Thanks to a goal and an assist on Sunday, Pierre-Luc Dubois now has eight multi-point games so far this season. The weekend road trip saw him do it twice, with three assists in the 5-1 win over Vancouver added to his work in Seattle, giving him five points in the last two games. Dubois already has 20 assists in 31 games, which means his career-high of 34 assists (set in 2018-19 with Columbus) is well within reach.
Hard to believe we've gone this far without mentioning the 2022 Lady Byng Trophy winner, but Kyle Connor also keeps rolling along. His assist in Seattle extended his point streak to nine games, and since November 23, his 20 points are the fifth most in the NHL
Also not to be lost in the shuffle, Cole Perfetti's assist in Vancouver moved him to 20 points on the season, which is the third most among rookies. Only Seattle's Matty Beniers (24) and Arizona's Matias Maccelli (21) have more.
AMONG THE LEADERS
Connor Hellebuyck was just 5:24 away from his fourth shutout of the season on Saturday, but Bo Horvat's deflection on a late Vancouver power play spoiled the party. Still, Hellebuyck sits tied for the league lead in shutouts with three, and is third in the NHL in save percentage with a 0.928.
The 2020 Vezina Trophy winner is already in the conversation for this year's award as well, and gave some insight into the Horvat goal after Saturday's game.
"It was a one timer," said Hellebuyck on the initial shot from Quinn Hughes. "So it made me react just slightly different, which pulled me just a hair off and allowed a little bit of room for the deflection."
Shutouts are great, but the one stat that Hellebuyck cares the most about is wins. The Jets have 20, and he has 16, putting him one back of Linus Ullmark for the league lead in that category.
GETTING EVERYONE INVOLVED
Injuries also offer players a chance to make the most of their opportunities.
Look no further than Kevin Stenlund, who was recalled from the Manitoba Moose on December 13. He picked up an assist in his Jets debut, and has now appeared in four straight games.
His line with David Gustafsson and Axel Jonsson-Fjallby gave the Vancouver Canucks all they could handle on Saturday, and Stenlund's work in the dot earned him a bump up the line-up against Seattle with the Jets trying to find some offence in the third.
"He was winning a lot of faceoffs, that's the biggest thing," said Jets head coach Rick Bowness. "He's been good for us. But the big thing is that he was winning all of those faceoffs and we were getting control of the puck and trying to do something with it."
The triumph in Vancouver was also a case of the defence getting involved in the offence. Kyle Capobianco scored his first as a Jet, and Neal Pionk's blast shortly after that turned a 2-0 lead into a 3-0 advantage.
The defensive contributions didn't stop there, though. Morrissey had an assist earlier in the game, Brenden Dillon set up Pionk for the one-timer, and Dylan Samberg's stretch pass sent Jonsson-Fjallby in alone for Winnipeg's fifth goal.
Even the one goal without a defenceman on the scoresheet - Sam Gagner's goal in the third to make it 4-0 - it was Dylan DeMelo sending a perfect indirect pass to Kyle Connor to start the rush up ice off a neutral zone regroup.
"It starts in our defensive zone with our coverage. It's us not allowing the opposition to kind of get into their gameplan and usually a good defence leads to offence," said associate coach Scott Arniel. "When we do get in the zone we don't just throw pucks away. That we play a possession game. We look for some quality. That's been a real good thing for us."