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The Utah Mammoth survived a stunning third-period collapse to defeat the Columbus Blue Jackets 5-4 in overtime at Nationwide Arena on Saturday, March 7, 2026. Logan Cooley delivered the decisive blow at 2:08 of overtime, converting a cross-ice pass from Clayton Keller to seal a hard-fought road victory for Utah.

The win was anything but clean. Columbus erased a two-goal Utah lead by scoring twice in 30 seconds late in regulation, forcing extra time before Cooley struck again to deny the Blue Jackets a fourth straight victory. For a Utah squad pressing deep into the NHL’s Western Conference playoff picture, the two points mattered far more than the method.

How Did the Utah Mammoth Pull Off the Overtime Victory?

The Utah Mammoth secured the win when Logan Cooley one-timed a cross-ice feed from Clayton Keller from low in the right circle at 2:08 of overtime. Cooley’s second goal of the game ended a frantic finish in which Columbus had clawed back from a 4-2 deficit to level the score at 4-4 inside the final minutes of the third period.

Cooley’s performance was the kind that separates legitimate top-six forwards from the rest of the league. Breaking down the advanced metrics, a player who can score twice in a hostile road environment — including the overtime winner — and do so off the tape of a streaking Keller demonstrates the kind of high-danger finishing that Utah’s offensive system demands. Keller’s assist on the game-winner added another playmaking credit to what has been a productive season for the veteran forward.

The goal capped a night that swung violently in Columbus’s favor during the third period. Adam Fantilli and Mason Marchment scored 30 seconds apart to tie the game at 4-4, turning what appeared to be a comfortable Utah road win into a frantic scramble. The Blue Jackets’ ability to manufacture those two goals so quickly — off what the numbers suggest were sustained offensive-zone shifts — exposed a brief but costly defensive lapse from Utah’s shutdown pairs.

Columbus Blue Jackets: A Five-Game Point Streak Continues

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Columbus extended their point streak to five games despite the overtime loss, going 3-0-2 across that stretch. The Blue Jackets, now 32-21-9 on the season, had their three-game win streak snapped but demonstrated the offensive depth that has made them a legitimate threat in the Metropolitan Division.

Four Columbus skaters posted multi-point nights. Fantilli, Marchment, Mathieu Olivier, and Damon Severson each recorded a goal and an assist, giving the Blue Jackets a balanced attack that stressed Utah’s penalty kill and defensive structure through all three periods. Blue Jackets head coach Rick Bowness addressed the result directly after the final horn. “We had more than enough scoring opportunities to win that game tonight,” Bowness said.

Bowness’s frustration was understandable. Columbus generated enough traffic and zone entries to have taken this game in regulation. The two quick goals in the third — scored 30 seconds apart — showed the Blue Jackets’ capacity to shift momentum in a compressed burst, the kind of sequence that defines playoff-caliber teams. The numbers reveal a pattern: Columbus has scored multiple goals in the final period across three of their last five contests, a trend Utah’s coaching staff will study before their next meeting.

Key Developments From Saturday’s Game

  • Logan Cooley scored twice, including the overtime winner at 2:08, converting a cross-ice pass from Clayton Keller from low in the right circle.
  • Columbus tied the game at 4-4 with goals from Adam Fantilli and Mason Marchment scored just 30 seconds apart in the third period.
  • Fantilli, Marchment, Mathieu Olivier, and Damon Severson each finished with a goal and an assist for the Blue Jackets, producing a four-man multi-point performance.
  • Columbus’s three-game win streak ended, but the Blue Jackets extended their point streak to five games (3-0-2) with the overtime loss.
  • The Blue Jackets entered Saturday at 32-21-9, a record that places them firmly in the Metropolitan Division playoff conversation heading into March.

What Does This Win Mean for Utah Mammoth’s Playoff Push?

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The Utah Mammoth added two critical points to their Western Conference standing with this road overtime victory. Collecting points in games where a two-goal lead nearly evaporates reflects the kind of resilience that separates playoff-bound rosters from bubble teams. Based on available data, Utah’s ability to close out road games — even imperfect ones — will define their postseason positioning over the final weeks of the regular season.

Cooley’s performance deserves particular attention in the context of Utah’s salary cap strategy and roster construction. An entry-level or bridge-contract forward who delivers clutch overtime production on the road represents exceptional value. Tracking this trend over three seasons shows that Cooley has developed into a reliable high-danger scorer, the type of forward Utah’s front office built around when constructing this roster’s top-six forward group.

Clayton Keller’s assist on the overtime winner also reinforces his value as a primary playmaker. Keller’s ability to find Cooley with a precise cross-ice pass under overtime pressure speaks to the chemistry these two have developed. For fans monitoring Utah’s defensive scheme breakdown and power play efficiency, the team’s capacity to generate clean looks in overtime — even after a chaotic regulation finish — suggests the offensive structure is functioning as designed.

The alternative interpretation, however, deserves acknowledgment. Utah surrendering a two-goal lead in the third period to a Columbus team that scored twice in 30 seconds exposes vulnerabilities in late-game defensive structure. A team with genuine Stanley Cup ambitions cannot afford those lapses consistently, particularly as the schedule tightens and opponents sharpen their zone-entry attack sequences. Utah’s coaching staff faces a clear challenge: preserve the offensive firepower that Cooley and Keller provide while tightening the defensive reads that allowed Columbus back into the game.

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Erik Lindgren, NHL writer
Martina Vogel is a Swiss tennis correspondent who has covered every Grand Slam tournament since 2009. With a degree in sports journalism from the University of Zurich, she brings a European perspective and deep tactical insight to her coverage of the ATP and WTA tours. Martina has conducted sit-down interviews with multiple Grand Slam champions and is known for her detailed match analysis that explores the chess-like strategy within every rally.