Game 3 is tonight, and the value is on the Avalanche. Minnesota still hasn’t found a way to respond to Colorado, and although this series hasn’t played since Tuesday, fatigue could still be a factor. Minnesota came through a tough series against Dallas, while Colorado entered this matchup with much more rest.
Quick Pick
- Best Bet: Colorado Avalanche Moneyline
- Win Probability: Colorado 58% | Minnesota 42%
- Best Value Angle: The market is pricing this as near a coin flip on home ice, but Minnesota’s power play has gone 0 for 5 in this series and their top line remains largely neutralized — sustainable control indicators that home ice alone does not fix.

Why This Bet Has Value
Game 2 was the one that should concern the Wild more than any scoreline. Minnesota out-shot Colorado 31 to 23 and still lost by three. Their shooting percentage collapsed to 6.5% — not bad luck in isolation, but bad luck compounded by a team that is generating low-danger attempts at volume rather than high-quality looks. Colorado, on the other hand, converted at 21.7% and dominated the dot at 62.9%, flipping a script from Game 1 where the Avalanche had been badly outworked on faceoffs. Two games in, and Colorado has already made a meaningful tactical adjustment. Minnesota has not shown a comparable response.
The market is offering Colorado at roughly -130 implied probability based on the projected 53.9% win chance. Given the series-level evidence — a dead power play, a neutralized Kaprizov, and collapsing shot quality from the Wild — Colorado’s true probability of winning Game 3 is closer to 58%. That is a real but moderate edge, not a pound-the-table situation. Home ice matters. A desperate team coming back to its building matters. But the structural problems Minnesota is carrying into Saint Paul do not disappear because the building changes.
For the other Saturday matchup, check out our Hurricanes vs. Flyers preview, where Carolina has been in control since Game 1.
Game Snapshot
- Matchup: Colorado Avalanche at Minnesota Wild
- Date and Time: Saturday May 9, 2026, 9:00 PM ET
- Venue: Xcel Energy Center, Saint Paul, Minnesota
- Series Score: Colorado leads 2-0
Matchup Breakdown
Key Storylines
Colorado has swept both games in Denver by a combined score of 14-8. The margin is convincing enough, but what stands out even more is the trajectory. Game 1 was a chaotic 9-6 shootout where Minnesota won the faceoff battle at 63.1% and still lost by three. Game 2 was measured and clinical — Colorado 5, Minnesota 2, with the Avalanche locking down faceoffs at 62.9% after surrendering that battle entirely in the opener. The adjustment was immediate and sharp. Minnesota has not shown a comparable ability to change what Colorado is doing to them.What Happened Last Game
Game 2 told a story that the shot totals obscure. Minnesota generated 31 shots, Colorado 23. On paper, that looks like a competitive game. Underneath it, Minnesota was converting at just 6.5% while Colorado ran at 21.7%. Their power play went 0 for 2, extending their series drought to 0 for 5. Colorado’s power play, meanwhile, went 2 for 5 — a 40% conversion rate that is punishing Minnesota for every penalty taken. Nathan MacKinnon produced three points, Scott Wedgewood held in net for Colorado, and Nicolas Roy scored what proved to be the winning goal at even strength. Minnesota’s best offensive options — Kirill Kaprizov in particular — were largely absent from the box score in both games. Danila Yurov and Marcus Johansson are contributing peripheral production, but the engine of this Wild offense has not fired in two games.
What Changed
The biggest tactical shift between Game 1 and Game 2 was the faceoff. Colorado went from losing 63% of draws in Game 1 to winning nearly 63% in Game 2 — a 25-point swing in one of the most repeatable possession metrics in hockey. That kind of adjustment does not happen by accident. Jack Drury, who won 90% of his even-strength draws in Game 2, was clearly deployed differently. Whether Minnesota can respond to that at home is the key tactical question heading into Game 3.
Recent Form
Colorado has not dropped a game in this series. More importantly, they have not dropped a period that felt like a genuine warning sign. Even in Game 1 when Minnesota outscored them 3-2 in the second period, Colorado came back with four goals in the third. Game 2 was not close from the midpoint onward. The Avalanche are playing with the composure of a top seed that expects to win rather than hoping to.
Minnesota comes in having been outplayed in both games while also carrying the weight of their first-round exit narrative being avoided only by their own strong play against Dallas in the previous round. The Wild won that series 4-2 after beating a strong Stars team. That context matters — this is not a team without playoff pedigree. But the COL matchup is exposing real structural gaps.
Goaltending
Scott Wedgewood has been confirmed in net for Colorado across both games. He has won both games and is the expected starter in Game 3.
For Minnesota, Filip Gustavsson was given the chance to prove himself in Game 2, but after allowing four goals with an .818 save percentage, there is a chance they turn back to Wallstedt — despite him conceding eight goals in Game 1.
Key Skaters
MacKinnon has 6 points across 2 games and has been first or second in overall impact in both contests. He is the series engine on the Colorado side. Cale Makar produced 3 points in Game 1, including 2 goals, and his presence on the back end gives Colorado a constant threat from the blue line on the power play. Martin Necas has been quietly excellent — 3 assists in Game 1 and 2 points in Game 2 — giving Colorado a second-line option that Minnesota has not been able to limit.
Kaprizov is the Minnesota player the market is waiting on. He has been physically present but not impactful — 1 assist through 2 games. Whether that reflects Colorado’s defensive deployment or Kaprizov running cold is unclear, but 2 games of suppression from the team’s best player is a meaningful data point. Yurov and Johansson have picked up secondary production but are not capable of carrying the Wild on their own.
Team Performance and Metrics
| Metric | Colorado | Minnesota | Betting Impact |
|---|---|---|---|
| Last Game 5 on 5 | 3 goals on 14 shots | 2 goals on 20 shots | Edge: Colorado |
| Series Chance Quality | Finishing at 21.7% G2, 20.9% G1 | Collapsing — 16.7% G1 to 6.5% G2 | Edge: Colorado |
| Special Teams | PP 3 for 7 across series | PP 0 for 5 across series | Strong Edge: Colorado |
| Goaltending | Wedgewood confirmed — holding | Neither goalie has excelled | Edge: Colorado |
| Faceoffs | 62.9% in G2 after losing G1 | 37.1% in G2 after winning G1 | Edge: Colorado |
| Matchup Edge | Kaprizov neutralized through 2 games | No answer for MacKinnon line | Edge: Colorado |
The expected game script in Game 3 involves a more physically engaged Minnesota team feeding off a home crowd desperate for a response. Expect a faster start from the Wild and greater intensity in the first period. But the structural problem does not change: Minnesota cannot afford to take penalties, their power play is broken, and they have not found a way to generate high-danger looks rather than perimeter volume. Colorado should weather the early storm and reassert control if their Game 2 patterns hold.
Market and Odds Analysis
The system-projected win probability places Colorado at 53.9% and Minnesota at 46.1%, implying a near even-money market with Colorado as a modest road favorite. At those implied odds, the market is assigning significant weight to home ice — which is reasonable. Home teams in playoff series facing elimination historically perform better than the raw talent gap would suggest.
The series evidence, however, pushes Colorado’s real probability closer to 58%. Minnesota’s power play is 0 for 5 — that is not random variance at this stage. Their shooting efficiency has fallen from 16.7% to 6.5% game over game. Kaprizov has been a non-factor. These are repeatable structural issues, not one-game noise. A market priced near 54-46 is not wrong to account for home ice, but it may be underweighting how thoroughly Colorado has taken control of the underlying game.
| Market | Odds |
|---|---|
| Moneyline | Wild +112 | Avalanche -132 |
| Total | O 5.5 -155 | U 5.5 +128 |
| Puckline | Wild +1.5 -220 | Avalanche -1.5 +170 |
Key Edges
- Minnesota’s power play is 0 for 5 across the series — a sustained structural failure, not bad luck. Colorado’s discipline in Game 2 was near-perfect, taking only 2 penalties.
- Colorado’s faceoff dominance in Game 2 was a direct response to losing that battle in Game 1. The ability to adjust within a series is a quality indicator the market often under-prices.
- Kaprizov’s absence from the scoresheet through 2 games is the single biggest macro-level surprise of the series and one that Colorado’s coaching staff is clearly engineering with intention.
- The market pricing of roughly 54-46 slightly underweights how thoroughly Colorado has controlled the underlying metrics of both games.
Risk Factors
- Home ice and desperation are real forces. A first-period Minnesota surge could change momentum in ways that are hard to model from series data alone.
- Colorado’s shooting percentage across the series is historically high. Some regression is likely, and if it arrives in Game 3, the margin may be tighter than the series suggests.
Prediction and Verdict
- Best Bet: Colorado Avalanche Moneyline
- Score Projection: Colorado 4, Minnesota 2
- Win Probability: Colorado 58% | Minnesota 42%
- Edge: Moderate
Colorado is the play here, but not because Minnesota is incapable of winning a game at home. They almost certainly will at some point in this series. The bet on Colorado in Game 3 is a bet that the structural issues — the dead power play, the suppressed Kaprizov, the declining shot quality — are not the product of Denver ice or first-game jitters. They look like a coordinated Colorado gameplan that has worked across two very different types of games. Until Minnesota shows a concrete tactical adjustment that reverses any one of those trends, the Avalanche deserve to be priced higher than 54%.
Final Score Prediction: Colorado 4, Minnesota 2

