Colorado Hockey Daily has no direct affiliation to the Colorado Avalanche, NHL or NHLPA

COLORADO HOCKEY DAILY


Avalanche's latest victory soars to heights few teams have ever seen


PUBLICATION
Theodore Mosby
December 25, 2025  (1:27 PM)
SHARE THIS STORY

Colorado Avalanche fans have felt it building for weeks, and now the numbers finally caught up to the noise inside Ball Arena during this historic home streak.

The Avalanche extended their home winning streak to 13 games on Tuesday, a mark that puts this group into rare league company. According to team tracking, only 23 teams in NHL history have ever reached that number.
This is not a quirky stat padded by soft opponents or early-season chaos. Colorado has beaten playoff-level teams at home with pace, structure, and an edge that rarely fades after the first intermission.

Colorado Avalanche home streak rewrites expectations.

Jared Bednar's club is controlling games early, then squeezing opponents through the neutral zone once they chase. Clean exits turn into layered entries, and the slot stays protected even when legs get heavy late.
There is a confidence right now that fans can feel before puck drop, the sense that falling behind at home no longer means panic but patience.
Nathan MacKinnon has been the engine, driving possession and punishing coverage mistakes, and his home splits continue to tilt games. The 30-year-old former first overall pick keeps pushing play north, even when goals are not the headline.
Cale Makar's impact shows up in quieter ways during this run. His retrievals shorten defensive shifts, his outlets keep the Avalanche attacking, and opponents struggle to establish sustained forechecks in Denver.
Depth scoring deserves real credit too. Colorado's bottom six has chipped in timely goals during the streak, which keeps Bednar from leaning too heavily on the top line late in games.
The defensive structure has tightened since November. The Avalanche are collapsing quicker around the crease, limiting second chances, and allowing goaltenders Mackenzie Blackwood and Scott Wedgewood cleaner sightlines at home.
That combination explains why this streak feels sturdy, not fragile. It is not just one line or one heater, it is repeatable habits stacking wins in the same building.
The historical note came from a familiar account tracking Avalanche trends, underscoring just how rare this run is in the modern NHL.
What matters next is how Colorado leverages it. With Central Division races often decided by a handful of points, banking home wins now could pay off loudly in April.
Ball Arena has become a problem again for visiting teams, and the Avalanche look comfortable carrying that edge into the heart of the season.
POLL
DECEMBRE 25   |   29 ANSWERS
Avalanche's latest victory soars to heights few teams have ever seen

Does this home streak signal a deep Colorado Avalanche run?


COLORADO HOCKEY DAILY
COPYRIGHT @2025  ·  ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
TERMS OF SERVICE  ·  PRIVACY POLICY  ·  COOKIE POLICY
RSS FEED  ·  SITEMAP  ·  ROBOTS.TXT