Oscar Fisker Molgaard Continues To Fly Up The Ranks Within The Kraken Organization

On Thursday, Oscar Fisker Molgaard was recalled to the NHL after playing just 14 games in the AHL with the Coachella Valley Firebirds.

Not only would he be joining the big club, but he would be making his NHL debut that night when the Seattle Kraken took on the Chicago Blackhawks.

“When I got the call yesterday, yeah, pure excitement and joy and looking forward to today,” said Fisker Molgaard after Thursday’s morning skate. “Ron told me I’ve been doing a good job and had to get on the plane in a couple hours. It’s been a bit hectic ... just excited to get going. I’m really happy to be here.”

The 20-year-old didn't play a whole lot in his NHL debut, but like he's done at every level, he found a way to make an impact. He skated in just 6:50 of ice time, but he notched his first career NHL point with an assist on the Kraken's first goal of the game. 

The play started with Fisker Molgaard supporting a board battle and being first to the loose puck. Following the scrum, the young center worked to the front of the net where he deflected a puck before it hit off of Tye Kartye, picking up a primary assist. 

There wouldn't be many people who would have agreed that Molgaard would be the first player from their 2023 draft class to make his NHL debut, but since arriving in North America this summer, all he's done is impress the Kraken organization.

It began when he was a standout performer in rookie camp and in the rookie showcase. He constantly demonstrated a strong two-way ability and then carried the momentum. The 52nd overall pick in the 2023 NHL draft was one of the final cuts in training camp after playing in five pre-season games. 

The momentum continued as he started his AHL career in top form, showing no issues translating his game. In 14 games, he's recorded three goals and 10 points, tied for fourth in points. 

The Kraken spoke openly about wanting to trust their youth and allow them to shine. So far, they've done that. Berkly Catton remains in the NHL, Jani Nyman and Ryan Winterton are also up with the big club, and now Fisker Molgaard has seemingly skipped several steps in his development. 

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Kraken Prospect Oscar Fisker Molgaard Is Looking To Bring Previous Experience Into AHL Rookie SeasonKraken Prospect Oscar Fisker Molgaard Is Looking To Bring Previous Experience Into AHL Rookie SeasonOscar Fisker Molgaard is gearing up for his first Seattle Kraken training camp and season in the <a href="http://thn.com/ahl">AHL</a>, and he'll be looking to use past experiences to help him.

Say What? ‘We’re All Going To Die’ And Other Eye-Catching NHL Quotes From The Week

Every week in the NHL delivers goals, chaos, and occasionally, absolute gems on the microphone. Our “Say What?” series features some of the strangest, funniest, and most telling quotes from players, coaches, and executives around the league. 

This week, the quotes cover everything from existential goaltending philosophies to GMs calling out their own teams, and one player praising his “warrior wife.”

Here are the lines that made us stop scrolling and say… what?


“Nothing matters, nobody cares, we’re all going to die.” - Devin Cooley

Calgary Flames backup goalie Devin Cooley offered one of the most shockingly honest quotes of the season, saying he calms himself by repeating his quote about nothing mattering.

It sounds dark, but for Cooley, it’s grounding. He says it keeps him from getting too excited, which leads to “stupid stuff” and bad goals. It’s bizarre, a little morbid, and yet somehow very on-brand for a player who might become one of the most quotable characters in the NHL. It also shines an even brighter light on the theory that goaltenders are generally just a little weird.


“My warrior of a wife had our third daughter while we were on the ice.” - Dylan Strome

Washington Capitals center Dylan Strome announced the birth of his daughter, Sutton Kimberly Strome, on Friday night to reporters. Because it happened earlier than expected, he was unable to make it back to be with his wife, Tayler, in time, and he appeared emotional when discussing it.

“Really proud of her. It’s tough – you obviously want to be there for the birth of your children,” Strome said. “Didn’t know it was coming this soon, but can’t wait to go see her.”

It’s rare to hear a player express something so raw and family-focused during a hectic season, but Strome nailed it. Emotional, honest, and a reminder that hockey players are humans first.

"There was nothing I could do to get back," he said. “Just really proud of her. It’s not easy… For her to do that herself, it’s unbelievable."


“Next question… sorry, I don’t want to be rude, but I’m not going to say it.” Connor Bedard

After snapping at officials over a missed call, Connor Bedard was asked what he said that earned him a penalty for abuse of officials.

“Next question,” he responded. Realizing that there was probably a better way to word it, he then apologized for being rude to the person who asked the question.

“I have to control my emotions… I put our team in a vulnerable spot,” Bedard said.


“We don’t expect him to be the best defensive player out there, but everyone’s required to play defense.” - Mike Sullivan

New York Rangers head coach Mike Sullivan didn’t sugarcoat it when asked about Artemi Panarin’s willingness (or lack thereof) to play defense.

“We don’t expect him to be the best defensive player out there, but everyone’s required to play defense – and that’s the conversation that we have,” he told reporters after the Rangers’ 6-3 defeat to the Colorado Avalanche on Thursday.

Mike Sullivan (Peter Carr/The Journal News / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images)

“Everybody knows he drives offense, he’s a talented player. But I think he’s also capable of defending when he’s committed,” Sullivan added.

Coaches rarely call out stars this directly, and it’s intriguing that he’s choosing to do so with so much speculation surrounding the star, as he is a pending UFA on a team outside of a playoff spot.


“Everyone smells like a brewery.” - Brady Tkachuk

Not long ago, Matthew Tkachuk and Brady Tkachuk started up their own podcast, called Wingmen. In a recent episode, the brothers shared what it’s like for NHL players returning to their teams after the Christmas break. 

They discussed the NHL’s mandate that no team travels on Dec. 26th, which forces players to report to their teams early on the 27th, while they recover from their holiday festivities.

“It is the worst pre-game skate of the year, by far,” Matthew said. “The good thing is, everyone is in the same boat. Everyone’s a lot heavier, everyone’s a little sluggish.

“Everyone smells like a brewery,” Brady chimed in.


“It’s as though we went back 14 months.” - Martin St-Louis

Martin St-Louis has not been thrilled with the effort of his team over the past several games. He actually walked off during practice on Friday

After an 8-4 loss against Washington on Thursday, St-Louis told reporters the way the team is playing defense reminds him of what he saw before the team was good.

He also acknowledged that Sam Montembeault and Jakub Dobes can be better in net, but the team has to get the job done in front of them as well, instead of just pointing the finger at them.

“Put pucks in deep, fewer turnovers, defend better, get the puck out when it’s around the blueline, take fewer penalties, block shots, put the puck on the sticks in front of the net,” St-Louis said. “Do you want more?”

That’s as close to frustrated as St-Louis gets.

“I’m disappointed because it’s as if we went back in time a little bit tonight,” St-Louis said. “Our good was good, but we shot ourselves in the foot. It’s as though we went back 14 months.”


“Don’t take it for granted because it's not normal everywhere.” - Gabriel Landeskog

Gabriel Landeskog dropped a fun quote, reflecting on how lucky everyone is to watch the likes of Nathan MacKinnon, Cale Makar, and Martin Necas and how fun it is to see talented players play hockey. While fans get to see how dynamic top stars can be, in Colorado, he’s got a front-row seat. 

“You’re just blessed to get to watch on a daily basis,” Landeskog told reporters. I feel like you guys should probably feel the same way and don't take it for granted because it's not normal everywhere.”

While MacKinnon leads the league in scoring with 36 points, Makar and Necas are tied for fifth in the NHL scoring race with 28 points each.

“You have very elite players that are fully bought into what we're trying to do, and obviously they're special hockey minds and the talent and the hard work that they put in is exceptional,” the Avalanche’s captain said.


"In hockey, I always say you either win or you learn.” - Andre Tourigny

Utah Mammoth head coach Andre Tourigny doesn’t believe in losing without growth. After their loss to the Vegas Golden Knights on Thursday, he called out his team’s response to the emotion of the game.

“We cannot lose our focus like that because a call, or a goal, or a hit, or whatever,” Tourigny told reporters. “We cannot lose our temper and start to run around.”

In an outing where Utah’s bench boss believed his players could have controlled themselves a bit better, he wants them to learn a lesson from that defeat.

"In hockey, I always say you either win or you learn. If you just lose instead of learning, that doesn't work. You stay still, so we need to learn from what happened."


“I haven’t heard a single conversation about the Blue Jackets.” - sports media personality Bill Simmons

The Ringer CEO, Bill Simmons, was asked what the most irrelevant franchise in professional sports on a Nov. 18 episode of The Bill Simmons Podcast.

The commenter said they assumed it is their Columbus Blue Jackets, which have a total of 15 franchise playoff wins in 26 seasons so far. Simmons agreed.

"Now, granted, I don't have a ton of hockey fans in my life, but I've never heard a convo about them," Simmons added.

Blue Jackets defenseman Zach Werenski shrugged it off

“Yeah, it doesn’t matter,” Werenski told reporters. “It is what it is, I guess, right? I’m not going to lose sleep over it. I like Columbus, I like playing there, and I don’t care what Bill Simmons has to say.”


“I don’t see myself in another jersey, not in Florida, not in Colorado, anywhere” - Evgeni Malkin

Evgeni Malkin is having a tremendous start to his season, and with that, there has been trade speculation surrounding him. However, the long-time Penguins center made it clear that his intentions are to stay in Pittsburgh, even though he understands that some decisions are out of his control

“There are many details,” Malkin said. “What if the team struggles or misses the playoffs, and big trades start? Of course, I don’t see myself in another jersey – not in Florida, not in Colorado, anywhere.

“I’ve played my whole life in Pittsburgh. I love the fans, I love the city. I want to finish here. But there are always details. And of course, I want to fight for another Cup,” he concluded.


“I think there’s been too much vanilla with our team.” - Brad Treliving

The Toronto Maple Leafs GM didn’t hide from accountability when he spoke with the Toronto media on Tuesday. Brad Treliving admitted that the Leafs are not where they “envisioned to be” at this point in the season.

“I take full responsibility,” Treliving told reporters. “I’m in charge of the hockey department. I've put the people in place on the ice, off the ice. So the responsibility lies with myself.” 

He reflected on the team’s identity and the way they’ve played in the first quarter of this campaign.

“I think there’s been too much vanilla with our team," he said. "You can count on one hand how many complete games we’ve had.”


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Ottawa Senators Send A Player Down To The Minors, Clearing Room For Chabot's Probable Return

When defenseman Nikolas Matinpalo was injured in Thursday night's 3-2 victory in Anaheim on Thursday night, attention immediately turned to the idea of Lassi Thomson. After being called up to travel with Ottawa in case of injury, the Sens' 2019 first-round draft pick seemed like the logical replacement option if Matinpalo couldn't play on Saturday night in San Jose.

Not only will Thomson not get that opportunity, but he's heading back to Belleville. The Senators loaned him to the B-Sens on Saturday morning.

The Senators still have a long way to go on this road trip, so that means Ottawa's blue line is about to add at least one defenseman. It's most likely going to be an injured player who's now healthy again.

If it were only Matinpalo, then nothing would have changed, and Thomson would still be with Ottawa as the seventh defenseman. So either Thomas Chabot or Dennis Gilbert must be ready to join the team in California, bumping Thomson even further down the depth chart.

Chabot and Gilbert have both been close to a return from injury, but Gilbert is on Belleville's roster and hasn't played in almost a month, so the assumption is that he'll get some games in Belleville before joining Ottawa.

In all likelihood, Chabot has rejoined the Senators in San Jose. Assuming he dresses against the Sharks, that would restore Ottawa's blue line balance with three lefties and three righties, and Travis Green can go back to rotating Jordan Spence and Nikolas Matinpalo (if he's healthy) in the six hole.

Chabot was injured in a November 11th game against the Dallas Stars, possibly from a hard hit against the boards by Stars forward Colin Blackwell. The bodycheck occurred at the Stars' bench, where there's no glass, and it looked like Chabot's lower back or left rib area took the brunt of the hit, colliding with the hard edge at the top of the boards.

Among Sens defensemen, Chabot is tied with Artem Zub for second in scoring with 10 points this season. 

As for Thomson, his second act in the NHL will have to wait. He will rejoin the B-Sens, who are 4-0-1 in their last five games. In 15 games with Belleville this season, Thomson has three goals, one assist and 32 shots.

The Senators are in San Jose on Saturday at 7 p.m. EST.

Steve Warne
The Hockey News Ottawa

This article was originally published at The Hockey News Ottawa. Read more:

Without His Wingman, Sens Top Gun Tim Stützle Continues Relentless Drive To Improve
Report: Ottawa Senators Place Swedish Winger On Waivers
NHL Insider Says Senators Are 'Looking To Hit A Home Run' On The Trade Market
Former Senator Returns To Ottawa In Monday Trade With Philadelphia
Senators Have Big UFA Contract Decisions In Next Few Years (Who Stays And Who Goes?)
Four More Years: Shane Pinto Signs Four-Year Extension

Canadiens May Get A Big Boost From Energetic Forward

On Friday night, the Montreal Canadiens recalled Florian Xhekaj from the Laval Rocket. Some would say it was a long time coming, given how many injuries were necessary for the rugged forward to get his turn, but the Habs brass couldn’t go to him first, given how his season has started in the AHL.

However, after Jared Davidson and Joshua Roy were called up, Jake Evans received a high hit from Washington Capitals’ tough guy Tom Wilson. Since the Habs’ center may not be able to play tonight, the organization has decided to call up the younger Xhekaj.

Canadiens Recall Florian Xhekaj From AHL
Canadiens: Did Arber Xhekaj Need To Fight?
Canadiens: Why Jacob Fowler Is Not The Answer

It’s a well-known fact that the Xhekaj brothers grew up Habs fans in Ontario, and when they got to play a preseason game together earlier this year, they were absolutely stocked and oozed positive energy. Both brother scored that night in a 5-0 over the Philadelphia Flyers

With the Canadiens desperately trying to get out of a five-game losing streak, that positive energy may be what the Habs need to skate with an extra spring in their strides. Arber Xhekaj took some flak on Friday for not holding Wilson accountable for the hit on Evans, and chances are he’ll be looking to have a standout performance on Saturday to quiet the critics.

As for the younger brother, there’s no need to explain just how pumped he will be to see his NHL dream come true, wearing the uniform of the most storied franchise in the NHL, and the one he grew up rooting for.

Joined on her way to the airport this morning, Simona Xhekaj said:

I'm feeling very nervous, my morning coffee went right through me. Couldn't sleep, got up at 5:00 and took my babies out for a walk. Whirlpool in my head with all the flashbacks when they were little, when Flo almost died on me in Spain after that horrific accident on ice. I'm excited beyond words.
- The Xhekaj's mother's thoughts this morning

So far this season, the 21-year-old has only four points in 16 games, including just two lamplighters, after putting up 24 goals in 69 games in the AHL last season. Just like his brother, the youngster can play a challenging game; he had 175 penalty minutes last season, and he’s already up to 44 minutes this year.

While a team shouldn’t need extra motivation to win when they have lost their last five games, it certainly won’t hurt to have two players fulfilling their lifelong dream.


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How Landry Shamet's breakout season lifts Knicks' rotation

In a year the Knicks desperately needed to see one of their depth pieces emerge as a legitimate contributor, it hasn’t been the returning prospects or all of the headline offseason acquisitions that impressed early on. 

Instead, it’s been Landry Shamet, the definition of an NBA vagabond that was on the cusp of not returning to New York this season.

He’s since gone from the end of the bench to starting five games, shooting 42.4 percent from three and coming up with key performances in meaningful wins. Let’s look back on his impressive journey and what he’s done to lift the Knicks this season.

Shamet originally joined the Knicks during last season’s training camp and got rave reviews, leading to a locked-in preseason rotation role that was unfortunately cut short due to a shoulder injury. New York, believing in the talent and work ethic, waived Shamet but allowed him to rehab with their G-League affiliate in Westchester. 

It took a few months and a couple appearances at the developmental level before the Knicks called Shamet back up around Christmas. His first games back were rough though, as he was still finding his rhythm back.

Shamet played 19 games through early February through sporadic minutes and a sub-30 percent stroke from three, but something changed that month. He rediscovered his stroke and defensive intensity, hitting 42.4 percent of his threes down the final 31 games of the season, earning over 18 minutes a night. 

Oddly, his minutes evaporated in the playoffs after a 10-minute stint in their opening game. He’d see decreasing spot minutes against the Pistons before racking up DNP’s all the way until the Conference Finals. 

New York Knicks guard Jalen Brunson (11) and guard Landry Shamet (44) celebrate after Shamet makes a go ahead three point basket against the Dallas Mavericks during the fourth quarter at the American Airlines Center.
New York Knicks guard Jalen Brunson (11) and guard Landry Shamet (44) celebrate after Shamet makes a go ahead three point basket against the Dallas Mavericks during the fourth quarter at the American Airlines Center. / Jerome Miron-Imagn Images

With the Knicks down 0-2 going back to Indiana, Shamet found some burn and brought much-needed energy and shooting off the bench for the remainder of the series, including a 12-point outburst in the pivotal Game 6. His series performance earned him a lot of fans, and perhaps ultimately the final roster spot he secured with the team this summer.

That decision, along with new head coach Mike Brown’s strong trust in him, are paying major dividends now. Shamet’s averaging 9.9 points on 42.4 percent shooting from three, playing seven more minutes a night last year but only four more than his post-rust stretch.

Perhaps the biggest surprise statistically has been New York’s resilience defensively with him on the court. Opponents have worse efficiency when Shamet plays, and while he can struggle contesting one-on-one due to his size, his effort, low-risk approach and positioning are there.

Offensively, Shamet is rightfully known for his shooting, but he’s not just hitting a bunch of catch-and-shoots from the corner. 43.8 percent of his pull-up threes are dropping, some even off pick-and-roll, and he’s one of the team’s better shooters from outside the corners.

He’s given Jalen Brunson some reprieve as a ball-handler and has shown recent glimpses of his mid-range and finishing games as well, the highlight being a two-handed flush all over Miami’s Kel’el Ware. He was a monster in that Heat game, putting up a career-high 36 points (30 in the second half!) on 6 of 12 shooting from three.

A few nights later, Shamet would play heroic again, hitting two threes in the final minute of the game to give his team the lead before sealing the game in the final seconds with a drawn offensive foul. It’s tough not to credit Shamet heavily for two of New York’s nine wins this early season, a major payoff for Brown’s trust in him. 

Fans are hoping this continues. Most contenders get thin deeper into their bench, and New York is no exception. 

Having Shamet step up on his second veteran’s minimum deal for this team is not only crucial for their championship hunt, but a gritty and awesome New York story to get behind.

Championship: Coventry storm back to beat Baggies, Saints thrash Charlton 5-1

  • Leaders come back from 2-0 down

  • Southampton’s five-star first half stuns the Addicks

Leaders Coventry came from two goals behind to beat 10-man West Brom 3-2 in a thriller at the CBS Arena. Two goals from Aune Heggebø put the visitors ahead, but Josh Eccles halved the deficit before the break. After Jayson Molumby had been sent off four minutes into the second half, Ellis Simms and Victor Torp were on target to make it nine wins in 10 for Coventry.

Molumby had fouled Ephron Mason-Clark in the first half that led to a clash and both players were booked. Molumby then pulled back Torp to prevent a counterattack and was shown a second yellow card on 49 minutes.

This story will be updated

Continue reading...

NHL Situational Scoring Rankings: Celebrini Scores The Most Important Points

By any metric one can measure, Macklin Celebrini is laying to waste the notion of the sophomore slump. And here’s another metric where he’s killing it through the first quarter of the season.

When it comes to goal-scoring in the NHL, the old saying goes, “They don’t ask how. They ask how many.” With a unique stat called Situational Scoring, they don’t ask how many, they ask how many of them meant something? 

What makes it different from every other stat out there in the NHL is that it tracks only the important points, the ones that matter. Garbage points need not apply.

And Celebrini's scoring the most points that matter.

He isn’t the only player who’s making his impact when it comes to Situational Scoring. Guys such as Wyatt Johnston and Jack Roslovic aren’t anywhere near the top 25 in the actual scoring race, but they’re among the most productive players in the league in this stat. That’s what makes it fun.

Here's the ranking with stats updated as of Nov. 21. If you're unfamiliar with Situational Scoring or need a refresher, keep reading.

NHL Situational Scoring: Top 26 Players As Of Nov. 21, 2025NHL Situational Scoring: Top 26 Players As Of Nov. 21, 2025Situational Scoring tracks the points that matter the most. Goals and assists are assigned a value depending on the situation and added up in the total (SS points). Scroll to the right for more numbers.

As always, there are a couple of things to note, the most important being that goals are weighted more heavily than assists, with goals worth one point and assists worth half a point.

In this system, goals can be worth more than one point and assists worth more than a half a point. For example, the first goal of a game is automatically worth two points, one for being the first goal of the game and one for putting that player’s team ahead in a game. An overtime goal is worth three: one for putting the team ahead, one for being the game-winner and one for the overtime goal. If that is the only goal in a 1-0 game, it’s worth four.

It can all be a little confusing, so here’s a glossary:

FIRST: When a player scores the first goal of the game.

AHEAD: Any goal that puts a team ahead at any point in the game, including overtime.

TIED: Any goal that pulls a team into a tie at any point in the game.

COMEBACK: A goal that is scored when a team is trailing by two goals or more and is part of a series of goals that eventually ties the game, regardless of the ultimate outcome of the game.

WINNER: A game-winning goal, but not by the NHL’s definition. The game-winner in this category is the goal that puts a team ahead in a game to stay. So in other words, you could have a 7-6 game and maybe the first goal of the game was the game-winner.

OT: Overtime goal.

SO: Only shootout game-winning goals are counted in this category.

NHL: Where the player stands in the actual NHL scoring race.

Take a look at the list, watch the video column for more, and let us know your thoughts. If you want to see how last year's Situational Scoring list ended, check it out here.


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Jersey Bulls go down at Hastings United

Action from Hastings United v Jersey Bulls
Jersey Bulls have lost four of their 10 away games [BBC]

Jersey Bulls were beaten 1-0 at Hastings United in Isthmian League South East.

Hastings dominated much of the first half as Euan van der Vliet was forced to save well from Jordan Mase's 13th minute lob.

But the Bulls keeper flapped at a corner four minutes later and Eugene Asike was on hand to blast in on the line to put Hastings 1-0 up.

Bulls lost centre-back Luke Campbell to injury five minutes before half time as he tried to stop a James Stone attempt as the islanders struggled to deal with the resulting corner.

Bulls boss Elliot Powell made three changes at half time with one of those - James Sunley - having their first serious effort as his shot was cleared off the line 12 minutes after the restart.

Miguel Carvalho curled an effort over the home bar with 15 minutes left while James Carr forced a good save soon after, but the island side could not find a breakthrough.

The defeat keeps the islanders in mid-table while Hastings move away from the relegation places.

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Nick Lardis Scores Twice For IceHogs, Could Be Next Man Up To Blackhawks

Nick Lardis had been out of the Rockford IceHogs lineup for a few games due to injury. There was some speculation that it could be because of his first NHL call-up, but an actual injury was the reason. 

Lardis returned to the lineup on Friday and made an immediate impact. He scored two goals in their 2-0 comeback win over the Texas Stars. Both goals came in the third period. 

Late in the third, Kevin Korchinski took a penalty, but Nolan Allan scored a short-handed goal to take the lead for the first time. The Stars, however, didn't go quietly after relinquishing the lead. They tied it back up with 1:27 remaining in regulation to force overtime. 

It was in the free hockey period that Aidan Thompson gave the IceHogs the 4-3 victory. Rockford hasn't had the best start to the season, but this is the type of victory that can spark a winning streak. 

On the same night, the Chicago Blackhawks were run out of upstate New York as the Buffalo Sabres defeated them 9-3.

Tyler Bertuzzi & Connor Bedard Stay Hot But Sabres Run Blackhawks Out Of TownTyler Bertuzzi & Connor Bedard Stay Hot But Sabres Run Blackhawks Out Of TownThe Chicago Blackhawks were defeated by the Buffalo Sabres on Friday night.

Before the game on CHSN, NHL insider Frank Seravalli claimed that Nick Lardis could be the next man up when Chicago needs to call up a forward from the AHL.

That was before he went out and had a two-goal performance. Seravalli also mentioned Brett Seney as a veteran option, but Seney would need to sign an NHL contract (he is only on a one-way AHL deal). 

The Blackhawks have already called up Oliver Moore and Landon Slaggert. Injuries to forwards throughout the year have forced that. With Nick Foligno, Jason Dickinson, and Andre Burakovsky all out for the time being, the potential for another call up is something to be thinking about. 

For the Blackhawks to dress 12 forwards, they would have to make a call-up if those three were still out. If there is another injury, they will for sure make a call. 

Seney is tied for the AHL lead in points with 19, and Lardis is tied for seventh with 16, but he has played two fewer games than Seney.

7 of Lardis' 16 points are goals. He is scoring at a high clip for the AHL, especially being a rookie. He had 71 with the Brandtford Bulldogs last year, which is an absurd amount. He won't score that many in pro hockey, but it has been obvious for a while that his nose for the net will take him far. 

The elder skater in Seney is not a bad call-up option, but there is much more upside with Lardis. He is also a long-term piece, so giving him a look and an opportunity to make his NHL debut could work out very well for everyone involved. Lardis has a shot that will likely translate to the NHL, which will help the team win games. 

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Columbus Blue Jackets (24 pts) vs. Detroit Red Wings (25 pts) Game Preview

The Columbus Blue Jackets are on the road to take on the Detroit Red Wings at Little Caesers Arena.   

The Detroit Red Wings come into this game having gone 4-5-1 in their last 10 games, which includes a 5-0 loss to the New York Islanders on Thursday. 

The Red Wings currently sit 1st in the Atlantic Division and 4th in the Eastern Conference with 25 points. 

The Blue Jackets are coming off of an emotional road win against the Toronto Maple Leafs at Scotiabank Arena. Center Adam Fantilli had three points playing in his hometown, and in front of close to 150 friends and family. 

Now it's Zach Werenski's turn. He thoroughly enjoys playing in his hometown as well. Werenski has 8 points in 15 career games in Detroit. He also has 20 career points in 25 games against the Red Wings, including 6 points in three games last season. 

With 24 points, the CBJ currently sit 6th in the Metro, 9th in the East, and 18th in the league. 

Blue Jackets Stats

  • Power Play - 16.7% - 23rd in the NHL
  • Penalty Kill - 73.1% - 27th in the NHL
  • Goals For - 62 - 19th in the NHL
  • Goals Against - 60 - 20th in the NHL

Red Wings Stats

  • Power Play - 21.4% - 14th in the NHL
  • Penalty Kill - 81.7% - 13th in the NHL
  • Goals For - 60 - 22nd in the NHL
  • Goals Against - 67 - 22nd in the NHL

Series History vs. The Red Wings

  • Columbus is 48-52-1-14 all-time, and 21-28-0-7 on the road vs. Detroit.
  • The CBJ are 29-13-4 in the last 13 seasons.
  • The Jackets are 14-5-3 at Little Caesers Arena in the last 22 games.
  • The CBJ went 2-1 vs. the Wings last season, including a 5-3 win in the 2025 Stadium Series Games at Ohio Stadium.

Who To Watch For TheRed Wings

  • Patrick Kane has 86 points in 64 career games against Columbus.
  • Dylan Larkin leads the Red Wings with 12 goals and 24 points.
  • Lucas Raymond leads the team with 16 assists.
  • Goalie Cam Talbot is 8-2-0 with a .897 SV%. His last start was on November 18 in a win against Seattle.
  • John Gibson is 4-6-1 with a SV % of .870. His last start was on November 20 in a 5-0 loss to the Islanders.

CBJ Player Notes vs.Red Wings

  • Zach Werenski has 20 points in 25 career games against Detroit.
  • Charlie Coyle has 14 points in 30 games.
  • Sean Monahan has 16 points in 21 games vs. the Red Wings.

Injuries 

  • Erik Gudbranson - Upper Body - Missed 13 games - IR
  • Boone Jenner - Upper Body - Missed 5 Games - IR

TOTAL MAN GAMES LOST: 30

How to Watch & Listen: Tonight's game will be on FanDuel Sports Network. Steve Mears will be on the play-by-play. The radio broadcast will be on 93.3 The Bus, with Bob McElligott behind the mic doing the play-by-play. 

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