San Jose Sharks 3-2 Utah Mammoth (OT): Celebrini’s hat trick rescues Sharks
Date: November 19, 2025 – Author: IHM News
Key storyline: Macklin Celebrini stamped his star status with a three-goal night, including the overtime winner on a power play, as San Jose survived a furious Utah push to claim a 3-2 victory after overtime.
San Jose’s young core needed a response after nearly letting a perfect start slip away, and their franchise rookie supplied it. Celebrini scored twice in the opening six minutes to give the Sharks early control, then completed his hat trick in overtime on a man-advantage after Utah was whistled for too many men. The Mammoth, who were slow out of the gate, dominated large stretches of the third period and erased a 2-0 deficit behind a relentless forecheck and heavy net drives, forcing extra time despite trailing on the shot clock for most of the night.
From an IHM Performance Metrics lens, this game was all about chance quality swings. San Jose owned the interior in the first period, with Celebrini repeatedly slipping into soft pockets between the dots. Utah adjusted with a more aggressive F1-F2 pressure in the neutral zone and a tighter slot box, turning the middle frame into a grind. The third period flipped fully toward the visitors: Utah drove up their high-danger attempts, extended shifts in the Sharks’ zone and pinned San Jose back with layered entries. In overtime, however, one discipline mistake and one elite release decided everything.
Game flow: how Sharks survived Utah’s push
First period - Celebrini explosion. San Jose came out with pace and structure, stacking clean exits into controlled entries. Celebrini opened the scoring just 1:47 in, jumping on a feed from William Smith in the low slot and beating the goalie with a quick catch-and-release snapshot. A few minutes later he doubled the lead, arriving as the late trailer off a weak-side slash and finishing a cross-ice pass from Graf. Utah’s coverage was loose, their weak-side defender losing inside body position twice in the same shift. The Sharks’ 2-0 cushion reflected superior slot control more than raw shot volume.
Second period - Utah stabilizes. The Mammoth tightened their defensive layers and started winning more races on the walls. Their F3 stayed higher in the offensive zone, preventing Sharks stretch plays and forcing San Jose to chip pucks out instead of skating in transition. Even though the scoreboard didn’t change in the middle frame, Utah quietly tilted possession: they pumped more pucks from the points and generated traffic, while Sharks goalie Filip Lindberg (25 saves) held the line with strong rebound control and calm puck-tracking through screens.
Third period – Mammoth comeback. Utah finally broke through when JJ Peterka finished a net-drive sequence early in the third, cleaning up a loose puck after a seam pass forced San Jose’s box to collapse. The tying goal came later in the period, again from Peterka, who attacked downhill off the rush, used the defender as a screen and beat Lindberg low far side. At 2-2, the Mammoth were winning virtually every 50-50 puck, widening their edge in high-danger attempts and extending shifts in San Jose’s end. The Sharks spent long stretches in survival mode, collapsing around the blue paint and relying on blocked shots to protect their crease.
Overtime - discipline and execution. Extra time swung on one detail. Utah was called for too many men on the ice, handing San Jose a 4-on-3 power play. The Sharks set up in a 1-3-1 umbrella with Celebrini on the left flank. After a couple of patient puck rotations to move the Mammoth box laterally, Eklund and Smith combined to feed Celebrini in his one-timer pocket. The rookie wired a heavy shot short-side high at 2:51 of OT, freezing the goalie and sealing his first NHL hat trick in dramatic fashion.
Numbers box | IHM Performance Metrics
- Final score: San Jose Sharks 3, Utah Mammoth 2 (after overtime)
- Shots on goal: Sharks 23, Mammoth 27
- Shooting percentage: Sharks 13.04% (3/23), Mammoth 7.41% (2/27)
- Blocked shots: Sharks 10, Mammoth 16
- Goaltender saves: Sharks 25, Mammoth 20
- Save percentage: Sharks 92.59%, Mammoth 86.96%
- Penalties: Sharks 2, Mammoth 5 (including too many men in OT)
- PIM: Sharks 4, Mammoth 10
- Key streaks: Celebrini registers his first NHL hat trick and now has goals in back-to-back games.
Coach Mark comment
Celebrini showed exactly why he is projected as a franchise center. He attacked inside lanes, adjusted to Utah’s tighter coverage and still found space in the biggest moments. San Jose will be thrilled with the result, but they will not like the way they sat back in the third period; closing games with the puck instead of defending for 20 straight minutes has to be the next step.
Questions & Answers | IHM Performance Metrics
Q: How did San Jose build the early 2-0 lead?
A: The Sharks dominated the interior in the first period, using clean exits and middle-lane drives to attack the slot. Celebrini’s first two goals both came from prime scoring areas, with strong support from Smith and Graf on east-west puck movement that stretched Utah’s defensive box.
Q: Was Utah’s third-period push reflected in the underlying numbers?
A: Yes. The Mammoth finished ahead in shots on goal (27-23) and generated the bulk of their high-danger looks in the final 20 minutes, especially off the rush. Their increased shot volume and net-front presence turned what had been a controlled game for San Jose into a scramble.
Q: What did the too many men penalty change in overtime?
A: It flipped the matchup from 3-on-3, where Utah’s speed was dangerous, into a 4-on-3 situation favoring San Jose’s puck-movers. With an extra passing option high in the zone, the Sharks could run a 1-3-1 set and isolate Celebrini on his one-timer side, which is exactly how the winner was scored.
Q: How did the goaltenders perform in IHM Performance Metrics terms?
A: Lindberg’s 25 saves on 27 shots (92.59%) were efficient, but more importantly he managed rebounds and traffic extremely well during Utah’s push. At the other end, the Mammoth goalie faced fewer overall shots but a higher proportion from the inner slot, which is reflected in the lower save percentage (86.96%) and the three goals against from close range.
Q: What does this result mean for the Sharks going forward?
A: It reinforces the idea that their new identity runs through Celebrini and the young skill group. When San Jose plays fast through the middle and trusts their structure, they can trade chances with anyone. The concern remains game management: they will want to turn third-period leads into controlled possession time, not prolonged defending shifts.
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