On banner night, Artturi Lehkonen decided to have one himself.
Lehkonen, a Stanley Cup-winning hero acquired by the Avs from Montreal last March, scored two second-period goals to help power Colorado to a 5-2 win over Chicago on the opening night of the 2022-23 season Wednesday at Ball Arena.
“I thought we came out pretty well,” said Lehkonen, whose clutch postseason moments from last spring were celebrated before the game as part of the evening’s pregame Cup celebration. “It was a long, long time on the ice and it was a pretty emotional (night), but I thought we came out really well. And the most important thing is we got the win.”
The Avs opened the evening with an emotional, 25-minute ceremony that featured Blink-182 singer Mark Hoppus, a victory lap by captain Gabe Landeskog with the Stanley Cup, and the raising of the 2022 NHL championship banner to the rafters.
But the on-ice fireworks were only just getting started.
Both of the goals from Lehkonen, whose clutch postseason moments were part of the evening’s Cup celebration, came via the power play. And the first was pure poetry for a packed arena on Chopper Circle on-hand to celebrate the Avs’ first title defense in 21 years.
With 16:11 to go in the second stanza, Avs star Nathan MacKinnon drew the defense to the left of the goal, opening up a passing lane for Lehkonen trailing behind him. MacKinnon exposed a chasing Chicago defense by quickly passing the puck to linemate Mikko Rantanen, who was stationed just behind the net and out of the goalie’s line of sight. Rantanen then turned and flipped the biscuit back to the hard-charging Lehkonen, who finished the bang-bang sequence with the hosts’ third goal of the evening.
Midway through the period, Lehkonen struck again with the power-play unit, this time attacking the left side of the crease, altering a Mikko Rantanen laser past Chicago goalie Petr Mrazek to the glove side for a 4-1 lead.
Rantanen led all skaters with four points — all on assists — to become the first Avs player to post a four-point game on opening night since the franchise relocated to Denver.
“I think it’s leadership and (the) coaching staff,” Colorado’s veteran forward said after the game. “We were talking about it before (the game), that you know, it’s going to be emotional. (And) obviously remembering and seeing the video and seeing the … rafters, the banners. But I think because we got prepared mentally, we knew it was going to be 20 minutes of kind of celebrating and then (we were) going to flip the switch right away.”
The Avs will have to flip another switch, and quickly. They’ll head to Calgary for the second tilt of a back-to-back, tussling Thursday night with the Flames — and with old teammate Nazem Kadri, another key cog on the 2022 Cup-winning squad.
“(Kadri) was a big part of our team last year, a big part of why we won,” center Alex Newhook told The Post on Wednesday. “So it’d be cool, (and) definitely weird, to see him in different colors. But it’ll be a fun game.”
Colorado forward Valeri Nichushkin capped the scoring for the Cup champs with another redirected goal on another power play, tipping one of Cale Makar’s efforts from the blue line with 2:57 left in the game for a 5-2 Avs advantage.
Four of the hosts’ five goals came on the power play.
The Avs had been frustrated by Mrazek early, as the hosts peppered the Czech netminder with seven shot attempts, only to be denied.
But the eighth shot found the back of the net and opened the flood gates, thanks to a redirect and a funny bounce.
Forward Andrew Cogliano’s deflection turned MacKinnon’s fastball of a feed into a knuckler that trickled past a confused Mrazek on his stick side 6:16 into the contest.
After that, the whistles came out. Chicago capitalized on an Evan Rodrigues slashing call with a power-play goal from veteran Jonathan Toews, who fired an uncontested, short-range wrister past new Colorado netminder Alexandar Georgiev’s glove roughly 90 seconds later to even the score.
The Avs regained their footing — and the lead — after a Chicago high-sticking call with 3:51 left in the period. With 2:53 to go in the stanza, big Nichushkin camped out to the left of the crease and redirected a Rantanen rope for a goal and a 2-1 Colorado advantage.