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Golden Knights’ win streak ends with loss to Sharks

Updated January 11, 2019 - 12:00 am

For many Golden Knights fans, the Los Angeles Kings represent their fiercest rival, thanks to geography and a certain Drew Doughty quote.

Ask the players, though, and they’ll say San Jose is their chief adversary.

The Knights eliminated the Sharks from a closely contested second-round playoff series in six games. When the teams met for the first time this season on Nov. 24, San Jose coach Peter DeBoer and forward Evander Kane were ejected for abusive language to officials.

The latest installment of the budding rivalry came Thursday when the Knights were unable to hold a third-period lead and had their seven-game win streak come to a halt with a 3-2 loss before an announced crowd of 18,367 at T-Mobile Arena.

“It’s such a good rivalry with this team. We’re so close in the standings also, and these points mean a lot, so that’s why it’s so frustrating to miss out on that,” Knights goaltender Marc-Andre Fleury said. “I thought we played a good game. We’ve been solid lately and have had a good stretch. You can’t overthink it. We’ll look at the tape obviously and we’ll be fine.”

The Knights, who were without several regulars, saw their 10-game points streak end and also lost at home in regulation for the first time since Nov. 16.

Joonas Donskoi and Melker Karlsson scored 39 seconds apart in the third period for San Jose, which leapfrogged the Knights into second place in the Pacific Division.

“They’re a good team and so are we. It was a tight game tonight,” Knights defenseman Jon Merrill said. “I thought it was a really good hockey game, and unfortunately we came out on the wrong side of it.”

Tomas Nosek scored in the first period, and Merrill put the Knights ahead 2-1 at 2:16 of the third period.

Brandon Pirri outhustled Kane to a loose puck in San Jose’s zone and found Merrill, who sent a wrist shot past Martin Jones’ glove for his first goal.

Merrill was the only player to appear for the Knights this season without scoring.

“(Pirri) made a nice play,” Merrill said. “He pulled up and found me, and I just ripped it. Happy to see it go in.”

But the Sharks responded with two quick goals to earn their fifth consecutive victory.

Karlsson knocked in a rebound at 7:24, and Donskoi deflected a shot for his 14th goal less than a minute later after a scramble in front.

“It feels like a couple bounces went their way and they got some goals off it and it was 3-2 pretty quick,” Fleury said. “But I don’t think we gave the game away to them.”

San Jose entered fourth in the league in goals per game and produced 32 goals in its past six games but couldn’t generate much offense against the Knights’ tight coverage in the opening 40 minutes.

The Sharks had one shot on goal in the second period until Tomas Hertl made the Knights pay for a giveaway at the 14:05 mark.

Hertl danced around Ryan Carpenter in the neutral zone and carried the puck across the blue line with speed before he whipped a shot past Fleury for his 16th goal.

The Knights, wearing their white jerseys for a Frost the Fortress promotion, took the lead 94 seconds into the first period at the end of a strong shift by the revamped fourth line.

Ryan Reaves carried the puck into the zone 1-on-3 before he let a long shot go from the right wing that was turned away by Jones. But Nosek was there for the long rebound and knocked in his sixth goal before Jones could recover in time.

“We had lots of opportunities. They got a couple of breaks,” coach Gerard Gallant said. “We made a couple mistakes that cost us goals, but overall I thought we played a good game.”

More Golden Knights: Follow at reviewjournal.com/GoldenKnights and @HockeyinVegas on Twitter.

Contact David Schoen at dschoen@reviewjournal.com or 702-387-5203. Follow @DavidSchoenLVRJ on Twitter.

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