Avalanche perfect start ends with a dud against Penguins

PITTSBURGH — There were plenty of individual moments Thursday night that could accurately sum up the Colorado Avalanche’s first dud of the 2023-24 season, but let’s go with the Pittsburgh Penguins’ third goal of the evening.

The Avalanche, uncharacteristically sloppy with the puck and sluggish from the opening faceoff, turned it over in the neutral zone, which ignited one of several odd-man rushes for the home team. Defenseman Josh Manson hustled back to deftly break up a cross-ice pass and temporarily disarm the threat.

But then he tried to handle the puck instead of just sweeping it out of danger, Radim Zahorna knocked it away from him into the slot and Lars Eller was there for a tap-in and one of the easier goals he’s ever going to score with a goaltender on the ice.

That was Pittsburgh’s third goal en route to a 4-0 victory at PPG Paints Arena, ending Colorado’s perfect start to the season and its NHL-record 15-game regular-season road winning streak that dated back to last year.

“We just turned the puck over,” Avs forward Andrew Cogliano said. “The biggest part of our game plan tonight was to not turn the puck over and every chance we gave them was off turnovers. We were chasing the puck after making bad decisions, and ultimately against a team like this, that’s what happens. You lose.”

There were plenty of other similar moments in this one. The power play had four chances in the opening 40 minutes, including a four-minute man advantage late in the second period. Colorado had one great chance, but Pittsburgh goalie Tristan Jarry robbed a snake-bitten Jonathan Drouin in the slot. That there was only one great chance in eight minutes of power-play time was the larger issue.

The first period looked very sluggish compared to the first six games of this season. Avalanche players tried to force the puck into situations, either by skating it or passing it, that proved to be the wrong play. It was a cornucopia of miscommunications, bad ideas, a team-wide lack of energy or, at times, a combination of all three.

“We knew something was going to happen at some point. You’re going to get punched in the face,” Avs defenseman Cale Makar said. “It just didn’t seem like we really had our legs. Nothing was coordinated, myself included. I felt like it was a lot of turnovers. I feel like I tried to settle the puck like eight times. It was one of those nights where everybody was off sync. That’s going to happen. For us, it’s just about how quickly we can bring it back together.”

There have been short stretches during the 6-0 start where coach Jared Bednar noted some stubborn play or poor decisions, but this felt more like a “anything that can go wrong did” kind of night.

A shot by Pittsburgh Penguins’ Reilly Smith, not seen, gets past Colorado Avalanche goaltender Alexandar Georgiev (40) for a goal during the first period of an NHL hockey game in Pittsburgh, Thursday, Oct. 26, 2023. (AP Photo/Gene J. Puskar)

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