The Vegas vs. Utah series continues with another game in Salt Lake City. The main topic of discussion is, of course, how Utah managed to score four goals on just 12 shots in Game 3. Not a good look for Carter Hart in the Vegas net, posting only a 66.7% save percentage.
This likely won’t be the case in Game 4. But the fact remains that Utah has the hotter goalie, while Vegas does not.
Quick Pick Vegas vs. Utah
- Best Bet: Utah Mammoth ML (+100)
- Confidence: ★★★☆☆ 3 out of 5
- Win Probability: Utah 50% | Vegas 50%
- Best Value Angle: Utah at even money is a live dog getting a free square on home ice with the series lead, a consistent goaltender, and a Vegas power play that has gone 0-for-5 across the last 2 games combined.

Why This Bet Has Value
The honest framing here requires acknowledging what the data says: Vegas controlled Game 3 territorially, and the expected goals gap was significant. That is real and it cannot be dismissed. But results in hockey are not settled by expected goals, and the factors that caused Utah to win Game 3 are not all flukes. Their penalty kill was 4-for-4 across Games 2 and 3 combined. Vejmelka is playing the best hockey of his career. And at +100, the market is essentially calling this a coin flip — meaning Utah’s home ice, series lead, and structural advantages in net are being priced at zero premium.
That is where the value lives. Not in a claim that Utah is the better team, but in the argument that a consistent goaltender at home in a must-not-lose game for the opponent, at even money, is a line worth taking. Vegas’s top 6 has been largely invisible across 3 games. If Vejmelka holds and the Golden Knights power play remains broken, Utah does not need to outshoot Vegas to win. They have already proven that twice.
Game Snapshot Vegas vs. Utah
- Matchup: Vegas Golden Knights at Utah Mammoth
- Date & Time: April 27, 2026, 9:30 PM ET
- Venue: Delta Center, Salt Lake City
- Broadcast: ESPN, Scripps Sports, Utah16
- Series Score: 2-1 Utah
Matchup Breakdown
Key Storylines
Utah enters Game 4 in a position no one outside Salt Lake City expected when this series began. The Mammoth, in just their second season of existence, have taken a 2-1 series lead against the Pacific Division champions by doing something consistently difficult to defend: playing disciplined, connected team defense and letting their goaltender be great. A win tonight would put Utah one victory away from a first-round exit that would reshape how the league values this roster. For Vegas, the urgency is obvious. They have never trailed 3-1 in a playoff series and survived. For Utah, this is the chance to make a statement and close it out at home.
What Happened Last Game
Vegas dominated the shot sheet in Game 3 and lost 4-2. The expected goals favored Vegas heavily, and Carter Hart had a genuinely bad night, conceding 4 goals on 12 shots. That much is true and acknowledged. But it is equally true that Utah’s penalty kill was flawless, going 4-for-4 on the night to neutralize Vegas’s best weapon — their power play, which had been one of the league’s most dangerous units during the regular season. Utah did not need to outshoot Vegas. They needed to survive Vegas’s shot volume, score on their limited chances, and strangle every power play opportunity. That is exactly what happened, and it was not entirely accidental. Vejmelka was exceptional, but the structure in front of him was disciplined enough to limit Vegas’s best looks even when they controlled zone time.
What Changed
Utah’s Game 3 adjustments were deliberate. Their penalty kill, which was a liability at points during the regular season, has tightened significantly in this series. Coach André Tourigny has deployed Keller and Cooley in high-leverage defensive situations, and their speed on PK exits has disrupted Vegas’s power play rhythm. The underlying shot share remains in Vegas’s favor — that has not changed — but Utah’s ability to limit high-danger looks within that volume is what separates a 12-shot game from a 12-shot loss. Vejmelka’s lateral quickness and his comfort in high-event environments means Utah can absorb pressure without cracking.
Series Form
Utah has won 2 consecutive games after dropping Game 1. Both wins came in different ways — Game 2 was a competitive 3-2 decision where Utah earned the result, and Game 3 was a goaltending-and-structure performance that masked significant territorial disadvantage. The important point for Game 4 is that Utah has shown 2 distinct ways to win in this series. They do not need to replicate Game 3 exactly. They need Vejmelka to be himself and their forwards to convert on the limited quality chances they generate.
Goaltending
This is Utah’s clearest structural edge and the primary reason the moneyline at +100 has value. Vejmelka led the NHL in starts this season with 64 and posted 38 wins. He has been the more reliable goaltender wire-to-wire in this series. His known vulnerabilities — high blocker, low glove side, and rebound management — are real, but he has managed them effectively against Vegas’s volume attack. Hart, by contrast, is operating on an 18-game sample after a lengthy injury absence. His Game 1 performance was elite; his Game 3 performance was the opposite. That variance is not a narrative — it is a measurable function of small sample size, and it introduces genuine uncertainty that Vejmelka’s side simply does not carry to the same degree.
Key Skaters
Logan Cooley has been Utah’s best player in this series. The 21-year-old scored the series-clinching goal in Game 2 and has been dangerous at 5-on-5 in every game. Dylan Guenther led Utah with 4 shots in Game 3 and converted the power play goal that gave Utah a 3-0 lead and effectively ended the contest. Clayton Keller drives the power play and the 5-on-5 structure — his activation in the offensive zone is the engine behind Utah’s offense. On the Vegas side, Jack Eichel remains the only consistent offensive threat. Marner, Hertl, and Dorofeyev have combined for minimal impact across the series. That top-6 drought is now a series-long pattern, not a single-game blip, and it materially limits Vegas’s ceiling even when they control the puck.
Team Performance & Metrics
| Metric | Utah | Vegas | Betting Impact |
|---|---|---|---|
| Game 3 Shots on Goal | 12 | 32 | Vegas edge |
| Game 3 Expected Goals | 1.72 | 3.77 | Vegas edge |
| Series PK (Games 2–3) | 4-for-4 | 1-for-8 | Utah Edge |
| Goaltending Consistency | Vejmelka — reliable | Hart — volatile | Utah Edge |
| Top-6 Forward Output | Cooley/Keller active | Marner/Hertl invisible | Utah Edge |
| Home Ice | Delta Center, Game 4 | Road | Utah Edge |
The expected game script favors Vegas in terms of shot volume. That is a repeatable truth from this series. The counterargument Utah bettors are making is that Vejmelka absorbs that volume better than the expected goals model predicts, and that Utah’s efficiency in converting their limited chances — combined with a broken Vegas power play — produces enough goals to win. It has worked in 2 of 3 games. The question is whether it works a third time.
Market & Odds Analysis
Utah at +100 implies exactly 50% probability from the market’s perspective. Vegas is priced at -120, implying roughly 55%. The gap between those two numbers — 5 percentage points — is where the value conversation lives. If you believe Utah’s home advantage, Vejmelka’s reliability, and Vegas’s broken power play combine to make Utah a true 50-50 proposition, then +100 is a flat fair bet. If you believe those factors push Utah marginally above 50%, then +100 is genuinely plus-EV.
The market is not overreacting to Game 3 in Utah’s favor — if anything, it’s appropriately skeptical that Utah’s process was good enough to deserve the result. Vegas’s xG dominance is being respected in the line. What the line may be underweighting is the cumulative evidence that Vegas’s top 6 cannot convert even with extended territorial control, and that Hart’s variance is a real variable the market is treating as already resolved.
| Market | Odds |
|---|---|
| Moneyline (Utah) | +100 |
| Moneyline (Vegas) | -120 |
| Total | 5.5 (Over -128 / Under +104) |
| Puckline (Utah -1.5) | -265 |
Key Edges Vegas vs. Utah
- Utah at +100 is even money on a team with the series lead, home ice, and the more consistent goaltender — the market is offering no premium for those structural advantages.
- Vegas’s power play has gone 1-for-8 across the last 2 games combined. That drought is long enough to qualify as a series-level trend rather than variance.
- Vejmelka has been the more reliable of the 2 goaltenders across all 3 games — his floor is higher than Hart’s, and in a low-shot game for Utah, his ceiling may be all that is needed.
- Vegas’s top-6 production drought (Marner, Hertl, Dorofeyev largely invisible across 3 games) limits their ability to convert territorial dominance into goals, regardless of shot volume.
Risk Factors
- Vegas’s expected goals advantage in Game 3 was substantial (3.77 to 1.72) — a regression toward a result that reflects that gap is the single biggest risk to the Utah bet.
- Carter Hart at his Game 1 level (.939 SV%) makes Vegas nearly unbeatable regardless of Utah’s structure — his ceiling is higher than Vejmelka’s in a single-game burst.
- Utah’s 12 shots on goal in Game 3 is dangerously low — they cannot afford another game at that volume if Hart is sharp, even with Vejmelka playing well.
- Vegas’s desperation factor is real — a team down 3-1 in the first round faces organizational consequences, and Tortorella’s system tends to produce its sharpest hockey in high-stakes moments.
- No confirmed goaltender start for Game 4 — any change in net on the Vegas side would require reassessment.
Prediction & Verdict Vegas vs Utah
- Best Bet: Utah Mammoth ML (+100) — small unit
- Win Probability: Utah 50% | Vegas 50%
- Edge: Small — market-efficient, value driven by structural factors
Utah at even money is the bet. We can’t disregard Vegas’ xG 3.77 last game, but Hart letting in 4 goals on 12 shots and Vejmelka saves 30 shots paints a decent picture.
The Knights are not in a 2-1 hole because they have been outplayed — they are there because a broken power play and a volatile goaltender have erased the advantage their 5-on-5 dominance built. That can change in a single game, and it likely will at some point in this series.
The argument for Utah is narrower but real: Vejmelka has been more consistent than Hart across 3 games, the power play drought is long enough to bet against for one more night, and +100 on a home team with the series lead is simply not a price that demands you bet Vegas. Take Utah at even money, keep the unit small, and acknowledge that this is a lean on structural factors rather than a dominant process edge.
Final Score Prediction: Utah 3, Vegas 2
Earlier this evening the Flyers are playing the Penguins in Pittsburgh.

