'Still Have To Work On Our Game': Red Wings Lament Missed Chances in 4-1 Loss To Oilers

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While the Detroit Red Wings got off to a good start in Thursday evening's game against the Edmonton Oilers by generating multiple offensive chances, they weren't able to convert on them during the opening 20 minutes of play.

Meanwhile, the host Oilers capitalized on their first power-play opportunity of the night and controlled play on the scoreboard en route to a 4-1 win, giving the Red Wings their first regulation loss of their season-high six-game road trip and first since Nov. 28. 

Dylan Larkin, who leads Detroit with 17 goals on the season, said it simply came down to one team capitalizing on their chances and one not going so. 

“I thought it was maybe one of our better games of the trip in O-zone time and generating chances,” Larkin said. “They capitalized on their chances. We didn’t.”

“They started with a power-play goal to get their offense going. That was something we tried to avoid and weren’t able to tonight.”

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Oilers forward Zach Hyman registered a hat trick by scoring once in each period, including an empty-net tally late in regulation to seal the victory. 

The Oilers also got a goal from defenseman Mattias Ekholm, while goaltender Stuart Skinner picked up the win by making 27 saves. 

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Detroit's Cam Talbot surrendered three goals while making 25 saves in the venue he once called home earlier in his career during his tenure with the Oilers. 

Red Wings head coach Todd McLellan, who once coached Edmonton, explained that there were still holes in Detroit's game to work on. 

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“The wins and points in the bank are great, but obviously we didn’t get them tonight, and sometimes, that can fool you a little bit," he said. "But at the end of the year, it doesn’t really matter how you got them. We still have to work on our game.”

The Red Wings will conclude their road trip on Saturday evening with a matchup against the Chicago Blackhawks at United Center, and will hope to avenge their 5-1 setback at Little Caesars Arena on Nov. 9. 

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A Hollywood ending? Inside the final days of LeBron James in Los Angeles

LeBron James is the NBA’s all-time leading scorer. Photograph: Mark J Terrill/AP

In a book about LeBron James and the Los Angeles Lakers, it’s only fitting that one memorable scene involves a Hollywood star: Will Smith.

Yaron Weitzman’s latest book is titled A Hollywood Ending: The Dreams and Drama of the LeBron Lakers. Suffice to say the plot thickens when Smith goes to the Lakers’ film room to speak to the team in 2022.

Six months had passed since Smith had slapped Chris Rock at the Oscars. Now Smith was participating in a series of celebrity talks to the Lakers, an innovation brought in by general manager Rob Pelinka. According to the book, James asked Smith question after question until a scheduled half-hour visit had ballooned to nearly twice that amount, with fellow Laker Russell Westbrook growing visibly frustrated, frowning in a team photo with Smith.

“You get to see the personal, intra-office dynamics that impact the game that you don’t always think about,” Weitzman says of the scene.

He notes that those who’ve read the excerpt “seem to be cheering on Westbrook” and “latching on to the idea that it was LeBron’s fault, LeBron was a phony.” He points out that Westbrook has played for multiple NBA teams, and in LA, he was “awful on the court, hardheaded, no willingness to adjust his game.”

As for James: “He is the defining, not just basketball player … but athlete of my generation,” says the 37-year-old Weitzman. And, the author adds, “It seemed like the ‘merger’ between LeBron and the Lakers was fertile ground for the sort of reporting and storytelling” that’s fueled by what Weitzman calls behind the scenes drama.

Weitzman is no stranger to dissecting NBA franchises. It’s what he did in his previous book, about the Philadelphia 76ers, Tanking to the Top. With the Lakers, though, the spotlight was more intense. There was the team’s location in America’s entertainment epicenter. There was a legacy of championships won by stars from Magic Johnson to Kareem Abdul-Jabbar to Kobe Bryant to Shaquille O’Neal, the last two coached by the legendary Phil Jackson. (Last season brought another addition to the pantheon – Luka Dončić – but we’ll get to him later.) There was the role of the Buss family, especially the late longtime team owner Jerry Buss and his daughter, Jeanie, who succeeded him in the executive office. Then there was what Weitzman called the “merger” between the Lakers and James, who brought a star power all his own – as well as the increasingly powerful agency that represented him: Klutch Sports Group, run by James’ friend Rich Paul.

Related: The Luka Era begins: inside the transformation powering the post-LeBron Lakers

How rare is James’s status in the NBA? The book notes his estimated billion-dollar-plus worth while still on an NBA roster, and his dream of someday owning a franchise. Weitzman tracks the impact of James’ comments to the media – including some much-scrutinized remarks at a press conference after the Lakers’ 2023 playoff exit: “I’ve got a lot to think about, to be honest. Just for me personally going forward with the game of basketball, I’ve got a lot to think about.”

Neither James nor team ownership would talk with Weitzman for the book. He filled in the gaps by reading the news coverage from as far back as 15 years ago, supplementing this by watching documentaries, listening to podcasts and speaking with whoever would talk to him, a list that grew to almost 300. Keep an eye out for the footnotes while reading the book. Weitzman describes them as “like someone winking at the reader.”

On page 54, you’ll find not one but two footnotes relating to Daenerys Targaryen. Why? Bryant is quoted urging Jeanie Buss to emulate the Game of Thrones character in early 2017. That’s when, according to the book, she won a George RR Martin-esque power struggle for control of the team. The next year, James came to LA for four years and $154m.

“The Lakers were in a dark period,” Weitzman says. “They certainly needed LeBron. LeBron saved Jeanie Buss’ legacy by coming there.” He adds that unlike past stars such as Magic, Kobe or Shaq, LeBron came to the Lakers as “a fully formed icon, which they had not had before.”

There were significant if not immediate benefits: A championship in James’ second season with the Lakers, 2019-20 – a season that ended amid the Covid-19 pandemic and the Black Lives Matter protests. It was also a season that saw the death of Bryant and his daughter Gianna in a helicopter crash. Coach Frank Vogel kept the team focused as it played before empty stands in the NBA bubble. It was title No 17 for the Lakers, tying them with the Boston Celtics for the all-time league mark.

Would there be an encore? Pelinka tried to add more talent around James, and in 2021 he brought in Westbrook. Yet the 2021-22 team couldn’t even qualify for the playoffs to defend its title, and Vogel lost his job.

Darvin Ham succeeded Vogel as coach. James continued to dazzle on the court, yet the team struggled around him. The book finds a perfect microcosm: On 7 February 2023, James broke the all-time NBA scoring record, surpassing Abdul-Jabbar, in a game against the Oklahoma City Thunder. There were cheers for James after he set the mark late in the third quarter, and a salute from commissioner Adam Silver. However, as the book points out, it was the Thunder who won the game. The Lakers stood at 25-30, in danger of missing the playoffs once more.

Cue more plot twists. The Lakers traded away Westbrook, and saw their fortunes surge. They made the playoffs, going all the way to the West finals, which Denver swept. It was an encouraging first season for Ham, yet the following season the Nuggets ousted the Lakers again, this time in the first round of the playoffs. The hated Celtics won the title that season, moving them ahead of LA for that record 18th banner.

Parting ways with Ham, the Lakers flirted with UConn coach Dan Hurley before he ultimately turned LA down. The Lakers hired player-turned-podcaster JJ Redick and made a unique decision in the draft: They selected James’ son Bronny at No 54, setting up a rare father-son pairing in the lineup. Then, earlier this year, Pelinka made a league-shattering move, dealing Anthony Davis for Mavericks superstar Dončić, who is already one his way to replacing James as the face of the Lakers.

By that point, Weitzman thought he was finished with the manuscript, which initially ended with Bronny joining James on the Lakers. As they say in Hollywood, get me a rewrite.

“I live in New York. The Lakers were playing the Knicks that night at Madison Square Garden,” Weitzman recalls of the Dončić trade. “I was at the game, then I was driving my way home, saw the tweet – oh my God.”

The book wraps up in where-are-they-now style, giving readers updates on the cast. Among them: The Buss family has sold its majority stake to Mark Walter, the owner of the cross-town LA Dodgers, with Jeanie Buss remaining as governor and keeping 15% ownership.

“I’m curious to see where this goes,” Weitzman says. “Is she going to stay or go? I’m dubious whether she actually can stay … Usually, people who pay the money want to be in charge.”

As for James?

“Playing into his 40s, it’s something unparalleled,” Weitzman marvels. “In the major professional American sports, the four major sports, Tom Brady is the only comparison. I’ve never seen anything like it.”

Even Bazball’s implosion can’t shake Barmy Army’s crew of Ashes veterans | Emma John

If anyone knows how to weather a whitewash, it’s the merry band of England fans marking their 30th anniversary at their spiritual home

Courage, soldier. Ben Stokes’s England team may be heading into the third Ashes Test already 2-0 down, but not everyone in English cricket is fazed. There is one group tailor-made for this scenario, a crack(pot) unit who can lay claim to be the ultimate doomsday preppers. Have your dreams been shattered? Are you crushed beneath the weight of unmet expectation? Then it’s time to join the Barmy Army, son.

Already their advance guard are moving in on Adelaide, the city where they officially formed 30 years ago. England’s most famous – and per capita noisiest – travelling fans will be hoping for an anniversary win-against-the-odds, like the one they witnessed on that 1994-95 tour. And whatever happens on the pitch, off it the parties will be long and loud.

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Panthers struggle keeping up with speedy Avalanche, fall 6-1 in Colorado

The Florida Panthers ran into a buzzsaw on Thursday night.

Playing the back end of a back-to-back set, Florida was shellacked by the NHL-best Colorado Avalanche by a final score of 6-2.

Colorado jumped out to an early 1-0 lead when they scored on their first rush of the night.

A nice cross-ice pass by Martin Necas found a wide-open Sam Malinski, and his long wrist shot squeaked through Daniil Tarasov to give the Avs a 1-0 lead just 74 seconds into the game.

The Panthers tied the game about six minutes later, and the goal came from an unlikely source: Florida’s fourth line.

After a nice poke-check by Seth Jones, Noah Gregor picked up the puck and flew up the left side of the ice before driving toward the net. He then flipped a shot that went over the blocker of Mackenzie Blackwood to tie the game at one at the 7:21 mark.

A bad bounce led to Florida falling behind again shortly before the end of the period.

Gus Forsling was defending in front of Tarasov when a Valeri Nichushkin wrist shot hit him in the back and bounced to the side of the crease, where Brock Nelson extended his stick and got just enough of the puck to squeeze it between Tarasov’s skate and the goal post.

The Avalanche doubled their lead at the 5:05 mark of the middle frame when Gavin Brindley got his backhand on a Brent Burns rebound after the pair came down the ice on a 2-on-1.

A long wrist shot by Nathan MacKinnon got past a screened Tarasov just over two minutes later, suddenly making it 4-1 Colorado.

Artturi Lehkonen scored on what felt like Colorado’s tenth breakaway of the game, making it 5-1 Avalanche with 7:29 left in the second period.

Colorado captain Gabriel Landeskog got in on the fun at the 6:18 mark of the third period, corralling a Necas rebound and beating a sprawling Tarasov to five the Avs a 6-1 lead on their 38th shot of the night.

Florida picked up a goal with just under seven minutes to go, but it may have come at a cost.

Mackie Samoskevich finished off a nice passing play with A.J. Greer and Evan Rodrigues, but when Greer made a spinning pass at the side of Colorado’s net, Josh Manson slid down to try and block the pass and took out Greer’s skates causing him to go feet first into the boards.

Greer went to Florida’s locker room afterwards and did not return.

On to Dallas.

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Photo caption: Dec 11, 2025; Denver, Colorado, USA; Colorado Avalanche left wing Artturi Lehkonen (62) celebrates his goal with center Nathan MacKinnon (29) against Florida Panthers goaltender Daniil Tarasov (40) in the second period at Ball Arena. (Isaiah J. Downing-Imagn Images)

Takeaways: Penguins Fail To Respond, Fall To Montreal Canadiens For Third Straight Loss

There have been a handful of tough losses this season for the Pittsburgh Penguins, as there are for any team in the NHL. And, typically, the Penguins have been able to respond well when things aren't going their way. 

After two tough shootout losses to the Dallas Stars and the Anaheim Ducks - both of which featured blown leads very late in regulation - the Penguins hoped to bring their best effort against the Montreal Canadiens on Thursday, a team they will face three times in the month of December. 

And - a game delay and three periods later - they found themselves on the wrong side of the result again.

The Penguins fell to the Canadiens, 4-2, in what felt like one of the least energetic efforts of the season from the Penguins. Part of that could have been a byproduct of the fact that the game's original start time of 7:00 p.m. ET was delayed by a half hour due to a serious accident inbound to the city that delayed players getting to the rink.

But it's fair to wonder how much of Tuesday's loss still rang in their heads - and it's also worth noting that both teams had to deal with the delay. At the end of the day, the Penguins just couldn't seize any sustained periods of momentum in this game, and it was a lackluster response to two hard-to-swallow losses in a row that should have probably been won in regulation.

"I don't know. Honestly, we just had zero jump from the start," Penguins' defenseman Ryan Shea said. "They were all over us, and we didn't respond to start the game, but we didn't even have a response mid-game. I think we had a couple good shifts we put together after we took that timeout, but other than that, we just let them bring it to us, and we just sat back.

"No one wanted to be a difference-maker, and we were just flat."

The Canadiens were ready from the jump in this one, as a defensive zone turnover by Kris Letang near the left point turned into an early goal by Canadiens forward Alexandre Texier. The Habs held the Penguins to just four shots on goal in the first period, and things didn't get much better in the second for the Penguins.

Brendan Gallagher scored less than five minutes into the second period, and Cole Caufield registered a power play goal at the midpoint of the period to put the Canadiens up, 3-0. Pittsburgh got a little bit of momentum in a late push at the end of the second after a disallowed goal by Montreal that was deemed offside after the Penguins challenged.

And they did carry some of that into the start of the third period. Bryan Rust scored just 44 seconds into the third to cut the Habs' lead to 3-1. It looked like the Penguins had some life, but just like that, Oliver Kapanen scored just 15 seconds later to put Montreal back up by three.

Penguins' Top Goaltending Prospect Posts Impressive Shutout, Continues AHL DominancePenguins' Top Goaltending Prospect Posts Impressive Shutout, Continues AHL DominanceThe <a href="https://thehockeynews.com/nhl/pittsburgh-penguins/">Pittsburgh Penguins</a>' goaltending situation has certainly been an interesting one to follow as a whole this season.

The Penguins played a pretty flat game after that fourth Habs goal, even as they had a five-on-three power play that they failed to convert on a few minutes later. A holding call on Adam Engstrom with five minutes remaining in regulation resulted in the Penguins pulling goaltender Tristan Jarry for a six-on-five, which Erik Karlsson quickly converted on to make it 4-2. And Pittsburgh did push hard in the final five minutes, with Sidney Crosby making it 4-3 with around 40 seconds left.

However, it was too little, too late for the Penguins, who have now dropped three straight games after winning five of their previous six. They have a busy stretch of schedule ahead for the rest of December, which can, hopefully, help to pull them out of the funk they're in. 

"In two days, we've got to come out and bring our best game, then do it again back-to-back," Shea said. "It's a quick turnaround. [Friday], we've got to have a good practice, review this, see what we did wrong, then flush it and move on, because we've got two fast teams - two young teams - coming in that like to play offense.

"So, we've got to clean up things if we want to be able to stay in those games."


Here are some takeaways from the Penguins' latest loss:

- This is some of the most lifeless, sloppiest hockey I've seen the Penguins play this season. And it was so, so strange considering the fact that they've followed up some of their worst games this season with some of their best games. 

I do think the game delay may have played a factor in the team's start. But, after that, the Penguins still failed to put together any kind of big response until it was far too late in the game. 

They play Montreal three times this month. They play the San Jose Sharks and the Utah Mammoth back-to-back this weekend. It's critical that they don't let the results of the last three games spiral into something worse, as they can lose ground very quickly in such a tight Eastern Conference.

And it starts with the Penguins simplifying their game.

"When it comes to stuff like that, we've just got to be patient," Shea said. "We can't force stuff when it's not there. I think we've played too much east-to-west, and a team like that... it just fuels their game. I think they came out hot, they were on top of us, but we don't have to spiral out of control.

"We've just got to bear down. Usually, teams come like that for the first period, then they slow up. So, we've just got to learn how to withstand their best and bring ours right after."

Yes, Shootouts Are A Problem For The Penguins - But They're Not The Biggest ConcernYes, Shootouts Are A Problem For The Penguins - But They're Not The Biggest ConcernIf you've been paying any semblance of attention to the <a href="https://thehockeynews.com/nhl/pittsburgh-penguins">Pittsburgh Penguins</a> this season, you've probably heard a thing or two about shootouts.&nbsp;

- Letang's turnover in the defensive zone was something that just cannot happen. 

He had puck support right in front of him, and he just whiffed on the puck. It rolled off the heel of his stick and right to Texier, who brought it back into the slot and put it home.

It's tough to keep piling on Letang. He has been a staple for a very long time with the Penguins, and he has been a large part of their success in the Crosby era.

But his play is becoming a legitimate problem. These kinds of plays are starting to happen with frequency, and he isn't doing enough on the other side of the puck to make up for the defensive gaffes. It just seems like the game is happening too fast for him at times, and he tends to hold onto the puck a hair too long.

I don't know what the solution is. It's not like the Penguins have a plug-and-ready right defenseman on their roster who would fare better than Letang on the second pairing. Matt Dumba and Connor Clifton have been unspectacular this season. Jack St. Ivany was just activated from injured reserve and hasn't seen a game this season. Youngster Harrison Brunicke is about to head to the World Junior Championship and didn't even practice with the team Thursday, as he was working with Penguins' skills coaches on the other rink.

Unless Brunicke shows out at the WJC, rejoins the NHL team after to activate his entry-level contract, and shows a degree of readiness that wasn't there at the start of the season, I don't think there is a replacement for Letang on the second pairing that could allow him to slide down in a reduced role. 

So, yes, his play is an issue, and I do think the Penguins need to address it in some way. I'm just not sure how they even do that at this point. 

- I don't think this was a particularly strong outing from Jarry. While the Penguins were certainly not at their best in this one, Jarry let in a few goals that I'm sure he'd like to have back - including a bit of a leaky goal against from Caufield on the power play. 

That said, your goaltender is entitled to an off-day every now and again, especially in the midst of a largely positive season. I imagine Jarry probably gets the net again on Saturday against the Sharks, but we'll see how the Penguins decide to handle the weekend split between he and Silovs.

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- The third line - or "kid line" - is brought up in pretty much every recap at this point, and it's for good reason. Ben Kindel, Rutger McGroarty, and Ville Koivunen simply look comfortable out there with each other, and they definitely have chemistry. 

Outside of maybe the Crosby line, they were the best line for the Penguins again on Thursday, and I'm not so sure they shouldn't simply be the second line in the absence of Evgeni Malkin. They had their moments against the Habs - including a botched three-on-one where Kindel fed a center-breaking McGroarty a perfect pass that he just couldn't handle - but they were still generating offense.

I do think McGroarty looks a bit rusty, and Koivunen is still gripping his stick a bit too tight. But once the line's production begins to meet its chance generation, I do think the floodgates will open.

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- It goes without saying that the Penguins really, really miss Evgeni Malkin and Blake Lizotte

As far as Malkin, the impact is pretty obvious. The Penguins have lost all threee games that he's missed, and they're just 2-for-13 on the power play in his absence. The second line is not the same without him, either, as Kevin Hayes can't provide close to the offensive output that Malkin can for both himself and his linemates.

And as for Lizotte, he's obviously missed on the penalty kill. But there is a drastic difference between the way Danton Heinen centers the fourth line and the way Lizotte does. And it's a much better line with Lizotte on it. 

If neither are going to be back within the next few games, I think it might be in the Penguins' best interest to give Tristan Broz an extended look down the middle. He only played in one game against the Buffalo Sabres on Nov. 26 before sitting as a healthy scratch for two games and being optioned back to Wilkes-Barre/Scranton (WBS), where he has a goal and three points in his three games since the demotion. 

He's a two-way center, and he's young. The Penguins could use that right now. If they want to stop the bleeding, they need to try to address some of the deficiencies in their lineup where they can. Getting Rickard Rakell back soon should help, but they could still use some extra help.

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Bookmark THN - Pittsburgh Penguins on your Google News tab to follow the latest Penguins news, roster moves, player features, and more!   

Observations From Blues' 7-2 Loss Vs. Predators

NASHVILLE, Tenn. -- It got ugly quickly in Music City.

The St. Louis Blues laid another egg in a stretch of playing four divisional opponents, and the Nashville Predators were the beneficiaries.

Well, Steven Stamkos was the greatest beneficiary.

The sharpshooter scored four goals en route to a 7-2 bludgeoning of the Blues at Bridgestone Arena on Thursday.

The lone bright spot for the Blues was Hugh McGing scoring his first NHL goal; Robert Thomas also scored, Robby Fabbri earned an assist in his return to the Blues, and Jordan Binnington was hung out to dry, allowing six goals on 25 shots on a night where the Blues did not defend the ice very well whatsoever. He was lifted after two periods for Joel Hofer.

"The last two games we've not been hard enough at either net front," Blues coach Jim Montgomery said. "We don't get there too on the inside. That's where good teams in the NHL score goals, screening the goalie and having two guys whacking away at rebounds like you saw them score three or four times tonight, and we're not boxing out at our net front. The physicality and our D-zone coverage the last two games has really dissipated." 

The Blues (11-14-7) turn right back around and head home for a Friday night matchup against the Chicago Blackhawks (13-11-6).

Let’s take a look at Thursday’s game observations:

* Team was soft -- like Charmin -- at both ends of the ice – There was simply no defense. And there’s no defending this kind of play.

It started early, unfortunately for the fourth line being on the ice for the first two goals against.

The Blues had some terrific looks from the slot early, until O-zone whiff leads to 3 on 1 goal. The Blues were buzzing pretty good early with three slot shots on the power play but Juuse Saros came up with the necessary saves.

Then an unforced error, by McGing, whiffing on a puck in the O-zone, that ultimately led to a 3-on-1 and trouble.

Stamkos was set up for a one-timer that Binnington initially stopped but the puck went right back to the Nashville forward for the rebound goal at 8:22 of the first period.

Montgomery said when the Blues lost Nathan Walker (upper-body injury) and Alexey Toropchenko (scalding leg burns), they lost guys that can intimidate on that line.

The Blues have had to improvise with call-ups from Springfield of the American Hockey League in those spots to play with Oskar Sundqvist, and on Thursday, it was McGing and Aleksanteri Kaskimaki.

That trio was on the ice for each of the first two goals, when Stamkos was on the doorstep at the net, not tied up by Logan Mailloux, after Binnington kicked out a Roman Josi point shot. But Sundqvist lost the initial face-off, and the play ultimately led to a second goal against on that line at 11:19 of the first and a 2-0 Predators lead:

And from there on, the Predators wound up having six slot shots compared to the Blues’ five in the first.

The Blues’ top line and d-pair got caught running around in the zone that led to O’Reilly’s goal that killed any Blues momentum when they cut it to 2-1, a goal that made it 3-1 at 8:38 of the second and the route would be on. Cam Fowler was in Binnington’s line of vision on the shot that beat him five-hole.

Forsberg converted what was a flipped puck that ultimately was a 2-on-1, and made it 4-1 at 11:43 before Stamkos scored his third of the game, a pass actually that went in off Justin Faulk at 12:06 that made the score 5-1.

But ultimately, these goals are scored with little to no physicality by the Blues, not putting a body on anyone and leaving too much real estate to work with.

Stamkos’ fourth was the prime example of a puck to the net, and Dalibor Dvorsky of all people is there to fend the front of the net, not a defenseman, at 15:33 that made it 6-2. Again, it was the Fowler-Parayko pairing on the ice there:

It wasn't much better at the offensive end either, where the Blues were able to get good looks from between the dots but not committed enough to sacrifice bodies at the net.

Which led Brayden Schenn to some strong comments.

"Soft ... soft in front of our own net, soft in front of their net," he said. "Give good players time and space to score goals or second chances, leaving 'Binner' hanging out to dry on some, that's how we keep on giving up as many goals as we are right now."

This is December, and these kinds of results should be happening in preseason or early when guys are ridding themselves of pond hockey mode.

Should this be happening now?

"No, like flat-out answer no," Schenn said. "We're not hard enough in front of either net. That's why we don't score, that's why we give them up."

So how does this change?

"Mentality," Schenn said. "It's just simple as far as a mindset goes. We just don't do it, and that's every single guy. We have to commit to the little habits of the details to play for one another or if not, you keep getting embarrassed."

* Nashville’s top players grossly outplayed the Blues’ top players – Stamkos, O’Reilly and Forsberg combined for six goals, and yes, Robert Thomas scored one to make it 5-2 at 13:56 of the second:

But the Predators’ top players outworked and out-competed the Blues’ top players, and the score was indicative.

* Fabbri looked good in debut – Too many negatives on a night like this, but I thought Fabbri’s return to the Blues was a good one.

Not only did he set up McGing for his goal, but he was skating hard, he was engaged and finished with three hits in 14:28 of ice time. Even in the third period, he was working hard.

We’ll see where this goes, but this could be a good fit if the 29-year-old shows the kind of determination he showed here tonight.

"I thought Robby Fabbri was our best forward," Montgomery said. "I loved his habits and details. He was at the net front screening, he got his assist being at the net front passing it over to Hugh. He was finishing checks, he was winning wall battles, all those little things that help your team have success.

"You hope that it will be infectious throughout our lineup. We've got an opportunity to regroup tomorrow night against the Hawks, so we look forward to tomorrow night at home."

"I thought 'Fabs' played well tonight," Schenn said. "He played hard, he brought energy, he had an assist there. I thought 'Fabs' was one of our better players and I think he was excited to be back. I thought he played pretty good tonight."

* McGing gets a goal he’ll remember – McGing would redeem himself with his first goal in a Blues uniform, and it was a nice play set up by Fabbri and Philip Broberg to cut it to 2-1 at 4:17 of the second period.

Broberg had possession in the corner working the puck and found Fabbri at the right side of the post. A quick pass to the low right circle and quick shot high blocker gave the Blues the momentum needed.

"It felt good honestly," McGing said. "You dream about scoring in the NHL, so it finally came and felt good, but obviously I would like to get (it) in a win:

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Anders Lee records four points in Islanders' 5-2 win over Ducks

NEW YORK (AP) — Anders Lee scored twice and had two assists, and David Rittich made 31 saves as the New York Islanders beat the Anaheim Ducks 5-2 on Thursday night.

Simon Holmstrom had a goal and two assists and defensemen Travis Mitchell and Ryan Pulock each scored as the Islanders won for the fifth time in six games.

Leo Carlsson and Troy Terry scored for Anaheim, which had its three-game winning streak snapped.

Islanders leading scorer Bo Horvat left about seven minutes into the second with a lower-body injury after he became tangled with Anaheim defenseman Drew Helleson.

The Islanders took a 3-0 lead in the opening period, starting with Mitchell’s first NHL goal. The 26-year-old was playing his seventh game following his recall from Bridgeport of the AHL.

Lee made it 2-0, beating Ducks netminder Ville Husso on the power play. The Islanders captain scored again with the man advantage late in the first, his eighth goal. Lee has 297 career goals, fifth-most in franchise history.

Carlsson rifled a shot past Rittich in the second for his team-leading 17th goal.

Terry made it 3-2 with a short-handed goal early in the third. The Islanders pulled away when Holmstrom scored his sixth and Pulock added his first.

The Islanders are 14-6-2 in their last 22 games and continued strong play against top-tier competition since losing to Washington on Nov. 30. New York has since defeated Tampa Bay twice, plus Colorado and Vegas.

Rittich improved to 7-3-1 with a sharp performance against the improved Ducks, who have 19 wins in 31 games.

Husso made 32 saves.

Up next

Ducks: At New Jersey on Saturday.

Islanders: Host Tampa Bay on Saturday.

Pete Alonso thanks fans after Mets tenure ends: 'You believed in me, and you made me better'

The Orioles' deal for former Mets first baseman Pete Alonso was made official Thursday, and the slugger took to social media to thank the city and the fans for his time in the Big Apple. 

In his message, which was accompanied by a slideshow of some of his best moments at the plate and on the field, Alonso took time to show appreciation for the Mets faithful, coaches and staff who helped shepherd his growth in the major leagues for seven years.

"New York, thank you. These last few years have shaped me in ways I’ll carry for the rest of my life," Alonso wrote on his Instagram account. "This city demands your best and I’m proud to look back knowing I gave everything I had into earning the privilege of wearing that jersey.

I’ve been blessed with incredible teammates, coaches, trainers, staff, and countless people who helped shape me into the player and man I am today. I’m forever grateful for every person who challenged me, supported me and believed in me along the way.

Thank you for the passion. Thank you for the love. Even the tough love that comes with playing for New York. When it came time for first pitch, thank you for being electric through it all. Thank you for getting rowdy every time I stepped up to the plate and made the building shake when the ball found a seat over the wall. Your energy fueled me more than you’ll ever know.

You believed in me, and you made me better.

With love,

Polar Bear"

The Mets drafted Alonso in the second round of the 2016 draft and he burst onto the scene in 2019, his first season in the big leagues. That year, he hit 53 home runs, a new rookie record, en route to capturing the NL Rookie of the Year award. 

For seven seasons, Alonso became the Mets' most prolific power hitter, slashing .253/.341/.516 with 264 home runs, 183 doubles, and 712 RBI over 1,008 games. Those 264 home runs are a new franchise record, which he broke in 2025.

Islanders' Bo Horvat Leaves Game vs. Ducks With Lower-Body Injury

ELMONT, NY --New York Islanders forward Bo Horvat did not return against the Anaheim Ducks after he sustained a lower-body injury in the second period. 

He is considered day-to-day, per head coach Patrick Roy. 

Horvat's right skate got tangled up with Anaheim Ducks defenseman Drew Helleson. The Islanders' leading goal scorer stayed down before quickly getting to the Islanders' bench. 

He went right down the tunnel at 13:08 of the second:

Horvat, 30, has 31 points (19 goals, 12 assists) in 32 games played this season.