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PITTSBURGH — Give Colorado Avalanche general manager Chris MacFarland credit for one thing: He wasted very little time identifying and attempting to correct his club’s biggest weakness.
The Avs have completely overhauled the goaltending depth chart in 10 days. MacFarland sent starter Alexandar Georgiev to San Jose for Mackenzie Blackwood on Monday before the other goalie he acquired had time to add a Colorado-themed facemask.
Making one trade involving goaltenders before Christmas is hard to do in the NHL.
The Broncos’ bye week is over.
The stretch run has arrived.
Meaningful December football is back on the Front Range in a big way.
The Broncos come off their rest week squarely in the AFC playoff mix and facing perhaps their most impactful regular-season game since 2016 when they host Indianapolis on Sunday afternoon.
A quick reset: Denver is tied with Baltimore and the Los Angeles Chargers at 8-5 heading into the final four weeks.
Troy Renck: To enjoy bowling around these parts for most of the last decade, we had to watch highlights of Pete Weber screaming, “Who do you think you are? I am.” The last time CU and CSU appeared in a bowl game in the same year was December 2016, when “Black Beatles” by Rae Sremmurd topped the charts and Disney’s “Moana” stole kids’ hearts.
NEWARK, N. J. — The Colorado Avalanche has made another significant shakeup to its goaltending depth chart.
Colorado traded starting goaltender Alexandar Georgiev, forward Nikolai Kovalenko, a 2026 second-round pick and a 2025 fifth-rounder Monday to the San Jose Sharks for goalie MacKenzie Blackwood, forward Givani Smith and a 2027 fifth-round selection, the club announced.
RELATED: Avalanche GM Chris MacFarland attempts to fix goaltending issues with bold, risky trade
Elliotte Friedman of Sportsnet first reported the deal was in the works.
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