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Avalanche star Nathan MacKinnon erupts after Game 1 loss to Vegas

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David St-Jean
May 21, 2026  (1:10)
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Avalanche star Nathan MacKinnon erupts after Game 1 loss to Vegas
Photo credit: Screenshot

Nathan MacKinnon walked into the room hot Wednesday night, and head coach Jared Bednar's locker room didn't try to hide the bruise after Game 1 against Vegas.

The Colorado Avalanche dropped the opener of the Western Conference Final at home, and their best player wasn't in the mood to dress it up.

He kept circling the same word. Execution.

In a short clip shared by DNVR Avalanche, MacKinnon leans back in his stall, jaw tight, and tells reporters he's already used that word five times. Then he basically tells them to stop asking.

It's not posturing. It's a guy who put up 53 goals and 127 points in 80 regular-season games walking into a series he expected to dictate, not chase.

The frustration tracks with what Colorado built all year. 121 points. First overall. A plus-99 goal differential at 302 for, 203 against.

Pressure shifts to Bednar before Game 2 in Denver

The Avs hit the playoffs as the league's top team and bulldozed Minnesota in five. They've been the better team on paper in every series so far.

Now they're trailing the Golden Knights at home, and the room sounds annoyed instead of nervous. That's a fine line.

MacKinnon's playoff line is still loud. Seven goals, 14 points and a plus-7 through ten games. The shots are there. The finish is there.

But Colorado went 2-0-1 against Vegas in the regular season, including an overtime loss in April at Ball Arena. Wednesday's loss flips the home-ice math fast.

Cale Makar has four goals and a plus-5 in the run. Martin Necas is sitting on 11 points already. Devon Toews is plus-9 from the back end.

So the talent's producing, even if Makar is injured. The result didn't follow. That's the part eating at MacKinnon, and the part Bednar has roughly 48 hours to fix.

The next puck drop is Game 2 at home. Lose that one, and the conversation in Denver changes entirely.

Does the star stay this short with reporters all series? Or does the next game shut the noise down for him?