Vegas may lead this series and have the experience and star power, but I’m not convinced they’re the better team overall, especially given how much trouble they’ve had entering the Utah zone.
Quick Pick Vegas vs. Utah
- Best Bet: Utah Mammoth Moneyline +145 to +160
- Confidence: 2.5 out of 5
- Win Probability: Utah 48% | Vegas 52%
- Best Value Angle: The market is pricing a comfortable Vegas edge, but Game 5 showed Utah can hold a lead deep into the third — and now they go home with a crowd that has twice generated genuine momentum shifts.
Why This Bet Has Value
The scoreline says VGK 3–2, but Game 5 was not a Vegas performance of dominance. Utah led for roughly the first 37 minutes of game time, controlled the third period after going down 3–2, and had the game in hand 4–3 with under 8 minutes left in regulation. Vegas survived on two things: a hat trick from Pavel Dorofeyev, including a 6-on-5 equalizer with 52.7 seconds left, and a short-handed overtime winner from Brett Howden off a Reilly Smith high-sticking call — a sequence that required two periods of extra time to resolve. That is a lot of variance stacking on itself. Utah played the better third period. Vegas found the net on a power play opportunity in a penalty-kill situation and on a desperate goalie pull. Those are real goals and they count, but the underlying control of the third frame did not favor Vegas.
Now the series shifts to Salt Lake City, where Utah went 4–2 in Game 3. The Mammoth are playing their first-ever playoff series and the Delta Center crowd has already proven itself a factor. Vegas is legitimately the better team on metrics across the series, but when the result of a back-to-back overtime game rides this heavily on clutch goalie pulls and shorthanded flukes, the market should not be pricing Utah as clear underdogs. Utah covers their spread at home more than you’d expect, and at +145 or better, there is marginal value on the Mammoth to extend the series.
That said, this is a low-confidence edge. Both teams are tired. Vegas is one win from advancing. Howden has now scored 2 shorthanded goals in consecutive games, which is the kind of hot streak that either repeats or regresses hard. The honest answer is this is close to a coin flip with a slight structural lean toward Utah at home.
Game Snapshot Vegas vs. Utah
- Matchup: Vegas Golden Knights at Utah Mammoth
- Date & Time: Friday, May 2, 2026 — 7:00 PM ET
- Venue: Delta Center, Salt Lake City
- Series Score: Vegas leads 3–2
- Broadcast: ESPN, Utah16, Vegas 34
Matchup Breakdown
Key Storylines
Utah faces elimination on home ice with a crowd that has been a genuine lift throughout this series. Vegas arrived here having survived back-to-back overtime games and considerable fatigue. John Tortorella has instilled a “never quit” identity in Vegas — legitimate, given the evidence — but two marathon OT games in 5 days will test any roster’s legs. Fatigue is not a narrative hook here; it is a concrete performance factor that the market may be underpricing on the Utah side.
What Happened Last Game
Utah scored first through John Marino and led for the majority of the first half of the game. The Mammoth controlled the third period, erasing a Vegas lead with goals from Dylan Guenther and Michael Carcone on odd-man rushes to go up 4–3. Vegas tied it through a Dorofeyev 6-on-5 goal with 52.7 seconds remaining. In double overtime, with Vegas on the power play after a Reilly Smith high stick, Howden won a puck battle in the right circle and snapped home the shorthanded winner. Vegas outshot Utah 36–38, so shots were essentially even. The key issue at even strength: Utah had 31 shots to Vegas’s 30 at 5-on-5, meaning neither team dominated possession. Vegas won the game on special teams variance and two goalies who both made and missed key saves. Carter Hart stopped 34 of 38 shots. Karel Vejmelka stopped 31 of 36.
What Changed
The series moves back to Salt Lake City. Venue is the single clearest structural change. Utah’s home crowd has demonstrably impacted momentum in this series, and the Delta Center environment for an elimination game will generate an atmosphere Vegas has not experienced in this building. On the ice, both coaches will need to manage fatigue from back-to-back overtime games. Tortorella will likely stay with Howden on the first line given his production, while Tomas Hertl continues to see reduced minutes. JJ Peterka’s role remains uncertain after being benched in Game 4. No reported injuries on either side beyond what is known.
Recent Form
Within this series, Utah has won both home games — Game 3 by 4–2 and the series is now returning to Salt Lake City for the third time. Vegas has won both games at T-Mobile Arena plus Game 5. Every game this series has been decided by 2 goals or fewer, and 3 of 5 have required overtime. The pattern of this series is that neither team dominates — it has been decided by special teams moments and individual brilliance rather than systematic control.
Goaltending
Carter Hart is expected to start for Vegas. He finished Game 5 with 34 saves on 38 shots, his most tested game of the series and arguably his best performance. His SV% across the series has been uneven — he was carved up in Game 3 despite facing only 12 shots, converting 4 into goals. Hart appears sharper in Vegas than on the road this series. Karel Vejmelka is expected to continue in net for Utah. He stopped 31 of 36 shots in Game 5 and has now faced 36 or more shots in multiple appearances. His .899 series SV% looks concerning in isolation, but the shot volume against — Vegas is averaging 30+ SOG per game — creates context. Vejmelka has been asked to carry more of the load than Hart. Both netminders are capable of winning this game and both have shown vulnerability.
Key Skaters
Pavel Dorofeyev had a playoff hat trick in Game 5, completing it on a 6-on-5 goal. He is running hot and should be watched in any scenario where this game is close late. Shea Theodore has been increasingly effective, contributing both goals and defensive structure — his 2 overtime winners in the series are repeatable only if the defense holds assignment well. For Utah, Clayton Keller leads the series in points with a multi-assist game 5. Dylan Guenther continues to generate volume, scoring a goal in Game 5 off a rush play. Lawson Crouse also scored and has been the Mammoth’s most physical presence, logging heavy minutes in every game.
Team Performance & Metrics
| Metric | Utah Mammoth | Vegas Golden Knights | Betting Impact |
|---|---|---|---|
| Game 5 5v5 shots | 31 | 30 | Even |
| Series HD chances (ES) | 27 | 43 | VGK edge |
| Special Teams — Game 5 | 0-for-5 PP; 1 SHG allowed | 1-for-5 PP; 2 SHG scored | VGK edge |
| Goaltending | Vejmelka .899 SV% series | Hart .916 SV% series (per reports) | Slight VGK edge |
| Home-ice factor | 2-0 at Delta Center this series | 2-1 at T-Mobile Arena | UTA edge |
Vegas has been the better team in high-danger metrics across the full series, but results have not reflected that edge because Hart has been inconsistent at 5v5 save percentage, while the Mammoth have been clutch on the road. Game 5’s third period demonstrated that Utah can impose tempo and create structure even while trailing. The expected game script here is a competitive, low-margin contest similar to every other game in this series, with the result likely turning on goaltending or a single special teams moment.
Market & Odds Analysis
Game 5 odds for Utah were in the +135 to +140 range on the road. For Game 6 at home, Utah should be priced shorter — the host team in a series-deciding game returning to a building where they are 2-0 should theoretically command similar or shorter underdog odds. If books open Utah in the +145 to +160 range, that represents a mild value window. Vegas at -165 or shorter implies roughly a 62% win probability. Given the series evidence — 3 of 5 decided in OT, Utah winning both home games, no systematic Vegas dominance at 5v5 in Game 5 — a truer probability is closer to 52–55% for Vegas. That gap is not enormous, but it is real and consistent with the series data.
| Market | Estimated Odds |
|---|---|
| Moneyline — Utah | +145 to +160 |
| Moneyline — Vegas | -175 to -190 |
| Total | Series average is 6.4 goals/game — expect 6.0 line |
| Puckline — Utah +1.5 | -175 to -200 |
Key Edges
- Utah is 2-0 at Delta Center this series — the only consistent home-ice pattern in a series where road teams have also won.
- Game 5’s third period was controlled by Utah despite a deficit — the losing team in regulation outplayed their opponent and nearly won. That repeatable effort matters when evaluating closing-game price.
- Vegas’s 2 SHG in Games 4 and 5 are extremely low-probability events. If that regresses in Game 6, the special teams picture looks much more even.
- Back-to-back overtime fatigue affects both teams equally, but Utah’s crowd will be a factor in offsetting the emotional toll of a near-miss in Game 5.
Risk Factors
- Vegas leads the series high-danger chance battle significantly: 43 to 27 at even strength across 5 games. The underlying structure still favors the Golden Knights.
- Elimination-game experience heavily favors Vegas — a core that won the Stanley Cup in 2023 and a coach in Tortorella who has drilled a never-quit identity into this group.
- Vejmelka’s .899 SV% means Utah has been partially lucky to be alive in this series — any regression in his performance ends the game quickly.
- Howden’s SHG streak and Dorofeyev’s hat-trick form are hot-hand momentum factors that are difficult to predict but cannot be dismissed.
Prediction & Verdict: Vegas vs. Utah
- Best Bet: Utah Mammoth Moneyline — small unit, value play only if +145 or better
- Win Probability: Utah 48% | Vegas 52%
- Edge: Small
Utah plays an elimination game at home in front of a crowd that has already helped produce 2 series wins. Vegas is the superior team on advanced metrics and carries the structural advantage of a 3–2 series lead, but the gap between these teams in this series is not the gap implied by a heavy Vegas moneyline. The repeatable factors — home ice, crowd, Utah’s demonstrated ability to hold leads and create third-period chances — are worth a small-unit play on the Mammoth to force Game 7.
This is not a strong edge play. It is a situational value bet where the price exceeds the true probability by enough to justify a small position. If Utah is priced closer to +120, there is no edge and the right call is to pass.
Final Score Prediction: Utah 4 — Vegas 3
On Friday night, Tampa Bay and Montreal play Game 6, while Buffalo and Boston do the same.

