One bright note in an otherwise grim injury relief situation for Philipp Grubauer on Saturday night was that he got the first intermission to gather himself only 17 seconds after coming on to replace Matt Murray.
Grubauer used the time to head to a back room to perform hand-eye co-ordination exercises in lieu of simply “looking at the clock” and counting down the minutes until the second period. Those came in handy as he stonewalled the visiting San Jose Sharks throughout an ensuing early blitz and kept things tied until two Kraken goals 38 seconds apart late in the middle frame cued an eventual 4-1 victory in which Grubauer stopped all 19 shots directed his way.
“I think going into the second period there right away, the way the first two minutes went were not ideal for us as a team,” said Grubauer, who faced six of his 14 shots against that period the first two-plus minutes. “But it got me into the game having a lot of shots early on. It’s always tough if you’re not starting. It’s a situation where you don’t get too many shots in the warm-up right? So, it was helpful to get into the game right away and then I took it from there.”
Indeed, he did, flopping around at his acrobatic best to ward off a seemingly unrelenting San Jose storm before Adam Larsson snapped a go-ahead goal through traffic in the period’s final four minutes followed by Eeli Tolvanen converting a 2-on-1 pass from Chandler Stephenson off the ensuing faceoff. Jaden Schwartz, who’d opened the scoring off a net front pass by Stephenson in the first period, scored his second of the night on an empty net in the closing minutes to help the Kraken improve to a franchise record 9-4-5 mark and 23 points to start the season.
The Kraken now embark on a four-city road trip after a 2-0-1 homestand seemingly headed in the wrong direction after an overtime loss to Columbus earlier in the week. Instead, a valiant comeback victory against Winnipeg and then vanquishing a Sharks team that obliterated the Kraken 6-1 at Climate Pledge Arena just 10 days ago seemed to get a moribund offense untracked just in time.
Murray was still being evaluated postgame for a lower body injury suffered when former Kraken forward Alex Wennberg tied the game on a power play pass from Macklin Celebrini in the closing seconds of the first period. The potential loss of Murray should be mitigated somewhat by the anticipated return of Joey Daccord from an injury he suffered the last time the Sharks came in here and toyed with the home team.
Any longer absence for Murray, who was outstanding his past few outings coming off double-hip surgery from two years ago, will also be helped if Grubauer keeps playing like he did this game and in the prior Winnipeg victory. His early work that second period denied the Sharks at least two certain goals.
“They were probably quicker on pucks, outskating us there a little bit,” Grubauer said. “And they won a couple of 50-50 puck battles, and we couldn’t execute the play to get out of our zone. Sometimes that happens and we got stuck there for a minute and a half.”

















