The Utah Mammoth are proving they belong among the NHL’s elite after outplaying Vegas again and seizing control of their first-round series.
For three games now, the Utah Mammoth have done more than survive against a heavyweight contender — they have gone stride for stride with one of the NHL’s most decorated rosters and, at times, looked like the better team.
Vegas arrived in this series carrying the aura of a championship-caliber franchise and a lineup packed with proven names. Jack Eichel centered Team USA’s top line in the Olympic final just two months ago. Mark Stone and Mitch Marner skated for Team Canada. Shea Theodore and Noah Hanifin logged major international minutes on the blue line. On paper, few teams looked more formidable entering the postseason.
Yet it has been Utah’s younger, less celebrated core that has dictated large stretches of this matchup.
The Mammoth seized control of the series Friday night with a convincing 4-2 win in front of a thunderous home crowd witnessing its first Stanley Cup Playoff game. With the victory, Utah moved ahead 2-1 in the series and delivered another statement against an opponent many expected to control the matchup.
It had been four years since MacKenzie Weegar played in a home playoff game, and he wasted little time making up for it. Early in the opening period, the veteran defenseman blasted a slapshot that ricocheted off Carter Hart’s mask and into the net, igniting the arena and handing Utah an immediate surge.
The atmosphere only intensified from there.
Dylan Guenther, still just 23, delivered the night’s most electric finish with another blistering strike. After scoring 40 goals in the regular season, the winger has seamlessly carried that scoring touch into the playoffs, producing dangerous chances and timely goals in consecutive games.
For a player making his postseason debut, Guenther has looked remarkably composed. He recorded Utah’s first multi-point playoff outing in Game 2, then followed it with the franchise’s first playoff power-play goal in Game 3.
Utah’s veteran leadership also answered the moment. Lawson Crouse scored twice, while captain Clayton Keller orchestrated the attack with two assists and constant pressure. For a franchise still building its identity, those were foundational performances from cornerstone players.
Utah stormed to a 4-0 lead with two goals in the first period and two more in the second, stunning a Vegas club accustomed to controlling games of this magnitude.
The Golden Knights pushed back over the final half of the contest, scoring twice and piling up shots in an effort to tilt momentum. Vegas finished with a 32-12 edge in shots on goal, but the numbers did not tell the full story. Utah was sharper, more opportunistic, and far more dangerous with the chances it created.
That distinction mattered.
The Mammoth defended with commitment, blocked lanes, won battles, and made their opportunities count. It was less about volume and more about execution.
There will be those who frame this as a temporary swing — a hot shooting night, an emotional crowd, a brief surge that will fade as the series continues.
But three games in, that explanation is getting harder to sell.
Utah’s top players are creating offense. Its veterans are steadying tense moments. Its young talent looks unfazed by the stage. And its belief appears to be growing by the shift.
Head coach André Tourigny pointed afterward to the international experience many of his young players already possess. Guenther has delivered on big stages before. Logan Cooley helped Team USA capture gold at the World Championships. Keller represented his country at the Olympics. The names may be young, but the moments are not new to them.
Friday night felt significant not simply because Utah won, but because of how it won.
This did not look like a franchise happy to be invited to the postseason. It looked like one prepared to stay.
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Source: Utah News
