J.T. Miller had a goal and two assists and the Vancouver Canucks beat the Vegas Golden Knights 5-1 on Saturday night.
Vancouver won its second straight on a three-game trip that ends Sunday in San Jose. The Canucks have won four of five after a three-game skid.
Brock Boeser, Elias Pettersson, Andrei Kuzmenko and Bo Horvat also scored for the Canucks. Spencer Martin made 26 saves.
Jonathan Marchessault scored for the Golden Knights. Logan Thompson stopped 31 shots.
Vegas, meanwhile, fell for the second time in two nights after losing for the first time ever to Seattle on Friday. Prior to Saturday, the Golden Knights were 11-1-3 against the Canucks, including a 5-4 win in Vancouver on Nov. 21.
“We knew they played yesterday and we knew they lost. We knew they were going to come out hard, so we needed to be ready from the start and I think we did,” Canucks forward Elias Pettersson said.
“We played a good 60 minutes of hockey.”
Something the Golden Knights did not do, in arguably their worst performance of the season. Since opening the season an NHL-best 13-2-0, the Golden Knights have lost five of their last eight, with four losses coming at home.
Vancouver opened a 2-0 first-period lead behind a pair of power-play goals, one from Boeser’s deflection in front of the net, and the second from Miller when he found the back of the net with a shot from the left circle.
The barrage of power-play goals continued in the second period, as Pettersson lasered a one-timer from the right dot to extend Vancouver’s lead to three goals.
The Canucks finished 3 of 5 with a man advantage, and have now converted 19 times on 52 opportunities since Oct. 24. Their 36.5 per cent conversion rate in that span ranks No. 1 in the league.
Overall this season, Vancouver ranks second on the power play at 29.3 per cent.
“Special teams win us games,” Pettersson said. “We played good 5-on-5 today, but we got three today on the power play, which is huge. And they didn’t score on our PK, so special teams somewhat won us the game today.”
But the Canucks changed things up later in the period with a pair of even-strength goals to push it to 5-0.
First, it was Kuzmenko skating down the slot alone and burying Nils Aman’s pretty feed from behind the net.
And with two seconds left in the second, it was Vancouver’s captain, Horvat, taking Miller’s pass from the crease and firing it past Thompson.
The five-goal deficit sent the Golden Knights down the tunnel for intermission amidst a chorus of boos from an announced crowd of 18,004.