The Avalanche are big favorites here, just as they are to advance to the next round. I expect this game to go about in a similar fashion as game 1, and Colorado will be one step closer to the sweep.
Quick Pick
- Best Bet: Colorado Avalanche Moneyline (-295)
- Confidence: 3 out of 5
- Win Probability: Colorado 72% | Los Angeles 28%
- Best Value Angle: Colorado’s territorial dominance in Game 1 understated a 2-1 scoreline; the market is likely correct here, with the edge simply coming from Colorado’s structural superiority rather than any specific mispricing.
Why This Bet Has Value
The 2-1 final score from Game 1 flatters Los Angeles more than their actual performance warranted. Colorado controlled play for significant stretches, generated the better scoring chances at 5 on 5, and had a goal waved off due to goaltender interference that could have made the scoreline look entirely different. The Kings squeezed out their lone goal with the net pulled and a 6-on-4 advantage — a combination that is unsustainable as a repeatable offensive source. Wedgewood was sharp, making 24 saves in his first playoff start, but the bigger story is that Los Angeles could not generate consistent quality against a Colorado blue line led by Nathan MacKinnon and Cale Makar dictating terms.
At -295, Colorado is priced at roughly 75% implied probability. That is steep, and it leaves almost no margin for error in terms of odds value. However, the structural gap between these teams — a Presidents’ Trophy winner against a 35-27-20 wild card — is real and was visible in Game 1. The honest assessment here is that the market is largely efficient. There is no major mispricing. The case for Colorado is built on repeatable process, not a dramatic edge.
Game Snapshot
- Matchup: Los Angeles Kings at Colorado Avalanche
- Date and Time: Tuesday, April 21, 2026, 10:00 PM ET
- Venue: Ball Arena, Denver, Colorado
- Series Score: Colorado leads 1-0
- Broadcast: ESPN
Key Storylines
This is a significant talent mismatch on paper. Colorado finished the regular season at 55-16-11, winning the Presidents’ Trophy. Los Angeles came in as the 2nd Western wild card with a 35-27-20 record. Game 1 confirmed that gap exists on the ice as well, even if the final score did not look like a blowout. The Kings are a disciplined, low-event team that plays well defensively, and that style kept them competitive — but “competitive” and “dangerous” are two different things when you can only generate offense by pulling your goalie late.
What Happened Last Game
Colorado outplayed Los Angeles throughout Game 1. Artturi Lehkonen opened scoring in the second period on a MacKinnon rebound. Logan O’Connor — returning from a hip injury that cost him most of the regular season — added a third-period goal using his speed through the neutral zone to beat Anton Forsberg short side. The Kings had an earlier Colorado goal called off for goaltender interference against Forsberg following contact from Jack Drury, and Colorado’s video challenge to reverse the call was unsuccessful. That no-goal call preserved any hope Los Angeles had of keeping it close. LA pulled Forsberg late and scored on a 6-on-4 power play, but they never legitimately threatened to tie the game at 5 on 5. Forsberg made 28 saves in his playoff debut — a respectable performance that papered over some defensive gaps in front of him.
What Changed
The Kings’ coaching staff has already identified areas to address. Interim coach D.J. Smith pointed directly to physicality on the back end, saying his team needs to be more aggressive against Colorado’s defensemen. Whether Los Angeles actually executes that adjustment — and whether it meaningfully shifts the territorial balance — is the central question for Game 2. There are no confirmed lineup changes available at time of writing. Coaching adjustments should be expected, but their effectiveness is uncertain.
Recent Form
In the only game of this playoff series played, Colorado was the clearly superior team. Regular season form is a secondary reference point only: Colorado was dominant all year, while Los Angeles was a fringe playoff team. This is a first-round matchup between a legitimate Cup contender and a team that fought its way into the field.
Goaltending
Scott Wedgewood is expected back in net for Colorado. He led the NHL in save percentage during the regular season at .921 and was excellent in Game 1. His 5 most recent regular-season starts produced 1 goal or fewer allowed in each — a streak of dominance that carries weight. Bednar confirmed he was “fantastic” in Game 1 and there is no signal a change is coming.
Anton Forsberg is expected to get the call again for Los Angeles. His Game 1 performance was solid — 28 saves — but he faced high-danger moments Colorado generated through speed and skill. The concern is whether the Kings’ defensive structure can protect him better in Game 2. Darcy Kuemper remains the alternative, though no indication of a switch has been reported.
Key Skaters
Nathan MacKinnon is the most dangerous player in this series. He drew the penalty shot on Lehkonen’s goal with a rebound pass from the high slot and has been disruptive whenever he’s been on the ice. Cale Makar controls zone exits and entries for Colorado in ways that create downstream offensive opportunities the raw shot totals do not always capture. For the Kings, Artemi Panarin and Quinton Byfield are the most likely sources of offense — Panarin in particular on the power play. Los Angeles will need one of their top forwards to break through Wedgewood cleanly at even strength, something they could not manage in Game 1.
Team Performance and Metrics
| Metric | Los Angeles Kings | Colorado Avalanche | Betting Impact |
|---|---|---|---|
| Last Game 5 on 5 | Struggled to generate quality, held to the perimeter | Controlled play, better scoring chances | Edge: Colorado |
| Series Chance Quality | 1 goal from 6-on-4, no 5v5 conversion | 2 goals, a disallowed goal, sustained pressure | Edge: Colorado |
| Special Teams | Both teams ranked bottom-10 on PP in regular season; LA scored on 6-on-4 | 0 for 4 on PP in Game 1 despite opportunities | Edge: Even / Marginal Colorado |
| Goaltending | Forsberg: 28 saves, solid but tested | Wedgewood: 24 saves, .921 regular season SV% | Edge: Colorado |
| Matchup Edge | Physical style adjustment being emphasized by coaching staff | MacKinnon and Makar controlling transition | Edge: Colorado |
| Regular Season Context | 35-27-20 wild card, 50-plus one-goal games | 55-16-11 Presidents’ Trophy, league-best offense | Supports Colorado as structural favorite |
The expected game script in Game 2 looks similar to Game 1: Los Angeles will try to keep it tight, limit Colorado’s transition opportunities, and rely on Forsberg to make timely saves. Colorado will attempt to use speed and skill to create high-danger looks off MacKinnon’s line in particular. The risk for the Kings is that if they fall behind by 2 goals early, they have limited capacity to generate the offense needed to recover.
Market and Odds Analysis
Colorado opened around -218 for Game 1 and is now priced at roughly -295 after winning that game. The line move is a standard series-leader boost, reflecting the statistical reality that teams leading 1-0 in a playoff series win at a higher rate, especially at home. The implied probability at -295 is approximately 74-75%. My estimated probability for Colorado is around 70-72%, meaning the line is close to fair value or slightly juiced toward Colorado. There is no meaningful gap between market price and reasonable true odds — this is an efficient line.
The total sitting at 5.5 with the over at -128 reflects the expectation that Game 1’s 3-goal total was below what this matchup typically produces. Given Colorado’s offensive firepower and the fact that Forsberg will face sustained pressure again, there is a reasonable case for goals in this game — but both teams played a 2-1 game without the score feeling wildly different from the territorial picture. The under at +104 offers slight value if you believe Los Angeles’ defensive structure limits Colorado’s conversion rate again.
| Market | Odds |
|---|---|
| Moneyline — Los Angeles | +235 |
| Moneyline — Colorado | -295 |
| Total | 5.5, Over -108 / Under -110 |
| Puckline — LA +1.5 | Approximately -125 |
Key Edges
- Colorado’s Game 1 territorial dominance was understated by a 2-1 score that included a disallowed goal and a Kings tally from a pulled-goalie 6-on-4 situation — repeating that late-game manufacturing is unlikely.
- Wedgewood has been historically sharp this season and carried his form into Game 1 without visible signs of stress; no reason to bet against continuation.
- MacKinnon and the Avalanche transition game is the single biggest structural advantage in this series and showed up clearly in Game 1.
Risk Factors
- At -295, there is essentially no line value — backing Colorado here is a process bet, not an odds edge.
- Los Angeles is a playoff-caliber defensive team and could benefit from any adjustment that gets their forwards physically engaged on Colorado’s blue line, as Smith indicated.
- Small sample size: 1 playoff game at 5 on 5 does not lock in true performance — variance in goaltending or special teams can swing any single game.
- Confirmed goaltender lineups are expected but not officially locked in at time of writing; any surprise start from Kuemper or Blackwood would shift analysis.
Prediction and Verdict
- Best Bet: Colorado Avalanche Moneyline
- Score Projection: Colorado 3, Los Angeles 1
- Win Probability: Colorado 72% | Los Angeles 28%
- Edge: Small
Colorado is the right side here — the Game 1 process supported it, the regular season context supports it, and both goaltending matchups favor the Avalanche. The honest caveat is that -295 is a number you back with a light hand. The implied 75% win probability is about 3 percentage points ahead of where I peg the true number, which means the raw value is marginal at best. If you need a reason to pass, the price is it. If you are playing, Colorado wins this game in a similar fashion to Game 1 — a controlled, low-event performance where Wedgewood does enough and MacKinnon’s line creates the decisive moment.
Final Score Prediction: Colorado 3, Los Angeles 1
Other games tonight

