Games

Eagles Rally Past Barracuda 4-2, DiMarsico Nets First Pro Goal

DiMarsico's first pro goal doubled as the game-winner as Colorado erased a deficit to beat San Jose 4-2, delivering a two-point answer to Friday's blowout loss.

Tanya Okafor2 min read
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Eagles Rally Past Barracuda 4-2, DiMarsico Nets First Pro Goal
Source: www.coloradoeagles.com

A rookie's first professional goal rarely doubles as a statement of playoff resolve. Matt DiMarsico's marker Friday night in San Jose was both.

DiMarsico converted what became the deciding goal as the Colorado Eagles erased a deficit and skated away with a 4-2 road victory over the San Jose Barracuda on April 4, a result that lands in the standings with considerably more weight than a single two-point swing.

The context sharpens that weight. Twenty-four hours earlier, the Barracuda had snapped a four-game losing streak by handing Colorado a 6-3 defeat on the same ice. The Eagles returned the following night and answered in the clearest possible way: balanced scoring, steady goaltending, and a milestone from an unproven contributor who chose exactly the right moment to produce his first.

Colorado spread the offense across four players, each logging a goal and an assist: Jayson Megna, Tristen Nielsen, DiMarsico and Gavin Brindley. That symmetry is more than a tidy box score entry. It reflects the kind of multi-line depth contending teams require when playoff seeding is legitimately on the line in the Pacific Division's closing weeks. This was not a one-line performance propped up by familiar names.

AI-generated illustration
AI-generated illustration

Between the pipes, Trent Miner held firm when San Jose pushed back. His 24 saves on 26 shots kept the margin clean, and his steadiness through the middle frames gave Colorado the footing to complete the comeback rather than surrender the lead it had fought to build. Special teams execution and transitional speed gradually flipped the possession dynamic, suffocating a Barracuda home environment that had looked dangerous the night before.

For Colorado, the result carries implications beyond momentum. Late-season road wins against divisional opponents accumulate tiebreaker value, and the Eagles are now positioned to leverage Friday's performance as the final two weeks of the regular season determine seeding and matchup control. Winning the rematch after absorbing a blowout is a more telling achievement than any clean sweep.

DiMarsico's first professional goal as the deciding score is exactly the kind of moment a front office points to when projecting its next wave of contributors. Rookies who deliver in high-pressure situations have a way of quickly outgrowing the developmental label. In a race where the difference between seedings is measured in single points, Colorado found two of them in San Jose and found a new name worth watching while doing it.

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