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The worst is confirmed for John Tortorella and the Golden Knights ahead of Game 2 against Colorado

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Skyler Walker
May 22, 2026  (4:26 PM)
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Apr 7, 2026; Vancouver, British Columbia, CAN; Vegas Golden Knights forward Mitch Marner (93) talks with forward Mark Stone (61) during a stop in play against the Vancouver Canucks in the first period at Rogers Arena.
Photo credit: Bob Frid-Imagn Images

Mark Stone stays out for Vegas, and John Tortorella now has to push through another playoff night without his captain.

Vegas confirmed Friday that Stone will not play Game 2 against the Colorado Avalanche.

That locked in another major lineup hole at the worst time.

The news landed after Stone skated earlier in the day, which gave the usual jolt of hope around the rink.

It didn't last.

Instead, the Golden Knights ruled him out again, extending a stretch that has already kept him out of the last 4 games.

That's a brutal hit for a club trying to hold its structure in a heavy series.

Stone isn't just another top-six winger on this roster.

He's the player who settles shifts down, wins pucks back, and drives the kind of details coaches lean on in May.

That's why this one cuts deeper than a standard injury update.

When Stone is missing, the pressure doesn't fall on one line. It spreads through the whole bench.

"Mark Stone remains out for Vegas in Game 2."

Vegas loses its playoff driver again

Tortorella now has to find offense and matchup stability without one of his smartest two-way forwards.

That changes line management, special-teams rhythm, and late-game trust.

It also brings back the same concern that has followed Stone for years.

His game still plays at a high level when he's in, but his body keeps dragging the story in another direction.

That's the hard part for Vegas.

Every time Stone gets rolling, the conversation shifts from impact to availability, and that's a rough cycle for a captain carrying this much responsibility.

His value has never been limited to points.

He's the kind of forward who can break up a play in the neutral zone, win a board battle below the goal line, then make the next clean pass that gets Vegas moving.

Players like that are hard to replace for one night. They're almost impossible to replace in a series.

The Golden Knights still have enough depth to stay in the fight, but the margin gets thinner every time Stone stays out.

A contender can absorb a lot, just not forever.

Now the question is bigger than Game 2.

It's about whether Vegas can keep its playoff push on track while its captain watches from the outside again.