Quick Pick
- Best Bet: Vegas Golden Knights +1.5 (-166)
- Win Probability: Colorado 62% | Vegas 38%
- Best Value Angle: The puck line price is steep, but a wounded, battle-tested Vegas team coached by Tortorella is unlikely to get blown out in Game 1 on the road.
Quick answer: Vegas Golden Knights vs Colorado Avalanche Game 1 is best approached through the Vegas +1.5 puck line because the market is correctly pricing Colorado as a sizable favorite, but it may be underestimating how hard it is to cover -1.5 against a Tortorella-coached team that has leaked just two blowout losses in 12 playoff games. The Stone injury and goaltending uncertainty keep confidence at medium.
Why This Bet Has Value
Colorado is the right favorite. That much is not in dispute. The Avalanche went 8-1 in the first two rounds, posted a +17 goal differential, and have not lost a single game at Ball Arena in these playoffs. The question is not whether to fade them outright — it is whether laying -1.5 at -140 or better is actually worth the price against a Vegas team built to make games uncomfortable.
The sharpest angle here is game script. John Tortorella’s Golden Knights have played 12 playoff games and allowed 3 or more goals in just 4 of them. They conceded 4 or more goals only once — a 4-2 regulation loss to Utah in Game 3. Even in losses, they stay close. Colorado will generate pressure and MacKinnon will likely find ways to score, but blowouts require the opponent to stop competing. This version of Vegas does not do that.
The -192 moneyline implies a 66% win probability for Colorado. That is defensible given the gap in rest, depth, and top-end talent. But the puck line at -166 for Vegas to either win or lose by 1 is the sharper play given the game script Colorado is most likely to produce — a 2-goal win or a tight game — rather than a 4-goal blowout that the -1.5 coverage against them requires.
Game Snapshot
- Matchup: Vegas Golden Knights at Colorado Avalanche
- Date & Time: May 20, 2026, 8:00 PM ET
- Venue: Ball Arena, Denver, CO
- Series Score: Series begins — 0-0

Betting Breakdown
Colorado’s goaltending situation carries real uncertainty into Game 1. Scott Wedgewood is expected to start after coming on in relief of Mackenzie Blackwood in Game 5 against Minnesota, but neither option inspires full confidence. Wedgewood carries a .914 save percentage across 7 starts this postseason, but stepped aside in the second round when Blackwood was between the pipes — it was Wedgewood who was pulled after allowing three goals in Game 3 against Minnesota, with Blackwood finishing out that game. Colorado’s offense is good enough to mask goaltending lapses, but if Wedgewood struggles early, there is a credible scenario where Vegas steals Game 1 outright.
Carter Hart has carried a heavy workload across 12 starts for the Golden Knights and is posting a .912 save percentage. He was leaky against Utah in the first round but tightened up significantly against Anaheim, allowing 2 goals or fewer in 4 of the 6 games. Hart will face a different level of challenge against MacKinnon and Necas, but he does not need to steal the game — he just needs to keep Vegas within striking distance, which he has shown he can do.
The Mark Stone injury is the legitimate wildcard. Stone missed Games 4, 5 and 6 against Anaheim with a lower-body injury and his status for the Western Conference Final has not been confirmed. Vegas went 2-1 in those three games without him, which is an encouraging sign, but losing a captain’s defensive presence against Nathan MacKinnon is a real cost. Mitch Marner has been the best player of the entire postseason with 18 points in 12 games and remains Vegas’s best hope of generating enough offense to stay competitive.
Colorado’s 6-0 home record in these playoffs is legitimate, not a scheduling artifact. The Avalanche went 26-9-6 at Ball Arena in the regular season and have built a genuine fortress there. Vegas’s road record in these playoffs is 4-2, with both losses coming in Game 2 of each respective series — suggesting a pattern of slow starts on the road. If that pattern repeats, Colorado wins Game 1 comfortably. The puck line bet absorbs that risk, requiring only that Vegas avoids being embarrassed, not that it steals a road win.
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Market & Odds Analysis
Colorado is priced at -192 on the moneyline, implying roughly 66% win probability. That number is fair. The Avalanche are the better team, have more rest after 9 playoff games to Vegas’s 12, and hold home ice for 3 of the first 5 games. The market is not obviously wrong about the side.
The value is on the puck line. Vegas +1.5 at -166 implies roughly 62% probability that the game is decided by 1 goal or Vegas wins outright. Given that Colorado’s average margin of victory in these playoffs has been just over 1.5 goals per game, and that Vegas has not been blown out in the postseason with any regularity, this line may be underpricing the likelihood of a competitive game. The 5.5 total being set with the over juiced to -142 tells you the market expects scoring — which slightly raises the probability of a multi-goal margin — so the puck line is not a slam dunk. But the price still offers reasonable value against a Tortorella team that competes for 60 minutes.
If the puck line drifts toward -180 or worse, the bet loses value quickly. The play is only worth making if Vegas +1.5 is available in the -166 to -170 range.
Risk Factors
- Colorado has the best player in the series in MacKinnon, who is averaging more than 4 shots per game in these playoffs and could single-handedly produce a blowout if the Avalanche get rolling early.
- Mark Stone’s absence, if confirmed, removes Vegas’s most effective two-way forward and could expose Hart to sustained offensive pressure without defensive support at even strength.
Vegas Golden Knights vs Colorado Avalanche FAQs
The best bet is Vegas +1.5, but only if the price remains in the -166 to -170 range. If the line moves past -175, the juice no longer justifies the coverage given Colorado’s legitimate ability to win by multiple goals at Ball Arena.
Goaltending is the biggest factor, specifically Scott Wedgewood’s readiness. Wedgewood has seen limited action this postseason and steps into a Game 1 on the road against a rested Colorado offense. If he’s sharp, Colorado wins a close game. If he struggles, Vegas has the depth scoring to take advantage and keep the margin tight or steal a win.
A Colorado win by 1 goal is the most likely outcome given home ice and depth advantages — something like 3-2 or 2-1 in favor of the Avalanche, which would still cash the puck line for Vegas backers.
Final Prediction
Colorado is the better team and a deserving favorite in Game 1, but the moneyline at -192 asks bettors to lay nearly double for a team whose goaltending situation carries real uncertainty. The smarter play is Vegas +1.5, which gives the Golden Knights two ways to win — an outright upset or a 1-goal loss — at a price that reflects the competitive nature of this matchup without requiring you to pick a road upset. The Stone injury clouds the picture enough to keep confidence measured, and if that line drifts past -175, there is no bet worth making in Game 1. At its current price, the puck line is the sharpest available angle in a series where Colorado should win but probably will not dominate the way a 73% implied probability suggests.
Final Score Prediction: Colorado Avalanche 3, Vegas Golden Knights 2

