The Kraken have turned in a multitude of strong second periods so far this campaign. Friday night was not one of them.
Hakstol said he thought the Kraken were "competitively engaged" in the first period, despite the two-goal deficit.
"We got away from it in the second period," the Kraken coach said.
When asked about Driedger's start and Grubauer's relief job, Hakstol preferred to focus on Driedger. He didn't fault the former Florida Panthers goalie on the first goal, noting without names that Gourde trying to strip the puck sent it right to the Colorado goal scorer instead.
But the next three goals drew analysis from Hakstol. He said Driedger was having trouble "finding his angles" and those are shots "where he needs to stay big" to make a key save.
Colorado poured it on with four goals during the 20 minutes, starting with a Cale Makar shot the official scorer said was tipped by Mikko Rantanen but later switched the credit back to Makar.
Burakovsky scored his second power-play goal of the night two-plus minutes later. Then Makar, one of the league's elite defensemen at 23, scored his sixth goal of the year to make it 5-0.
Makar's second goal was the first one surrendered by Grubauer. Defenseman Erik Johnson, 33 and playing his 12th season for the Avs, scored to make it a 6-0 rout after 40 minutes.