Feed nhl-thescore

Link http://feeds.thescore.com/
Feed http://feeds.thescore.com/nhl.rss
Updated 2024-11-25 14:46
Game 1 between Bruins, Hurricanes pushed to Wednesday
The Boston Bruins and Carolina Hurricanes will have to wait one more day before kicking off their opening-round series, the league announced.Game 1 between the two sides has been postponed until Wednesday at 11 a.m. ET due to the Tampa Bay Lightning and Columbus Blue Jackets needing five overtimes to settle their opening-round contest.The thriller between the Blue Jackets and Lightning was the first game since 2003 to go into a fifth overtime period, and ended as the fourth longest game in NHL history.The Bruins and Hurricanes are set to meet in the postseason for the second straight year. Boston swept Carolina in the Eastern Conference finals in 2019.Copyright © 2020 Score Media Ventures Inc. All rights reserved. Certain content reproduced under license.
Seth Jones: Officiating in Game 1 was 'kind of suspect'
As if coming out on the losing end of the fourth-longest contest in NHL history wasn't harsh enough, the Columbus Blue Jackets were left extra sour after a controversial missed call potentially cost them the game against the Tampa Bay Lightning on Tuesday in the fifth overtime frame.Prior to Brayden Point's heroics in Game 1, Blue Jackets forward Cam Atkinson appeared to be hauled down on a breakaway chance; there was no call on the play that ultimately could have been a penalty shot.
Lightning take Game 1 over Blue Jackets with 5OT win
Tampa Bay Lightning forward Brayden Point scored 10:27 into the fifth overtime period of Game 1 on Tuesday night to seal a victory over the Columbus Blue Jackets.The game was the fourth-longest in NHL history.More to come.Copyright © 2020 Score Media Ventures Inc. All rights reserved. Certain content reproduced under license.
Dougie Hamilton expected to suit up for Game 1 vs. Bruins
Carolina Hurricanes head coach Rod Brind'Amour expects defenseman Dougie Hamilton to make his 2020 postseason debut in Game 1 against the Boston Bruins Wednesday, he said, according to The Athletic's Sara Civian.The series-opening contest was initially scheduled for Tuesday but was pushed back due to a lengthy Game 1 between the Columbus Blue Jackets and Tampa Bay Lightning.Hamilton will take part in the team's warmup ahead of Game 1 before the team makes an official decision.The 27-year-old didn't participate in the team's qualifying round series after suffering an undisclosed injury during Phase 3. Hamilton broke his fibula in January, but the current injury was reportedly not connected to it.Before his injury during the 2019-20 season, Hamilton was among the best defencemen in the league. He racked up 14 goals and 26 assists in 46 games while averaging 23:17 minutes of ice time per game.After sweeping the New York Rangers in the play-in round, the Hurricanes will kick off their series against the Bruins on Tuesday at 8 p.m. ET.Copyright © 2020 Score Media Ventures Inc. All rights reserved. Certain content reproduced under license.
Holland: Oilers need more defensive leadership from McDavid, Draisaitl
Edmonton Oilers stars Leon Draisaitl and Connor McDavid may have finished atop the league in regular-season scoring, but general manager Ken Holland is challenging them to do more defensively."The answer would be, yes," Holland said when asked if the Oilers need the duo's defensive leadership more than their offensive influence, according to Sportsnet's Mark Spector."They are getting better," Holland said. "But in this playoff series (against the Blackhawks), we were playing against battle-tested players (who) had won three Stanley Cups."McDavid led all skaters in the qualifying round with five goals and nine points, while Draisaitl contributed six points in the series. However, the No. 12-seeded Blackhawks still upset the Oilers in four games.Edmonton allowed three-plus goals in each contest and 16 during the series. Holland acknowledged the Oilers' defensive improvement this season, but he knows there are still steps ahead to become an elite team.“We went from 25th to 17th (in goals against), but we need to make more strides,” he said. “You’ve got to be able to defend. You can’t just outscore your opponents. I don’t think that’s totally a reflection on the defencemen. It’s a reflection on the whole team, and their commitment to keeping the puck out of the net.”With the series loss to Chicago, Edmonton failed to secure a spot in the round of 16 for the third consecutive campaign.Copyright © 2020 Score Media Ventures Inc. All rights reserved. Certain content reproduced under license.
Rangers GM: Plan for next season is to carry 2 goalies
The New York Rangers plan to carry two goaltenders on the active roster for the 2020-21 season, general manager Jeff Gorton revealed to the media on Tuesday, according to Newsday's Colin Stephenson.The Rangers had three goaltenders on their NHL roster for majority of the 2019-20 season: Henrik Lundqvist, Alexandar Georgiev, and Igor Shesterkin. Georgiev started 32 games, Lundqvist started 26, and Shesterkin started 12.Team president John Davidson said that he's already spoken to Lundqvist following the team's elimination from the postseason, adding that the team will "handle things the right way."The 38-year-old has spent the last 15 seasons backstopping the Rangers after New York selected him in the 2000 NHL Draft. Georgiev, 24, has been with the team since 2017-18, while Shesterkin, also 24, joined the team midseason after spending the past six seasons in the KHL.Lundqvist has one year left on his contract, which carries an average annual value of $8.5 million. Shesterkin's entry-level contract runs through the 2020-21 season, and Georgiev's expires this offseason.Copyright © 2020 Score Media Ventures Inc. All rights reserved. Certain content reproduced under license.
NHL podcast: Draft lottery takeaways, Leafs fallout, playoff plot twists
Welcome to Puck Pursuit, an NHL podcast hosted by John Matisz, theScore's national hockey writer.Subscribe to the show on iTunes, SoundCloud, Stitcher, and Spotify.Puck Pursuit · Hockey analyst Rachel DoerrieRachel Doerrie, writer, podcast host, and former hockey analyst for the New Jersey Devils, joins the show to discuss a variety of topics, including:
1 compelling storyline for each round of 16 playoff series
The real Round 1 of the playoffs is officially here. Everyone loves a good narrative, so we'll take a look at one key storyline for each series.Note: The NHL re-seeded teams after the qualifying round.Eastern ConferencePhiladelphia Flyers (1) vs. Montreal Canadiens (8) Andre Ringuette/Freestyle Photo / Getty Images Sport / GettyCarter Hart's favorite goalie growing up was Carey Price. Now the 21-year-old will go toe to toe with his childhood hero.Price was the top goalie of the last decade, and today's players still believe he's the best in the league at his position. The 2015 Vezina and Hart Trophy winner was lights out in Montreal's upset series win over the Pittsburgh Penguins in the qualifying round. He may need to be even better for the Habs to get past Philly.Hart, meanwhile, is unquestionably the league's best young (under 25) goaltender, and he'll likely win the Vezina Trophy in the future. But only the present matters, and he'll need to perform better than his idol for the Flyers to advance.Tampa Bay Lightning (2) vs. Columbus Blue Jackets (7) Kirk Irwin / Getty Images Sport / GettyCan the Lightning conquer their demons? Last year's shocking four-game sweep at the hands of the Blue Jackets surely still stings. What did they learn about playing Columbus? Tampa definitely won't take the Jackets lightly this time, but will the Lightning be able to figure out how to solve Columbus' stingy defense?Tampa Bay could also be without Steven Stamkos and Victor Hedman for the series. Stamkos didn't suit up during the round robin, and Hedman departed Saturday's game after taking an awkward fall. Their statuses for Game 1 are uncertain. Without them, Brayden Point and Nikita Kucherov would be counted on even more heavily to produce offense, and Ryan McDonagh and Mikhail Sergachev would log more minutes on the blue line.The Blue Jackets are also battle-tested after a roller-coaster play-in series against the Toronto Maple Leafs, whose playing style is similar to the Lightning's. Columbus should be well-prepared to pull off another upset. Losing again would be crushing for the Lightning, with the team firmly in its Stanley Cup window.Washington Capitals (3) vs. New York Islanders (6) Patrick McDermott / National Hockey League / GettyBarry Trotz won the Stanley Cup following the last game he coached for the Capitals with Todd Reirden as his right-hand man. Now, Trotz will go head to head with his protege.The Islanders will try to clog up the neutral zone and keep shots to the outside in the defensive zone. Despite Reirden being Trotz's disciple, his Caps are a bit more offensive-minded and will aim to make the series more wide-open. The coach whose team can dictate the pace will get the edge.Boston Bruins (4) vs. Carolina Hurricanes (5) Bruce Bennett / Getty Images Sport / GettyThe rematch of the 2019 Eastern Conference Final could be the most entertaining Round 1 series. It will also show how much weight we should have put on the round robin and play-in results.The Bruins didn't look like this season's Presidents' Trophy winners while going winless in the round robin. The Hurricanes, meanwhile, were the most dominant team during the qualifiers, sweeping the New York Rangers in three games by a combined score of 11-4.These aren't the same Hurricanes the Bruins swept a year ago, as Sebastian Aho, Andrei Svechnikov, and Co. are a year older. Jake Gardiner, Joel Edmundson, Brady Skjei, and others have also been added to the mix. Additionally, rookie Martin Necas will be a factor. The Bruins, who entered the season as the league's fourth-oldest team, haven't changed much since last year.Carolina's chances have seemingly improved, but overlooking Boston would be downright foolish.Western ConferenceVegas Golden Knights (1) vs. Chicago Blackhawks (8) Jonathan Kozub / National Hockey League / GettyThis series might be personal for Robin Lehner, who was dealt from the Blackhawks to the Golden Knights at the trade deadline."I went to Chicago to help them out and got promises of getting a fair chance to play," the goaltender said after the trade. "I didn't play much in the beginning or the middle beginning of the season, even if I played really well and had a good camp."Lehner added that eventually he took over and won nine out of 10 games, saying, "We walked up one point behind a playoff spot."Then, all of a sudden, I found myself on the bench for no reason," he continued. "That was tough. Plus, negotiations had totally died out."Lehner will be out to prove he's a better netminder than Corey Crawford, with whom he shared Chicago's crease for the majority of the campaign. That is, assuming Lehner gets the call for Vegas in Game 1 over Marc-Andre Fleury.Colorado Avalanche (2) vs. Arizona Coyotes (7) Andy Devlin / National Hockey League / GettyHow far can Darcy Kuemper take the Coyotes? Though the Nashville Predators drastically outplayed Arizona in the qualifying round, Kuemper was a brick wall, posting a .933 save percentage in the 3-1 series win while facing an average of 41 shots per game.The Avalanche are the vastly superior team and should dominate play in this series, but the Coyotes' one advantage comes between the pipes. If Kuemper can stand on his head, the Yotes have a chance. If not, this series could be over early.Dallas Stars (3) vs. Calgary Flames (6) Icon Sportswire / Icon Sportswire / GettyTyler Seguin's and Ben Bishop's health could have a major effect on this series. Both of Dallas' stars missed Sunday's final round-robin contest and their statuses for Game 1 are unclear. The Stars can survive without Bishop thanks to Anton Khudobin, the best backup in the league, but Seguin would be difficult to replace. He led the team with 50 points this season, while no other player cracked 40 on the goal-starved squad.Even if Seguin plays, you know the Flames - specifically the likes of Matthew Tkachuk and Milan Lucic - will not hold back physically.St. Louis Blues (4) vs. Vancouver Canucks (5) Jeff Vinnick / National Hockey League / GettyThis series will be an excellent test for Vancouver's young core. Elias Pettersson, Brock Boeser, and Quinn Hughes are about to get their first real taste of playoff hockey against a proven team built for the postseason. How will these three offensive juggernauts fare against defensive specimens like Ryan O'Reilly and Colton Parayko? The Blues are going to be extremely physical, and the Canucks' young guns will either back down or rise to the challenge.Copyright © 2020 Score Media Ventures Inc. All rights reserved. Certain content reproduced under license.
Scheifele doesn't think Tkachuk hurt him on purpose
Mark Scheifele isn't holding any ill will toward Matthew Tkachuk after a hit from the agitator ended his season in the first period of the qualifying-round series between the Calgary Flames and the Winnipeg Jets.Scheifele told TSN's Sara Orlesky the result of the hit was frustrating, but he doesn't believe Tkachuk raised his skate blade intentionally."In terms of the hit, I think the first thing is that he was a little out of control," Scheifele said. "He did reach out to me and talk to me about it. He was out of control and he tried to get a piece of me. Obviously I wish that didn't happen and I would have been playing in the rest of that series, but that's the way hockey is."Scheifele played just 2:59 in Game 1 before he needed to be helped off the ice, and debate raged online as to whether Tkachuk targeted the Jets forward maliciously.The Flames went on to win the best-of-five series in four games as Winnipeg's offense struggled without Scheifele and Patrik Laine, who was also injured in Game 1.Scheifele collected 73 points in 71 regular-season games in 2019-20, his seventh full campaign with the Jets.Copyright © 2020 Score Media Ventures Inc. All rights reserved. Certain content reproduced under license.
Hedman in lineup for Game 1 vs. Blue Jackets
Tampa Bay Lightning defenseman Victor Hedman is in the lineup for Tuesday's series opener versus the Columbus Blue Jackets.The star blue-liner fell awkwardly in the first period of the Bolts' final round-robin game Friday and was unable to return with an undisclosed injury.Hedman is a vital piece in the Lightning's Stanley Cup aspirations, and the club could ill-afford for him to be out of the lineup with captain Steven Stamkos also sidelined with an injury for the foreseeable future.Hedman is a Norris Trophy finalist for the fourth consecutive season after collecting 55 points in 66 games while averaging over 24 minutes per night.Copyright © 2020 Score Media Ventures Inc. All rights reserved. Certain content reproduced under license.
Pens' Rutherford: 'There is something wrong. Changes need to be made'
After yet another early postseason exit, Pittsburgh Penguins general manager Jim Rutherford knows he has to make some changes."There is something wrong," Rutherford said, according to The Athletic's Josh Yohe. "Changes need to be made."In regards to the team's coaching staff, Rutherford added: "We had a good regular season and dealt with adversity and got through that. You look at that and give credit in the right places. You also have to look at what happened here at the end of these last two seasons and there's a pattern here."The Penguins were eliminated from the playoffs last week at the hands of the 12th-seeded Montreal Canadiens despite finishing the regular season as one of the league's top teams. Pittsburgh was swept by the New York Islanders in the opening round of last year's playoffs.Despite the Penguins' lack of recent postseason success, Rutherford confirmed that he doesn't plan to make any changes to their aging core, which includes stars Sidney Crosby, Evgeni Malkin, and Kris Letang."I plan to move forward with the core. These are good players. They still have good hockey left in them," Rutherford said. "I always have to say, if some amazing trade comes along, you have to look at it, but I will not actively be looking at trying to trade our core players."However, Rutherford acknowledged that he may not be able to keep his team's goaltending duo intact due to the flat salary cap. Matt Murray and Tristan Jarry are both set to become restricted free agents this offseason.The Penguins currently have 11 impending free agents on their active roster.Copyright © 2020 Score Media Ventures Inc. All rights reserved. Certain content reproduced under license.
Stanley Cup odds update: Big moves following preliminary round
Find line reports, best bets, and subscribe to push notifications in the Betting News section.Since the play-in series and round-robin games concluded, there have been some significant shifts on the Stanley Cup oddsboard.Oddsmakers have reacted quite strongly, but we'll have to wait and see how much stock we should put into these games.Were the adjustments necessary, or have they opened up value in the market for bettors?TEAMODDS (8/11)ODDS (7/28)Vegas Golden Knights+550+800Philadelphia Flyers+600+700Colorado Avalanche+650+800Carolina Hurricanes+700+4000Tampa Bay Lightning+800+400Boston Bruins+900+400St. Louis Blues+1000+1000Washington Capitals+1200+900Dallas Stars+1600+1200Chicago Blackhawks+1800+6000Calgary Flames+2000+3000New York Islanders+2200+4000Vancouver Canucks+2600+3000Montreal Canadiens+3000+12500Columbus Blue Jackets+3200+6000Arizona Coyotes+3400+4000Vegas Golden Knights (+550)Oddsmakers noted the Knights' unbeaten record in the qualifying round, making them Cup favorites after securing first seed in the West. There's no real value at this price, but this number is only going to shorten as the playoffs progress. Similarly, the Flyers shortened to +600 after claiming the top spot in the East, but we could see a better price there soon with strong showings from the Lightning and Bruins.Carolina Hurricanes (+700)I recommended hopping on the Hurricanes train before the NHL returned, and then did so again a few days later, before their first play-in game. Both of those times, the Hurricanes were sitting at +4000. Their dominant showing against the Rangers depleted their line value completely, but you can probably wait for a better one in their next - and likely tighter - series with the Bruins. I've heavily invested in Carolina, but not at this price.Tampa Bay Lightning (+800)Falling short of the No. 1 seed probably bumped them back from a +400 open a bit, but Victor Hedman and Steven Stamkos' injuries are what really impacted this line. If you're interested, snap it up now because it won't be available for long.Boston Bruins (+900)The round-robin stage had the most negative impact on the Bruins, who slumped to an 0-3 finish. But the overreaction to a few glorified exhibition games is a little harsh. This experienced group is worth backing at the current price, and there shouldn't be any concern about Boston's ability to ramp up the intensity ahead of Round 1.Chicago Blackhawks (+1800)The Blackhawks' date with the top-ranked Knights isn't scaring oddsmakers, who have seen their odds shorten from 60-1 to 18-1 following their play-in win over the Oilers. Chicago led the round with 16 goals despite just 9.7 expected goals for, and allowed a league-high 71 high-danger scoring chances. But that's just not going to cut it against Vegas. Don't waste your money at this price.Montreal Canadiens (+3000)The Canadiens had by far the longest odds to win the Cup before the play-in round began, more than double the next closest team at 125-1. Their upset of the Penguins impressed oddsmakers, reasonably giving them the biggest move before Round 1 begins. The Habs' triumph was more than just Carey Price standing on his head - their youngsters' emergence resulted in strong depth down the middle, while their big three on defense were well-equipped to carry the load. This price is a fairer representation of Montreal's chances.Columbus Blue Jackets (+3200)There's still a ton of value in backing the Blue Jackets at 32-1. This team is built for playoff hockey, with excellent goaltending, a defense that excels at limiting quality chances against, and a relentless forecheck that stresses opposing teams out. This price should be closer to 20-1.(Odds source: theScore Bet)Alex Moretto is a sports betting writer for theScore. A journalism graduate from Guelph-Humber University, he has worked in sports media for over a decade. He will bet on anything from the Super Bowl to amateur soccer, is too impatient for futures, and will never trust a kicker. Find him on Twitter @alexjmoretto.Copyright © 2020 Score Media Ventures Inc. All rights reserved. Certain content reproduced under license.
Golden Knights to start Lehner in Game 1 vs. Blackhawks
Vegas Golden Knights head coach Pete DeBoer revealed that goaltender Robin Lehner will start Game 1 against the Chicago Blackhawks on Tuesday, according to The Athletic's Jesse Granger."It's not about what Flower (Marc-Andre Fleury) didn't do. Flower has been great," DeBoer said, according to Granger. "It's about what Lehner has done since he got here."The Golden Knights acquired Lehner from the Blackhawks at this season's trade deadline. He started three regular-season games for Vegas, going 3-0-0 with a .940 save percentage and 1.67 goals-against average.Lehner started two of Vegas' three round-robin contests. He turned aside 57 of the 62 shots he faced while winning both matches.Fleury, who will be Lehner's backup in Game 1, started 48 games for the Golden Knights this season. He allowed four goals on 17 shots in his only round-robin appearance.Vegas' series against the Blackhawks is slated to begin at 10:30 p.m. ET on Tuesday.Copyright © 2020 Score Media Ventures Inc. All rights reserved. Certain content reproduced under license.
NHL Eastern Conference 1st-round betting preview: Prepare for upsets
Find line reports, best bets, and subscribe to push notifications in the Betting News section.The favorites were tough to bet against in our Western Conference preview, but that couldn't be further from the truth in the East, where the chaos factor is off the charts.Which giants are poised for an early postseason exit?Philadelphia Flyers (-240) vs. Montreal Canadiens (+195)This isn't going to be a walk in the park for the Flyers. The Canadiens are an excellent team at five-on-five - they finished third in expected goals percentage this season - whereas Philadelphia is more middle of the road in that regard. The Flyers have more elite talent, but the Habs make up for that in depth.Nick Suzuki and Jesperi Kotkaniemi give the Canadiens a lot of flexibility down the middle, with Claude Julien able to play around with matchups. The Flyers were a great team during the regular season, but it's going to be tough for them to keep up that level of play against a Montreal side that won't just sit back and let them play with the puck.Philadelphia is the better team - and has an answer to the Carey Price conundrum in Carter Hart - but this series will be a lot closer than the line suggests, and there's plenty of value in Montreal at this price.Pick: Canadiens (+195)Tampa Bay Lightning (-225) vs. Columbus Blue Jackets (+185)Even without the injured Victor Hedman and Steven Stamkos, the Lightning should be too much for the Blue Jackets. Any offensive, defensive, or goaltending stat flatters Tampa Bay, which has few weaknesses. However, we've seen this before.The Blue Jackets are a tenacious, physical, and relentless bunch who are completely committed to the cause. Defensively, they have a proven ability to slow elite offenses and the goaltending to match.Puck luck will have to be on Columbus' side if it's to win this series, though it'll be interesting to see how quickly Tampa Bay can ramp up its intensity following a lackadaisical round robin. The Lighting are the easy choice if you're picking a winner straight up, but I'm not willing to pay -225 to find out if they're ready to exorcise their playoff demons.Pick: Blue Jackets (+185)Washington Capitals (-167) vs. New York Islanders (+140)Barry Trotz leads his Islanders into battle against his former team, which will know exactly what to expect. The Isles have a clear identity: they suppress chances, block a lot of shots, and make teams fight for every inch. They are deep down the middle and on the blue line, which will be a real test for the Capitals' elite forwards, who were quiet during the round robin.Still, the Capitals are excellent at driving play and keeping possession. They have an abundance of high-end talent who will ensure the bulk of this series is played in the Islanders' end. It's unlikely that Semyon Varlamov, who's largely sheltered by New York's strong defensive play, is capable of stealing the series from Washington.John Carlson's health will be a major factor, but all signs point to him being ready for Game 1, in which case Washington - provided Braden Holtby is solid enough between the pipes - will outlast the Islanders in a tight series.Pick: Capitals (-167)Boston Bruins (-137) vs. Carolina Hurricanes (+116)This is going to be a ton of fun. The Bruins are a strong defensive team with talent up front and stellar goaltending. The Hurricanes are an elite offensive team with a stacked blue line that will include Dougie Hamilton. This pair of powerhouses shine both on paper and the ice, but the price feels inflated.Boston's top line is superior, but Carolina is deeper up and down its lineup. The Hurricanes get greater offensive contributions from their bottom six and have the best defensive corps in the NHL. The Bruins hold the edge in goal, though, and they might actually need to lean on Tuukka Rask more than they'd like to during this series.This Carolina team is a much stronger and less naive group than the one the Bruins swept last season. It rolled through the New York Rangers in the play-ins while Boston was largely uninspiring, finish 0-3 during round-robin play. Having a healthy Hamilton - the best defenseman in this series - is a huge bonus for the Canes, who have all they need to pull off the upset.Pick: Hurricanes (+116)Alex Moretto is a sports betting writer for theScore. A journalism graduate from Guelph-Humber University, he has worked in sports media for over a decade. He will bet on anything from the Super Bowl to amateur soccer, is too impatient for futures, and will never trust a kicker. Find him on Twitter @alexjmoretto.Copyright © 2020 Score Media Ventures Inc. All rights reserved. Certain content reproduced under license.
NHL Power Rankings: Each team's most impressive player since restart
This is the 14th edition of theScore's NHL Power Rankings for 2019-20 and the second since the announcement of the season restart. With the round of 16 about to begin, we've limited the rankings to the teams still competing.In this edition, we'll look at each club's most impressive player since play resumed on Aug. 1.1. Philadelphia FlyersPrevious rank: 6Scott Laughton has continued to develop offensively after potting a career-high 13 regular-season goals. The 6-foot-1 forward led the Flyers with three goals and five points in round-robin play despite logging just over 14 minutes per contest.2. Vegas Golden Knights Andy Devlin / National Hockey League / GettyPrevious rank: 8The Golden Knights went 3-0-0 in round-robin action without Max Pacioretty, largely due to defenseman Shea Theodore's brilliant play. The 24-year-old rearguard recorded two goals and two assists while averaging 24:02 of ice time. He also led the club with 11 shots on goal and paced Vegas' blue-liners with a 62.37% Corsi For rate at five-on-five.3. Colorado AvalanchePrevious rank: 3Nathan MacKinnon hasn't shown any rust following the league's long hiatus. The Hart Trophy candidate notched three points in three games and led all forwards while averaging 22:17 of ice time per contest. MacKinnon also set the tone physically with six hits, and Colorado owned a 63.49% share of expected goals with the star forward on the ice at five-on-five.4. Tampa Bay LightningPrevious rank: 4Brayden Point picked up the slack with Lightning captain Steven Stamkos out. The 23-year-old pivot shared the team lead with three points in three games, and he was dominant during faceoffs while winning 65.85% of his draws.5. Boston BruinsPrevious rank: 1The mighty Bruins are struggling to find their game since returning to action, dropping all three round-robin games while scoring only four goals. Two of those tallies came from 6-foot grinder Chris Wagner, who also led the team with 12 hits and played a penalty-kill role. The Bruins will be in fine form if they receive that type of depth play once their big guns get rolling.6. Carolina Hurricanes Mark Blinch / National Hockey League / GettyPrevious rank: 10With 23-year-old Sebastian Aho leading the attack, the Hurricanes' young stars were on full display in their sweep of the New York Rangers. Aho netted three goals, and he ranks second in postseason scoring with an impressive eight points in three games.7. St. Louis Blues Previous rank: 2The reigning Conn Smythe Trophy winner is picking up where he left off last postseason. The Blues weren't at their best during the round robin, but Ryan O'Reilly was the team's offensive leader with three points, and he remains one of the league's best defensive forwards.8. Washington CapitalsPrevious rank: 7The Capitals are counting on Braden Holtby to return to his old form this postseason. His regular season was lackluster, and backup Ilya Samsonov isn't with the team. However, Holtby looked sharp during the round robin, posting a .925 save percentage and a 1.98 goals-against average.9. Dallas StarsPrevious rank: 9Miro Heiskanen doesn't get enough attention despite being one of the league's best young defensemen. It's time to start recognizing the 21-year-old Finn as a future Norris Trophy candidate. He led the Stars offensively with four points in three games during the round robin while also playing big minutes and doing an excellent job limiting his opponents' chances.10. Columbus Blue Jackets Andre Ringuette/Freestyle Photo / Getty Images Sport / GettyPrevious rank: 15If the Blue Jackets go on a deep run, it'll be because of their defense and goaltending. While Seth Jones and Zach Werenski were sensational at slowing down the high-powered Toronto Maple Leafs' attack, Joonas Korpisalo gets the nod here after posting a .956 save percentage and a qualifying-round best 4.43 goals saved above average over four games.11. New York IslandersPrevious rank: 13Semyon Varlamov helped provide stability for the Islanders while sharing the crease with Thomas Greiss during the regular season, and the Russian goaltender was the biggest reason New York dispatched the Florida Panthers in four games during the qualifying round. Varlamov allowed only seven goals throughout the series while authoring a .932 save percentage.12. Vancouver CanucksPrevious rank: 17Jacob Markstrom was solid in net for the Canucks over four games as they eliminated the Minnesota Wild, but Quinn Hughes has been Vancouver's best player since the restart. The 20-year-old Calder Trophy finalist led his club with five assists and six points in the series while averaging a team-leading over 24 minutes of ice time per game.13. Calgary FlamesPrevious rank: 19There was some debate about who should start Game 1 for the Flames against the Winnipeg Jets, but there's no doubt who should occupy Calgary's crease now. Cam Talbot was excellent in the qualifying round, surrendering only six goals over four games while posting a .945 save percentage and helping to eliminate the Jets with a 31-save shutout in Game 4.14. Montreal Canadiens Andre Ringuette/Freestyle Photo / Getty Images Sport / GettyPrevious rank: 24Speaking of netminders, the Canadiens needed their franchise player to excel if they wanted to shock the Pittsburgh Penguins, and that's exactly what happened. Carey Price finished the series with a .947 save percentage, shutting out his dynamic opposition in the Game 4 clincher and allowing two-plus goals only once over the three previous contests.15. Arizona CoyotesPrevious rank: 22The Coyotes managed to squeeze past the Nashville Predators despite being outplayed all series. They moved on largely thanks to Darcy Kuemper and his dazzling .933 save percentage.16. Chicago BlackhawksPrevious rank: 23Jonathan Toews is playing like a man on a mission this postseason. "Captain Serious" has been disproving doubters throughout the 2019-20 campaign, and the Blackhawks' leader remains the club's best player since play resumed. He helped Chicago upset the Edmonton Oilers with a team-leading four goals and seven points over four games.(Analytics source: Natural Stat Trick)Copyright © 2020 Score Media Ventures Inc. All rights reserved. Certain content reproduced under license.
NHL playoff picks: Stars, Bruins will start strong
Find line reports, best bets, and subscribe to push notifications in the Betting News section.This is when the real playoff hockey starts. The round-robin games felt like exhibition contests, and the play-in series didn't offer genuine playoff matchups.The field is set now, and here are a pair of bets for the beginning of Round 1 on Tuesday.Calgary Flames (-110) @ Dallas Stars (-120)A lot of money is coming in on the Flames to win this game and the series, which is an overreaction to their convincing series victory over the Jets. Calgary outscored Winnipeg 16-6 over four games, with Cam Talbot posting a .945 save percentage.However, the Jets were missing two of their top scorers all series, which contributed to Talbot's suddenly improved performance. As for Calgary's offensive outburst, Winnipeg's defense has been a wreck all season. The Jets were 26th in regular-season expected goals against, and they allowed the second-most high-danger scoring chances.Now the Stars should give the Flames a wake-up call. Dallas allowed the second-fewest goals in the league this season, and the Stars excelled at suppressing chances. They play a style suited for playoff hockey, and until we see that from the Flames too following their swift elimination last season, Calgary remains a strong fade candidate.Critics will doubt the Stars because of their trouble scoring this season, but the team's veteran forward group is capable of stepping up when it matters. Tyler Seguin, Jamie Benn, and Alexander Radulov were terrific in the playoffs last season, while Corey Perry and Joe Pavelski have a history of elevating their play in the postseason. Ride Dallas at a bargain in Game 1.Pick: Stars (-120)Carolina Hurricanes (+115) @ Boston Bruins (-145)I'm picking the Hurricanes to win this series, but am backing the Bruins to jump out to an early lead and take Game 1. Boston was underwhelming in round-robin play, but the Bruins are incredibly experienced and won't struggle to ramp up the intensity to begin the playoffs.The well-coached Hurricanes are a bit green, and they'll need to earn their stripes in Game 1. They cruised through the play-in round, and navigating past the Rangers with ease will hurt them a bit here. Carolina is also welcoming Dougie Hamilton back into the lineup for the first time since Jan. 16, and he'll need a game to get back up to speed.Pick: Bruins (-145)(Odds source: theScore Bet)Alex Moretto is a sports betting writer for theScore. A journalism graduate from Guelph-Humber University, he has worked in sports media for over a decade. He will bet on anything from the Super Bowl to amateur soccer, is too impatient for futures, and will never trust a kicker. Find him on Twitter @alexjmoretto.Copyright © 2020 Score Media Ventures Inc. All rights reserved. Certain content reproduced under license.
Rangers win 2020 NHL Draft lottery
The New York Rangers won the draft lottery Monday night and will get the No. 1 selection in the upcoming 2020 NHL Draft.The Rangers haven't selected at the top of the draft since 1965 when they drafted Andre Veilleux. They picked Kaapo Kakko with the second overall pick in 2019.Each team participating was given an equal 12.5% chance to win the lottery. The Rangers finished with the league's 18th-best regular-season record at 37-28-5.QMJHL phenom Alexis Lafreniere is the consensus projected top pick. He was named CHL Player of the Year in each of the past two seasons after accumulating 72 goals and 217 points in 113 games across both campaigns.Here's the full order for the first 15 picks in the draft:PickTeam1Rangers2Kings3Senators (via Sharks)4Red Wings5Senators6Ducks7Devils8Sabres9Wild10Jets11Predators12Panthers13Hurricanes (via Maple Leafs)14Oilers15Penguins**Pittsburgh has seven days to decide whether it will keep the 2020 pick or transfer it to the Wild. Minnesota would get the Penguins' 2021 pick if Pittsburgh keeps its 2020 selection.The Maple Leafs traded their first-round pick to the Hurricanes along with Patrick Marleau last summer. The pick was top-10 protected, which means Carolina now owns the 2020 selection.Pittsburgh's pick was sent to the Wild in exchange for Jason Zucker prior to this season's trade deadline. The Penguins now get the choice to keep it because the pick fell between Nos. 1-15.The 2020 NHL Draft is set to take place Oct. 9-10.Copyright © 2020 Score Media Ventures Inc. All rights reserved. Certain content reproduced under license.
Wild GM Guerin: 'There definitely have to be changes' this offseason
After failing to make it past the qualifying round, Minnesota Wild general manager Bill Guerin knows that he will have work to do in his first full offseason at the helm."I think we’re a good team, but there definitely have to be changes,” Guerin said, according to The Athletic's Michael Russo. "We haven’t had success here. Things need to get better, that’s just the way it is."The Wild have made the postseason four times in the last five years, but have failed to advance past Round 1 each time. Last week, they lost their qualifying round matchup against the Vancouver Canucks in four games.In his first season as general manager, Guerin made several big moves, including trading out veteran Jason Zucker to bring in Alex Galchenyuk, Calen Adisson, and a first-round pick. He also fired head coach Bruce Boudreau in his fourth season with the team.Guerin pointed to the fact that the team has been lacking a true No. 1 center, and says he will do what he can to fulfill that need this offseason.“Teams don’t trade No. 1 centers. They just don’t,” Guerin said. “Usually it’s got to be done in the free-agent market or through the draft. It’s a position that I think this organization has needed for quite some time, and we’re going to try to address it. It’s not the easiest thing in the world.”The Wild only have five players on their roster that need new contracts ahead of the 2020-21 season, so Guerin very well may have his hands full in the near future.Copyright © 2020 Score Media Ventures Inc. All rights reserved. Certain content reproduced under license.
Tortorella: No timeline for Merzlikins' return from injury
John Tortorella doesn't know when Elvis Merzlikins will return to the Columbus Blue Jackets' lineup."He's out. I'm not sure how long," the head coach told assembled media, including team reporter Jeff Svoboda, on Monday.Tortorella did not elaborate on why the talented rookie goaltender will miss time.Merzlikins opened Columbus' qualifying-round matchup against the Toronto Maple Leafs as his team's backup netminder but replaced Joonas Korpisalo in Game 3, helping the Blue Jackets erase a three-goal deficit en route to an overtime victory.Merzlikins then started Game 4, making 49 saves in a 4-3 overtime loss that included a three-goal rally by the Maple Leafs with less than four minutes left in regulation.Tortorella tabbed Korpisalo as Columbus' starter for Game 5, saying before the contest that Merzlikins was hurt but offering no specifics. Korpisalo ultimately shut out the Maple Leafs to help the Blue Jackets clinch the series.Merzlikins burst onto the NHL scene in a big way during the regular season. The 26-year-old posted a .923 save percentage and 12.1 goals saved above average in 33 games before the league halted play. He went 13-5-5 with a .935 save percentage and an NHL-best 13.11 GSAA at five-on-five after taking over as the Blue Jackets' No. 1 goalie on Dec. 29.Copyright © 2020 Score Media Ventures Inc. All rights reserved. Certain content reproduced under license.
NHL: No positive COVID-19 tests in 2nd week of restart
The NHL's bubbles remain effective in combatting the coronavirus.Zero positive COVID-19 tests were recorded in the second week since the return-to-play plan was initiated, the league announced Monday.More than 7,000 daily tests were conducted on all members of each teams' 52-person traveling group from Aug. 2-8.The NHL also found no positive test results during the first week of the restart (July 27-1), which followed clean results during the week leading up to the return (July 18-25) as players began reporting to the hub cities.Copyright © 2020 Score Media Ventures Inc. All rights reserved. Certain content reproduced under license.
Tortorella defends Leafs' Keefe: What he's criticized for 'pisses me off'
Columbus Blue Jackets head coach John Tortorella is well-known for his unapologetic attitude, but this time he's showing support for first-year Toronto Maple Leafs head coach Sheldon Keefe after his squad fell in the qualifying round to the Blue Jackets."I just can't get over people ripping Sheldon Keefe and his staff as far as the job he's done with that Maple Leafs team," Tortorella said, according to The Athletic's Aaron Portzline. "They have done a terrific job with that team.""Some of the things I read, some of the things I watched last night ... it just pisses me off for a fellow coach in the league, and I know it's Toronto, a great city, great hockey town, love being here," he added. "But some of the things he's criticized for are beyond belief, and it just shows that people have no clue what's going on in this game. I just want to support him."After shutting out Toronto on Sunday in the decisive Game 5, many fans and critics began pointing fingers at Keefe and the coaching staff for the loss. The Leafs have now failed to advance past the first round of the postseason since 2004.The two coaches have a history together before the series. The Tampa Bay Lightning drafted a 19-year-old Keefe in 1999, right as Tortorella came in as head coach for the 2000-01 season. Keefe spent time between the NHL and AHL while playing for Tortorella, totaling 125 NHL games.Keefe, who took over as head coach of the team in November, recorded a 27-15-5 record before the season's pause on March 12.Columbus will now take on the Tampa Bay Lightning in the first round of the playoffs. Last season, the Jackets shocked the hockey world by sweeping the No. 1 ranked Lightning in the opening round.Copyright © 2020 Score Media Ventures Inc. All rights reserved. Certain content reproduced under license.
NHL Western Conference 1st-round betting preview: Chalk rules the West
Find line reports, best bets, and subscribe to push notifications in the Betting News section.The NHL wasted no time jumping from the play-ins to Round 1, so we won't either.Let's get right into these Western Conference matchups.Chicago Blackhawks (+225) @ Vegas Golden Knights (-278)The Blackhawks did well to upset the Oilers, but Edmonton doesn't hold a candle to Vegas. The Knights are unbelievably deep from top to bottom. They get production from all four lines, are stacked on the back end, and have two goaltenders capable of carrying this team to the Cup.The Knights are a powerhouse when it comes to puck possession and pose a huge mismatch for the Blackhawks, who will need to play flawless hockey to even stand a chance. The issue for Chicago is that their weaknesses on the back end will be exploited by Vegas' depth - something Edmonton lacked. Corey Crawford is capable of some big nights, but he can't steal a series for the Hawks.I hate the idea of laying -278, and it's not something I'll be doing personally. However, if you're looking to make a series bet here there's just no justifying a flier on the Hawks.Pick: Knights (-278)Arizona Coyotes (+205) @ Colorado Avalanche (-250)I was on the Coyotes in the first round as one of my favorite series bets, but that was a byproduct of it being a good matchup for them against the Predators. A date with the Avalanche is anything but.Arizona allowed 2.65 expected goals against per game versus Nashville - only the Blackhawks had a worse mark in the play-in round. Colorado's loaded forward group will feast in this series, while the Coyotes' offensive shortcomings will be amplified against an Avs blue line with no real weakness.Unless Darcy Kuemper stands on his head - which is certainly possible given the season he's had - there's just no other edge the Coyotes hold here to inspire much confidence they can pull off the upset. The Avalanche have eyes on making a legitimate Cup run and Arizona simply lacks the firepower or depth needed to deny them.Pick: Avalanche (-250)Calgary Flames (+100) @ Dallas Stars (-118)It's hard to put much stock in the Flames' play-in win over the Jets, who were playing significantly shorthanded from the jump. There's nothing about this club that jumps off the page - they do nothing particularly well, and nothing particularly bad. They were a middling team all season and remain average. They may have beat the Stars twice in the regular season, but won't give Dallas too much trouble in this series.Playoff hockey suits the Stars, who were among the best defensive clubs all season. They have depth and star power at every position, rarely getting the respect they should. Dallas was fifth in the NHL this season in expected goals for percentage at five-on-five - the Jets were dead last - and created the fifth-most high-danger scoring chances per 60 minutes, while allowing the seventh-fewest over the course of the regular season. The Stars were also second in the NHL at five-on-five save percentage, armed with a pair of excellent goaltenders capable of giving Calgary's scorers fits.The Flames went out without a whimper in the first round last season and there's little evidence to suggest this year will be any different. The Stars are an absolute bargain at this price, and are my favorite series bet.Pick: Stars (-118)Vancouver Canucks (+165) @ St. Louis Blues (-200)These two teams couldn't be more different. The Blues possess the sort of experience and grit that's really lacking from the Canucks. Vancouver has plenty of star power up front, but their lack of depth at forward and on defense leaves a lot to be desired.The Blues are also the only one of the top four seeds Vancouver doesn't hold an edge over in goal. Jacob Markstrom is capable of stealing a few games for the Canucks, as we saw against the Wild, but Jordan Binnington can steal an entire series.Vancouver will be a popular underdog pick in Round 1, but this team has a lot of people fooled. There are too many deficiencies on the roster and to its game, and the Blues are well-equipped to exploit them.Pick: Blues (-200)Alex Moretto is a sports betting writer for theScore. A journalism graduate from Guelph-Humber University, he has worked in sports media for over a decade. He will bet on anything from the Super Bowl to amateur soccer, is too impatient for futures, and will never trust a kicker. Find him on Twitter @alexjmoretto.Copyright © 2020 Score Media Ventures Inc. All rights reserved. Certain content reproduced under license.
Hockey Hall of Fame postpones induction ceremony due to COVID-19
The 2020 Hockey Hall of Fame induction weekend is postponed until further notice due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the Hall announced Monday.The induction ceremony, originally scheduled for Nov. 16, was set to follow the rest of the weekend's festivities, including the annual Hall of Fame Game hosted by the Toronto Maple Leafs.The Hall's board of directors plans to discuss rescheduling the induction events when it convenes on Oct. 29. The most probable scenario, according to chairman Lanny McDonald, is delaying the 2020 events until November of the following year."While it's possible, the class of 2020 could be inducted on alternative dates during the modified 2020-21 NHL season, the most likely scenario is to postpone to November 2021, either by waiving the 2021 elections or in combination with the 2021 induction class involving adjusted category limits," McDonald said."Since the magic of the induction from the honored members' perspective is experiencing several days of close interaction with family, friends, former teammates, and fans, the board ruled out any means of holding the 2020 inductions virtually," he added.Jarome Iginla, Marian Hossa, Ken Holland, Kevin Lowe, Kim St-Pierre, and Doug Wilson were elected to the Hall in the class of 2020 in late June.Copyright © 2020 Score Media Ventures Inc. All rights reserved. Certain content reproduced under license.
Leon and the kids: Inside Germany's desire to join hockey's elite
Moritz Seider can pinpoint precisely when and where he fell in love with hockey. It was a Monday some 14 winters ago in the small town of Zell in western Germany. He and his kindergarten pals, all new to the sport, had been invited to the local arena for a private skate with the best adult players in the area."I can remember walking in with my mom and all the pros were waiting to skate with us, these little kids," Seider said in a recent phone interview. "I had no words in that moment. Since then, there's no other sport hitting me that hard in my life."Moritz Seider Kevin Light / Getty ImagesSeider, now 19 years old and listed at 6-foot-4 and 207 pounds, has developed into one of the top prospects on the planet. If not for COVID-19, the No. 6 pick in the 2019 NHL Draft likely would have made his debut on the Detroit Red Wings' blue line late in the season after getting his first taste of North American hockey with 49 games in the AHL. Back in 2006, though, nobody in Seider's extended family had played competitive hockey."When I first told my parents I wanted to be a hockey player, they imagined me fighting every game. They were not really happy, so they decided to buy a hockey book for dummies, like a hockey ABC," Seider said with a short laugh. "Now, they're my biggest fans and they really love the sport. They love the intensity, how fast it is."In 2020, the perception and profile of hockey across Germany are markedly different than they were a decade ago. The nation of 83 million people has never had a bigger presence in the NHL or on the international stage. In the 24-team restart, seven Germans - including Edmonton Oilers superstar center Leon Draisaitl and Colorado Avalanche goalie Philipp Grubauer - cracked playoff rosters.Homegrown teen Tim Stutzle is projected to go as high as second overall in the upcoming draft. Two other German prospects, John-Jason Peterka and Lukas Reichel, are potential top-50 picks. Plus, let's not forget, Germany claimed silver at the 2018 Olympics."The silver medal is going to be special for my whole life," Buffalo Sabres forward Dominik Kahun said of the unexpected result. "When we came back from PyeongChang, it was unbelievable how many people were waiting for us at the airport. It was a little bit like when the soccer team comes back from the World Cup.""But," Kahun added, "after a few weeks it was like everybody forgot about it."That's the predicament that the German hockey community faces: Is this recent progress a fleeting jolt of success and interest in the sport? Or, is it something more permanent, a sign of things to come for a country that has slowly but surely ascended to an impressive seventh on the IIHF World Ranking? Major stakeholders are trying their best to assure it's the latter.––––––––––Marco Sturm Jean Catuffe / Getty ImagesBefore Draisaitl, Grubauer, Seider, and Stutzle, there was Marco Sturm.Sturm, Germany's all-time leading NHL scorer, appeared in 938 games from 1997 to 2012 for six franchises, most notably the San Jose Sharks and Boston Bruins. Sturm, now 41, is an assistant coach for the Los Angeles Kings as well as a vital contributor to the German Ice Hockey Federation. It was Sturm, with barely any coaching experience, who guided Germany to silver in PyeongChang.The result was shocking despite the absence of NHLers creating a more level Olympic playing field. The German federation hadn't expected to compete for medals at major events like the Olympics and World Championship until at least 2026. "We want to play in the medal round (consistently). That was the goal of Power Play 26," Sturm said. "And then the silver medal happened, and we were laughing."Sturm officially joined the federation in 2015, shortly after the unveiling of Power Play 26, a comprehensive plan for short-, medium-, and long-term growth. Spearheaded by federation president Franz Reindl amid a "crossroads" for German hockey, Power Play 26 prioritizes a modern approach to developing youth players. For instance, it demands kids' coaches focus on skills training rather than team tactics. The plan is aimed squarely at establishing sustainable success instead of opportunistic, one-off triumphs."It was a surprising 14 days in PyeongChang," said Reindl, a former forward who won an Olympic bronze in 1976. "The weather was nice, and everything was great. But this is not normal. We're being realistic. Our goal is to be competitive in the future, which means we need more high-quality players, top players. It feels like we're on a good way, but there's still a lot of work to do."For years, six nations - Canada, Finland, Sweden, Russia, the United States, and the Czech Republic - have formed the elite echelon in international hockey. The second tier has been traditionally populated by Slovakia, Germany, Switzerland, Denmark, Latvia, and Norway."Our goal," Sturm said, "is to always be in the top eight in the world rankings. In order to do that, we've got to start with youth hockey."Franz Reindl Getty ImagesThere are roughly 24,000 registered hockey players in Germany, Reindl said, which is only 3,000 fewer than rival and neighbor Switzerland, according to the IIHF's website. These German players are spread out across 15 regional branches that oversee 65 local organizations. The federation ships coaches and administrators to these local hubs on a regular basis - 350 total visits a year, according to Reindl - to reinforce best practices and ensure instruction and culture is consistent in all regions."We're not waiting for the talent to come to us. We're not being selective," is how Reindl frames the hands-on approach. The hope is that consistency produces a certain type and quality of player."We have a close eye on our technique, on basic skills, on stickhandling skills, on skating skills, and as soon as we see we have a good development in those areas, we'll build upon it through our philosophy," said Stefan Schaidnagel, the federation's general manager."What's the definition of German hockey players? Is he tall? Is he a good defending player? Is he fast, a quick skater? Does he have clear structure? On top of our skills, we want to reach a real German hockey philosophy. That way everybody knows that when you play against Germany, you're playing against a team which is fast, which is solid on defense, which creates ideas in the offensive zone, which uses the neutral zone for good structure and good transition."The federation receives €1.5 million in government funding each year, Schaidnagel said, a "little boost" from the amount it received prior to winning silver. The Olympic buzz also triggered an uptick in corporate sponsorship for the national body.This government stipend, earmarked mostly for growing youth and women's hockey, seems to be having its desired effect. Registration at the youth level has increased between 8% and 10% annually, according to Reindl. It would probably be higher if hockey wasn't such an expensive sport in relation to basketball, handball, and tennis. Hockey's money problem is not unique to Germany. But it is compounded by the fact that its sporting culture is so closely tied to soccer. (Asked for a pecking order of sports in Germany, Sturm said, "There's soccer. Then there's nothing. Then there's the rest.")"Imagine you only have to pay for two pairs of soccer boots a year, and then you need new skates, which would cost nowadays up to $1,000 or whatever, a stick, which is probably $250 nowadays," Seider said. "It's a pretty expensive sport and not a lot of families are financially ready to do that every single season. I was pretty lucky. My parents probably could have gone on way nicer vacations, but instead they sponsored a lot of tournaments for me, and I appreciate it a lot."Mannheim's SAP Center Getty imagesThe federation rolled out the Five-Star Program as part of Power Play 26, wherein local clubs are judged and funded based on the professionalism of their operation. The national body distributes stars based on a rubric that grades quality of arenas, locker rooms, and other facilities. Access to goalie coaches, video rooms, and physiotherapy staff are big pluses, too. Organizations' code of conduct is also audited."One star could be five or six different topics. And one topic has another five or six different points under it," Sturm said of the program's depth.This incentive system is in place to help develop players throughout Germany and not just in the traditional hockey hotbeds of Mannheim, Berlin, and Cologne. The master plan is centered around spreading the wealth between Germany's three professional leagues, not just the top flight Deutsche Eishockey Liga (DEL)."To get to the second star, you have to get through the first star," Sturm said. "It builds up and builds up, and then if you're at five, that's great. There's some teams who are not in the DEL - maybe in the third division - who get five stars. They make 40, 50, 60 thousand euros, and that's huge. For that, they can hire a new coach."Distributing the wealth across each league is also key to the program's success as the federation attempts to raise standards across the country. Naturally, there's been resistance from well-run DEL teams who have deep-pocketed owners and a particular way of operating. "We don't really care about the Five-Star Program here," said Pavel Gross, head coach of powerhouse Adler Mannheim. "The program here in Mannheim is a six-star program and has been for years."Dominik Kahun Sara Schmidle / Getty ImagesAnother bone of contention in the German hockey community is playing time for teenagers in the DEL. The surefire NHL-bound prospects - such as Seider, Stutzle, Peterka, Reichel - have no gripes, but there aren't many other teens receiving ample ice time. Teams tend to favor veterans who are often imported from elsewhere over developing homegrown youngsters."That's probably the most important thing that we are discussing every year here in the DEL," said Kahun, who spent four seasons with Munich EHC. "Last year, they made a rule that you must have two guys of a certain age that have to be on the team and in the lineup. But there are certain coaches who will put them in the lineup but keep them on the bench for all 60 minutes. That's even worse. They should play in the second league and get ice time.""Our goal has to be to show the (DEL) that (young German players) behind Stutzle, Peterka, and Reichel are easily able to play in the league also," Schaidnagel said. He believes there are 10-to-15 teens capable of playing in the DEL but aren't because teams are focused solely on winning.Kahun, who like Draisaitl, Seider, and Stutzle moved to Mannheim early in his teens to play with and against better hockey players, found his big break in the DEL. He originally had tried to get noticed by NHL scouts in Canada as an import player on the OHL's Sudbury Wolves, but a move back home proved beneficial for the 25-year-old born in the Czech Republic and raised in Germany."Back in the day, if you were a talented guy, you probably went to the (Canadian Hockey League) and hoped to be a high pick in the CHL import draft and then walk your way through that," Seider said. "Now you can actually play in the best German league and stay in your home country. You can be on the power play, be on the PK, be a leader, and compete against men. That's a big one, a big advantage over people who are coming from, I don't know, the U.S. program or the CHL. You're competing against men."Seider's whole family moved to Mannheim after he outgrew competition in Erfurt, the town where he grew up. "If you want to get to a better team, you have to move on," Seider said. "Or, if you want to develop a little bit more, you have to move on. I had the opportunity to play for Mannheim, and I was really happy that my family took that step."NHL teams were heavily scouting the DEL to watch the likes of Stutzle (Mannheim), Peterka (Munich), and Reichel (Berlin) before sports around the world were shut down earlier this year. Gross calls the 2002-born trio "something special" but not necessarily a reflection of the state of the entire German development system. "I don't think we'll see some similar players next year or in two years," he said.Stutzle, who considered playing in North America in his NHL draft year, ended up alongside Canadian center Ben Smith and Finnish winger Tommi Huhtala on Mannheim's top line. The shifty 6-foot-1, 187-pound left-winger skated for 16-17 minutes a game, including plenty of time on the club's No. 1 power-play unit, Gross said. He produced at an eye-popping rate - 34 points in 41 games - for someone who turned 18 in January and was matched up against men every single shift."You don't need to know much about hockey to realize how good of a player he is," Kahun said. "He was outstanding (in 2019-20) as a young kid in the DEL."Stutzle was a fantastic soccer player growing up, showing signs of pro potential. He made a commitment to hockey around age 9, though. "My strengths are my playmaking ability and skating," Stutzle said when asked for a personal scouting report. "My hockey IQ and my work ethic I would describe (as good, too). I think I can still work on everything since I'm very young, especially staying on my feet and winning more battles; gaining more weight, more muscle is probably the biggest thing I need to work on."Tobias Reider Andy Devlin / Getty ImagesSixty-eight NHL draft picks were born in Germany, according to Elite Prospects. Draisaitl (No. 3 in 2014) is the highest selection in the expansion era. Seider is the only other top-10 pick, while Dominik Bokk (25th in 2018), Marcel Goc (20th in 2001), and Sturm (21st in 1996) round out the country's first-rounders. Goaltender Olaf Kolzig (19th in 1989) grew up in Canada but used his German citizenship to represent the country in various international competitions.In the NHL's round of 16 - which starts Tuesday - there's Grubauer on the Avalanche, forward Tom Kuhnhackl and goalie Thomas Greiss on the Islanders, and forward Tobias Rieder on the Flames. Draisaitl and the Minnesota Wild's Nico Sturm were eliminated in the qualifying round. This group of playoff warriors, mixed with other German NHLers and the top prospects, could provide a solid roster for the 2022 Beijing Games.The current generation of youngsters adores Draisaitl, and the NHL scoring champion and MVP finalist reciprocates the love through mentorship."He was reaching out during the year at least once a week to check with me, to make sure I'm doing good, that everything's going well," Seider said. "He knows how hard it is in the AHL. He went through it, and he even got sent down to juniors again. So he helped me a lot, and I'm very, very thankful for that."Said Draisaitl, "I would love to help these kids as much as I can, if they ever need anything or have any questions. I'm always there for them and I'd love to help them, but I think these kids nowadays are so advanced, so good, their confidence is so high, that I think they'll make the right decisions and they'll be great players in their own right."Leon Draisaitl Getty ImagesSturm likes to compare Draisaitl's popularity in Germany now to that of Dirk Nowitzki when he was at his peak as an NBA superstar."There was no bigger guy than Nowitzki, athlete-wise," Sturm said. "But, when you live there, it's hard. You rarely see something on TV. You don't see too many highlights. ... You get lost a little bit in the shuffle and you lose track, and you start wondering what Leon is doing."Exposing Germans to one of the best hockey players in the world - one of their own - is part of the equation that Reindl, Schaidnagel, and all involved in Power Play 26 are attempting to solve. A mountain of progress has been made over the past five years, but Germany can't get complacent."We are on the right track," Schaidnagel said. "But now it's coming to the time where we need to re-evaluate every day, every month, every year, and ask ourselves, 'Are we still on the right track?'"Sturm's Kings own 11 picks in the 2020 draft. They have an opportunity to draft Stutzle at No. 2, as well as five more chances in the second and third rounds to possibly land Peterka or Reichel. What a capper that would be for Sturm, the country, and the kids."I'm very proud to be a German," Sturm said, "and they should be proud too."John Matisz is theScore's national hockey writer.Copyright © 2020 Score Media Ventures Inc. All rights reserved. Certain content reproduced under license.
Panthers, GM Tallon part ways following qualifying-round loss
The Florida Panthers and general manager Dale Tallon have agreed to part ways, the team announced Monday.The club will immediately begin a search for its next GM.Tallon spent a decade with the Panthers, who were eliminated by the New York Islanders in Game 4 of their best-of-five qualifying-round series Friday.The 69-year-old's contract was due to expire after this season.He helped assemble a core that includes versatile captain Aleksander Barkov, talented playmaker Jonathan Huberdeau, and cornerstone defenseman Aaron Ekblad.The Panthers made three postseason appearances during Tallon's tenure but failed to advance beyond the first round; they haven't done so since reaching the Stanley Cup Final in 1996.Tallon joined Florida in 2010 after serving as GM of the Chicago Blackhawks from 2005-09. While with Chicago, he hired head coach Joel Quenneville, who ultimately led the Blackhawks to three championships. Tallon was eventually demoted to senior advisor and replaced as GM by Stan Bowman before leaving for the Panthers.Tallon reunited with Quenneville in the Sunshine State last April, hiring him as the Panthers' head coach after Florida missed the playoffs for the sixth time in seven seasons.Copyright © 2020 Score Media Ventures Inc. All rights reserved. Certain content reproduced under license.
Leafs exit restart: What went wrong against CBJ, and who's on the hot seat
A-lex-ee La-fren-yer.Learn how to say it, Maple Leafs fans, because having a 12.5% chance at drafting Alexis Lafreniere, the top prospect in the 2020 NHL Draft, is the only lasting positive development from this past week.The Leafs were bounced Sunday from the NHL's 24-team playoff tournament following a 3-0 loss to the Blue Jackets at Scotiabank Arena. Columbus won the tight, roller coaster best-of-five qualifying-round series in five games, outscoring Toronto 12-10 in the process. The Leafs have now dropped all four of their postseason series since Auston Matthews entered the league in 2016-17.Let's break down what went wrong for Toronto, and who's ostensibly on the hot seat heading into the offseason:What went wrong Andre Ringuette / Getty ImagesYou can blame the absences of Jake Muzzin and Tyson Barrie. You can blame the tremendous performance of Blue Jackets goalie Joonas Korpisalo, who casually turned aside all 33 shots he faced Sunday. You can blame John Tavares somehow hitting the post when given an open net in the first period. You can even blame the emotional and physical letdown following an exhilarating Game 4.But, truthfully, the Leafs flat-out didn't execute in Game 5.They allowed the Blue Jackets to score the opening goal in a do-or-die game, which is a cardinal sin. Despite the madness that unfolded in Game 4, Columbus protects leads arguably better than any other NHL team. John Tortorella's squad specializes in clogging the neutral zone and the front of its own net. And after Friday's embarrassment, there was no chance the blue-collar, disciplined Blue Jackets were letting another lead slip away.The result: A team with Matthews, Tavares, Mitch Marner, William Nylander, and Morgan Rielly that was shut out just once in 70 regular-season games was blanked Sunday for the second time in five play-in contests. Columbus figured the Leafs out, limiting Toronto to three five-on-five goals all series."We had to find a way to break through," Tavares told reporters postgame, referring to Sunday's loss. "We had some good chances, some unfortunate breaks on a couple chances, and they do a really good job of clearing the net on second and third opportunities and we weren't able to find some of those seconds today." Chase Agnello-Dean / Getty ImagesThe momentum swings in this 8-seed vs. 9-seed Eastern Conference series were wild, with the goals coming in bunches. Two tallies for Columbus, then six for Toronto, then seven for Columbus, then four for Toronto, and three for Columbus. In a battle of contrasting playing styles, the Blue Jackets' steadiness overpowered the Leafs during a five-game sample."A little more luck and it might have been a different result," Leafs head coach Sheldon Keefe lamented postgame on Sunday. He cited Toronto shooting an awful 2% during 274 minutes of five-on-five action. (For context, the Leafs shot 8.6% at five-on-five in the regular season.)It's not like the Leafs didn't show up during the NHL's restart. They played well enough to win Game 1 but didn't, and then they were cruising with a three-goal lead midway through Game 3. Game 5 wasn't a blowout either. Toronto held a 351-318 overall shot-attempt advantage in the series, according to Natural Stat Trick. It was theirs for the taking.The Blue Jackets were more opportunistic, though, often capitalizing off the rush, as Pierre-Luc Dubois did twice in Columbus' epic Game 3 comeback. The Leafs responded only during their own comeback in Game 4."It's hard to put it all into words," Leafs defenseman Morgan Rielly said. "It might take some time to digest a little bit, but it's definitely a bad feeling, a bad taste. Comparing it to the loss in Boston (last year), this one is different for sure for obvious reasons. Whether that makes it worse or easier to deal with I don't know, but right now it certainly feels like it's harder to live with."Tortorella leaned heavily on his elite first-pairing defensemen, Seth Jones and Zach Werenski, to push back against Toronto's formidable attack. Jones averaged 29:28 of ice time per game, while Werenski - who missed the end of Game 4 because of an injury and was a game-time decision Sunday - ended up with 25:25. Both deserve credit for rising to the challenge.Meanwhile, the unheralded goalie tandem of Korpisalo (.956 save percentage) and Elvis Merzlikins (.946 SV%) was superb all series. Mark Blinch / Getty ImagesIt was a tumultuous year for the Leafs. Not only did they bow out before the round of 16 following a five-month pandemic-induced break, but they also played under two head coaches. Mike Babcock, the supposed savior for a Stanley Cup-starved franchise, was fired in November. Keefe's tenure started solidly with a 27-15-5 regular-season record, and his preferred style of focussing on puck possession and lineup flexibility seemed to gel with a roster of offensive dynamos.Now, none of that matters. A team that hasn't advanced in the postseason since 2004 is once again on vacation too soon.The hot seat Rene Johnston / Getty ImagesKyle Dubas: Dubas has constructed the Leafs to overwhelm the opposition with an abundance of skill and scoring punch. Well, Columbus was undeterred. So the 34-year-old general manager should be owning this early exit as much as anybody. For starters, Toronto's defense corps isn't close to being good enough, even when Muzzin is at full health (boy, that Tyson Barrie acquisition flopped, didn't it?).However, Dubas, who was named GM in May 2018, is probably secure in his role over the offseason. Leafs president Brendan Shanahan believes in him and his vision. It would be surprising if Shanahan made a rash decision - especially with the shorter series and five-month break. A portion of the fan base would probably be upset with that, as Dubas' name was trending nationwide on Twitter immediately following Game 5. Leafs Nation is losing patience with its GM.Sheldon Keefe: Keefe deserves credit for not being afraid to throw Matthews, Tavares, and Marner over the boards regularly, and often at the same time. Being flexible with his lineup in general is a positive (though substituting Andreas Johnsson for Nick Robertson in Game 5, when the former hadn't played a game since February, was an odd decision).Then again, Keefe's team was on the losing end of a colossal collapse in Game 3, and some of the blame must be placed on him. His job should be safe for some time since he was hired less than a year ago. But with a summer training camp under his belt, the new-coach shine has officially worn off. He's no longer a rookie bench boss, and the temperature will be turned up.John Tavares: Tavares' series was frustrating. He couldn't generate much offense in the opener, but then looked fantastic in the second game while scoring a goal and recording eight shots. Then he was stripped of the puck ahead of the OT winner in Game 3, was instrumental in the Game 4 comeback, but failed to convert on several opportunities in Game 5.Now how will he be perceived moving forward? Toronto is paying Matthews, Marner, and Nylander a combined $29.5 million per season, and Tavares another $11 million. That's essentially half the salary cap on four players, and with five years left on his deal, the captain turns 30 next month.The chances of Tavares living up to expectations are slim. Buzz about his contract, which was once overwhelmingly positive, will start to swing the other way. Chase Agnello-Dean / Getty ImagesFrederik Andersen: Andersen played well (.936 SV%) in front of a shorthanded defense corps. He shouldn't be shouldering much blame here. Yet, the big Dane has now failed to advance in the postseason in six of seven career series.A lights-out Blue Jackets tandem outplayed Andersen, who let in a weak Game 1 goal to set the tone for the series. What's the solution? That's tough because Andersen usually performs at a top-10 level in the regular season, and replacing a goaltender of his caliber isn't easy. So he's undoubtedly safe, but extra external pressure will be there next season, his final before unrestricted free agency.Kasperi Kapanen: If there's going to be a shake-up at forward, the Leafs' stars will most likely be off limits in trade discussions. The attention then turns to Kasperi Kapanen, who makes $3.2 million per year for the next two seasons. He can skate like the wind, has some scoring touch, and, unlike contemporary Johnsson - another possible trade chip who earns $3.4 million per year for the next three seasons - Kapanen showcased himself throughout the series. Legitimate question: Has Kapanen played his final game in a Toronto jersey?John Matisz is theScore's national hockey writer.Copyright © 2020 Score Media Ventures Inc. All rights reserved. Certain content reproduced under license.
Keefe: Leafs needed a 'little more luck' against Blue Jackets
Toronto Maple Leafs head coach Sheldon Keefe believes a couple of bounces could've changed the course of his team's best-of-five series against the Columbus Blue Jackets."A little more luck and it might be a different result," Keefe said postgame after Toronto fell 3-0 in Game 5, according to Sportsnet's Luke Fox.The Blue Jackets' defense stymied the Maple Leafs' third-ranked regular-season offense, with Toronto scoring just three goals at five-on-five in the series, thanks in part to a 1.97 shooting percentage, according to Natural Stat Trick. Toronto controlled 55.1% of the scoring chances and 59.3% of the high-danger chances, all while generating 55.2% of the expected goals in the series at five-on-five."We had enough chances to score more goals than we did," Keefe added, according to Sportsnet's Chris Johnston.The Maple Leafs have now lost in the opening round of the postseason to end four straight campaigns during the Auston Matthews, Mitch Marner, and William Nylander era."It's obviously very disappointing," Matthews said, according to Sportsnet. "Lots of mixed emotions kind of going through all of our heads right now. Just very frustrating.""It's a game of inches out there," he added.The Maple Leafs have not won a postseason series since 2004.Copyright © 2020 Score Media Ventures Inc. All rights reserved. Certain content reproduced under license.
NHL's round of 16 playoff matchups set
With the qualifying and round-robin games finished, the NHL is moving on to its traditional 16-team playoff format.Each series will now be a best-of-seven as usual, but instead of the normal bracket, teams will be re-seeded after every round.Let's take a look at the eight matchups.Eastern ConferencePhiladelphia Flyers (1) vs. Montreal Canadiens (12) Len Redkoles / National Hockey League / GettyGameDateTime (ET)1Aug. 128 p.m.2Aug. 143 p.m.3Aug. 168 p.m.4Aug. 183 p.m.*5Aug. 19TBD*6Aug. 21TBD*7Aug. 23TBD*If necessaryThe Flyers absolutely dominated during round-robin play, winning all three games and not trailing once. Montreal showed it's a legitimate threat after easily disposing of the highly touted Pittsburgh Penguins. Can the Canadiens keep the underdog train rolling?Tampa Bay Lightning (2) vs. Columbus Blue Jackets (9) Kirk Irwin / Getty Images Sport / GettyGameDateTime (ET)1Aug. 113 p.m.2Aug. 133 p.m.3Aug. 157:30 p.m.4Aug. 173 p.m.*5Aug. 19TBD*6Aug. 21TBD*7Aug. 22TBD*If necessaryThis is a rematch of last year's Round 1 clash in which the Blue Jackets pulled off one of the most stunning upsets in league history, sweeping the powerhouse Lightning. This time around, though, they'll be trying to prevail without the departed Artemi Panarin, Matt Duchene, and Sergei Bobrovsky - all of whom were fantastic in that series. The Bolts, however, could be without Steven Stamkos and Victor Hedman.Washington Capitals (3) vs. New York Islanders (7) Icon Sportswire / Icon Sportswire / GettyGameDateTime (ET)1Aug. 123 p.m.2Aug. 148 p.m.3Aug. 1612 p.m.4Aug. 188 p.m.*5Aug. 20TBD*6Aug. 22TBD*7Aug. 23TBD*If necessaryThe Capitals may have finished the season with the league's fifth-best record, but after going 1-2 in the round robin, they settled for the No. 3 seed in the East. The Islanders' strong defensive play was too much for the Florida Panthers to overcome, setting up a first-round battle in which New York bench boss Barry Trotz will face his old team.Boston Bruins (4) vs. Carolina Hurricanes (6) Icon Sportswire / Icon Sportswire / GettyGameDateTime (ET)1Aug. 118 p.m.2Aug. 138 p.m.3Aug. 1512 p.m.4Aug. 178 p.m.*5Aug. 19TBD*6Aug. 20TBD*7Aug. 23TBD*If necessaryBoston was the NHL's best regular-season squad, but the Bruins couldn't muster a round-robin win. They slid to the No. 4 seed and are preparing for a tough first-round matchup against the Hurricanes - the only team that swept its opponent in the qualifying round.Western ConferenceVegas Golden Knights (1) vs. Chicago Blackhawks (12) Ethan Miller / Getty Images Sport / GettyGameDateTime (ET)1Aug. 1110:30 p.m.2Aug. 135:30 p.m.3Aug. 158 p.m.4Aug. 166:30 p.m.*5Aug. 18TBD*6Aug. 20TBD*7Aug. 22TBD*If necessaryThe Golden Knights glided through the round robin, going 3-0 to secure the top spot in the West. Meanwhile, the Blackhawks stunned the Edmonton Oilers in four games, and they'll look to keep that momentum going.Colorado Avalanche (2) vs. Arizona Coyotes (11) Norm Hall / National Hockey League / GettyGameDateTime (ET)1Aug. 125:30 p.m.2Aug. 142 p.m.3Aug. 153 p.m.4Aug. 175:30 p.m.*5Aug. 19TBD*6Aug. 21TBD*7Aug. 23TBD*If necessaryThe Avalanche cruised through the round robin, and now they're finally fully healthy. The Coyotes managed to squeeze past the Nashville Predators in the qualifying round largely thanks to netminder Darcy Kuemper's elite play. But will they be able to contain Colorado's high-octane offense that averaged the fourth-most goals per game (3.37) during the regular season?Dallas Stars (3) vs. Calgary Flames (8) Icon Sportswire / Icon Sportswire / GettyGameDateTime (ET)1Aug. 115:30 p.m.2Aug. 1310:30 p.m.3Aug. 1410:30 p.m.4Aug. 162 p.m.*5Aug. 18TBD*6Aug. 20TBD*7Aug. 22TBD*If necessaryThe Flames took care of the injury-plagued Jets in four games during the qualifying round, but now the stingy Stars will test them. However, Tyler Seguin and Ben Bishop are both considered day-to-day, making their Game 1 availability uncertain.St. Louis Blues (4) vs. Vancouver Canucks (7) Icon Sportswire / Icon Sportswire / GettyGameDateTime (ET)1Aug. 1210:30 p.m.2Aug. 146:30 p.m.3Aug. 1610:30 p.m.4Aug. 1710:30 p.m.*5Aug. 19TBD*6Aug. 21TBD*7Aug. 23TBD*If necessaryThis could be a compelling series. The Blues didn't look very sharp in the round robin, but the defending champions are battle-tested. Meanwhile, this will be the first taste of real playoff hockey for Elias Pettersson, Brock Boeser, Quinn Hughes, and the youthful Canucks.Copyright © 2020 Score Media Ventures Inc. All rights reserved. Certain content reproduced under license.
Your guide to Phase 2 of unprecedented NHL Draft Lottery
2020 NHL Draft Lottery, Phase 2
Leafs' Johnsson draws in for Robertson in Game 5 vs. Jackets
Toronto Maple Leafs forward Andreas Johnsson is in the lineup for Sunday's winner-take-all Game 5 against the Columbus Blue Jackets.Johnsson, who hasn't played since Feb. 13 after suffering a knee injury that eventually required surgery, replaces 18-year-old Nick Robertson in the lineup and plays on Toronto's third line with Alexander Kerfoot and Ilya Mikheyev.Here are the Leafs' forward lines:LWCRWJohn TavaresAuston MatthewsMitch MarnerZach HymanWilliam NylanderKasperi KapanenAndreas JohnssonAlexander KerfootIlya MikheyevKyle CliffordPierre EngvallJason SpezzaThe 25-year-old Swede tallied eight goals and 21 points in 43 games during the regular season. Robertson had one goal in the series.Copyright © 2020 Score Media Ventures Inc. All rights reserved. Certain content reproduced under license.
Pacioretty joins Vegas in bubble, probable for Game 1 vs. Blackhawks
After going 3-0-0 in round-robin play, the Vegas Golden Knights are welcoming back their top scorer.Max Pacioretty has joined the club in the Edmonton bubble, and head coach Pete DeBoer anticipates the winger to be ready for Game 1 against the Chicago Blackhawks in the round of 16, according to The Athletic's Jesse Granger.The 31-year-old suffered a minor injury during training camp and did not travel with the team for the beginning of Phase 4 of the league's return-to-play plan.Pacioretty led the Golden Knights in goals (32) and points (66) while averaging 17:55 of ice time through 71 games this season.He contributed an impressive five goals and 11 points in seven contests during his first playoff run with Vegas in 2019.Copyright © 2020 Score Media Ventures Inc. All rights reserved. Certain content reproduced under license.
Trotz ready to battle former club: 'It will be a hell of a series' vs. Caps
Head coach Barry Trotz is looking forward to competing against his old team as his New York Islanders prepare for a clash with the Washington Capitals in the round of 16."I think it will be a hell of a series," Trotz said Sunday, according to The Athletic's Tarik El-Bashir. "Both teams are well-equipped to go at each other."Trotz spent four seasons (2014-2018) as Washington's bench boss and led the Capitals to their first Stanley Cup in his final campaign with them.The 58-year-old also coached the Capitals to back-to-back Presidents' Trophies in 2016 and 2017, and he earned the Jack Adams Award as the league's top bench boss in the former season.Trotz won his second Jack Adams Award after his first season in Long Island in 2018-19. Under his tutelage, the Islanders have reached the round of 16 in consecutive campaigns for just the second time in the post-lockout era.New York owns an 83-50-17 regular-season record over two campaigns with Trotz at the helm.The Islanders won their play-in series against the Florida Panthers in four games to advance.Copyright © 2020 Score Media Ventures Inc. All rights reserved. Certain content reproduced under license.
Capitals drop Bruins to conclude East round robin
TORONTO (AP) T.J. Oshie and Tom Wilson scored, Braden Holtby made 30 saves and the Washington Capitals beat the Boston Bruins 2-1 in round-robin play Sunday to clinch the No. 3 seed in the Eastern Conference and set up a first-round matchup against former coach Barry Trotz's New York Islanders.Boston, which won the Presidents' Trophy as the top team during the NHL regular season that was cut short in March, lost all three of its seeding games and fell to fourth in the East. The Bruins will face the Carolina Hurricanes in the first round in a rematch of the 2019 East final.Trotz coached Washington to its first Stanley Cup title in franchise history in 2018, then left in a contract dispute. Trotz went to the Islanders, while the Capitals hired his top assistant, Todd Reirden, as head coach. This is the first time they've faced off in a playoff series since.''It'll be interesting,'' Wilson said. ''We know them well, some personnel and the coaching staff that we're familiar with, obviously a good rivalry, so we're excited for it and ready to go.''Washington shook off a shootout loss to Tampa Bay and a regulation loss to Philadelphia to continue its years-long dominance of Boston. The Capitals have now won 17 of their past 19 games against the Bruins and by earning the third seed cannot play the top-seeded Flyers until the conference final.It's unclear whether Norris Trophy finalist John Carlson will be ready for Game 1 against the Islanders after missing the all of round-robin play with an injury. The 30-year-old defenseman went down to the ice awkwardly in Washington's exhibition game vs. Carolina on July 29 and has practiced but not played since.Jake DeBrusk scored and Tuukka Rask made 23 saves for Boston, which also got an assist from winger Ondrej Kase in his round-robin debut.NOTES: With Carlson still out, rookie Martin Fehervary made his round-robin debut, replacing Radko Gudas on the Capitals blue line. ... Connor Clifton played on defense for the Bruins in place of Matt Grzelcyk.Copyright © 2020 Score Media Ventures Inc. All rights reserved. Certain content reproduced under license.
Werenski, Korpisalo to play Game 5 vs. Maple Leafs
Columbus Blue Jackets defensemen Zach Werenski and Ryan Murray will both be in the team's lineup for the deciding Game 5 match against the Toronto Maple Leafs on Sunday, head coach John Tortorella said.Goaltender Joonas Korpisalo will start in net after conceding the Game 4 start to teammate Elvis Merzlikins.Tortorella told play-by-play announcer Bob McElligott that Merzlikins is hurt. It remains unclear if he will be available to back up Korpisalo on Sunday.Werenski was injured during the third period of Game 4 on Friday and didn't return. He went for an MRI on Saturday.The 23-year-old has been a vital piece on Columbus' blue line, logging 26:42 of ice time per game in the series and matching up against most of the Maple Leafs' stars. However, he's managed just one assist through four games after leading all defensemen in goals during the regular season.Murray was scratched from Game 4 due to an injury after appearing in the first three games of the series. He's averaged 17 minutes of ice time per contest while slotting in on the team's third defensive pairing.Korpisalo was pulled in favor of Merzlikins in the middle of Game 3 with the Blue Jackets trailing 3-0. Merzlikins then helped steer Columbus to an improbable comeback victory.Toronto pulled off a historic comeback against Merzlikins in Game 4. The Latvian netminder surrendered three goals in the final four minutes and conceded the overtime winner. Still, Merzlikins stopped 49 of the 53 shots he faced.Game 5 is set for Sunday at 8 p.m. ET.Copyright © 2020 Score Media Ventures Inc. All rights reserved. Certain content reproduced under license.
Hedman displays frustration after leaving game with apparent injury
Tampa Bay Lightning workhorse Victor Hedman left Saturday's round-robin game against the Philadelphia Flyers and did not return after taking an awkward fall.
Flyers clinch No. 1 seed in Eastern Conference with win over Lightning
The Philadelphia Flyers defeated the Tampa Bay Lightning 4-1 on Saturday night to claim top spot in the Eastern Conference with a perfect 3-0-0 record in the round robin.The Flyers will face the No. 12 seeded Montreal Canadiens in Round 1 of the playoffs. The Lightning, who finish second in the East, will now play the winner of Sunday's Game 5 between the Toronto Maple Leafs and Columbus Blue Jackets in the round of 16.More to come.Copyright © 2020 Score Media Ventures Inc. All rights reserved. Certain content reproduced under license.
Report: Werenski to get MRI, status for Game 5 vs. Leafs in question
Columbus Blue Jackets defenseman Zach Werenski will have an MRI Saturday for an upper-body injury, and his status is unknown for Game 5 against the Toronto Maple Leafs on Sunday, TSN's Darren Dreger reports.The 6-foot-2 blue-liner played 21:24 during Friday's Game 4 overtime loss but exited midway through the third period and did not play in the extra frame. The cause of his injury is unclear.Werenski has logged 26:42 of ice time per game in the series and has matched up primarily against the Maple Leafs' top talents. He's also contributed one assist while posting a Corsi For of 52.33% at five-on-five.The 23-year-old was the only NHL defenseman to record 20 goals in 2019-20 and the first rearguard in Blue Jackets history to hit that single-season mark.Copyright © 2020 Score Media Ventures Inc. All rights reserved. Certain content reproduced under license.
Crosby acknowledges Pens' window may be closing: 'It's a possibility'
After a shocking upset at the hands of the 12th-seeded Montreal Canadiens in the NHL's qualifying round, Sidney Crosby believes the window for the Pittsburgh Penguins' championship core may soon be closing."With age, it's a possibility," Crosby said, according to NHL.com's Wes Crosby. "But I can only speak personally. Obviously, I would've liked to stay a little bit healthier and play a full season."He added: "It's a really hard one to evaluate. That's the honest truth as far as trying to break this all down. It's a tough one to evaluate overall."Crosby - who turned 33 years old Friday - Evgeni Malkin (34), and Kris Letang (33) have all been with the Penguins during their three Stanley Cup wins since 2009.The trio has struggled to stay healthy recently. Crosby played in 41 games during the 2019-20 season, while Malkin and Letang appeared in 55 and 61 contests, respectively.However, head coach Mike Sullivan believes those three players still have years left in the tank."I think these guys are still elite players. I believe in this core," Sullivan said. "They're elite hockey players, and I still think there's elite play left in them. So, that's just what I believe. Obviously, at some point, everybody's window closes. ... But I strongly believe that this group has a lot of elite hockey (left)."Letang echoed his coach's sentiment and said he believes Pittsburgh will contend in the near future."I think we still believe in the core group of this team," Letang said. "I think we have a lot left in the tank. We're going to keep playing hard and give everything for the Penguins. I think we have to be better. This year, we didn't play good enough to win, but I feel comfortable with the group of guys that we have."Copyright © 2020 Score Media Ventures Inc. All rights reserved. Certain content reproduced under license.
Horvat proud of Canucks' success: 'This franchise has been through a lot'
Vancouver Canucks captain Bo Horvat is happy to see how far the franchise has come after his team defeated the Minnesota Wild to advance to the round of 16 on Friday."This franchise has been through a lot," Horvat said, according to NHL.com's David Satriano. "These last four years, not making the playoffs, we've taken it to heart. We wanted to come out and prove ourselves, play hard. We have a great group of guys here, and to finally get a playoff win under our belt in a playoff series, it definitely feels great, but we've got a lot more work to do."The Canucks have made the playoffs three times in the last eight seasons and haven't advanced past the first round of the postseason since they were one win away from capturing the franchise's first Stanley Cup in 2011.Horvat, who was selected ninth overall in the 2013 NHL Draft, has been a big part of the Canucks' rebuild. He leads the team in games played (446), goals (120), and points (275) since his rookie season.The 25-year-old pointed to goaltender Jacob Markstrom as one of the biggest reasons behind the Canucks' regular-season success in 2019-20 and their qualifying series win."He's been a brick wall for us all year," Horvat said. "He might want a couple back or one of them back tonight, but you know what, he's been our rock ever since Day 1, and we wouldn't be in this position right now without him."Markstrom was superb through the first three games of the series against the Wild, allowing five goals on 92 shots, including a shutout in Game 3. He stopped just 25 of the 29 shots he faced in Game 4.Vancouver will face the loser of the final round-robin game between the Dallas Stars and St. Louis Blues in the first round of the NHL's traditional playoff format.Copyright © 2020 Score Media Ventures Inc. All rights reserved. Certain content reproduced under license.
'It's a roller coaster': Resilience rules Maple Leafs-Blue Jackets
"If you want something good," the Greek philosopher Epictetus once said, "get it from yourself." In other words, take responsibility for your thoughts and actions. Don't wait for the world to change. Be resilient and change it yourself.That mindset has, in a weird way, come to define the stunning, unpredictable, and ultra-entertaining Eastern Conference qualifier series between the Maple Leafs and Blue Jackets. Not only have the two teams that play completely different styles traded wins to set up a fifth and deciding game Sunday, the manner in which they've arrived at this point has been utterly confounding.Both teams played well enough to win Game 1, though Columbus' combination of elite goaltending and its protective defensive system led to a 2-0 victory. The Leafs kept pressing in Game 2, peppering the Blue Jackets with shots, and were rewarded with a 3-0 win. In Game 3, a comfortable 3-0 lead for Toronto turned very uncomfortable and then disastrous as the Blue Jackets stormed back in dramatic fashion to win 4-3 in overtime. And in Friday's epic Game 4, the Leafs flipped the script and authored their own improbable comeback, also winning 4-3 in overtime after falling behind 3-0, but pulling off their miracle with under four minutes to play in the third period.Two gut-punch shutouts and two gut-punch 4-3 games. No in-between."This is what happens in a series. The ups and downs," Columbus defenseman Seth Jones told reporters Friday night in his postgame media availability. "It's a roller coaster and we've got to try to stay even keel." Chase Agnello-Dean / Getty ImagesBy and large, the 2019-20 Blue Jackets are just that - even keel. While his antics with the media might suggest otherwise, coach John Tortorella is steadfast in keeping his players focused entirely on the next obstacle and as far away from outside noise as possible. It's one of the reasons Columbus is in this 2-2 spot with Toronto to begin with. There's a natural, inherent resilience to the oft-forgotten franchise from central Ohio. It wins because it's a unified group, a team in the truest sense of the word.The Leafs surely are a team, too, but not quite in the same way. They don't abide by the virtues of blue-collar hockey or have anything close to a small-market attitude. Juxtaposed with Columbus, Toronto must find resilience, that chip on one's shoulder, along the way. Which is what made Keefe's blunt assessment of his team's Game 3 performance fascinating."I didn’t like our game in the first period. I didn’t like our game at 1-0. I didn’t like our game at 2-0 or 3-0. We just got what we deserved," Keefe, who replaced Mike Babcock in November, said Thursday. "I thought we reverted back to a lot of really bad habits. We didn’t have any real purpose or plan to our game today. We were just making it up as we go along."He then repeated himself: "We get what we deserve." Andre Ringuette / Getty ImagesThat the Leafs were ill prepared is a notable admission, considering it's in Keefe's job description to make sure his team's ready to play, especially in games that truly matter. But let's be honest: Toronto is, without question, the more talented squad here, and perhaps that leads to shortcuts. Theoretically, the Maple Leafs shouldn't surrender a three-goal lead, right? There's a psychological toll that comes with Game 3's ugly collapse if you're not careful.Except on Friday, roughly 24 hours after making those remarks about not having a purpose or a plan, Keefe settled in and controlled what he could as the visiting coach - player motivation, line combinations, player usage - to spark a rally for the ages late in the third period. Backs against the wall, the plan was going to be carried out this time, no excuses.Keefe leaned heavily on his stars. Morgan Rielly finished with a game-high 33:51 of ice time. Auston Matthews was second at 28:15. Mitch Marner and John Tavares were third and fourth at 27:58 and 26:52, respectively. Most notably, the three highly paid forwards skated together for 12-plus minutes at five-on-five, creating a super line of sorts, something Babcock only flirted with over the course of his multiple seasons in Toronto. Friday, facing elimination and trailing, Keefe said screw it, let's do this, and just like that, in four minutes, Columbus became Toronto, blowing a 3-0 lead and a glorious opportunity. Mark Blinch / Getty ImagesIt seems so incredibly simple: play your best players as much as possible. But in the normal flow of a game, or a series, or a season, it can sometimes be detrimental to grind your stars into the ground. This was different. Toronto was desperate - Jason Spezza was out there fighting! - and Keefe's leadership, his resilience, and his trust in the process paid off. He wasn't stubborn about it, he didn't publicly yell or scream, he simply rose to the occasion as a coach.Matthews, the series leader in points with six, sniped the game-winning goal - who else? He set up Leafs goals two and three - primary assists on incredibly bold passes through the slot to Tavares and Zach Hyman - in the frantic final minutes. Marner, who clocked a game-high 50 seconds of offensive zone possession time, according to data provided by SPORTLOGIQ, pitched in three assists. Tavares, who turned the puck over in Game 3 ahead of Columbus' OT winner, finished with a goal and the primary assist on Matthews' clincher, which came on a power play with Nick Foligno in the box."Your mind just kind of goes blank," Matthews told reporters postgame of the memorable marker. "It's a credit to every single guy on our team for just sticking with it, battling back, and just not quitting."Matthews and Pierre-Luc Dubois have been unbelievable through four games. Matthews has been an absolute force in all three zones, pushing the tempo no matter the score and no matter how many times Joonas Korpisalo or Elvis Merzlikins - Columbus' two goalies, who've been incredible - shut the door. Dubois, meanwhile, managed to turn a very public lecture from Tortorella during Game 2 into a hat trick a couple of days later. He's asserted himself on both sides of the puck.Heading into Sunday's Game 5, there are countless questions. Can Columbus persevere without stud defenseman Zach Werenski, who missed half the third period and all of OT on Friday? Can Toronto's fourth line of Spezza, Kyle Clifford, and Pierre Engvall - the trio played 9:22 at even strength, trailing only the super line in five-on-five minutes, and dominated possession to the tune of 76.19%, according to Natural Stat Trick - do that again? The most crucial question, though, given their recent playoff history and this roller coaster of a series and 48 hours, might be: Can Toronto persevere?On Sunday, it'll be fascinating to watch whose resiliency will shine through. Who will, as the Greek philosopher said, get it from themselves?John Matisz is theScore's national hockey writer.Copyright © 2020 Score Media Ventures Inc. All rights reserved. Certain content reproduced under license.
NHL playoff picks: Expect tense games with 1st seed up for grabs
Find line reports, best bets, and subscribe to push notifications in the Betting News section.We've been spoiled since the NHL's return, so a two-game slate on Saturday feels eerily quiet.However, you only need one game to have action, so in that regard, we're living in luxury.Philadelphia Flyers (+120) @ Tampa Bay Lightning (-140)The round-robin games have been low in intensity at times, but that won't be the case when the Flyers and Lightning meet on Saturday in their final tune-up before the playoffs. Both of these teams are dialed in, making for a tightly contested game with first place and a date with the Montreal Canadiens up for grabs.The Flyers have allowed just 2.05 expected goals against in two games, limiting their opponents to just eight high-danger scoring chances. The Lightning haven't been as stout defensively, with 3.17 expected goals against in their two games, while giving up 16 high-danger chances. But they haven't missed a beat offensively, and Andrei Vasilevskiy has been excellent.Philadelphia has benefited from some stout goaltending as well. Carter Hart was superb against the Boston Bruins, while Brian Elliott was sharp against the Washington Capitals. Hart will be back in for this one, with Vasilevskiy remaining in net for Tampa. With both goaltenders on top of their game and plenty at stake, don't expect fireworks in Saturday's lone game in Toronto.Pick: Under 5.5 (+105)Vegas Golden Knights (+100) @ Colorado Avalanche (-120)The first seed in the West is also up for grabs in Edmonton on Saturday. The Knights are having a high-scoring 2-0 start to round-robin play, while the Avalanche have been nearly flawless in their wins.I'm high on both of these teams, and truthfully there is very little to separate them on the ice. The Knights have a slight edge in goal, while the Avalanche are incrementally better on the blue line, and both are capable of scoring in bunches.There's a strong possibility these teams will meet in the Western Conference final. If this ends up being the case, possessing top seed - meaning "home-ice" advantage and final line choices before faceoffs - would be huge. There's plenty at stake, so in this final matchup, expect Colorado to keep playing strong defensively and Vegas to try and tighten things up.Pick: Under 5.5 (+100)(Odds source: theScore Bet)Alex Moretto is a sports betting writer for theScore. A journalism graduate from Guelph-Humber University, he has worked in sports media for over a decade. He will bet on anything from the Super Bowl to amateur soccer, is too impatient for futures, and will never trust a kicker. Find him on Twitter @alexjmoretto.Copyright © 2020 Score Media Ventures Inc. All rights reserved. Certain content reproduced under license.
How the 12th-seeded Habs and Blackhawks clinched colossal upsets
Underdogs prevailed in both of the NHL's 5 vs. 12 qualifying series games Friday. Here are three takeaways from Montreal blanking Pittsburgh 2-0, and Chicago bouncing Edmonton from the playoffs with a 3-2 win.––––––––––Montreal's outing went according to planThere are two ways to frame the Canadiens' mammoth Game 4 shutout victory. One is to say they basically won in five seconds - the elapsed time between Ben Chiarot forcing a turnover in the offensive zone and Artturi Lehkonen cashing Paul Byron's whirled pass to the tip of the crease. The other is all-encompassing - Montreal had a plan on Friday, and it worked to perfection for 60 minutes.From puck drop, Claude Julien's charges looked entirely content to angle for a 1-0 win. They planned to bottle up Pittsburgh's rushes, prevent the Penguins from gaining any modicum of space or speed, curb the quality of any shots that got through to Carey Price, and seize on the frustration this approach was sure to cause. And, you know, to score eventually.The Habs' conservative start was striking after they racked up four goals and a whack of scoring chances off the rush in Game 3. Yet it was also logical they'd default to caution, given the skill gap between these rosters. Sidney Crosby and Evgeni Malkin were never at their best, but their reputations precede them. As it turned out, Montreal's four top scorers - Tomas Tatar, Phillip Danault, Max Domi, and Brendan Gallagher - didn't need to supply a single goal in this textbook underdog series win. Andre Ringuette / Getty ImagesThe Canadiens gained more pep as Game 4 wore on, seemingly assured that quickening the tempo wouldn't benefit Pittsburgh. They overran the Pens in shot and scoring attempts from the midway mark on and were sharper down the tense final stretch. Julien rejigged his lines to promote Nick Suzuki to No. 1 center, which galvanized the new second trio of Danault, Byron, and Lehkonen. That line pounded Pittsburgh at five-on-five to the tune of a 70.5 expected-goals percentage, plus the game-deciding goal.The big picture here: a .500 team, the 24th-best in the NHL, is legitimately in the playoffs, where they'll probably get pantsed in, say, five games by Tampa Bay or Philadelphia. But let's hold that thought for next week. Price's .947 save percentage (.960 at even strength) is the best mark of the qualifying round, and after the Habs lost Game 2 despite his sensational play, other guys - the defensive triad of Chiarot, Shea Weber, and Jeff Petry, primarily - helped lift the club off the mat.As for that desired 1-0 scoreline? The insurance marker Weber wound up rimming around the boards and into Pittsburgh's empty net came when Chiarot, Danault, Byron, and Lehkonen - plus Price, of course - were also on the ice. For those players specifically, it'd be hard to script a more fitting ending.Where was Pittsburgh's urgency?Pardon a quick reference to Friday's Nashville-Arizona game, which the Coyotes won 4-3 in overtime to seal that series. Bowing out at this stage is a profound disappointment for the Predators, the Western Conference's sixth seed, but at least Roman Josi can't be blamed. He didn't score but took a dumbfounding 14 shots on Coyotes goalie Darcy Kuemper, more than a quarter of Nashville's 52 overall.Suffice to say that Crosby and Malkin didn't rise to Josi's standard in Game 4. The moments that they, or any teammate, played with the needed urgency to snap Pittsburgh's trance were scant. Crosby forced a good save from Price at the end of a rare odd-man rush, and he rang one slapper off iron during a third-period power play. Those were fruitless highlights on an afternoon Pittsburgh generated just 22 shots and three high-danger chances. Chase Agnello-Dean / NHL / Getty ImagesIf Montreal was the chief beneficiary of this postseason's unique format, the Penguins fell prey to the danger it represents: a hot goalie toppling a high seed in a shorter series than usual. That doesn't fully explain this catastrophic letdown, though, and for as impenetrable as Price looked at times, stars have to be ready to bear the burden of facing him. Malkin helped drive solid possession numbers across the series but wasn't on the ice for a single Pens goal at five-on-five. Pittsburgh only scored four of them, anyway.By the time Game 4 ended, broadcasters working the series were trendily pointing out how Pittsburgh's lost nine of its 10 most recent playoff games, including last season's first-round sweep at the hands of the Islanders. Their Stanley Cup form of 2016 and 2017 recedes farther in the rearview every year.By inserting Tristan Jarry in net for Game 4, coach Mike Sullivan was seeking to replicate the boost Matt Murray provided when he displaced Marc-Andre Fleury during the 2017 Eastern Conference Final. Ultimately, the Pens' struggles against Price negated their goaltending question. Jarry and Murray are both about to hit restricted free agency, but the team's more pressing issue is its great disappearing killer instinct.Chicago won with mettleThe Oilers could have beaten the Blackhawks without necessarily changing too much, as their No. 5 seed foretold. In what's obviously bare consolation, the advanced metrics are on their side as they exit the bubble in their own home city. Their superior shot share and number of quality chances at five-on-five amounted to an expected goals percentage of 58.52. Put into words, they probably should have won three of four games, not the reverse.In reality, Chicago outscored Edmonton 12-9 at full strength - and 3-0 across the third periods of Games 3 and 4, as the Oilers squandered one lead and then biffed the chance to claim another and avoid premature elimination. A few factors led to Edmonton's undoing, primarily defensive lapses at the wrong time and the general absence of secondary scoring - an impediment in a matchup that featured so many goals both ways. Dave Sandford / NHL / Getty ImagesCrucially, the Oilers lacked tenacity in decisive moments, which is what helped the Blackhawks secure their first series victory since 2015, when Jonathan Toews and Patrick Kane last hoisted the Stanley Cup.In Game 3, Edmonton blinked and lost its one-goal edge in the third period, when Chicago rallied back to score on two netfront tips. The team's cunning and brawn set up all three of their goals in Game 4. Brandon Saad got inside position by the net on Oscar Klefbom ahead of his wraparound tally. At 2-2, Toews outmuscled Ethan Bear in a puck battle and then fed Dominik Kubalik for his one-timed winner.Small breaks and decisions had an outsize effect in shaping Chicago's victory, which happens in close games. Think of Darnell Nurse's (admittedly dubious) interference penalty that interrupted a five-minute Oilers power play. Think of Kubalik stretching to stay onside during the zone entry that preceded his goal. Think of Edmonton getting booked for too many men with two minutes left, and Chicago adopting a four-corners offense to burn most of that remaining time.Connor McDavid exits the playoffs as the clubhouse leader in scoring with nine points. Ryan Nugent-Hopkins and Leon Draisaitl were forces in this series, too. But the dearth of help behind them, and strong showings from Kane and Toews in their own right, along with Corey Crawford finally standing tall in Game 4 all offset the duo's brilliance. Crawford's 43 saves included a few huge stops in the waning minutes that will nag Edmonton's stars all summer.Like Montreal, the Blackhawks will be severely outmatched next round by Colorado or Vegas, the round-robin heavyweights still in the running for the West's top seed. That said, nothing can detract from the gutsiness they showed in the play-ins, nor from the significance of these legendary franchises' latest milestones. Before Friday, no NHL team had shocked the world in a 5 vs. 12 showdown in decades.Nick Faris is a features writer at theScore.Copyright © 2020 Score Media Ventures Inc. All rights reserved. Certain content reproduced under license.
Keefe praises Spezza in Leafs' comeback: He 'did not want our season to end'
When everybody was ready to write off the Toronto Maple Leafs, the players had a different idea on Friday in Game 4 against the Columbus Blue Jackets.The Maple Leafs were 22 seconds away from an opening-round postseason exit for the fourth straight year when Zach Hyman's equalizer sent the game to overtime.Hyman's tally was Toronto's third goal in 3:34 after the Leafs trailed 3-0 with under four minutes remaining. Auston Matthews then delivered the overtime dagger, and a winner-take-all Game 5 will now take place on Sunday night."I've never been a part of anything like that," said forward Jason Spezza, a veteran of 1,123 regular-season games and 84 postseason contests, according to The Athletic's James Mirtle.Spezza dropped the gloves with Dean Kukan late in the second period in an effort to spark his team, which trailed 2-0 at the time. Head coach Sheldon Keefe praised the veteran postgame."Jason Spezza did not want our season to end today," Keefe said, according to TSN's Kristen Shilton. "That's a guy not going down literally without a fight."While the Maple Leafs' big four of Matthews, John Tavares, Mitch Marner, and William Nylander will deservedly make most of the headlines after combining for 10 points, Spezza and the fourth line deserve credit as well."He wants it more than anyone," Hyman said of Spezza, per TSN's Mark Masters. "He’s been in the league so long. He was a first-line player throughout his career, an All-Star, Hall of Famer, and now he’s on the fourth line and willing to drop the gloves ... he’s a real leader on our team ... we all love him."Spezza's line with Kyle Clifford and Pierre Engvall was integral in the victory, playing the second-most minutes together of any three forwards at five-on-five. They dominated play, too, finishing the contest with a 16-5 shot-attempt differential and an expected goals for percentage of 74.6, according to Natural Stat Trick.Keefe juggled the forward lines to try and find a spark - which included loading up one line with Matthews, Tavares, and Marner - but Spezza, Engvall, and Clifford were the lone trio to stay together from start to finish.The Leafs' comeback over the Blue Jackets came just one night after they blew a 3-0 lead themselves. Toronto is now the first club in NHL history to overcome a deficit of three-plus goals after surrendering a lead of three-plus goals to lose the previous contest, according to NHL Public Relations.Additionally, the Leafs are just the second team in league history to score three goals with the extra attacker in a playoff game, joining the 2017 Anaheim Ducks.Copyright © 2020 Score Media Ventures Inc. All rights reserved. Certain content reproduced under license.
Blackhawks best Oilers in 4 games, advance to round of 16
The Chicago Blackhawks have advanced to the round of 16 with a 3-2 win over the Edmonton Oilers in Game 4 on Friday.Blackhawks rookie Dominik Kubalik fired home the game-winning goal midway through the third period for his third tally of the series. Netminder Corey Crawford made 43 saves, including 20 in the third frame to seal the win.Oilers forward Josh Archibald opened the scoring just 45 seconds into the game, but the Blackhawks retook the lead ahead of the first intermission on goals from Brandon Saad and Matthew Highmore.Blackhawks captain Jonathan Toews continued his strong play with two assists to finish with a team-high seven points in the series.Copyright © 2020 Score Media Ventures Inc. All rights reserved. Certain content reproduced under license.
Bieksa: Luongo had clause in contract omitting him from road back-to-backs
Roberto Luongo had a unique provision in his contract during his time with the Vancouver Canucks that aimed to provide ample rest - at least a former teammate claims he did."Luongo had a clause in his contract where he didn’t have to play back-to-back games on the road if he didn’t want," longtime Canuck and current Sportsnet analyst Kevin Bieksa said on Friday's Hockey Night in Canada broadcast, according to The Athletic's Harman Dayal.But this is news to Luongo himself:
Hawks' DeBrincat handed 5-minute major for dangerous hit on Oilers' Bear
Chicago Blackhawks forward Alex DeBrincat was assessed a five-minute major for boarding Edmonton Oilers defenseman Ethan Bear on Friday night.
Senators, Devils add 2020 1st-round picks with Coyotes, Isles advancing
A pair of trades - including conditional draft picks contingent on postseason outcomes - have officially been sorted, with the Arizona Coyotes and New York Islanders each advancing to the round of 16 on Friday.The Ottawa Senators now own the Islanders' first-round pick in 2020 as part of the swap that sent forward Jean-Gabriel Pageau to New York at the trade deadline. If the Islanders had instead been eliminated and won the draft lottery, the pick, which was top-three protected, would have been Ottawa's in 2021.Ottawa now owns three first-round selections at the 2020 draft and an additional four picks in round two.The New Jersey Devils now own the Arizona Coyotes' first-round pick as a result of the Taylor Hall trade. The conditions on that pick were identical to those in the Pageau deal.The Devils could add an additional first-rounder in 2020 if the Vancouver Canucks eliminate the Minnesota Wild in their play-in series. New Jersey received the pick when it traded forward Blake Coleman in February to the Tampa Bay Lightning, who owned the Canucks' pick from a previous trade.Copyright © 2020 Score Media Ventures Inc. All rights reserved. Certain content reproduced under license.
Ellis: Predators 'thoroughly outplayed' Coyotes in series loss
Ryan Ellis believes the Nashville Predators left it all on the ice in their 3-1 series loss against the Arizona Coyotes, which concluded Friday with a 4-3 overtime defeat."Colorado, Winnipeg, Dallas ... we weren't happy with those series," Ellis said postgame, recalling the team's previous three playoff opponents, according to NHL.com's Thomas Willis. "This felt different. I felt like we thoroughly outplayed the Coyotes."The numbers agree. The Predators outshot the Coyotes every game, including 52-33 on Friday. They weren't just firing shots at will from the outside - Nashville had 50 high-danger scoring chances in the series compared to Arizona's 41, according to Natural Stat Trick.The difference in the series was goaltending. Darcy Kuemper was fantastic, posting a .933 save percentage in the series. Juuse Saros, who played all four games over veteran Pekka Rinne, was mediocre at best, only registering an .895 save percentage.Filip Forsberg, who scored Nashville's game-tying goal with 32 seconds left in regulation to force overtime, doesn't think his team should hang their heads."We played the same way literally throughout the whole series," he said, according to WKRN's Emily Proud. "We played well enough to win, obviously it didn't happen this time."The Predators now have just one playoff series win since their Stanley Cup Final berth in 2017.Copyright © 2020 Score Media Ventures Inc. All rights reserved. Certain content reproduced under license.
Habs stun Pens with Game 4 shutout to advance to round of 16
Upset complete.The Montreal Canadiens shocked the hockey world on Friday with a 2-0 win over the Pittsburgh Penguins in Game 4, giving the Habs a 3-1 series victory in the qualifying round.Artturi Lehkonen played the role of hero, breaking the 0-0 stalemate with just over four minutes left in the third period. Shea Weber eventually added an empty netter to put the icing on the cake.
Tristan Jarry starts must-win Game 4 vs. Canadiens
The Pittsburgh Penguins switched starting goaltenders for their do-or-die Game 4 against the Montreal Canadiens on Friday.Goaltender Tristan Jarry took the net after teammate Matt Murray started the first three games of the series.Murray played adequately, but was only able to lead the Penguins to one win. He stopped 85 of 93 shots he faced overall, and put together a 2.50 goals-against average and .914 save percentage.Jarry, who appeared in 33 games during the 2019-20 season, put together a great year and was named to the All-Star Game. He went 20-12-1 and had a 2.43 goals-against average with a .921 save percentage.Copyright © 2020 Score Media Ventures Inc. All rights reserved. Certain content reproduced under license.
...172173174175176177178179180181...