Hellebuyck records league-leading sixth shutout in 3-0 win over Avalanche

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This was precisely why Scott Arniel decided to change things up and save Connor Hellebuyck for this battle of Central Division heavyweights.

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Hey there, time traveller!
This article was published 11/01/2025 (243 days ago), so information in it may no longer be current.

This was precisely why Scott Arniel decided to change things up and save Connor Hellebuyck for this battle of Central Division heavyweights.

After backup Eric Comrie helped the Winnipeg Jets get to overtime and salvage a point against the Los Angeles Kings on Friday, Hellebuyck stood tall and made 22 saves to record his league-leading sixth shutout of the season in what was a 3-0 victory over the Colorado Avalanche on Saturday before a crowd of 14,782 at Canada Life Centre.

Hellebuyck was at his big and boring best, but also benefitted from an incredibly impressive defensive effort in front of him.

“He had an easy night,” said Arniel, who was smiling but quickly got serious.

“No. Never, ever discredit a guy that gets a shutout. I mean he had to make stops. He knew that they were trying to get their (shot) volume. And that’s another thing we did a really good job of, was get in shot lanes. We did a really good job of making sure that not all those pucks got to the net front.

“But when stuff happens, he’s there.”

Winnipeg Jets goaltender Connor Hellebuyck keeps his eye on the puck as Dylan DeMelo (2) ties up Colorado Avalanche’s Ross Colton (20) in the third period at Canada Life Centre in Winnipeg on Saturday. (John Woods / The Canadian Press)

Winnipeg Jets goaltender Connor Hellebuyck keeps his eye on the puck as Dylan DeMelo (2) ties up Colorado Avalanche’s Ross Colton (20) in the third period at Canada Life Centre in Winnipeg on Saturday. (John Woods / The Canadian Press)

The commitment to structure, puck management and attention to detail was among the best we’ve seen all season long as the Jets took a 2-1 lead in the four-game season series — with the final meeting scheduled for Jan. 22 in Denver.

It was the fifth time this season that the Jets have played games on consecutive days, but the first time travel was not involved and the first time Arniel changed the goalie order.

After going 4-0 in the front end of those games, the Jets dropped four consecutive outings on the tail end.

Hellebuyck, who was celebrated on Friday for hitting the goalie triple crown of 500 games, 300 wins and 40 shutouts, is on a nonsensical heater against the Avalanche in the regular season — blanking them on three consecutive occasions during the past two seasons.

“Yeah, he’s been fantastic all year. And not just this year, for me he’s been one of the top guys in the league for a while,” said Avalanche head coach Jared Bednar.

“That is earned. It’s consistency over time, giving your team a chance to win.”

With the win, the Jets extended their lead over the Avalanche in the Central Division to eight points.

Dylan DeMelo (right) checks Avalanche’s Casey Mittelstadt (37) in the first period in Winnipeg on Saturday evening. (John Woods / The Canadian Press)

Dylan DeMelo (right) checks Avalanche’s Casey Mittelstadt (37) in the first period in Winnipeg on Saturday evening. (John Woods / The Canadian Press)

The Jets, who improved to 29-12-3 for the season, are back in action on Tuesday against the Vancouver Canucks as they continue an eight-game homestand.

The Jets have collected six of a possible 10 points so far.

Let’s take a closer look at what transpired in this one:

THE ERASER

Arniel was treating this latest Jets vs Avalanche battle as if it was a playoff game, complete with altering two of his lines after the pre-game warmup.

With Vladislav Namestnikov out after blocking a shot in the third period of Friday’s game against the Los Angeles Kings, Jets captain Adam Lowry moved up onto the second line with Nikolaj Ehlers and Alex Iafallo, while Rasmus Kupari got a promotion to the third line with Nino Niederreiter and Cole Perfetti.

Not only did Ehlers score a goal to open the scoring, the Lowry line handled plenty of the heavy minutes against the Avalanche top line of Nathan MacKinnon, Mikko Rantanen and Jonathan Drouin — and held them in check.

Adam Lowry (17), Nikolaj Ehlers (27), Alex Iafallo (9) and Dylan Coghlan (52) celebrate Ehlers’ goal against the Avalanche in the first period Saturday evening in Winnipeg. (John Woods / The Canadian Press)

Adam Lowry (17), Nikolaj Ehlers (27), Alex Iafallo (9) and Dylan Coghlan (52) celebrate Ehlers’ goal against the Avalanche in the first period Saturday evening in Winnipeg. (John Woods / The Canadian Press)

“Yeah, of course,” said Ehlers, who is up to 14 goals after adding an empty-netter with 57 seconds to go in regulation.

“But you know, they’re really good players, too. When they buzz, they buzz. But like I said, I think you can see that I enjoyed that challenge and I tried to do my best not to give up anything. And we worked as a line not to give them anything. I loved it.”

Arniel liked the way Ehlers handled the additional responsibility and had him thinking about future permutations and combinations.

“He knew he was going against the MacKinnon line and he took a lot of pride in that, in making sure he did his part to keep those guys off the scoresheet,” said Arniel.

“It’s intriguing now. It’s got me thinking. I liked a lot of what I saw.

THE ERASER PART II

It’s a five-man job every time MacKinnon steps onto the ice and Arniel chose to lean on the defence pairing of Dylan Samberg and Neal Pionk to handle a good chunk of the job — with Josh Morrissey and Dylan DeMelo providing some support as well.

Samberg had another strong showing in what was just his second game back from a broken foot he sustained while blocking a slapshot from Nashville Predators forward Steven Stamkos back on Nov. 23.

It’s not difficult to quantify the boost that Samberg provided to the defence corps as a whole and to Pionk, who has cycled through a revolving door of defence partners during the past seven weeks.

Samberg had three shots on goal, a hit and three more blocked shots and also chipped in an assist on the Ehlers goal that gave the Jets a 1-0 lead early in the first period, though he was quick to downplay his contribution — a calm cross-ice zone exit.

Dylan Samberg celebrates Nikolaj Ehlers' (not shown) goal against Colorado's Mackenzie Blackwood during the first period. Samberg assisted on the goal. (John Woods / The Canadian Press)
Dylan Samberg celebrates Nikolaj Ehlers' (not shown) goal against Colorado's Mackenzie Blackwood during the first period. Samberg assisted on the goal. (John Woods / The Canadian Press)

“I didn’t do a whole lot, to be honest,” said Samberg. “Just get the puck to the right players, let them do their magic. That’s pretty much what it was.”

Samberg was north of 23 minutes of ice time — including plenty of taxing minutes — in each of the two games played on consecutive days.

“It actually feels pretty good. I’m just a little tired,” said Samberg.

“I’m ready to take a nice long nap. It was fine. Good to get back out there.”

THE PASS(ES)

In order to extend the lead late in the second period, the Jets completed a series of smart passes in the offensive zone.

The first saw Jets Morrissey find Kyle Connor in the slot with a nifty saucer pass.

With a pair of Avalanche defenders applying pressure on Connor, he noticed Mark Scheifele all alone on the backdoor and ensured that his pass found him — when most thought he might be trying to get a shot of his own off.

Mark Scheifele (55) and Kyle Connor (81) celebrate Scheifele’s goal against the Avalanche during the second period.  Scheifele now has 50 points on the season. (John Woods / The Canadian Press)

Mark Scheifele (55) and Kyle Connor (81) celebrate Scheifele’s goal against the Avalanche during the second period. Scheifele now has 50 points on the season. (John Woods / The Canadian Press)

For Scheifele, it was his team-leading 25th goal and moved him to 50 points for the season — joining Connor — who has 23 goals and 55 points in 44 games.

Scheifele also moved into a tie for 2nd in the NHL in goals, trailing only Leon Draisaitl of the Edmonton Oilers.

THE KEY PLAY

Nikolaj Ehlers set the tone by taking a pass from Dylan Samberg, accelerating through the neutral zone and ripping a shot past Mackenzie Blackwood 72 seconds into the contest.

THE THREE STARS

  1. Connor Hellebuyck, Jets, 22 saves for his league-leading sixth shutout of the season.
  2. Nikolaj Ehlers, Jets. Two goals, three shots on goal, three hits, two blocked shots
  3. Dylan Samberg, Jets. One assist, team-leading 24:47 of ice time.

EXTRA, EXTRA

Jets defenceman Logan Stanley left the game with 5:29 to go in the first period after taking a puck in the face. He returned to start the second and finished the game with 12:43 of ice time on the third pairing with Dylan Coghlan.

Logan Stanley (64) takes a puck to the face in the first period. (John Woods / The Canadian Press)

Logan Stanley (64) takes a puck to the face in the first period. (John Woods / The Canadian Press)

With Namestnikov scratched with a lower-body issue and officially listed as day-to-day, Dominic Toninato suited up for the Jets for the first time this season. In what was the 185th NHL game of Toninato’s career, he took 13 shifts for eight minutes and 20 seconds of ice time, including 1:27 while shorthanded.

According to Natural Stat Trick, the Jets held a decisive 14-3 edge in high-danger chances at five-on-five.

ken.wiebe@freepress.mb.ca

X and Bluesky: @WiebesWorld

Ken Wiebe

Ken Wiebe
Reporter

Ken Wiebe is a sports reporter for the Free Press, with an emphasis on the Winnipeg Jets. He has covered hockey and provided analysis in this market since 2000 for the Winnipeg Sun, The Athletic, Sportsnet.ca and TSN. Ken was a summer intern at the Free Press in 1999 and returned to the Free Press in a full-time capacity in September of 2023. Read more about Ken.

Every piece of reporting Ken produces is reviewed by an editing team before it is posted online or published in print — part of the Free Press‘s tradition, since 1872, of producing reliable independent journalism. Read more about Free Press’s history and mandate, and learn how our newsroom operates.

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