Fleury of Goals Overwhelms Wild in Kraken’s 4-1 Victory

Andrew McMann
Andrew McMann
5 Min Read
Oct 28, 2021; Seattle, Washington, USA; Seattle Kraken left wing Jared McCann (16) defends the puck from Minnesota Wild center Frederick Gaudreau (89) during the first period at Climate Pledge Arena. Mandatory Credit: Steven Bisig-USA TODAY Sports

In their debut season, the Seattle Kraken knew that getting contributions from all over the ice would be crucial to their success.

Enter defenseman Haydn Fleury.

“I think it’s a key part of our team,” Fleury said. “I think all the defensemen from our team have the capabilities to help contribute, and if we’re going to be a successful team, we have to do that.”

Fleury scored the first two-goal game of his career, and Brandon Tanev added his sixth goal of the season into an empty net as the Kraken defeated the Minnesota Wild 4-1 on Thursday night.

Seattle secured its second consecutive win — and the most impressive of its three victories so far — by handing Minnesota just its second loss. This victory came despite a sluggish start that saw the Kraken fall behind within seven minutes.

“They just got going,” Seattle coach Dave Hakstol said. “That’s good veteran leadership that realizes what’s happening at that point in the game and knows what needs to happen.”

Fleury scored late in the first period to tie the game at 1-1, and his wraparound goal in the second period gave the Kraken the lead. Tanev and Mark Giordano scored empty-net goals after Minnesota pulled Cam Talbot. Giordano’s goal, his second of the season, was banked off the boards from his own defensive zone.

Ryan Hartman scored his third goal of the season off a great feed from Kirill Kaprizov early in the first period, but Minnesota was stymied the rest of the way by Seattle goalie Philipp Grubauer.

Grubauer made 30 saves, including a critical stop on a breakaway by Kaprizov in the closing seconds of the second period. As Minnesota pushed for an equalizer in the third period, Grubauer held the Wild off with 16 saves in the final 20 minutes.

“They wanted to push back and throw everything on the net,” Grubauer said.

Joel Eriksson Ek nearly tied the game midway through the third on the power play. His tipped shot trickled along the goal line but hit the post and stayed out.

“Everybody’s watching, right? We have to score on those,” Eriksson Ek said.

Minnesota played without leading scorer Mats Zuccarello and forward Rem Pitlick after both were placed on the NHL’s COVID-19 protocol earlier Thursday. Zuccarello had seven points through six games, while Pitlick assisted in his Wild debut in Tuesday’s win at Vancouver.

“I think we started good the first five minutes,” Eriksson Ek said. “They got some power play time, they got into it, and we didn’t win enough battles, wall battles to get out of our zone.”

Fleury had three goals in 47 games last year between Carolina and Anaheim. His career high of four goals came in the 2019-20 season with the Hurricanes. Fleury fits the mold of the player Seattle hoped to flourish with a bigger role.

Fleury’s first goal was a wrist shot from just inside the blue line through traffic that sneaked past Talbot.

His second was a terrific individual play. After a lengthy spell in the offensive zone, Fleury faked a slap shot from a distance, carried the puck deep, and flicked a wrist shot that Talbot saved. But the puck rebounded right to Fleury, and he quickly wrapped around the back of the net, beating Talbot and giving Seattle a 2-1 lead.

“I just faked it, walked around them, thought I had a hole short side and missed it, but I got my rebound and wrapped it in,” Fleury said. “That one felt pretty cool.”

SUPERSONICS RECOGNITION

Basketball Hall of Famer Lenny Wilkens was honored Thursday with the street outside of Climate Pledge Arena being renamed Lenny Wilkens Way. Wilkens, a coach and player for the Seattle SuperSonics, celebrated his 84th birthday on Thursday, and the crowd sang to him during the game.

Game Notes

Wild F Connor Dewar and defenseman Jon Lizotte made their NHL debuts. It was especially meaningful for Dewar, who played junior hockey for the nearby Everett Silvertips. D Jordie Benn also made his Minnesota debut. Seattle has allowed two goals in 18 power play attempts this season.

UP NEXT

  • Minnesota: At Colorado on Saturday.
  • Seattle: Host the New York Rangers on Sunday.