WINNIPEG ā Connor Hellebuyckās coach and teammates believe he deserves the VĆ©zina Trophy he was nominated for on Monday.
They also know their elite goaltender deserves more help in front of him if the Winnipeg Jets are to avoid being bounced out of the NHL playoffs in Game 5 at home against the Colorado Avalanche on Tuesday night.
The Jets have lost three straight and are down 3-1 in their best-of-seven opening-round series against the Avalanche.
āHe is No. 1 for me. Itās very well deserved,ā Jets head coach Rick Bowness said of Hellebuyck on Monday.
āHe is the backbone. Every great team has a great goaltender and, listen, this guy is a great goaltender and he deserves it. I just spoke with him about it and heās pretty excited but heās more worried about tomorrow night, right? Heās focusing on that.ā
Hellebuyck was nominated for the leagueās top-goalie award for the second straight year and fourth time in his career. He captured the hardware in 2020.
Vancouverās Thatcher Demko and Floridaās Sergei Bobrovsky are the other finalists.
Hellebuyck posted a 37-19-4 record with a 2.39 goals-against average, .921 save percentage and five shutouts. He won the William M. Jennings Trophy as the goaltender (minimum 25 games played) on the team with the fewest goals allowed.
Now he leads all post-season netminders in goals against with 19, but no one is blaming him for the teamās poor performance.
Backup Laurent Brossoit replaced Hellebuyck to start the third period Sunday when Winnipeg trailed 4-1 in what eventually was a 5-1 loss.
āI gave him a little bit of a breather in the third period last night and to put a little more onus on the players in front of him have to play better,ā Bowness said. āThatās why we made that (change). It had absolutely nothing to do with his play at all.ā
Jets defenceman Neal Pionk agreed.
āWe have the best goalie in the league and we got to play better in front of him. So plain and simple,ā Pionk said. āWe got to give up less chances, block more shots and compete a little harder in front of him.ā
POSITIVE INJURY UPDATE
Bowness had a better-than-expected update on forward Vladislav Namestnikov, who had a puck hit him under his visor after teammate Nate Schmidtās shot went off a stick.
Trainers helped him off the ice and he was taken to a Denver hospital.
āHe has a fractured cheekbone,ā Bowness said. āThereās no orbital damage but they kept him overnight and heās on his way back (to Winnipeg).
āI sent him a text last night and he answered this morning and said heās feeling better.ā
Bowness was asked if Namestnikov might play Tuesday wearing a helmet with a full cage.
āListen, nothing would surprise me with (Namestnikov),ā he replied, adding heāll never rule anything out.
Jets captain Adam Lowry described the sound of the puck hitting Namestnikov and seeing the pool of blood as āterrifying.ā
āI think, first and foremost, youāre hoping that it avoids his eye. You know thereās going to be some damage,ā Lowry said.
āFrom all the reports, we still havenāt seen him, but from all the reports he certainly avoided the worst.ā
Bowness updated Winnipegās other injuries and said lineup changes will be made for Tuesday's critical match.
Forward Morgan Barron has been out since the teamās second-last game of the regular season with a lower-body injury, still hasnāt skated and wonāt play Tuesday, he said.
Veteran defenceman Brenden Dillon hasnāt been ruled out after a skate blade sliced his left hand in last Fridayās 6-2 loss to the Avs.
āHeād play with two broken hands if he could, if we let him,ā Bowness said.
āWeāll make the right decision based on whatās best for him. Weāre not going put him out there unless weāre 100 per cent sure there can be no more damage done.ā
ADJUSTMENTS STILL NEEDED
Bowness said his team isnāt winning enough battles and he wants his playersā intensity to ramp up against the 2022 Stanley Cup-champion Avalanche.
āYou can make all of the adjustments that you want, if the intensity and everything else isnāt there, itās going to go for naught,ā he said.
Lowry said the tight-knit group can improve.
āI think it's one of those things you can't look at the task as being so unmanageable,ā he said. āYou have to have some belief. And I believe we have a lot of belief in our group and our ability to get out of this.ā
This report by The Canadian Press was first published April 29, 2024.
Judy Owen, The Canadian Press