June 17, 2025
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Nathan MacKinnon could be part of deadliest Team Canada line ever

Avalanche plan to refocus vs. Blackhawks after blown lead

Mar 29, 2025; Denver, Colorado, USA; Colorado Avalanche center Brock Nelson (11) shoots the puck in the second period against the St. Louis Blues at Ball Arena. Mandatory Credit: Ron Chenoy-Imagn Images
Clinching the No. 3 seed in the Central Division and a spot in the Western Conference playoffs is well within reach for the Colorado Avalanche.

Trouble is, Colorado has struggled to distance itself from opponents lately.

The Avalanche (45-26-4, 94 points) enter Wednesday’s visit to the Chicago Blackhawks on a two-game losing streak. After starting a four-game homestand with multi-goal wins against Detroit and Los Angeles, Colorado fell by one goal apiece to St. Louis and Calgary.

Monday’s loss to the Flames saw the Avalanche surge to a 2-0 advantage — only to yield goals 32 seconds apart midway through the third period and allow the only shootout tally.

“Can’t have that now, especially this time of year,” said Colorado forward Brock Nelson. “Closing out games and winning games, that’s what it’s all about. So, we know we’re capable of closing out, too, with the way we can play. So, it’s just about energy, focus.”

Chicago (21-44-9, 51 points) toted the second-fewest points in the NHL into Tuesday, but has frustrated the Avalanche more often than not this season.

The Blackhawks rolled 5-2 Oct. 28 at Colorado and prevailed 3-1 Jan. 8 on home ice before the Avalanche regrouped for a 3-0 victory on March 10. Scott Wedgewood posted a 20-save shutout for host Colorado.

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That defeat marked the second in a seven-game losing streak for the Blackhawks, which since has stretched to 10 losses in 11 games.

Chicago blitzed Philadelphia 7-4 on March 23 to begin a five-game homestand. Since then, the Blackhawks have been outscored 15-8 by New Jersey, Vegas and Utah.

“There have been times in the last couple of games where you see we’re doing some really good things,” said Blackhawks interim coach Anders Sorensen. “Then when we have a little hiccup, we have a hard time stopping it after that. But a lot of young guys are doing a lot of good things.”

Forward Oliver Moore and defenseman Sam Rinzel skated in their NHL debuts Sunday. Rinzel was denied on separate scoring chances midway through the second period of a 5-2 loss to Utah.

“Like ‘Ollie’ said, as a hockey player, you want to win, so that stings,” Rinzel said. “But overall it was an unbelievable first game.”

Colorado held a six-point edge on Minnesota and a seven-point cushion on St. Louis before play began Tuesday. The Avalanche have seven games remaining.

Nathan MacKinnon continues to keep the Avalanche afloat. He stretched his home points streak to 25 games with an assist Monday against Calgary and has collected points in two of his last three road games. He reached 110 points with Monday’s helper and is just the 12th player in league history to reach that threshold in three consecutive seasons.

Postgame - Bednar (Feb. 10)

“He finds a way to chip in and create offensively. … I think that’s what great players do,” said Avalanche coach Jared Bednar. “They find a way to chip away, and when they get opportunities, they tend to finish them off. And he’s done that consistently.”

Another blown lead for the Colorado Avalanche and Jared Bednar this time resulting in an actual loss. The Avs are just unacceptable right now.

April showers and spring weather bring a different ‘flavor of avalanches’ to Colorado

Rounding out a ‘feast-or-famine’ season, spring weather brings variable avalanche danger to the mountains

As the first week of April brings a storm to Colorado’s High Country, the shift from last week’s false spring back to cold temperatures and snow signals a return of winter avalanche danger.

On Tuesday, the higher elevations across Colorado’s central mountains tipped back into moderate avalanche danger as snow hit the region, according to the Colorado Avalanche Information Center’s daily forecast.

Brian Lazar, the deputy director of the Colorado Avalanche Information Center, said the storm is the primary driver of danger this week.

“We’re worried about avalanches breaking in the new and drifting snow this week,” Lazar said. “And we do have the potential for some of these avalanches to break on persistent weak layers in the upper part of the snowpack.”

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The most dangerous slopes will be those with wind-drifted snow, which, with a west-to-southwest storm, should be the north- and east-facing slopes, Lazar added.

The storm follows a week of warmer weather, where conditions transitioned toward spring in the snowpack. It’s expected that next week will swing back toward these warmer, sunny conditions.

“It can be a complicated time as the snowpack transitions from a dry, winter-like snowpack into a more mature and ripe spring-type snowpack,” Lazar said. “But until we’ve gotten water through the entire snowpack into the ground, we’re going to be dealing with both kinds of avalanches, both cold snow and wet snow, cold dry snow, and wet snow as the weather swings wildly between winter-like weather and springtime temperatures.”

Spring brings a change in the “flavor of avalanches” in Colorado, Lazar said.

“When we get into this transition to spring, what we see is an introduction of meltwater into the snowpack,” he said. “When we get prodigious amounts of meltwater into the snowpack, avalanches become more of the wet variety, which includes loose, wet avalanches, and then wet slabs.”

When this week’s storm, which could drop up to a foot of snow in some places, sees next week’s “warm temperatures and strong April sunshine for the first time, it will start to slough off and (bring) loose, wet avalanche activity,” Lazar said.

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Once the meltwater gets deeper into the snowpack, Colorado often experiences an “uptick in wet slab avalanche activity when the water reaches previously dry weak layers for the first time,” he added.

Last week’s spring weather, which brought over 180 avalanches during the workweek, likely “took a little bit of sting” out of what the upcoming week’s warm temperatures might mean for slides, Lazar said.

“What we saw last week is a good indication of the kinds of avalanches we’ll see next week as we get through the weekend,” he added.

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