Skip to content

Mikko Rantanen’s hat trick dooms Avalanche in brutal Game 7 loss

Rantanen had 11 points in the final three games of the series

The Dallas Stars celebrate after Mikko Rantanen, laying against boards at rear, scored against the Colorado Avalanche's Mackenzie Blackwood (39) in the third period in Game 7 of a first-round NHL hockey playoff series Saturday, May 3, 2025, in Dallas. (AP Photo/Julio Cortez)
The Dallas Stars celebrate after Mikko Rantanen, laying against boards at rear, scored against the Colorado Avalanche’s Mackenzie Blackwood (39) in the third period in Game 7 of a first-round NHL hockey playoff series Saturday, May 3, 2025, in Dallas. (AP Photo/Julio Cortez)
DENVER, CO - SEPTEMBER 25: Denver Post Avalanche writer Corey Masisak. (Photo By Patrick Traylor/The Denver Post)
UPDATED:

DALLAS — The Colorado Avalanche was less than 13 minutes away from exorcising some playoff demons.

An old friend created a new one.

Mikko Rantanen dragged the Dallas Stars back from a two-goal deficit in the final period, and a late Wyatt Johnston tally finished off one of the biggest collapses in Colorado franchise history, a 4-2 loss in Game 7 of this Stanley Cup Playoffs series Saturday night at American Airlines Center.

Rantanen finished a hat trick with an empty-goal and added an assist in the third period. It was the third Game 7 hat trick in NHL history, and the first scored entirely in the third period.

“It’s pretty shocking,” Avs star Nathan MacKinnon said. “Felt like we were in total control and then Mikko, credit to him, he made some amazing plays. He was a difference maker and he took over. I don’t know. I’m in shock to be honest with you. Felt like we were in complete control of the game the whole time and just lost it.”

When asked if this was the most shocking or disappointing loss in his career, MacKinnon quickly responded with one word.

“Definitely.”

Rantanen and fellow ex-Avs forward Matt Duchene set up Johnston’s series-winner, which came with 3:56 remaining and 17 seconds after Jack Drury went to the penalty box for hauling down Tyler Seguin near the Avalanche net.

Avalanche-Stars Game 7 slapshots: Mikko Rantanen sticks in the dagger with hat trick for the ages

For nearly two and a half periods, the Avalanche had put up a defensive wall. Rantanen busted it down with two great individual efforts.

Rantanen, whom Colorado traded to Carolina in late January in one of the most stunning NHL trades of the past two decades before the Hurricanes flipped him to Dallas six weeks later, stared the comeback with 12:11 remaining in the third period.

Then the guy who had 34 goals and 101 points in 81 career playoff games in an Avalanche uniform tied this contest at 2-2 with 6:11 remaining. It came at the end of a Stars power play, with Cale Makar in the box. Rantanen attempted a wraparound shot, and it went off Samuel Girard and into the net.

Makar had broken his stick on a one-timer attempt at one end, then was called for tripping Roope Hintz at the other.

"Just trying to defend. Didn't think he was going to cut that close to me when I slid," Makar said. "I think I got the puck with my foot, but guess they called tripping anyways. Yeah, just can’t catch any luck. Of course the stick breaks there. So yeah, really tough."

Rantanen tied an NHL playoff record with four points in the second period of Game 6, and then did it again in consecutive contests.

The last time these two teams played a Game 7 in this city, 8-year-old Josh Manson was in the building at Reunion Arena. His father, Dave, was a rugged defenseman for the Stars and his team held off a late rally by the Avalanche in a 3-2 victory to advance to the 2000 Stanley Cup Final.

Manson scored what at the time felt like the biggest goal of his life midway through the second period. For the second time in this series, Logan O'Connor created a massive shorthanded goal.

Hintz entered the Colorado zone and tried to connect with Rantanen near the right point. O'Connor deflected the puck into the neutral zone, then punched it forward again into the Dallas end and outraced Thomas Harley to it. O'Connor stopped, turned and snapped a pass to Manson cutting to the net.

His shot went off the right post, but bounced off the back of Jake Oettinger and into the net.

MacKinnon scored the first Game 7 goal of his career to make it a 2-0 lead. MacKinnon came off the bench as an extra attacker during a delayed penalty on the Stars. Ryan Lindgren had the puck at the left point and gave it to his hard-charging teammate.

MacKinnon went around Johnston in the left faceoff circle and flipped a quick shot between Oettinger and the near post just 31 seconds into the third period.

Dallas coach Peter DeBoer is now 9-0 in his career in Game 7s, which is the most by a coach or player in NHL history. He is also 4-0 in series against Jared Bednar and the Avalanche, winning with three different teams (San Jose, Vegas and now twice with Dallas).

The Stars defeated the Avalanche in seven games during the 2020 playoffs inside the NHL’s “Covid bubble” in Edmonton. Current Avs forward Joel Kiviranta scored the winner, completing the second Game 7 hat trick in league history.

Dallas knocked Colorado out last season, with Duchene scoring the series-ending goal in overtime of Game 6.

Each of the previous two postseasons ended with a loss on home ice, but also with a locomotive-sized hole in the lineup because Valeri Nichushkin had left the team in the middle of the series. There’s no obvious excuse to fall back on this time.

The Avs were the healthier team for the entire series. Two of Dallas’ best players, No. 1 defenseman Miro Heiskanen and goal-scoring leader Jason Robertson, did not play at any point. Colorado enjoyed the triumphant, emotional return of captain Gabe Landeskog after nearly three years away, and his on-ice play has been beyond anyone’s wildest expectations.

Just like a year ago, a longer-than-expected offseason has arrived. Landeskog’s recovery removes one captain-sized question that has dominated the past couple of offseasons. There are plenty of other hard questions, and the answers may not be easy to find.

There were four unrestricted free agents in the lineup Saturday night, led by No. 2 center Brock Nelson. Beyond who re-signs or who replaces the departed players, a different question will loom over everything: How does this franchise find its way back to the top of the mountain, given all that it’s tried (and traded) in recent years to match its magical 2022 run?

Not to mention how to recover from such a stunning defeat.

"Yeah, it’s tough," Landeskog said. "I don’t know where to start, to be honest. It sucks … It sucks."

Want more Avalanche news? Sign up for the Avalanche Insider to get all our NHL analysis.

Originally Published:

RevContent Feed