| However, Colorado's starting goaltender didn't last the night 
				and may not be available for Game 2 on Thursday night.
 
 Darcy Kuemper left the game in the second period with an 
				upper-body injury and didn't return. When asked if Kuemper could 
				play Thursday, Avalanche coach Jared Bednar said, "We'll see."
 
 Pavel Francouz stopped 18 of 21 shots in relief of Kuemper, who 
				allowed three goals on 16 shots.
 
 The Avalanche got two goals from J.T. Compher and Cale Makar had 
				a goal and two assists to lead the offensive barrage Tuesday 
				night.
 
 "We need four (wins), we got one," Colorado center Nathan 
				MacKinnon said. "There's a lot of work to do."
 
 MacKinnon, Gabriel Landeskog and Mikko Rantanen had a goal and 
				assist each, Nazem Kadri and Andrew Cogliano also scored and 
				Devon Toews had two assists for Colorado, which built a 7-3 lead 
				but had to hold on for the win.
 
 Connor McDavid had a goal and two assists, Evander Kane and Ryan 
				Nugent-Hopkins had a goal and an assist each, and Derek Ryan, 
				Zach Hyman and Ryan McLeod also scored for the Oilers. Leon 
				Draisaitl contributed two assists.
 
 "That's not how you win hockey games at this time of the year," 
				Draisaitl said. "Regroup, adjust a couple of things and we'll be 
				better."
 
 Edmonton's Mikko Koskinen turned aside 20 of 21 shots in relief 
				of Mike Smith, who yielded six goals in 25 shots.
 
 "When you're on the bench halfway through the game, it's not a 
				good sign," Smith said. "It's one game. We've been in this 
				position before. You park it. It's a long series."
 
 Kane gave the Oilers a 1-0 lead at 5:04 of the first period, his 
				13th goal of the postseason, and the Avalanche answered 36 
				seconds later on Compher's first goal of the night.
 
 MacKinnon put Colorado ahead 2-1 at 15:10, his ninth goal of the 
				playoffs.
 
 Hyman tied it for the Oilers at 19:37, his ninth of the 
				postseason, as he matched the franchise record by scoring a goal 
				in a sixth consecutive playoff game.
 
 Makar scored just nine seconds later. Edmonton challenged the 
				goal for offside, but the goal was upheld, giving the Avalanche 
				a power play thanks to the failed challenge.
 
 "You've got to live with it and move on," Oilers coach Jay 
				Woodcroft said. "We made the decision to do it and we felt and 
				still feel the player had control of the puck."
 
 On the man advantage, Kadri scored 32 seconds into the second 
				period to make it 4-2.
 
 McLeod got the Oilers within a goal when he knocked in a rebound 
				at 2:59 of the second, but Rantanen's slapshot at 4:38 made it 
				5-3.
 
 Compher's deflection at 6:20 made it 6-3, prompting the Oilers 
				to send in Koskinen for Smith.
 
 Cogliano scored at 16:20 of the second period for a 7-3 edge, 
				but McDavid scored his eighth of the playoffs just 31 seconds 
				later.
 
 Ryan cut the deficit to 7-5 at 3:28 of the third period, and 
				Nugent-Hopkins got Edmonton within one with a power-play goal at 
				12:36.
 
 Koskinen came off for an extra skater with 1:53 left, and 
				Landeskog scored into an empty net with 21.4 seconds remaining.
 
 --Field Level Media
 
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