Anaheim Ducks 4-1 Winnipeg Jets
Date: November 10, 2025
Author: IHM News
Ducks dominate Jets with special-teams precision, extend home momentum
Anaheim delivered another composed, structured home performance, beating the Winnipeg Jets 4-1 behind two power-play goals from Leo Carlsson and a standout all-situations night from rookie Beckett Sennecke. Winnipeg generated a shot edge but struggled to break Anaheim’s layered defensive zone reads, while Lukas Dostal delivered calm, technically precise goaltending to steady the Ducks throughout.
Game Flow
1st Period: Anaheim controlled pace early and struck first at 07:18 when Beckett Sennecke buried a rebound created through Corey Gauthier’s entry pressure. Physicality ramped up, but the Ducks kept composure. At 19:03, Carlsson doubled the lead on the power play, snapping a one-timer off a crisp Terry-to-Kreider passing rotation for 2-0.
2nd Period: Winnipeg responded quickly at 04:22 through Kyle Connor, finishing off a Morrissey-Scheifele sequence. Anaheim stabilized fast, and Sennecke answered at 11:48 with his second of the night after controlled middle-lane support from McTavish and Gauthier, restoring a 3-1 lead.
3rd Period: Early in the period at 02:46, Carlsson struck again on the power play, timing the weak-side seam perfectly for 4-1. Winnipeg thought they pulled one back at 19:13, but a successful goalie-interference challenge overturned the goal. Anaheim closed out confidently.
Numbers Box
- Shots on Goal: ANA 21, WPG 24
- Shots off Target: ANA 23, WPG 19
- Power Play: ANA 2/4, WPG 0/4
- Blocked Shots: ANA 15, WPG 14
- Saves: Dostal 23/24 (95.8%), Comrie 16/20 (80%)
- PIM: ANA 8, WPG 8
- Notable: Sennecke 2G, Carlsson 2 PPG goals, Ducks win special-teams battle
Coach Mark Comment
Carlsson’s timing on the power play keeps getting better. Sennecke showed real poise in tight areas, and Anaheim’s defensive reads were simple but effective. When the Ducks control their neutral-zone tempo like this, they’re difficult to break.
Questions & Answers | IHM Performance Metrics
Why did Anaheim control this matchup?
Their special teams dictated pace, and their neutral-zone layers forced Winnipeg into predictable entries. Dostal handled the rest.
What stood out about Beckett Sennecke’s performance?
His goal-scoring came from smart support routes and quick-release positioning. He consistently attacked inside ice.
How did Winnipeg generate more shots but fewer dangerous chances?
Anaheim kept most attempts to the perimeter. Jets lacked sustained slot penetration, especially at even strength.
What made Carlsson’s power-play goals possible?
Elite timing, clean east-west puck rotation, and Winnipeg’s passive penalty-kill spacing.
Is Anaheim’s home performance trend sustainable?
Yes. Their defensive structure and transition clarity hold up well against most opponents.
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