Jason Mowry / Getty Images / Tribune News Service
Seattle Kraken goaltender Philipp Grubauer (31) attempts to block a shot by the Columbus Blue Jackets’ Zach Werenski, not pictured, during the second period at Nationwide Arena on Thursday in Columbus, Ohio.

Jason Mowry / Getty Images / Tribune News Service Seattle Kraken goaltender Philipp Grubauer (31) attempts to block a shot by the Columbus Blue Jackets’ Zach Werenski, not pictured, during the second period at Nationwide Arena on Thursday in Columbus, Ohio.

Kraken drop fourth straight with sloppy loss to Blue Jackets

Defensive breakdowns and turnovers lead to 6-2 loss at Columbus.

  • By Tim Booth The Seattle Times
  • Friday, January 10, 2025 3:20pm
  • SportsKraken

COLUMBUS, Ohio — The Kraken began the second half of the season on Thursday night with a performance that looked unsurprisingly similar to plenty of other games over the past few weeks.

Defensive breakdowns. Sloppy turnovers. A goalie under siege. And an offense unable to finish its own chances.

The result was a 6-2 loss to the Blue Jackets that served as a deflating start to the final 41-game stretch of what’s quickly becoming a lost Kraken season. Seattle (17-22-3) has dropped four straight.

Asked on the postgame television broadcast if there was anything positive that could be taken from the game, Jared McCann flatly said, “no.”

“The second period was just embarrassing from us,” Eeli Tolvanen told reporters.

The season’s midway point arrived with an obvious opportunity to regroup. After a frustrating 1-2-1 homestand that included New Jersey goalie Jacob Markstrom stealing a win on Monday, the Kraken started a five-game road trip with the Blue Jackets.

It was also the start of a 16-game stretch leading into the two-week break for the Four Nations Faceoff where if the Kraken are to make something of this season they need wins. Otherwise, they are likely to just become trade fodder for other teams.

“It starts with this road trip but our focus is going to become quite narrow-minded here to win some hockey games here in the next 16 games, win some hockey games here on this road trip to get back into this thing,” coach Dan Bylsma said after skate on Thursday morning.

Unfortunately for Bylsma, while the Kraken started the game well, the second period was — as Tolvanen noted — an embarrassing effort, and unfairly left goalie Philipp Grubauer exposed and fishing pucks out of his own net.

Bylsma said the inability for Seattle to capitalize on a power play at the start of the period set the tone for Columbus to take control.

“I think the chance with the power play at the beginning of the second to do some damage, and that didn’t happen and the response after that was critical to the game,” Bylsma said. “Some lapses in (defensive) zone coverage. Some details. We knew they were going to be a good team around the net, strong at the net and some lapses at the net, and now you find yourself in a huge hole. And the response, I think, after the third goal in particular there was a huge dip in our game after that for too long of a time.”

Luca Del Bel Belluz swatted a pass out of midair to give Columbus a 2-1 lead early in the second period. Zach Werenski and Denton Mateychuk scored less than two minutes apart midway through the period that both came off defensive lapses. Werenski, who entered the game second in the league in points among defensemen, was left unmarked in a defensive breakdown between Andre Burakovsky and Adam Larsson.

Mateychuk’s goal also came on a backdoor play when Tye Kartye was unable to knock the defenseman off the puck. It was Mateychuk’s first NHL goal.

The final strike of the period was the one that Grubauer likely should stop as Kent Johnson flicked a shot through Brandon Montour and into the net.

Grubauer was tagged with five goals allowed on 19 shots and was replaced by Joey Daccord late in the second period. For Daccord, it was his first appearance since Dec. 22 in Colorado having sat the previous five games with an upper body injury. Daccord made four saves and was on the bench for an extra attacker that led to Kirill Marchenko’s empty-net goal in the final minute.

Bylsma said pulling Grubauer was in the hope of creating a little bit of a spark.

“(He’s) made huge saves for us the last four games, played really well. You’re just trying to wake up your team, send a message to the group,” Bylsma said.

Lost in the context of the ugly middle 20 minutes was a relatively strong start by Seattle. The Kraken had the first six shots on goal and had a 14-1 advantage in shot attempts in the opening minutes of the first period.

Columbus got the first goal when Sean Kuraly was left alone in front of Grubauer and redirected Ivan Provorov’s point shot 11:58 into the first period. But that lead lasted all of 10 seconds before Tolvanen snapped a 12-game streak without a goal off a terrific play along the boards by Shane Wright.

Tolvanen was one of — maybe the only — bright spot in the game for Seattle as he scored with 11:16 remaining to pull within 5-2. But the Kraken failed to convert on a power play a few minutes later and any hope for a Vancouver-like comeback dissipated over the final five minutes.

“I feel like we have to stick to our game, to be honest. If we play a simple game I feel like we are the best and then when we start trying to make fancy plays that’s when we scored on our own end,” Tolvanen said. “It’s the turnovers in the offensive zone (where) we have the chance to shoot the puck and we try to pass for backdoor tap-ins. We have to get back to just shoot the puck and get into a working mentality.”

Notes

• The Kraken failed to earn a point against Columbus for the first time in franchise history. Seattle was 5-0-2 all-time against the Blue Jackets entering the game.

• Daniel Sprong cleared waivers on Thursday and was assigned to Coachella Valley. Sprong was in the lineup once since the Christmas break and was placed on waivers on Wednesday.

• The Kraken recalled forward John Hayden from Coachella Valley for additional depth, but he was scratched from the lineup.

BOX SCORE

Talk to us

> Give us your news tips.

> Send us a letter to the editor.

> More Herald contact information.

More in Sports

The Jackson girls golf team poses with the state championship trophy and sign on the 18th green of Eagle's Pride Golf Course after winning the WIAA 4A State Championship in DuPont, Washington on May 21, 2025. Pictured left to right: Coach Jerome Gotz, freshman Karen Shin, sophomore Kayla Kim, senior Paige Swander, senior Lindsay Catli, sophomore Chanyoung Park and junior Christine Oh. (Joe Pohoryles / The Herald)
Jackson girls golf wins first state title

The Timberwolves turn one-shot lead on back nine into 14-stroke victory for 4A crown.

Kamiak’s Tristan Kim putts during the 4A District 1 Boys Golf Championship at Legion Memorial Golf Course on Tuesday, May 13, 2025 in Everett, Washington. (Olivia Vanni / The Herald)
‘Kamiak Flip’ powers Knights boys golf to top-five state finish

Kamiak leverages a strong second round to win hardware as Tristen Kim finishes third individually.

Snohomish’s Griffin Triggs and Chase Clark celebrate getting the final out to beat Bellevue in loser-out opening round 3A state game on Tuesday, May 20, 2025 in Snohomish, Washington. (Olivia Vanni / The Herald)
Snohomish baseball mounts comeback against Bellevue

The Panthers score five runs in the sixth to win 6-2 and advance to the WIAA second round.

Prep roundup for Tuesday, May 20

Mohr scores twice to lead Wildcats to state second round.

Snohomish’s Luke Davis yells after getting an out at first base during the opening round 3A state game against Bellevue on Tuesday, May 20, 2025 in Snohomish, Washington. (Olivia Vanni / The Herald)
Prep state tournament results and schedule

Here’s a look at what’s happening this postseason.

Vote for The Herald’s Prep Athlete of the Week for May 11-17

The Athlete of the Week nominees for May 11-17. Voting closes at… Continue reading

Jorge Polanco of the Seattle Mariners celebrates his three-run home run during the second inning against the Los Angeles Angels at T-Mobile Park on Tuesday, April 29, 2025, in Seattle. (Steph Chambers / Getty Images / Tribune News Services)
Simple approach leading to Polanco’s improvement

Despite not being 100% healthy, Polanco is off to a hot start… Continue reading

Shai Gilgeous-Alexander celebrates as the Thunder pull away in the fourth quarter Tuesday night in Oklahoma City to beat the Timberwolves. (Carlos Gonzalez / The Minnesota Star Tribune / Tribune News Services)
Anthony Edwards tried to rattle SGA, and it didn’t work.

Four minutes into a Western Conference finals headlined by… Continue reading

Snohomish sophomore Deyton Wheat (22) celebrates his go-ahead, three-run home run with senior Brayden Holscher (11) during the Panthers' 4-2 win against Monroe in a District 1 3A consolation game in Woodinville, Washington on May 17, 2025. (Photo courtesy of Brea Bursch / Snohomish Baseball)
Snohomish, Shorewood earn state baseball tourney berths

Panthers top Monroe 4-2, Stormrays blank Edmonds-Woodway 7-0 in District 1 3A consolation.

The Shorewood boys soccer team celebrates with their trophy after winning the District 1 3A title on May 17, 2025 at Shoreline Stadium. (Qasim Ali / The Herald)
Shorewood boys soccer storms to district three-peat

An early penalty lifts the Stormrays to a 1-0 win over Monroe in the title game.

File Photo: Stanwood senior Gavin Gehrman delivers a pitch during the Spartans' 8-3 win against Arlington in Stanwood, Washington on March 19, 2025. In Stanwood's 7-4 loss to Mount Vernon in the District 1 3A Championship on May 17, 2025, Gehrman went 2-for-4 with 2 RBI. (Joe Pohoryles / The Herald)
Stanwood baseball slips in District 1 3A Championship

The Spartans’ early 3-0 lead crumbles as Mount Vernon wins 7-4 in comeback.

Jackson High School's Kyle Peacocke hands the 2023 WIAA class 4A softball championship trophy to the team after their win in Richland, Wash., on Sat., May 27. (TJ Mullinax/for The Herald)
Prep state tournaments set to begin this week

Here’s a look at where local teams will open tournament play.

Support local journalism

If you value local news, make a gift now to support the trusted journalism you get in The Daily Herald. Donations processed in this system are not tax deductible.