Jim’s Dead Wrong—Avs Looked FINE, and Here’s Why Game Two is a LOCK

Harry Balz Avatar

Colorado Avalanche vs Vegas Golden Knights

Avs game two analysis from a fan who actually watched: Listen, I just read my brother Jim’s little panic attack masquerading as sports analysis, and I gotta set the record straight because SOMEBODY has to bring actual hockey intelligence to this conversation.

First off—Jim calling the Avs opener “UGLY” like he just discovered disappointment for the first time? Please. This is May hockey, brother. You know what’s ugly? Pretending like a one-goal game decided by an empty-netter is some kind of referendum on a franchise’s championship DNA. Get a grip.

Avs Game Two Analysis: What Actually Happened in Game One

Here’s what ACTUALLY happened, for those of you who watched with your EYES instead of your feelings: Colorado played a Vegas team that—shock of all shocks—is REALLY GOOD. The Avs came in without Cale Makar, who is not just “a star defenseman” like Jim casually throws out there—he’s the BEST defenseman in hockey right now and the engine of Colorado’s entire transition game.

You remove the Norris Trophy winner from ANY team’s lineup and tell me how smooth they look. I’ll wait.

Jim Misses the Plot: Avalanche Resilience Is the Story

But here’s where Jim completely misses the plot: THEY ALMOST TIED IT. Down in the third period, missing their best player, against a team that’s rolling—and they STILL nearly forced overtime. That’s not a crisis, folks. That’s RESILIENCE. That’s championship mettle showing up when the lineup card says it shouldn’t.

The Numbers Support Colorado

MacKinnon had chances. Rantanen was generating offense. The underlying numbers—you know, the STATS that actually predict success—showed Colorado controlling significant stretches of play. This wasn’t a team that forgot how to hockey. This was a team working through legitimate roster adversity against legitimate competition.

And you know what the beautiful part is? Makar’s coming back. When he does, this team gets their quarterback back, their power play weapon, their defensive stabilizer. Game Two isn’t just important because of adjustments—it’s important because Colorado gets BETTER as a roster.

Avs vs Golden Knights game action

Jim wants to panic about the Central Division being a “bloodbath.” Yeah, it is. You know who THRIVES in that environment? Teams with top-tier talent, championship experience, and the kind of depth that lets them survive a Game One without their best player. That’s literally describing the Avalanche.

My prediction for Game Two? Avs win by two-plus goals. They tighten up the neutral zone, MacKinnon remembers he’s Nathan freaking MacKinnon, and Georgiev—who Jim didn’t even MENTION—settles into his rhythm. This team doesn’t need a “wake-up call.” They need their full roster, and they’re about to get it.

The difference between Jim’s take and mine? I actually understand that playoff hockey is about process, not panic. One game doesn’t define a season. The Avs showed they can compete with their backs against the wall. Now they get to show what they look like at full strength.

Vegas should be worried. Colorado’s about to remind everyone why they’re still the class of the Central.

This is Harry Balz, and unlike my brother, I actually watch hockey instead of just having opinions about it.

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