Salt Lake City welcomes the Stanley Cup playoffs for the first time. Rather than picking a side, I’m looking at the Over.
Quick Pick
- Best Bet: Over 5.5 goals · Listed at -115 to -120
- Confidence: 3 out of 5
- Win Probability: Vegas 52% | Utah 48%
- Best Value Angle: Two goalies trending toward regression, 11 goals already scored in 2 games, and Utah is an over machine at home — the total feels a half-goal short.
Why This Bet Has Value
Game 2 was a 3-2 Mammoth win, but the underlying story actually favors Vegas more than that scoreline suggests. Through 2 games, the Golden Knights have posted a 55.5% Corsi For percentage and a 52.8% expected goals percentage at 5-on-5 — they have controlled play in this series. All 3 Utah goals in Game 2 had a fortunate quality: a puck that deflected off two Vegas defensemen for an own goal, a rebound off the post that found Cooley in a perfect spot, and a Guenther shot from the point. Vegas was the better team structurally, they just couldn’t convert.
That said, the moneyline market has responded correctly — the line is essentially a coin flip at -111/-108, which is appropriate. There is no meaningful edge backing either side on the moneyline. Where the market may be leaving something on the table is the total. Vegas and Utah have combined for 11 goals over 2 games. Carter Hart stopped 57 of 62 shots across Games 1 and 2, but his save percentage through that stretch was partly a product of volume and puck luck — he was not challenged the way his .939 and similar numbers suggest. Vejmelka has allowed 3 or more goals in 6 of his past 8 starts combined regular season and playoffs. The 5.5 total looks like a number the books set conservatively given playoff norms, while both rosters and both goalies point toward goals tonight in Salt Lake City.
Game Snapshot
- Matchup: Vegas Golden Knights at Utah Mammoth
- Date & Time: Friday, April 24, 2026, 9:30 PM ET
- Venue: Delta Center, Salt Lake City, Utah
- Series Score: Tied 1–1 (Vegas won Game 1, 4–2; Utah won Game 2, 3–2)
- Broadcast: TBS

Matchup Breakdown
Key Storylines
Utah steals home-ice advantage by splitting in Vegas. The Mammoth head to the Delta Center having never lost a playoff game at home, though of course this is their inaugural playoff run. For Vegas, this is the first regulation loss of the Tortorella era — he entered 8-1-1 — and now a road environment tests how quickly his system reasserts itself. The psychological edge shifts slightly to Utah, though Tortorella’s history suggests his teams do not spiral.
What Happened Last Game
Game 2 was a back-and-forth 3-2 Utah win. Mark Stone gave Vegas the first-period lead on a power play, deflecting off Mikhail Sergachev’s skate. Utah tied it through a fortunate own goal — a puck bouncing off Hanifin’s stick and Andersson’s shin into the net. Barbashev restored the Vegas lead in the second, weaving through the slot on a backhand, before Guenther knotted it from the left point. Cooley’s winner came off his own rebound sequence — Guenther’s rush shot hit the post, and Cooley knocked in the loose puck with 6 minutes left. Vegas had 14 penalty minutes, 4 power play chances, and converted on just 1. They put 21 shots on Vejmelka, who needed only 19 saves. The control metrics still point to Vegas — they just couldn’t finish.
What Changed
Tortorella acknowledged his team needs to fix “a couple of things” after losing flow in the second period. The penalty discipline issue is the clearest area — Vegas’s undisciplined Game 2 gave Utah momentum and zone time they didn’t otherwise earn. Expect a harder Vegas structure tonight on the road. Utah, for their part, will lean on Logan Cooley’s speed-based game, which Tortorella specifically noted fits into the intense playoff pace. Whether Tourigny makes any line adjustments is not yet confirmed.
Recent Form
Within this series: Vegas was the cleaner team in Game 1 with a dominant physical edge — 52 hits to Utah’s 30 — and controlled Game 2 structurally despite the loss. Utah’s series wins have come from opportunistic finishing rather than sustained pressure. That is a repeatable tactic, particularly with Cooley and Guenther generating rush chances, but it is not the same as dictating play. Vegas’s underlying metrics are the stronger foundation.
Goaltending
Carter Hart is the confirmed Vegas starter. He stopped 57 of 62 shots across the first 2 games but allowed a soft one in Game 2 on the deflection sequence. His .905 career save percentage and the 1.66 GAA over his final 6 regular season starts speak to elite recent form, though regression toward his career norms is a real possibility. Vejmelka carried 64 games this season with a .897 save percentage — solid but not elite — and has allowed 3 or more goals in 6 of his last 8 starts going back through the regular season. Neither goaltender provides strong reason to play the under; both invite goals when challenged.
Key Skaters
Jack Eichel is the central figure to watch. He has assisted on both Vegas goals from Stone and Barbashev in Game 2, recording a primary assist on each, but has not scored himself in 11 games stretching into the regular season — 54 shots, 17 high-danger chances, and just 5.6% shooting. He is generating the opportunities; his regression toward a normal finishing rate is a matter of when, not if. Logan Cooley has scored in both playoff games — the series-tying goal in Game 1 and the winner in Game 2 — and is the Mammoth’s most dangerous speed threat. Dylan Guenther had a goal and assist in Game 2 and is Utah’s best even-strength forward. Mark Stone has 2 goals in the series, including a power play marker in each game.
Team Performance & Metrics
| Metric | Vegas Golden Knights | Utah Mammoth | Betting Impact |
|---|---|---|---|
| Series 5-on-5 Control | 55.5% CF% | 44.5% CF% | Edge: Vegas |
| Series xG% | 52.8% xG | 47.2% xG | Edge: Vegas |
| Special Teams | 1 PP goal in Game 2, 14 PIM | Converting on chances | Risk for Vegas if undisciplined |
| Goaltending | Hart (.905 career SV%) | Vejmelka (.897 season SV%) | Slight edge Vegas, both trending to regression |
| Goal-Scoring Depth | Stone, Eichel, Barbashev, Marner | Guenther, Cooley, Schmaltz, Keller | Even — both rosters have punch |
| Home-Ice Context | Road game, first of series | First home playoff game ever | Utah crowd factor, uncertain impact |
Expect Vegas to tighten defensively and limit their penalty exposure. The most likely game script is a tight, physical game decided late — similar to Game 2 — with both teams generating quality chances. The 5-on-5 metrics back Vegas to generate the better opportunities, but Utah’s ability to convert on relatively few chances keeps the Mammoth dangerous even in games they don’t control.
Market & Odds Analysis
The moneyline is priced as nearly a pick’em: Vegas -111 to -112, Utah -108. The implied probabilities are roughly Vegas 52.6% and Utah 52%, which after the vig essentially splits the market 50/50. That is the correct pricing given the 5-on-5 edge for Vegas being partially offset by Utah’s home debut in the playoffs and the Mammoth’s demonstrated ability to win even when outplayed. There is no meaningful moneyline edge.
The total is set at 5.5. At -115 to -120 for the over, the implied probability of going over is around 53–55%. Given 11 goals in the first 2 games, 2 goalies trending toward regression, and Utah’s over tendency at home — 10 of their last 14 games went over — that line feels a touch low. The over has a small but real edge.
The puckline is not confirmed at time of writing but is expected to be Utah +1.5 as the home underdog at a significant price.
| Market | Odds |
|---|---|
| Moneyline — Vegas | -111 to -112 |
| Moneyline — Utah | -108 |
| Total | 5.5 (Over -115 to -120) |
| Puckline | Not confirmed at time of writing |
Key Edges
- Over 5.5 goals: Vejmelka’s recent form suggests vulnerability, Hart is due for regression from an unsustainably high save percentage, and 11 goals in 2 games establish the series pace.
- Eichel regression to the mean: He has 54 shots and 17 high-danger chances in 11 games without scoring — a positive regression event is increasingly likely and could unlock a Vegas offensive surge.
- Utah’s home over trend: 10 of their last 14 games went over — a meaningful directional signal when combined with goaltending vulnerability on both ends.
Risk Factors
- Playoff totals routinely trend lower than regular season averages due to defensive structure — 5.5 is already a below-average number.
- Vejmelka could replicate his Game 1 shutout performance, particularly in a juiced home environment — his best games this season have come at home.
- A 3-2 or 2-1 game is entirely plausible.
- Goaltender confirmation: Hart is expected but injury or late scratch would shift the calculus significantly.
- Utah crowd: This is the Mammoth’s first-ever home playoff game. Crowd energy is a genuine unknown variable.
Prediction & Verdict
- Best Bet: Over 5.5 goals
- Score Projection: Vegas 3 – Utah 4 or Vegas 4 – Utah 3
- Win Probability: Vegas 52% | Utah 48%
- Edge: Small
The moneyline is efficiently priced and there is no compelling reason to back either team outright with conviction. Vegas has been the better team structurally across 2 games but cannot close, and Utah has been the luckier team while playing in a system that does not demand they control play to win. Neither of those tendencies is going away tonight. The over is the cleaner angle — both goalies are showing signs of regression, the series total is already at 11 goals, and Utah’s home scoring environment has been consistently productive all season. A small play on the over is the sharpest angle in this game.
Final Score Prediction: Utah 4, Vegas 3
Find our daily NHL picks during the playoffs here at ATS.io

