Hockey·Recap

Golden Knights' 5-goal 1st period puts Canucks away early

Mark Stone scored his first goal for the Golden Knights on Saturday as Vegas trounced the Vancouver Canucks 6-2.

Vegas' Marc-Andre Fleury passes Jacques Plante for 8th all-time in wins

Vegas' Nate Schmidt, left, celebrates his second-period goal with teammate Reilly Smith during the Golden Knights' 6-2 win against the Vancouver Canucks on Saturday. (Ben Nelms/The Canadian Press)

Mark Stone had to wait a few weeks, but he finally scored his first goal for Vegas.

And, that sparked the Golden Knights in a big way.

Stone scored 1:32 into the game and Vegas used a five-goal first period to cruise past the Vancouver Canucks 6-2 on Saturday night, the sixth straight win for the Golden Knights.

"It took a little bit longer than I hoped," said the 26-year-old right wing, who also has two assists since being acquired from Ottawa at the trade deadline on Feb. 25. "The way the guys are playing right now is awesome and it's awesome to be able to contribute."

Paul Stastny, Alex Tuch, Tomas Nosek, Cody Eakin and Nate Schmidt also scored for the Golden Knights. Marc-Andre Fleury had 29 saves for his 34th win of the season and 438th of his career to move past Jacques Plante for eighth on the NHL's all-time list.

"It's a little surreal, right?" Fleury said of the accomplishment. "He's a guy that has done so much for the game and obviously being from close to Montreal, I never got to watch him play but I heard a lot about him and saw videos of him and it's an honor to be right there with him."

But the 34-year-old said getting a win on Saturday was more important.

"We've been playing better hockey lately and it shows," he said. "I think every night we are tough to beat, so we have to keep this rolling and see where it takes us."

WATCH | Stone scores 1st as Golden Knight in win over Canucks:

Golden Knights ride 5 goal 1st period to rout of Canucks

6 years ago
Duration 0:29
The Vegas Golden Knights beat the Vancouver Canucks 6-2 for their 6th straight win.

The Canucks got goals from Brock Boeser and Bo Horvat, while Alex Biega tallied two assists. Jacob Markstrom stopped 11 of the 16 shots he faced before he was replaced by Thatcher Demko midway through the first period. Demko turned away 16 of 17 shots.

"I thought our young guys competed tonight," Canucks coach Travis Green said. "We've got a young team dressed against a veteran team that's poised to try and win a Cup. That's a tough game to play once they have a first period like that. But I thought our team kept coming at them."

The Golden Knights have outscored their opponents 24-9 through their winning streak.

Vancouver got off to a disastrous start, allowing five goals in the game's first 15 minutes. It was the fourth outing in a row during which the Canucks have been forced to battle back from an early multigoal deficit.

"Collectively as a unit we have to do better," Biega said. "At the end of the day, we have to defend quicker. We've got to get those loose pucks and find a way to be hard against their skill. We play a grindy game and when we do, we have success."

Stone opened the scoring 1:32 in, popping a backhanded shot past Markstrom from the slot for his first goal in a Golden Knights jersey. The 26-year-old right wing has also had two assists since Vegas acquired him from Ottawa at the trade deadline on Feb. 25.

Tuch made it 2-0 for the Knights less than four minutes later, tipping in a long shot from Jon Merrill after the Canucks failed to clear the puck.

At 7:33, Eakin forced a shot through heavy traffic, bouncing the puck off Vancouver's Tanner Pearson and into the net to put Vegas up 3-0.

Nosek made it 4-0, tipping the puck in over Markstrom's glove at 11:52. The Vancouver goalie was pulled at 14:17 after Stastny beat him through the five-hole.

The Canucks' first real scoring chance of the night came just over 10 minutes in when Antoine Roussel stole the puck and went 2-on-1 with Elias Pettersson. Roussel sliced a cross-ice pass to the star rookie, whose blistering shot went off the post.

Less than a minute later, Boeser put Vancouver on the board, deflecting a long shot from Biega in past Fleury.

Horvat added a goal 3:56 into the second period with a hard wrist shot from the face-off dot that beat Fleury glove side. It was the center's first point in six games.

Schmidt quieted hopes of any second-period comeback a minute later, ripping a shot from high in the slot. The puck bounced off the stick of Vancouver's Josh Leivo and into the net, putting Vegas back up by four goals.​