MacKinnon dominates again as Avalanche stay unbeaten

MacKinnon dominates again as Avalanche stay unbeaten

MacKinnon Dominates Again as Avalanche Stay Unbeaten

Date: May 6, 2026
By IceHockeyMan Newsroom


Colorado Tightens Control of the Series

The Colorado Avalanche continued their playoff dominance Tuesday night, defeating the Minnesota Wild 5-2 in Game 2 and extending their unbeaten postseason run.

At the center of everything once again was Nathan MacKinnon, who delivered another elite playoff performance with one goal and two assists while driving Colorado’s pace from shift to shift.

The Avalanche now head to Minnesota with a 2-0 series lead and complete control of the tempo.


MacKinnon Taking Over the Playoffs

MacKinnon has now recorded three consecutive three-point playoff games, putting himself into rare historical company.

But beyond the points, his overall impact continues defining the series:

  • Explosive zone entries
  • Fast puck movement through transition
  • Relentless pace pressure on Minnesota defenders
  • Elite power-play execution

Every time the Wild stabilize defensively, MacKinnon forces the game back into open ice.


Special Teams Changed Everything

Minnesota competed well at 5-on-5 for long stretches, but special teams became the deciding factor.

  • Wild power play: 0-for-2
  • Penalty kill: 3-for-5
  • Colorado power play generated momentum repeatedly

Gabriel Landeskog and MacKinnon both capitalized with key power-play goals that shifted momentum permanently toward Colorado.


Fast Start Crushed Minnesota Early

Colorado attacked immediately.

Martin Necas opened the scoring after another dangerous MacKinnon zone entry, but Minnesota responded instantly through Kirill Kaprizov just six seconds later on a breakaway.

Still, Colorado never truly lost control.

The Avalanche repeatedly attacked through speed and quick puck movement, forcing Minnesota’s defensive structure into constant recovery mode.


IHM Tactical Breakdown

The biggest issue for Minnesota right now is not effort - it is pace management.

Colorado forces defensive hesitation because every turnover instantly becomes a transition threat.

  • Defensemen backing off too early
  • Penalty killers collapsing too deep
  • Colorado controlling middle-lane speed

The Wild are competing physically, but they are reacting instead of dictating.


Landeskog Effect

Gabriel Landeskog’s return continues stabilizing Colorado emotionally and structurally.

Beyond his goal and assist, his puck support and net-front presence are giving Colorado another layer of playoff control.

This Avalanche team suddenly looks deeper, calmer and more complete than previous playoff versions.


Goaltending Layer

Filip Gustavsson made his first playoff start this postseason and finished with 18 saves, but Colorado’s speed and puck movement created too many broken defensive sequences around him.

Meanwhile Scott Wedgewood remained steady again and continues building one of the quietest strong playoff runs in the league.


What This Means

Minnesota now faces enormous pressure heading home for Game 3.

If the Wild cannot slow Colorado’s transition game and improve special teams immediately, this series could shift out of reach quickly.

Colorado currently looks like the most dangerous offensive team remaining in the Stanley Cup Playoffs.


Coach Mark Comment

Colorado is winning because they attack before defensive structures fully form. Most teams attack after setup. The Avalanche attack during movement. That difference is why they create panic so easily. Minnesota has talent, but right now they are defending chaos instead of controlling space.


Fan Pulse

Can anyone in the West actually slow down Colorado’s speed right now?


Q&A: Avalanche vs Wild Game 2

Who was the best player in Game 2?
Nathan MacKinnon.

What is the series score?
Colorado leads 2-0.

Biggest difference in the game?
Special teams and transition speed.

Can Minnesota recover?
Only if they slow the pace and tighten structure.

Which player is controlling the series?
Nathan MacKinnon.

Start a Conversation

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *