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Kraken sink struggling Oilers with offensive outburst

EDMONTON — It didn’t take long for the Seattle Kraken to get a full measure of revenge on the Edmonton Oilers after suffering a 7-2 drubbing last Friday.
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Seattle Kraken' Daniel Sprong (91) is stopped by Edmonton Oilers goalie Stuart Skinner (74) during first period NHL action in Edmonton on Tuesday, January 3, 2023.THE CANADIAN PRESS/Jason Franson

EDMONTON — It didn’t take long for the Seattle Kraken to get a full measure of revenge on the Edmonton Oilers after suffering a 7-2 drubbing last Friday.

Jaden Schwartz had a goal and two assists as the Kraken exploded for four consecutive goals in the second period to come from behind and steal a 5-2 victory over the Oilers on Tuesday night.

“It was nice. I thought the way we played it was good to get rewarded,” said Kraken defender Adam Larsson. “There was a lot of emphasis on what happened last game and that made us even more hungry today. From top to bottom every guy played a solid game."

Matty Beniers, Yanni Gourde, Jared McCann and Alex Wennberg also scored for the Kraken (20-12-4) who have won two games in a row.

“In the second period, we got that one goal and it gave us some wings offensively and we were able to make more plays offensively and I think we kept our game pretty simple,” Gourde said.

“We weren’t trying too much, we weren’t trying to pass through guys, we were just putting it at the net and trying to work our way there and we got rewarded.”

Martin Jones made 32 saves in the Seattle net.

Ryan Nugent-Hopkins and Connor McDavid responded with goals for the Oilers (20-17-2), who have lost two straight and five consecutive games on home ice.

“You go up 2-0 and the odds that you win that game are statistically pretty high, right?” said Oilers forward Zach Hyman. “But, unfortunately, we weren’t able to keep the lead and we had 11 minutes where we fell asleep in the second period (and allowed four goals) and suddenly you are playing catch-up.

"It is something we need to clean up, especially on home ice. It hasn’t been something we have been proud of. Usually, we are a really good home team and like playing here and we have to go back to doing it the right way.” 

Edmonton’s lethal power play connected again to start the scoring with 7:13 remaining in the opening period as a Leon Draisaitl shot attempt went through the crease to Nugent-Hopkins, who sniped home his 19th of the season from a tough angle past Kraken goaltender Jones.

Oilers goalie Stuart Skinner kept it a 1-0 game by making a breakaway stop on Daniel Sprong a few minutes later.

The Oilers went up by a pair just 48 seconds into the middle frame as Mattias Janmark sprang McDavid with speed and he danced around defender Carson Soucy to deposit his league-leading 33rd goal of the season.

The Kraken would battle back to tie the game with a pair of goals just 31 seconds apart, however.

Seattle got on the board 4:44 into the second period with a power-play goal as Beniers was able to bat a rebound out of mid-air and it trickled behind Skinner for his 12th.

Then with another Oiler penalty on the way, Beniers made a perfect long pass to Schwartz at the backdoor and he directed home his first goal in 12 games and ninth of the year.

The Kraken kept coming against a shaken Oilers squad, as the Edmonton defence failed to clear a big rebound, allowing Gourde to score his first goal in nine outings through traffic with just over seven minutes to play in the second.

Seattle scored its fourth consecutive goal in the period with 4:12 remaining as Wennberg made a spin pass on to the tape of McCann, who recorded his 17th of the campaign. The goal chased Skinner from the net after allowing four goals on 20 shots, with Jack Campbell coming in to replace him.

Edmonton thought it had clawed back to within a goal on an early third period power-play goal by Draisaitl, but it was erased on a coach’s challenge that determined Hyman was offside on the play.

The Kraken were able to put the game away on an empty goal by Wennberg, his seventh of the season coming with 2:31 remaining.

Edmonton outshot Seattle 14-4 in the third period.

NOTES

The teams previously met last Friday, with Edmonton rolling to a relatively easy 7-2 victory, highlighted by a five-point performance from McDavid. … With eight of their next nine games on the road, the Kraken actually spend more time in Edmonton than in Seattle during that stretch as they will make a stop at home for one game following their seven-game road swing, only to return right back to Edmonton on Jan. 17. … Draisaitl, the league’s second leading scorer behind teammate McDavid, returned to the lineup after missing two games with an oblique strain. Remaining on the mend for the Oilers are Evander Kane (wrist) and Ryan Murray (back). Kane is skating, but should still need a month before being available. … Out for the Kraken were Joonas Donskoi (upper body) and Chris Driedger (lower body).

UP NEXT

Both teams are back in action on Thursday night.

The Oilers welcome the New York Islanders to town as the third game of a four-game homestand. The Kraken play the second game of a season-high seven-game road trip in Toronto against the Maple Leafs.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Jan. 3, 2023.

Shane Jones, The Canadian Press

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