LAS VEGAS (AP) — Marcus Johansson had a goal and three assists and the surging Minnesota Wild beat the Vegas Golden Knights 5-2 on Monday night.
The Wild are 9-1-1 since Dec. 8. They are third in the Central Division with 54 points.
Matt Boldy, Jared Spurgeon, Brock Faber and Joel Eriksson Ek also scored for the Wild. They have scored first in 25 games this season.
Boldy has 18 points (10 goals, 8 assists) in his last 12 games, while Eriksson Ek has 13 points (6 goals, 6 assists) in his last 11.
Filip Gustavsson improved to 6-0-1 in his last seven starts, stopping 14 shots.
Minnesota outshot Vegas, 27-16.
Both teams were 0 for 2 on the power play.
Vegas goalie Carter Hart allowed five goals on 12 shots before he was pulled as Minnesota opened a 5-0 lead by the 6:56 mark of the second period. Akira Schmid came in for Hart and stopped all 15 shots he faced.
Brayden McNabb and Mark Stone scored for Vegas.
Vegas lost center Tomas Hertl just 2:13 into the game when he was ejected for a game misconduct after being called for a major boarding penalty.
The Knights have lost five of six, including two of three during their four-game homestand. The Golden Knights have been outscored 25-21 during their 1-3-2 slide.
Up next
Wild: At San Jose on Wednesday night.
Golden Knights: Hosts Nashville on Wednesday night.
-
Knights in the Morning: William Karlsson 'proud to be an Original Misfit'
William Karlsson discusses his pride to be a Golden Knight and his joy for having a fellow Original Misfit back on the ice with him.
Marner scores 2 as Golden Knights get 5 in 1st period and beat Sharks 7-2
The Golden Knights had a season-high scoring output, topping the previous high of six reached three times in October.
McDavid has goal and 2 assists, Oilers hold off Golden Knights 4-3
Tomas Hertl got one back for Vegas on a power play in the second, then assisted on goals by Mitch Marner and Pavel Dorofeyev in the third, with Marner also striking with a man advantage.
Jesper Bratt notches winner in shootout as Devils top Golden Knights 2-1
Pavel Dorofeyev, Mark Stone and Mitch Marner missed opportunities in the shootout. Marner’s attempt appeared to go in, but it was deemed a no-goal because the puck went off his skate after the shot.