Kraken defenseman Vince Dunn and company heeded the advice of their head coach and fired pucks at the opposing net from up-high, down-low, the corner of the rink and anywhere else they could get stick blades on frozen rubber.
Bolstered by the return of Jared McCann following a near-six-week absence and then a surprise tying goal from Dunn on the opening shift of the final period, the Kraken seemed poised to steal at least another overtime point as Wednesday night’s game against the Dallas Stars wound down. But then a surprise shot out of nowhere by the visitors with six minutes to go and tiniest of deflections through a screen handed the Kraken a disappointing 3-2 loss in a game where their inability to fully capitalize on generated chances and power play opportunities loomed large.
“I thought the attempts and the mentality were a little bit better tonight,” Dunn said. “I think we can still try to be a little bit more selfish with our shots. I think we’re just not making it hard enough at times for the other teams to defend.”
Dunn at least was somewhat selfish with his tying goal just 18 seconds into the third period, racing all the way up ice with the puck ahead of uncorking a 39-foot wrist shot that appeared to catch opposing netminder Casey DeSmith somewhat by surprise. The Kraken’s opening goal by Brandon Montour to tie things 1-1 in the first period similarly caught DeSmith by surprise as it came from the corner of the rink and bounced in off his pads.
Those are added benefits of a shoot first, ask questions later approach espoused the past week by Kraken head coach Lane Lambert. Unfortunately for the Kraken, the Stars benefitted similarly on the game’s decisive goal when Vladislav Kolyachonok unleashed a 57-foot wrist shot from atop the left faceoff circle that traveled through a screen, appeared to deflect off defenseman Adam Larsson and then banked in off the goal post past a stunned Joey Daccord.
Kraken forward Jaden Schwartz left the game in the second period with an undisclosed lower body injury and did not return. He was still being evaluated postgame.
Roope Hintz and Esa Lindell also scored for Dallas, which improved to 15-5-4 for the NHL’s second-best record. The Kraken, meanwhile, fell to 11-6-6 despite some stellar Daccord saves and lost to the Stars for the eighth consecutive time in regular season play despite once again playing them tough throughout most of the contest.
“It’s just tough when we’re right in the fight and a bounce just doesn’t go our way,” Dunn said. “It was kind of a weird goal there. To be honest, I thought we were defending pretty well.”
The Stars seemed to be fending off the Kraken rather well until Dunn literally took things into his own hands in going end-to-end to tie things up before many Climate Pledge Arena fans had even sat back down following the second intermission.
“The puck kind of spits out and I see a lot of room and when I looked up I was coming down on (Dallas forward Jamie) Benn,” Dunn said. “Usually when I come up on a forward that’s skating backwards I try to make at least one move. But I just put my head down and tried to shoot it as hard as I could. Honestly, I didn’t really see where it went in.”

















