The Jets’ Biggest-Ever Blowout Victories

Sometimes you win by the skin of your teeth, and sometimes you win big. This piece is about the latter.

Winnipeg Jets Kyle Connor celebrates with Blake Wheeler, Mark Scheifele, Paul Stastny, and Josh Morrissey
Some games are just full of celebrations. (Photo by Jonathan Kozub/NHLI via Getty Images)

The Winnipeg Jets have won 382 games over 10 seasons since relocating from Atlanta prior to the 2011-12 campaign. Here’s a look at their biggest win of each season.

2011-12: Pummelling the Panthers

Date: March 1, 2012

Score: 7-0

Interestingly, the Jets’ biggest win in each of their first seven seasons occurred in the friendly confines of the MTS Centre/Bell MTS Place. The biggest of their inaugural campaign was a 7-0 drubbing of the Florida Panthers.

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The play fans will remember most from the game — which is tied for the Jets’ largest margin of victory of all time — is the “Flying W,” where the Jets had a 5-on-1 rush in the third period Bryan Little scored on via a cross-crease pass from Blake Wheeler. The name, created by Jets fans, was an homage to the “Flying V” of The Mighty Ducks film franchise.

Bryan Little - Winnipeg Jets
Bryan Little scored to finish off the “Flying W.” (Amy Irvin / The Hockey Writers)

Poor Erik Gudbranson, the lone man back. Poor Jose Theodore, the man in the crease. They never stood a chance.

“I’ve never seen that before ever,” Wheeler said after the game. “I was really nervous, actually, because I looked up and I heard the crowd going crazy so I figured, oh, a two-on-one, three-on-one, whatever. But it was all five guys and I didn’t know where to go with the puck. (Randy Jones) seemed like a good option so I gave it to him, hopefully, he was going to give it right back to me. Thank God I was able to find (Little) ’cause I’ve never seen that before, ever.”

Blake Wheeler on the 5-on-1 rush

The game was actually close through two periods, just a 2-0 lead for the Jets. Kyle Wellwood scored to make it 3-0 early in the third and the Flying W made it 4-0 and sent Theodore to the showers. Nik Antropov, Evander Kane, and Wheeler all notched goals on Scott Clemmensen thereafter to round out the scoring.

2012-13: Slurpees, Cell Phones, and a 7-2 Win

Date: April 11, 2013

Score: 7-2

Winnipeg is the Slurpee capital of the world and Slurpees are better in Canada. The bear that inspired A.A. Milne’s Winnie the Pooh was from Winnipegger. Winnipeg is the coldest city of more than 600,000 people.

Those are some of the facts Panthers’ announcers Steve Goldstein and Bill Lindsay dropped about the city they were in instead of describing what was happening on the ice. That’s because Chris Thorburn had just scored to make it 7-2 Jets with eight minutes to go.

After Chris Thorburn scored to make the game 7-2, Panthers’ announcers Steve Goldstein and Bill Lindsay started chatting about Winnipeg instead of the game. (Amy Irvin / The Hockey Writers)

It was the fifth straight goal the Jets had scored and it wholly diverted Goldstein and Lindsay’s attention to Winnipeg fun facts.

As for the reason Canadian Slurpees are superior, they are denser and have less air in them than their U.S. counterparts, Lindsay explained to Goldstein.

Other topics the duo covered as the clock ran out and the Jets captured their third-straight win: how Winnipeg was the first North American city to use a three-digit emergency number —adopting ‘999’ in 1959 — and how the inventor of the cell phone hailed from the city, too. Martin Cooper, a North End boy, made the first call from his Motorola DynaTAC 8000x in Manhattan in April, 1973.)

2013-14: Two 5-Goal Victories

Dates: Nov. 8, 2013 and March 16, 2014

Scores: 5-0 and 7-2

The Jets’ biggest margin of victory in the 2013-14 season was five goals, which they won by twice.

The first time was in early November, where the Jets — who had just moved to the Central Division from the Southeast — exploded for four first-period goals against the Nashville Predators in a 5-0 win. Little opened the scoring and then a trio of short-lived Jets — Olli Jokinen, Eric Tangradi, and Devin Setoguchi — all scored before the game was even 20 minutes old.

Winnipeg Jet Olli Jokinen - Photo By Andy Martin Jr
Olli Jokinen had a goal and an assist in the four-goal first. (Photo By Andy Martin Jr.)

Little scored again in the third period and Ondrej Pavelec stood on his head, making 41 saves for his first shutout of the season.

The second time was in March, where the Jets shot down the Dallas Stars by a 7-2 score. After Tyler Seguin gave the Stars a 2-1 lead 7:02 into the first, the Jets scored six straight.

The win snapped a six-game losing streak under new head coach Paul Maurice, and strangely enough, the d-men led the offence: the blue-line pairing of Dustin Byfuglien and Tobias Enstrom each had three points, and rookie Jacob Trouba scored, too.

2014-15: Perreault Pots 4 Against Florida

Date: Jan 13, 2015

Score: 8-2

The Jets seemed to pot a lot of goals versus the Panthers in their early seasons.

In this game — the third time in four seasons the Panthers were the team the Jets blew out the biggest — the home side piled up eight goals and Mathieu Perreault contributed half of them. He had quite the night indeed, scoring four a little more than a month after Bryan Little finally scored the Jets’ first hat trick.

Related: Winnipeg Jets 2.0 — Reliving Their ‘Firsts’

It was a historic night at the MTS Centre indeed, as Perreault scored two in the first and then completed his hat trick in the second at 15:23 of the second period. The goal was rather serendipitous, as Tobias Enstrom’s point shot went off the Perreault and past Al Montoya. Hats didn’t rain down until a stoppage about 30 seconds after the goal, as the scorer wasn’t immediately apparent.

Perreault, not content with three, banged in a rebound generated from a Michael Frolik breakaway 69 seconds later, blowing the roof off the building.

Perreault had a glorious chance to add a fifth goal on a third-period breakaway, but Montoya stopped him. If he would have scored, Winnipegger Gail McDonald would have won $1 million dollars courtesy of the Safeway “Score and Win” contest. Three years later, Patrik Laine won Christopher Haley the seven-figure prize as part of the same contest with his five goal outburst against the St. Louis Blues.

2015-16: Scheifele, Stafford, Maul Maple Leafs

Date: Dec. 2, 2015

Score: 6-1

It wasn’t a happy holiday night for the Maple Leafs on this early December night as the Jets put up a six-spot at the MTS Centre.

After Michael Grabner scored for the Leafs 2:02 into the game, Drew Stafford scored back-to-back goals — both assisted by Mark Scheifele — to give the Jets a 2-1 lead heading into the first intermission.

The score remained as such until 1:25 into the third, when Scheifele — who recorded 61 points in what then was his best season as a professional — shovelled a backhand past Garrett Sparks off a rebound generated by a Mathieu Perreault shot.

Mark Scheifele Winnipeg Jets
Mark Scheifele paced the Jets with three points in the game. (Photo by Jonathan Kozub/NHLI via Getty Images)

From there, the floodgates opened; Andrew Ladd, Bryan Little, and even enforcer Anthony Peluso — who only scored four goals for the Jets in 142 games — all notched goals thereafter.

2016-17: Rookie Laine Lights It Up

Date: Nov. 8, 2016

Score: 8-2

Talk about soaring well above the Stars.

Less than a month after recording his first-career hat trick, Finnish phenom and then-rookie Patrik Laine was at it again, scoring three on Kari Lehtonen in the first 30:07.

His first goal was a tip job from a Ben Chiarot point shot. His second was a power play stuff in from in tight. His third was on a rush, one he finished off by banging the puck top shelf with authority.

As hats rained down, Stars head coach Lindy Ruff frowned and crossed his arms. His mood would not improve through the second half of the contest as Laine and Schiefele — who had four points apiece — and the rest of the Jets kept swinging and popped four more past replacement goalie Antii Niemi.

2017-18: Jets Put Firepower on Display

Date: Oct 29, 2017

Score: 7-1

Three nights prior against the Pittsburgh Penguins, the Jets lost a 2-1 overtime squeaker at PPG Paints Arena. The score in this one at Bell MTS Place wasn’t nearly so close.

The Jets went 52-20-10 this season, but were still in the process of finding their identity — just 4-3-1 — when they shocked the Penguins with five first-period goals. It was the first time they truly showed just how offensively adept they were.

Mark Scheifele #55, Blake Wheeler #26 and Patrik Laine #29 of the Winnipeg Jets
It was an early-season win but an important one nonetheless – the first time the Jets truly put the league on notice with their firepower in their best-ever season. (Photo by Darcy Finley/NHLI via Getty Images)

Blake Wheeler scored a first-period hat trick in a 4:20 span, and his third goal, where he undressed Kris Letang and put the puck off the post and in on the backhand, was a thing of beauty. Four other Jets — Joel Armia, Kyle Connor, Shawn Matthias, and Mark Scheifele — had multiple points.

Related: Winnipeg Jets’ Five Best Games of 2017-18

The Jets never looked back after that game. They went 7-2-1 in their next 10, captured the franchise-high mark in victories, and advanced all the way to the Western Conference Final.

2018-19: Jets Blow Away Hurricanes

Date: March 8, 2019

Score: 8-1

Jets rolled into Raleigh on March 8, 2019 and acted like a “bunch of jerks” to the Carolina Hurricanes and their “Cane-iacs” fanbase. The seven-goal margin of victory displayed on the PNC Arena scoreboard at the end of the game was the first time the Jets had won by that many since their inaugural season.

Coming into the game, the Hurricanes were on an 8-1-1 heater and were lighting up social media with their creative-but-controversial “Storm Surge” celebrations. However, the Storm Surge, on this night, was but a summer breeze that couldn’t cause the Jets any turbulence as they soared an 8-1 victory.

Deadline-day acquisition Kevin Hayes got the scoring started early, batting his own rebound out of midair and beating Curtis McElhinney, who was later victimized for three straight by Blake Wheeler, Ben Chiarot, and Nikolaj Ehlers before the first intermission.

Curtis McElhinney Dougie Hamilton Carolina Hurricanes
The Jets victimized Curtis McElhinney for eight goals on 29 shots. (THE CANADIAN PRESS/Adrian Wyld)

The Hurricanes simply had no answer for the Jets, who used their immense speed and skill to build up an impressive 6-1 lead before potting two more in the final minute for good measure. Adam Lowry, who rounded out the scoring with 19 seconds to go, even payed mock homage to the Storm Surge with a cheeky post-game celly.  

2019-20: Wheeler Sets Milestone in Minneapolis

Date: Dec. 21, 2019

Score: 6-0

This game in Minneapolis marked a major milestone for Minnesota-born Blake Wheeler and was a huge statement win for the Jets, who had lost three of their last four.

In the contest prior to their Christmas break, the captain tied and then toppled Ilya Kovalchuk’s as the top point-producer in Thrashers/Jets franchise history by recording his 615th and 616th points.

Related: Jets Top 5 Games of the 2019-20 Season So Far

The tying point came on a first-period shorthanded goal that put the Jets up 1-0 and got them going. The go-ahead point came on a cross-ice seam pass to Patrik Laine on a third-period power play the latter one-timed home.

Blake Wheeler
Blake Wheeler recorded a goal and an assist, tying and surpassing Ilya Kovalchuk as the Thrashers/Jets’ all-time points leader, in an important statement game. (Photo by Darcy Finley/NHLI via Getty Images)

In addition to Wheeler’s record-setting performance, a couple goals from Laine, three assists from Josh Morrissey, and 31 saves from Connor Hellebuyck, Jansen Harkins — making his NHL debut — recorded his first big-league point as he set up Logan Shaw with a slick centring pass for the game’s final goal.

2020-21: A Pair of Big Shutouts in Shortened Season

Dates: April 10, 2021 and May 11, 2021

Scores: 5-0

The 2020-21 NHL season, which didn’t begin until January due to COVID-19, was only 56 games long, but the Jets captured 30 wins in the temporary all-Canadian North Division. Their widest margin of victory was five goals, which they achieved in two separate 5-0 shutouts.

The first was on April 10, when they victimized goaltender Jake Allen and the Montreal Canadiens at the Bell Centre. Though scoreless through the first 30 minutes, the Jets opened the game up with a trio of goals in the latter half of the second frame, with Paul Stastny, Nikolaj Ehlers, and blue-liner Derek Forbort all scoring.

Forbort’s goal was perhaps the most notable: it was the defensive defenseman’s first goal in more than two months and a beauty at that, as he went roof-daddy on Allen in the final minute of the frame. Andrew Copp and Perreault scored in the third and Connor Hellebucyk — who was dialled in after allowing a fluky goal to the Canadiens two nights earlier turned away all 19 shots that came his way.

The second 5-0 win was in the penultimate game of the season against the Vancouver Canucks, when not much was on the line for either team.

The Jets were on a terrible slide coming into the contest, having lost nine of their last 10 games and appearing to be in total free fall. Despite that, a playoff berth wasn’t in doubt. However, they wanted to get some good vibes going before beginning their Stanley Cup chase and they did just that, dominating a Canucks team that was well out of the playoff picture.

The big guns led the way, as Blake Wheeler — who was finally healthy and playing well after spending most of the season playing poorly and with cracked ribs — had two goals and two assists. Kyle Connor and Mark Scheifele both chipped in with three points, and Connor Hellebuyck turned away 24 shots.

It was a true team win, and the only thing that would have made it better would have been a point for Paul Stastny, who was playing in his 1000th-career NHL game.

Paul Stastny Winnipeg Jets
Paul Stastny played in his 1000th career NHL game in the 5-0 rout. (Photo by Jonathan Kozub/NHLI via Getty Images)

The victory secured third place in the North Division and set up a matchup with the heavily-favoured Edmonton Oilers, and the Jets ended shocking the hockey world by sweeping them.

2021-22: A Crazy Win Over the Canadiens

Date: March 1, 2022

Score: 8-4

The Jets’ biggest margin of victory in the 2021-22 season was only four goals, with them winning by that margin seven separate times. So, we’ll take a look craziest win out of those seven: an absurd March matchup against the Canadiens.

The Jets jumped all over the lowly Habs and inexperienced netminder Sam Montembeault, scoring four goals in the first 9:13, all at even strength. But something every observer knew is that the lead was not safe due to the Jets’ poor defensive structure and mental fragility.

Indeed, as they had many times already that season, they eased up considerably and let their opponent back into the game. The implosion began when Hellebuyck allowed a very weak, seemingly harmless shot in by Josh Anderson from a sharp angle. Anderson scored another on a power play to make it 4-2, then a free pizza by Neal Pionk on an attempted breakout pass led to an Artturi Lekhonen breakaway goal to make it 4-3 going into the first intermission.

In the second, Anderson completed the first hat trick of his career to knot the game 4-4, and the score remained that way for a while.

Josh Anderson Montreal Canadiens
Josh Anderson scored a hat trick as the Canadiens drew even after being down 4-0. (Photo by Mark Blinch/NHLI via Getty Images)

The Jets nearly allowed the Canadiens to take the lead when Pierre-Luc Dubois slashed Rem Pitlick on a shorthanded breakaway, but Hellebuyck got just enough of Pitlick’s penalty shot attempt with his blocker to keep the game tied.

That save turned out to be a turning point. Andrew Copp, in his first game back after missing six with a concussion, scored 18 seconds later to restore the one-goal lead going into the second intermission.

In the third, mostly thanks to the Canadiens’ suspect goaltending, the Jets were able to pot three more to win 8-4, and nine players ended up with multiple points. It was the first time in NHL history a team relinquished a four-goal lead before winning by four.