Avalanche aim to finish West final vs. Oilers without Kadri

Updated Jun. 5, 2022 12:32 p.m. ET

EDMONTON, Alberta (AP) — Nazem Kadri is a major reason the Colorado Avalanche are one win away from the franchise's first trip to the Stanley Cup Final in more than two decades.

They'll have to take that step without him.

Kadri is out for at least the rest of the Western Conference final against the Edmonton Oilers after being injured on an illegal hit by Evander Kane in Game 3.

"He’s out," coach Jared Bednar said of Kadri after his team won Game 3. “The hit, it’s the most dangerous play in hockey. He puts him in head-first from behind, eight feet from the boards. I’ll leave it at that.”

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Kane will also likely be suspended for at least Game 4 pending a hearing with the NHL's department of player safety for boarding Kadri. The Oilers are looking to become just the fifth team in league history to win a series after falling behind 3-0.

“Not a great situation to be in, down three,” captain Connor McDavid said. “Series isn’t over, obviously. We got to go one at a time here.”

Assuming the Avalanche don't join the dubious list of teams to blow a 3-0 lead and lose a best-of-seven series, they could be without Kadri for part or all of the Stanley Cup Final against the New York Rangers or back-to-back defending champion Tampa Bay Lightning.

That would be a significant blow given that

Kadri didn't return after Kane sent him crashing left arm-first into the boards 1:06 in, a hit that was reviewed and called a major penalty.

“I don’t like it,” Avalanche captain Gabriel Landeskog said of the hit. “Those are the ones that kind of gives you the chills down your spine, and you’re taught from a young age that you don’t do that, and especially in that distance from the boards. It’s a dangerous play, and, yeah, I don’t know what else to say.”

Kane said he was trying to “get up on” Kadri, and, “Unfortunately he went into the boards awkwardly and hurt his hand.”

Unsurprisingly given the shroud of secrecy in hockey, especially during the playoffs, the Avalanche have not revealed what Kadri's injury is or said how long he'd be out, beyond Bednar's postgame declaration. They're already without defenseman Samuel Girard, who broke his sternum last round against St. Louis, and winger Andre Burakovsky, who blocked a shot with his right leg in Game 1 of this series.

Nicolas Aube-Kubel, claimed off waivers from Philadelphia in November, figures to slot in for Kadri. Depth, bolstered by general manager Joe Sakic's deadline acquisitions of defenseman Josh Manson and forwards Artturi Lehkonen and Andrew Cogliano, helped Colorado win the Central Division and earn the top seed in the West.

Along the way, the Avalanche have gone a perfect 6-0 on the road. One more in Edmonton on Monday would sweep the Oilers out of the playoffs for a second consecutive year and send Colorado to the final for the first time since 2001.

Playing solid road hockey has become a staple for Nathan MacKinnon and Co. this postseason. While MacKinnon thinks the Avalanche's details are better at home, there's something to be said for perhaps the fastest team in the NHL slowing things down and getting the job done away from home.

“You don’t got to please anybody," he said. "We’re here to hopefully make it boring and gross and just play a good two-way game. There’s no show to put on when we’re on the road, and it kind of feels like we’re just playing the right way.”

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