F Kyle Connor (knee) may miss Jets’ matchup vs. Sharks

The surging Winnipeg Jets bring a four-game winning streak into the third game of their road trip, a matchup against the San Jose Sharks on Tuesday.

Winnipeg rallied for a 4-2 victory with four unanswered third-period goals against the Anaheim Ducks on Sunday.

However, the Jets were not in a celebratory mood afterward.

Despite the triumph, Winnipeg’s comeback was marred by a knee-buckling collision to star left winger Kyle Connor, who likely will not be in the lineup Tuesday.

Connor, tied for fourth in the NHL through Sunday’s games with 17 goals, carried the puck into the offensive zone and made hard knee-to-knee contact with the Ducks’ Ryan Strome in the first minute of the second period.

Connor’s linemate Mark Scheifele immediately went after Strome, and the two punched it out with the Anaheim second-line pivot knocking down the Jets’ top center.

“Yeah, you don’t touch any of our guys, especially like that,” Scheifele said. “Definitely didn’t like the hit. To see KC down like that, he doesn’t wince like that very often. You have to get in there.”

Connor lay crumpled on the ice for minutes before gingerly getting up on his skates and having to be supported off the ice by the training staff.

Added Winnipeg coach Rick Bowness, “Knee-on-knee … you hope that’s suspendable.”

However, the NHL announced on Monday said there would be no supplemental discipline for Strome, who received a five-minute major and a game misconduct.

The Jets said Connor was in San Jose and getting an MRI to determine the extent of his knee injury.

The Sharks closed a six-game road trip by giving the Vegas Golden Knights all they could handle Sunday night, erasing a two-goal deficit by way of tallies from Calen Addison and Mike Hoffman in the final 3:45 of regulation.

However, Jack Eichel and Jonathan Marchessault scored the only two goals in the shootout as the reigning Stanley Cup champions won 5-4.

For last-place San Jose, the road trip (3-2-1) was a rousing success.

The club earned seven points, shocking the New Jersey Devils, New York Islanders and Detroit Red Wings in victories. The Sharks now sit just one point behind Anaheim in the Pacific Division standings.

After starting 0-10-1, surrendering 10 goals each in two consecutive games and appearing headed toward a historically bad campaign, San Jose is 8-7-2 in the past 17 games.

Rallying against the champs was just another part of Sharks’ progress.

“We’ve created a blueprint of how we’re going to have success here over the last month,” San Jose coach David Quinn said. “We’ve been doing it, but not as consistently as we have over the last two games, and our guys pretty much understand how we’re going to have success.

“I thought they had a five-minute stretch in the third where they kind of hemmed us in a little bit, but a month ago, that’s 25 minutes of hemmed-in hockey that we were trying to fight through.”

The Tuesday matchup will be the first of three between the Western Conference foes over the next two months.