
The Kraken needed to get at least one more in that period. They were cooking, and the Flames were on their heels, but Seattle couldn’t get another one by Vladar and took a tenuous 3-2 lead to the third period.
As we’ve seen repeatedly this season, the Kraken got way too defensive in the third, letting the play come to them instead of keeping their foot on the gas pedal. The tables turned once again, and now Calgary was in the driver’s seat, peppering Daccord with 16 shots in the final 20. With the way the game was going at that point, everyone in the building knew the tying goal was coming.
“We played gritty,” McCann said. “But we’ve got to learn from our mistakes here and learn how to finish games off.”
We still can’t explain Seattle’s struggles at maintaining leads this season, other than there’s an obvious shift to defensive hockey once the team gets ahead. We don’t think this is an intentional change in tactics, but once the momentum shifts, they aren’t finding ways to get it back.
The good thing here is that as fixable trends have appeared for this team over the past two seasons, Hakstol and his staff have typically found ways to fix them. Protecting leads is an issue that’s continuously costing the Kraken standings points, so here’s hoping they can figure this one out.
Takeaway #3: Kraken in a “playoff” spot
There’s an old theory that Thanksgiving is an important marker for NHL teams, because statistically, those in playoff spots at the holiday make the postseason more often than not. Well, if the Kraken can beat the lowly 3-14-1 Sharks on Wednesday, they will officially be in a playoff spot on Thanksgiving, no matter what happens with other teams in the Western Conference.
There’s some voodoo accounting happening to get them into said spot, because as of the writing of this story, they’ve played two more games than the Ducks, Coyotes, and Flames, and those three teams are all within two points of Seattle.
Still, being this close should bring a small sigh of relief for Kraken fans. With the way the team started its season, this position by Thanksgiving seemed farfetched just a few weeks ago. Things continue to trend in the right direction, even if the results in games continue to be maddening at times.
Darren Brown
Darren Brown is the Chief Content Officer at soundofhockey.com and the host of the Sound Of Hockey Podcast. He is a member of the PHWA and is also usually SOH’s Twitter intern (but please pretend you don’t know that). Follow him @DarrenFunBrown and @sound_hockey or email darren@soundofhockey.com.