Stars sniper’s second-period hat trick sinks Jets 3-2

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This time, there was no personal vendetta to sort through, but Mikko Rantanen still made life miserable for the Winnipeg Jets on Wednesday.

On the heels of eliminating his former team with a four-point effort in Game 7 against the Colorado Avalanche, the Dallas Stars winger delivered a natural hat trick to propel the team to a 3-2 victory over the Winnipeg Jets before a sellout crowd at Canada Life Centre.

Rantanen now leads the Stanley Cup playoffs with eight goals and 15 points in eight games, an impressive total, especially when you consider he’s gone through the emotional toll of being traded twice this season before signing an eight-year extension with the Stars.

Fred Greenslade / THE CANADIAN PRESS

Dallas Stars’ Mikko Rantanen (96) is helped up by teammates after scoring one of his three goals on the Winnipeg Jets during the second period of the Stars 3-2 victory in Game 1 of their second-round Stanley Cup playoff series in Winnipeg, Wednesday.

“He’s a big man and he’s hard to move. When he decides to take pucks to the net, you’ve got to get into him early because he can do that,” Jets head coach Scott Arniel said after the morning skate. “And then he has the offensive instincts and then, the skill set that he’s an elite goal scorer in this league, the way he shoots the puck and gets himself into position.”

Rantanen seems to be getting more and more comfortable in his new surroundings and that’s a scary proposition for opponents.

“I mean he’s a game changer,” said Stars head coach Pete DeBoer. “You saw that last game. But he’s a game changer in a league where everybody’s only got one of those guys, maybe two. The eight teams left probably have a couple each. I think the games get tight checking, the scores get lower, there’s less and less room and those types of players have the ability to make something out of nothing.”

That was definitely the case in Game 1 and that’s why the Stars drew first blood in this battle for Central Division supremacy.

The best-of-seven series resumes on Friday night before the series shifts to Texas for Game 3 on Sunday afternoon.

Let’s take a little closer look at what transpired in the series opener:

THE RETURN

Although he was officially listed as a game-time decision, there was little doubt that Jets’ top centre Mark Scheifele was going to be back in the lineup for the first time since suffering an undisclosed injury in Game 5 against the St. Louis Blues when he was on the receiving end of a pair of jarring hits from Brayden Schenn and Radek Faksa.

Fred Greenslade / THE CANADIAN PRESS
                                Winnipeg Jets' Mark Scheifele celebrates his second-period goal against the Dallas Stars.

Fred Greenslade / THE CANADIAN PRESS

Winnipeg Jets’ Mark Scheifele celebrates his second-period goal against the Dallas Stars.

After sitting out Games 6 and 7, Scheifele was back for the opener and made an immediate impact, skating on the top line with Kyle Connor and Gabe Vilardi.

After the Jets fell behind 3-1, Vilardi took advantage of a defensive-zone turnover by Stars captain Jamie Benn, who lost control of the puck below the goal line.

Vilardi found Scheifele alone in the slot and he buried his shot for his third goal of the postseason.

Getting Scheifele back in the lineup allowed the Jets to run their full forward group for the first time since Mar. 23, when Vilardi suffered an upper-body injury late in the third period against the Buffalo Sabres.

“It certainly helps your group when you have that depth and that’s the biggest thing for me. That depth is now back there,” said Arniel. “As you guys know, I’m pretty confident, as (Stars head coach) Pete (DeBoer) is with his group, to throw four lines out there and to throw them against anybody at any time.”

THE STRETCH PASS

Jets defenceman Haydn Fleury went from being a healthy scratch in five of the first six games of the Stanley Cup playoffs to playing 33:02 in Game 7 against the Blues.

Fred Greenslade / THE CANADIAN PRESS
                                Dallas Stars goaltender Jake Oettinger makes a save on Winnipeg Jets’ Gabriel Vilardi in the first period.

Fred Greenslade / THE CANADIAN PRESS

Dallas Stars goaltender Jake Oettinger makes a save on Winnipeg Jets’ Gabriel Vilardi in the first period.

When Josh Morrissey was forced to miss Game 1 of the second round due to a suspected shoulder injury, Fleury took his spot on a pairing with Dylan DeMelo.

Fleury’s skating ability should be a big benefit in this series against a Stars team that plays a heavy game.

“We need some mobility and that’s what Haydn brings,” said Arniel. “We’ve asked him over the course of the season to step up his role at different times and he’s done that. He’s played some big minutes that maybe he hadn’t in the past. Obviously, the other night was big for him.”

Fleury carried some of that momentum from the seventh and deciding game into the series opener.

On the first goal of the contest, Fleury made a heads up play, coming around the net and making a stretch pass to Mason Appleton at the offensive blue line.

Appleton found Nino Niederreiter, who beat Jake Oettinger with a sneaky backhand at 3:30 of the second period.

Fleury was in the box for cross-checking when Rantanen completed the hat trick, but that was more of a push to the pants that caught Tyler Seguin off guard.

And after the Jets had the first three power plays of the contest, it wasn’t a surprise that Fleury was penalized on the play.

Fred Greenslade / THE CANADIAN PRESS
                                Winnipeg Jets’ Brandon Tanev and Morgan Barron collide as they pursue Dallas Stars’ Oskar Back in the first period.

Fred Greenslade / THE CANADIAN PRESS

Winnipeg Jets’ Brandon Tanev and Morgan Barron collide as they pursue Dallas Stars’ Oskar Back in the first period.

THE CHESS MATCH

Both teams aren’t afraid to run four lines and all three D pairings, which is important when you consider how hard the Jets and Stars had to work in order to advance to the second round.

The Jets didn’t use a hard match in Game 1, although they did run out captain Adam Lowry against Stars top centre Roope Hintz for a chunk of the contest.

Prior to the game, DeBoer was asked if there was anything from the blueprint the Blues put forth to have success in the first round battle with the Jets that he might try to implement in this series.

“Well, I think that’s all part of our pre-series planning. We’d be crazy not to look at what we felt St. Louis did well and where we felt maybe St. Louis fell short, that maybe we’d have to be better at,” said DeBoer. “The recency factor is always critical when you’re pre-scouting. There’s no more recency than the seven games those two teams just played. So, we’ve looked at that pretty heavily.”

THE KEY PLAY

Rantanen’s pass attempt for Roope Hintz goes off the skate of Jets defenceman Dylan Samberg and into the net to complete his second hat trick in consecutive games.

Fred Greenslade / THE CANADIAN PRESS
                                Winnipeg Jets’ Adam Lowry and Neal Pionk collide with Dallas Stars’ Roope Hintz in the first period.

Fred Greenslade / THE CANADIAN PRESS

Winnipeg Jets’ Adam Lowry and Neal Pionk collide with Dallas Stars’ Roope Hintz in the first period.

THE THREE STARS

1. Mikko Rantanen, Stars, Recorded a natural hat trick.

2. Thomas Harley, Stars, Had an assist, logged 25:07 of ice time.

3. Mark Scheifele, Jets, Scored a goal in his return to the lineup.

EXTRA, EXTRA

Special teams were a factor in this one, as the Jets power play finished zero-for-four, while the Stars got the game-winning goal on the power play from Rantanen at 16:38 of the second period and finished one-for-two.

Jets goalie Connor Hellebuyck finished with 21 saves, while Stars goalie Jake Oettinger finished with 30 and was serenaded with “U.S. backup” chants during the second period.

While both teams got a top forward back from injury, the Jets were without Morrissey and the Stars were without top D-man Miro Heiskanen. Morrisey, who left Game 7 against the St. Louis Blues in the first period after taking four shifts and playing 2:09, was moving well at the morning skate and looks like a candidate to suit up in Game 2 against the Stars. As for Heiskanen, his timeline is a bit unclear, though he continues to progress from the knee injury he suffered in an awkward collision with Vegas Golden Knights captain Mark Stone on Jan. 28. The Jets were also without defenceman Logan Stanley (undisclosed injury) and the Stars played without winger Colin Blackwell (undisclosed).

Fred Greenslade / THE CANADIAN PRESS
                                Winnipeg Jets goaltender Connor Hellebuyck (37) makes a save on a Dallas Stars shot during the first period.

Fred Greenslade / THE CANADIAN PRESS

Winnipeg Jets goaltender Connor Hellebuyck (37) makes a save on a Dallas Stars shot during the first period.

Stars winger Jason Robertson suited up in his first game of the 2025 Stanley Cup playoffs after suffering a knee injury in Game 82 of the regular season. Robertson played on a line with Wyatt Johnston and Mason Marchment and took 19 shifts for 13:44 of ice time, recording one shot on goal.

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