Quick Pick Vegas vs. Anaheim
- Best Bet: Anaheim Ducks Moneyline — Game 3 in Anaheim
- Confidence: 3 out of 5
- Win Probability: Anaheim 52% | Vegas 48%
- Best Value Angle: Anaheim’s even-strength dominance finally translated in Game 2, and home ice in a tied series gives the Ducks a meaningful structural edge the market has not fully caught up with yet.

Why This Bet Has Value
Game 2 changed the series in a way the final score only partially communicates. Anaheim beat Vegas 3-1 at T-Mobile Arena — on the road, against the team that just spent two games looking like a structurally superior opponent. The Ducks outshot the Golden Knights 28 to 22, and more importantly, all 3 of their goals came at even strength. That is the key data point. Vegas had been relying on Carter Hart to paper over their defensive cracks, and in Game 2, Hart simply did not hold up. He allowed 3 goals on 27 shots, a performance that brings his playoff numbers back to earth after a standout Game 1.
The market going into Game 2 had Vegas around -160 to -166 on the moneyline at home. The series is now tied 1-1, with play shifting to Honda Center. Anaheim won all 3 of their first-round home games against Edmonton. This is a team that has demonstrated it knows how to protect home ice. If the market prices Game 3 anywhere near even money or leans Vegas despite the home switch, there is a modest but real edge on the Ducks — particularly given the 5-on-5 evidence from Game 2. The bet is not a blowout call. It is a value call on a home underdog in a coin-flip series.
Game Snapshot
- Matchup: Vegas Golden Knights at Anaheim Ducks
- Date & Time: May 9, 2026, 9:30 PM ET
- Venue: Honda Center, Anaheim
- Series Score: 1-1
- Broadcast: TNT / truTV / Max and Sportsnet
In Friday night’s other matchup between Montreal and Buffalo, we expect a tighter contest.
Matchup Breakdown
Key Storylines
Anaheim is now heading home having proven they can compete with Vegas at both ends of the ice, and they did it in a building that had been extremely hostile to road teams all postseason. Meanwhile, Vegas has to reckon with what happened to Carter Hart in Game 2 and whether John Tortorella makes any structural adjustments.
What Happened Last Game
Game 2 was a controlled Anaheim performance rather than a chaotic upset. The Ducks generated 28 shots and 20 of those came at even strength — all 3 of their goals also came at even strength. Leo Carlsson scored what turned out to be the winning goal and was credited as first star. Jansen Harkins added an empty netter to seal it. Chris Kreider and Troy Terry each contributed an assist, showing the Ducks can spread offensive contributions across lines. Vegas, for their part, managed only 22 shots with a meager 4.5 shooting percentage. Their lone goal came from Mark Stone on the power play — the only category where they had a genuine edge on the night. Jack Eichel went 62.5% at the faceoff dot and generated some pressure but ended up with just a single assist. The Golden Knights were held scoreless at even strength, which is the single most important fact from this game.
What Changed
In Game 1, Vegas won despite being outshot 34-22 because Hart was extraordinary — 33 saves, a .971 performance. In Game 2, with a near-identical shot disadvantage, Hart allowed 3 even-strength goals on 27 shots. The talent gap at goaltender that many expected to define this series is looking far less decisive. Anaheim’s Lukas Dostal stopped 21 of 22 shots in Game 2, a clean and confident performance. If that holds in Game 3, Anaheim’s shot volume advantage becomes a serious problem for Vegas.
Recent Form
In series terms, both teams now sit at 1-1. Anaheim’s series profile is increasingly strong at 5-on-5, while Vegas is leaning on special teams and goaltending that showed vulnerability in Game 2. The Ducks went 3-0 at Honda Center against Edmonton in Round 1 — that home-ice track record matters here.
Goaltending
Carter Hart is expected to continue in goal for Vegas. His Game 1 effort was elite; Game 2 was a regression back toward his playoff average of roughly .898 save percentage. Two data points is a small sample, but the trend moving away from home — where he was significantly better in Round 1 — is worth noting. Lukas Dostal started Game 2 and looked composed. His Round 1 numbers of .874 were a concern entering this series, but his Game 2 performance suggests he has found his footing.
Key Skaters
Leo Carlsson has been Anaheim’s most dangerous driver across both games, generating volume and quality at 5-on-5. Troy Terry continues finding ways to create even without a goal yet in the series. For Vegas, Eichel is generating faceoff wins and neutral-zone control but has yet to impose himself offensively at even strength. Mark Stone’s goal was his first of the series. Ivan Barbashev had 5 shots in Game 2 but none went in. Vegas has plenty of firepower on paper — the issue is converting it against a Dostal who is now showing steadier form.
Team Performance & Metrics
| Metric | Vegas Golden Knights | Anaheim Ducks | Betting Impact |
|---|---|---|---|
| Last Game 5-on-5 | 0 goals on 16 shots, 4.5% shooting | 3 goals on 20 shots, 15% shooting | Clear Edge — Anaheim |
| Series Chance Quality | Controlled Game 1 defensively; exposed in Game 2 | Generated high-danger volume both games | Edge — Anaheim |
| Special Teams | PP: 1 for 4 in Game 2; 0 for 6 so far in series | PP: 0 for 5 in Game 2; PK held Vegas to 0 for 6 | Roughly Even |
| Goaltending | Hart: elite Game 1, regression in Game 2 | Dostal: steady Game 2 after shaky round 1 | Uncertain — narrowing gap |
| Matchup Edge | Tortorella structure; Eichel faceoff dominance | Shot volume, rush speed, home crowd Game 3 | Edge — Anaheim at home |
| Regular Season Context | Vegas on 11-3 run under Tortorella | Ducks swept regular-season series 3-0 vs Vegas | Supporting context only |
The expected game script for Game 3 is Anaheim generating high volume off the rush and demanding Hart make saves, while Vegas tries to compress space and create through the Eichel line. If Dostal continues his current form and Anaheim gets the same even-strength production, the home side wins a close game. The wildcard is whether Vegas makes tactical adjustments after conceding 3 even-strength goals — Tortorella-coached teams are not known for passively accepting that kind of result.
Market & Odds Analysis
Game 2 odds had Vegas at -166 as home favorites. With the series now tied and play shifting to Honda Center, the market will need to reprice significantly. Based on the series-level data and home-ice shift, a fair line for Game 3 likely sits around Anaheim -120 to -135 as home favorites, or close to a pick’em if the market underweights the venue change. If Anaheim opens as underdogs or near even money following Game 2, that represents a genuine pricing inefficiency worth targeting.
| Market | Odds |
|---|---|
| Moneyline | ANA -104 | VGK -114 |
| Total | O 5.5 -141 | U +118 |
| Puckline | ANA +1.5 -265 | VGK -1.5 +200 |
Key Edges
- Anaheim’s even-strength dominance in Game 2 is a repeatable structural factor, not a fluke — their line combinations and rush execution held up in a hostile road environment.
- The home-ice shift to Honda Center is significant. Anaheim went 3-0 at home in Round 1, and this group has shown it plays a different game in front of its own crowd.
- Hart’s vulnerability away from T-Mobile Arena has been a consistent pattern — his road numbers in Round 1 were meaningfully weaker than at home, and Game 2 reinforced that signal.
Risk Factors
- Only 2 games of series data means the sample is extremely small — one elite Hart performance resets the entire narrative.
- Tortorella-coached teams are known for fast tactical adjustments, and Vegas giving up 3 even-strength goals is the exact type of result that triggers aggressive system changes.
- Jeremy Lauzon is confirmed out for Vegas with an injury, but no other confirmed lineup news for Game 3.
Prediction & Verdict Vegas vs. Anaheim
- Best Bet: Anaheim Ducks Moneyline — conditional on opening at or near even money
- Score Projection: Anaheim 3, Vegas 2
- Win Probability: Anaheim 52% | Vegas 48%
- Edge: Small to Moderate
This is a tight series that the evidence says is far more competitive than the pre-series odds implied. Game 2 gave Anaheim real proof of concept at 5-on-5, and the move to Honda Center adds a structural advantage they have used effectively all postseason. The bet case for Anaheim in Game 3 is not about Vegas being bad — it is about Anaheim being genuinely good, and a market that may still be pricing Vegas as a clear favorite out of habit rather than current evidence.
This is a close-game, process-based lean — not a hammer play. Shop lines carefully and only act if the price reflects what the market actually offers after Game 2 results filter through.
Final Score Prediction: Anaheim Ducks 3, Vegas Golden Knights 2

