Avalanche Complete Stunning Comeback and Advance to Western Final
Date: May 14, 2026
By IceHockeyMan Newsroom
Colorado Turns Disaster Into Statement Win
For one period, Colorado looked completely disconnected. Minnesota jumped to a 3-0 lead, silenced Ball Arena and forced the Avalanche into one of their most uncomfortable positions of the postseason.
Then everything changed.
Colorado erased the deficit, tied the game late through Nathan MacKinnon and completed the comeback in overtime when Brett Kulak finished the series-winning goal. The Avalanche defeated the Wild 4-3 and advanced to the Western Conference Final.
MacKinnon Opens the Door Late
The defining regulation moment came with 1:23 left in the third period.
MacKinnon found a tiny shooting lane and beat Jesper Wallstedt with a shot that squeezed into the only available space. It was not a high-volume chance. It was elite finishing under maximum pressure.
IHM Signal:
Superstars decide playoff games when they can turn half-chances into series-changing goals.
Kulak’s Overtime Moment
Brett Kulak was not the obvious hero. That is exactly why the moment matters.
In overtime, Martin Necas found Kulak open, and the defenseman finished the chance that sent Colorado through. It was a reminder that playoff series are often closed by players who understand timing, spacing and patience rather than by the biggest name on the ice.
IHM Insight:
Depth players become dangerous in overtime because defensive attention naturally collapses toward stars.
The Goalie Change Spark
After a poor first period, Colorado replaced Mackenzie Blackwood with Scott Wedgewood.
This was not only a goaltending decision. It was a momentum reset.
- Changed the emotional tone on the bench
- Forced the team to simplify its defensive structure
- Gave Colorado a clear break point after a chaotic start
The Avalanche looked sharper immediately after the adjustment.
How Colorado Took the Game Back
The comeback was not built on panic offense. It came through layers.
- Parker Kelly gave Colorado life in the second period
- Jack Drury cut the deficit late in the third
- MacKinnon tied it with a superstar finish
- Kulak ended it in overtime
That sequence shows why Colorado is so dangerous. They do not need one perfect push. They can build pressure in waves.
Minnesota Collapse Under Pressure
The Wild had the game where they wanted it after the first period. They were ahead 3-0, had energy and forced Colorado into uncomfortable hockey.
But they could not close.
Once Minnesota shifted toward protecting the lead, Colorado’s speed and pressure started to return. The Wild spent too much time defending, lost control of middle ice and allowed the Avalanche to build emotional momentum inside the building.
IHM Signal:
Trying to protect a lead against Colorado is dangerous because it gives their transition game more repeated entry chances.
Why This Win Matters Beyond the Series
Colorado did not just advance. They showed championship-level belief.
Teams that can recover from a three-goal deficit in a clinching game usually carry something deeper than tactical quality. They carry internal trust.
- No panic after the first period
- Bench stability after goalie change
- Top players delivering late
- Depth finishing the series
That combination makes Colorado one of the most dangerous teams left in the playoffs.
Western Final Outlook
The Avalanche will now wait for the winner of Vegas vs Anaheim.
Either matchup presents a different challenge:
- Vegas brings structure, depth and playoff experience
- Anaheim brings speed, resilience and upset energy
But after this comeback, the bigger message is clear: Colorado is not easy to kill.
Coach Mark Comment
This was a championship-type response. Colorado looked poor early, but they did not lose their belief. The goalie change gave them a reset, MacKinnon gave them the elite moment, and Kulak finished because Minnesota’s defensive attention was stretched. That is how deep teams win. They do not need one player to solve everything.
Fan Pulse
Did this comeback make Colorado the clear favorite in the West?
Q&A: Avalanche vs Wild Game 5
Who scored the overtime winner?
Brett Kulak scored the series-clinching overtime goal.
How big was the comeback?
Colorado erased a 3-0 deficit.
Who tied the game late?
Nathan MacKinnon scored with 1:23 left in regulation.
Who do the Avalanche play next?
They will face the winner of Golden Knights vs Ducks.
What was the biggest tactical shift?
Colorado simplified after the first period and regained speed through the middle.