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Golden Knights’ Ryan Reaves calls out Sharks’ Evander Kane — VIDEO

Updated April 15, 2019 - 12:35 am

Golden Knights forward Ryan Reaves and San Jose Sharks forward Evander Kane have disliked each other since their days in the Western Hockey League.

Reaves has just been hoping Kane would act on his feelings when they’re on the ice together.

“Kane gets 10 feet tall when I’m not on the ice, and when I’m out there, he doesn’t seem to do much,” Reaves said Sunday before Game 3. “That’s how he’s been every time I’ve played him in my career. I don’t expect it to stop.”

That changed late in Sunday night’s 6-3 Knights win at T-Mobile Arena when Reaves tracked down Kane and the longtime rivals exchanged big right hands until Reaves dragged Kane to the ground and the referees stepped in to stop the fight.

Prior to the fracas, Kane’s barbs have been mostly shared through the media. His actual jabs largely had been landed on Reaves’ teammates, aside from poking each other with their sticks at the end of Game 1 near the benches before they finally locked horns late in Game 3.

Neither player spoke to media after the game.

Kane, who has previously referred to Reaves as the Knights’ “babysitter” during the Stanley Cup playoff series between the teams, was assessed a delay of game penalty in the first period Sunday before serving a double-minor for drawing blood from Will Carrier on a high-sticking penalty. Max Pacioretty scored for the Knights five seconds into the man-advantage.

Reaves understands the Sharks are trying to bait him into losing his cool, but said before the game he was determined not to bite.

“I think containing myself sometimes frustrates them even more,” Reaves said. “They’re trying to get me off my game and take penalties, and I’m not going to do that. That can be frustrating in itself for them. I think making sure I’m not hurting the team by doing that is a start.”

The fight was the culmination of a third straight contentious game between the teams.

“It’s been two very physical games, chippy games,” Knights coach Gerard Gallant said before Game 3. “Sooner or later, we’ll get the real good hockey. Both teams are real talented. That’s the way every series is. You watch the games on TV, and it’s no different. The scrums happen all the time. The guys are pumped up and ready to go. There’s a lot of importance. You’ve got to be ready to play playoff hockey.”

Playing through pain

Knights third-line center Cody Eakin added a jaw protector to his helmet Sunday after being involved in a postgame scuffle with the Sharks on Friday.

Eakin declined comment after the team’s morning skate at City National Arena, but Gallant said he expected Eakin to play with no restrictions.

“We feel real good about it,” Gallant said. “He skated this morning and feels fine.”

Sharks missing blueliner

Sharks defenseman Marc-Edouard Vlasic didn’t play Sunday after blocking a shot by Knights defenseman Shea Theodore 1:02 into the second period Friday.

Vlasic ranked third among Sharks defensemen in average time on ice (21:03) and points (25) during the regular season.

He was replaced in the starting lineup by Tim Heed.

More Golden Knights: Follow at reviewjournal.com/GoldenKnights and @HockeyinVegas on Twitter.

Contact Adam Hill at ahill@reviewjournal.com or 702-277-8028. Follow @AdamHillLVRJ on Twitter.

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