3 Takeaways From The Canadiens’ Crucial Win

The line of Christian Dvorak, Josh Anderson and Brendan Gallagher had its best game of the year in this crucial game against the Ottawa Senators. Photo credit:  Eric Bolte - Imagn Images

On Tuesday night, rivalry night at the Bell Centre, as the Montreal Canadiens hosted the Ottawa Senators. With the hosts sitting in ninth place in the Eastern Conference and the visitors in the first wild card spot, the tilt had huge playoff implications, just like the Calgary Flames vs. New York Rangers, New York Islanders vs. Pittsburgh Penguins, and Detroit Red Wings vs. Washington Capitals matchups.

Just like Saturday night, the Bell Centre crowd was very vocal. It erupted in cheers when Patrik Laine made Linus Ullmark drop his stick with a hard shot and even more when Christian Dvorak scored to give Montreal the early lead.

Former Canadiens Goaltender Gives Montreal A Hand In Playoffs Race
Kent Hughes ‘Won’t Spend Like a Drunken Sailor’ in Free Agency
The Canadiens Hits Leader May Not Be Who You Think

The Canadiens Have Become Harder To Play Against

Back in Marc Bergevin's days, the Habs had several hard-hitting defensemen, which the former GM liked to say made them hard to play against. Montreal still has some hard-hitting blueliners, but there are also hard hitters up front, and it makes a difference.

In the first period alone, Thomas Chabot backed off the puck twice to brace himself for contact. Once because of a Jayden Struble hit and once because of Josh Anderson. That was one of Anderson’s five hits in the first 20 minutes.

Montreal dished out 13 to Ottawa’s nine. While we often speak of the Canadiens being more offensive under Martin St-Louis, the physical aspect of the game is getting increasingly important.

At the end of the game, the Canadiens had 27 hits, the Senators only 13, and captain Brady Tkachuk didn’t have a single one. I asked Martin St-Louis why his players were so physically dominant during the game:

I think it’s part of the game, and when you bring pace to the game, you have an opportunity to be physical. We put good pucks in the zone, and it allowed us to be close enough to them to be able to be physical. We talk a lot about the strategy of where to put the pucks, and we have players who are able to play a physical game.
- Martin St-Louis on his team's physical game

Double Whammy

Failing to score on a power play is one thing, but conceding inside what should have been the two minutes of the power play hurts that much more. In the middle frame, while Drake Batherson was in the sin bin, Juraj Slafkovsky was found guilty of holding on Artem Zub. Michael Amadio gave the Senators the lead on the ensuing four-on-four sequences and deflated the Habs and the building momentarily.

Slafkovsky didn’t play a bad game, but that penalty was costly, when it happened. Still, on the Sens’ second penalty of the frame, he prevented two clearing attempts in the nick of time. After 40 minutes, the big Slovak had 3 of the Canadiens’ 17 shots and was doing more than his fair share offensively.

Thankfully for the power forward, the Habs bounced back in the best of ways in the third frame. 

Winning As A Team

After Lane Hutson leveled the score in the third frame, Travis Hamonic scored from far out, a goal Samuel Montembeault probably would have liked to get back. Earlier this season, this could have been it; it could have sucked out the energy from his teammates but not on Tuesday night the Canadiens rolled up their sleeves and went to work.

Anderson, who had worked so hard all game long, was rewarded when he scored the Canadiens’ second game-tying goal of the frame. Montreal was still hungry, though, and when Shane Pinto tripped Anderson, he opened the door wide for the Habs to put the finishing touch on that game.

Nick Suzuki, who once again played on both powerplay units, scored the game-winning goal with two seconds to go to the man advantage, but he never would have been able to do it had Brendan Gallagher not gotten it away from Ullmark after Emil Heineman’s rocket of a shot. The alternate captain got three points, and even though he didn’t get a star, he did everything else. It was a dominant performance from the third line since center Dvorak scored four points, and they were the line who capped the win off with a couple of empty-netters.

With this hard-earned win, the Canadiens leapfrog the Rangers and take sole possession of the second wildcard spot in the Eastern Conference. With 15 games to play, the Habs are squarely in the mix, and right now, this group believes it can do anything.


Canadiens stories, analysis, breaking news, and more! Tap the star to add us to your favorites on Google News, never to miss a story.  

Follow Karine on X @KarineHains Bluesky @karinehains.bsky.social and Threads @karinehains.

Bookmark The Hockey News Canadiens' page for all the news and happenings around the Canadiens.

Red Wings Burned Late in Washington, Fall 4–1

Mar 18, 2025; Washington, District of Columbia, USA; Washington Capitals center Connor McMichael (24) celebrates after scoring a goal during the third period against the Detroit Red Wings at Capital One Arena. (Peter Casey, Imagn Images

The Detroit Red Wings fell 4–1 to the Washington Capitals at Capital One Arena Tuesday night.  The final score was not an entirely accurate reflection of the run of play, with the Caps surging late to pull clear in what had been a competitive game.  The third period began at 1–1, before Washington took full advantage of its chances when the Red Wings couldn't for three unanswered goals. 

In the end, it's a setback for Detroit's wild card aspirations.  Between the loss in Washington and the other results on the out-of-town scoreboard, the Red Wings now sit three points back of the Montreal Canadiens for the second wild card spot in the Eastern Conference, with Detroit having played an extra game and with three teams (the Rangers, Islanders, and Blue Jackets) separating the Wings and Habs.

Bookmark The Hockey News Detroit Red Wings team site to stay connected to the latest newsgame-day coverage, and player features

Here are five observations from the performances:

I. Capitals Exert Heavy Presence Around Mrazek's Crease

At the 6:36 mark of the first period, Capitals center Dylan Strome opened the scoring.  He did so by throwing a puck to the net—at a harmless pace, from a harmless position along the point—through heavy traffic, which Red Wings goaltender Petr Mrazek never saw.  Connor McMichael battled with Ben Chiarot at top of the crease, and two other Caps flashed across Mrazek's sight line as Strome fired with enough precision to strike the net.  It was the type of shot that had hit Mrazek Sunday afternoon against the Vegas Golden Knights, even when he didn't see it on the way, but it snuck through for Strome Tuesday night.

On the ensuing shift, Washington's fourth line got right back to the same game plan, crowding Mrazek and throwing pucks toward him from the point: hardly a revolutionary strategy, but one to which the Capitals committed all night. 

This trend took on a slightly different flavor for Washington's third and fourth goals: establishing a heavy presence around the crease, then having someone else drive the net once a lane opened.

For the third goal, Pierre-Luc Dubois cleared out a lane for Tom Wilson to skate into, affording Wilson an open re-direct on an Aliaksei Protas centering pass from just beyond the crease.  On the fourth, the gravitational pull of Alex Ovechkin opened up room at the net front for Connor McMichael to wack a loose puck home through Simon Edvinsson.

Over the last two seasons, Detroit has struggled at times with teams that play a heavy game low in the offensive zone.  Part of this can be explained simply because that tendency applies to a number of the best teams in the league (e.g. Florida, Edmonton, Dallas, and, in its own way, Carolina), and it's certainly a strength for Washington.  That presence was a driving factor in the Caps forcing their way to the right side of the result Tuesday night.

II. Rush Chances Missed and Made

About three and a half minutes into the third with the game still tied at one, Patrick Kane hit the offensive blue line with speed, descending in from the right wing for a two-on-one chance and firing a short-side shot that just missed its target.  It was a moment and an opportunity you're accustomed to seeing Kane seize, and he didn't miss by much.

Some three minutes after that, Alex DeBrincat skated in for a similar look, also down the right flank (though he hadn't built up quite as much speed).  DeBrincat targeted Washington goaltender Logan Thompson's glove side (the far side, because Thompson catches with his right hand), but Thompson knocked down, then covered the shot.

Then, roughly a minute and a half later, Dubois accelerated as he slashed from right to left across the neutral zone to rush wide on Justin Holl.  He didn't have a tremendous angle, but Dubois got the shot off quickly, and it deflected off Holl's stick and through Mrazek.

Tuesday's game swung on thin margins.  The trouble for Detroit came when the Red Wings failed to recover their rhythm following the wobble of Dubois' goal, instead conceding twice more in the ensuing seven minutes and change.

Trending Red Wings Stories

Three Questions as Red Wings Embark on Season-Defining Road Trip

Game Notes: Mrazek, Red Wings Bounce Back for Shutout over Golden Knights

Detroit Red Wings Schedule For March 2025

Can The Red Wings Make The Playoffs?

Red Wings Prospect Augustine Propels Michigan State Back to Big Ten Title Game with Shutout

III. Penalty-Free Game Lets Five-on-Five Prevail

There were zero penalties in either direction Tuesday night, allowing five-on-five play to prevail and theoretically affording both sides a chance to settle into a simple, rolling rhythm.  For Detroit, that mean not having the chance to build momentum on the sizzling power play, but it also meant not having to worry about any bleeding on the struggling penalty kill.  The Red Wings were competitive at even strength for most of the night, but there can ultimately be no real denying that the better team prevailed.  

IV. Red Wings Third Line Creates, Can't Convert

Building off a positive performance Sunday against Vegas (which helped produce the highlight reel goal for Albert Johansson), the Detroit third line of J.T. Compher with Jonatan Berggren and Vladimir Tarasenko on his wings played a strong game.  However, that trio failed to take advantage of the chances it created.

Compher had two excellent looks in the first period, but he couldn't quite get off the shot he wanted in either case.  Meanwhile, for the second game in a row, Tarasenko got himself into good positions—arriving at the right time to dangerous areas—but he's missed the net too often on the ensuing shots. 

If any of those chances had come good, it could have wound up a much different night for the Red Wings in the end.  Detroit's been starved for depth scoring all season.  In theory, it's a positive sign to see the third line at least creating quality chances, but the next step of converting those chances is obviously pivotal.

V. Caps as Measuring Stick: an Extra Gear

To reiterate, if you're looking at this game (against the Eastern Conference leaders) as a measuring stick for Detroit, there were positives to take.  At the very least, the Red Wings showed themselves to be competitive, but of course, Detroit is at a point of the season where results are king, and the Wings didn't get the right one Tuesday.

Meanwhile, in considering the gap in the East table from Washington at first to Detroit at 12th, the Capitals certainly showed a gear the Red Wings couldn't match.  It's not as though Washington caved in its guests for 60 minutes by any means, but the Caps showed flashes of that type of control.  There was a quickness and sharpness to Washington's puck movement, especially in transition, that stood out Tuesday night. 

One such spell came in the immediate aftermath of Strome's opening goal.  The Capitals defense corps made incisive vertical passes, which sprung their forwards into advantageous offensive positions.  That space empowered the forwards to switch sides in the offensive zone and create high quality looks.

When you supplement that puck movement and transition game with Washington's heavy game around the net, it's not hard to see why Spencer Carbery's team has been so successful this season.

Never miss a story by adding us to your Google News favorites. 

3 Takeaways From Brutal Loss To Islanders

Credit: Charles LeClaire-Imagn Images

The Pittsburgh Penguins (28-30-10) had a good thing going until it all came crashing down in 20 minutes during the third period of their 4-2 loss to the New York Islanders on Tuesday night at PPG Paints Arena. 

Despite giving their fanbase some hope all week with a sliver of hope to qualify for the playoffs, losing to the Islanders in such dramatic fashion all but snuffs out that smoldering fire. 

Let's discuss another Penguins setback.

The Honeymoon is Over

Tristan Jarry has not looked better in the past four games, playing arguably his best hockey of the 2024-25 season. However, a very sloppy third period will likely lead to Alex Nedeljkovic getting the nod against the Columbus Blue Jackets on Friday night.

NHL Highlights | Islanders vs. Penguins | March 18, 2025NHL Highlights | Islanders vs. Penguins | March 18, 2025Watch full game NHL highlights from the matchup between the New York Islanders and the Pittsburgh Penguins on March 18, 2025, condensing all the action into ...

Whether it was a rebound, an undefended player, or something else, Jarry looked like the Jarry of old in the third. He got beat by a wrist shot, kicked out a rebound for a game-tying goal, and gave up a goal on the first shot of a period with a bounce off his back. 

His inability to make a save at the start of the period led to a sequence of events that cost the Penguins their lead and ultimately cost them the game. The four-game win streak was fun while it lasted, but Pittsburgh showed their true colors on Tuesday.

Crosby Continues His Quest

Sidney Crosby scored a first-period goal to run his season total up to 74 points, putting him within six of 80, which would give him a point-per-game average this season, breaking Wayne Gretzky's record of 19 years.

Without much to play for down the stretch, watching the captain continue to climb the NHL leaderboards is one season to tune in. He may miss Mario Lemieux's franchise record before the end of the season; every point he collects now only helps his quest next season. 

After scoring his 616th goal on Tuesday, Crosby is only nine lamplighters away from catching Joe Sakic on the all-time list for most goals with a single franchise. Considering he's got 12 games left, never say never.

Mistakes Glore

The Islanders scored the game-winning goal on a breakaway, which only took place because Kris Letang opted to play a puck with his stick instead of his stick. Meanwhile, earlier in the period, Matt Grzelcyk sent a backhand pass behind the net, hoping to connect with Erik Karlsson, who was nowhere in the area.

Thankfully, the Islanders didn't score, but they had a good chance. They dominated the third period, outshooting the Penguins 13-5. Once the first goal went in, the home team couldn't make good passes, get quality shots on goal, and disrupt New York's momentum. 

Just like Jarry for 40 minutes, the Penguins hit all the right notes and got by, but once that first goal went in, everything unraveled, and by the final buzzer, the home team looked like a shell of themselves through the first two periods. 

Islanders complete third-period comeback to beat Penguins, 4-2

PITTSBURGH (AP) — Pierre Engvall scored the tiebreaking goal in New York’s four-goal third period, and the Islanders rallied to beat the Pittsburgh Penguins 4-2 on Tuesday night.

Kyle Palmieri had a goal and two assists, Noah Dobson added a goal and an assist, and Simon Holmstrom also scored to help New York get four goals in the third after trailing 2-0 for the second straight game. Ilya Sorokin finished with 20 saves.

Sidney Crosby scored his 24th goal, Joona Koppanen got the first of his NHL career and Tristan Jarry stopped 34 shots for the Penguins, who snapped a four-game win streak.

Palmieri got the Islanders on the scoreboard 17 seconds into the third as he chased down the puck after it got away from Penguins defenseman Kris Letang, skated in on Jarry and fired a shot in off the right post.

Dobson tied it as he knocked in the rebound of Bo Horvat’s driving attempt at 5:34. Engvall put the Islanders ahead as he beat Jarry with 6:52 left, and Holmstrom added an empty-netter with 1:32 remaining to seal the win.

Koppanen gave the Penguins a 1-0 lead as he deflected Vladislav Kolyachonok’s shot from the point past Sorokin 4:40 into the game.

Crosby doubled the lead with 15 seconds left in the first as he knocked in the rebound of a shot by Conor Timmins.

Takeaways

Islanders: New York won for the second time in five games and is three points out of a wild card spot in the Eastern Conference.

Penguins: Pittsburgh was trying for its first five-game win streak since Nov. 4-14, 2023. Instead, the Penguins fell to 5-4-1 in their last 10 games.

Key moment

The Penguins had several chances to score late in the final minute of the first period. Sorokin made saves on shots by Rickard Rakell and Timmins before Crosby scored to give him 1,670 points for his career. He moved past Wayne Gretzky for the fourth-most points with one franchise in NHL history.

Key stat

The Islanders improved to 5-21-2 when trailing after two periods, and the Penguins fell to 18-2-2 when leading after two.

Up next

Islanders host Montreal on Thursday night.

Penguins host Columbus on Friday.

Highlights

Rangers waste Igor Shesterkin's fine play in 2-1 loss to Flames

The Rangers, in a scrap for a final spot in the playoffs, failed to show much of a fight at all in a 2-1 loss to the Calgary Flames on Tuesday night at Madison Square Garden.

Igor Shesterkin, again, was tasked with keeping the game close and, unfortunately, was the lone Ranger who showed any bit of interest in continuing the season past the regular season. The goaltender made a series of big saves, including several on Jonathan Huberdeau, after errors by Blueshirts in front of him. He finished with 33 saves on the night, but a pair of first-period goals were enough to sink the Rangers (72 points, 33-30-6) to a second straight defeat.

The Rangers had no forecheck to speak of (generating just one takeaway), committed a multitude of giveaways (20), and managed just 13 shots on goal, one off their season low. And it proved doubly costly as the Canadiens (73 points, 33-27-7) beat the Ottawa Senators to jump ahead of New York for the final Wild Card spot in the Eastern Conference. Montreal also has a game in hand.

Here are the takeaways…

- J.T. Miller, always looking to force the action since he arrived for his second stint with the Rangers, forced a save from Flames goaltender Dan Vladar just 24 seconds into the game. Artemi Panarin did him one better scoring on a snap shot from the left side 1:13 into the contest for his 30th of the season.

Calgary, playing on the second night of road back-to-back that meant they didn’t arrive in New York until the early hours of Tuesday morning, became the aggressors and penned in the home team, who constantly gave away the puck and looked stuck in neutral. The Flames had all the intensity of a team on the bubble of a playoff spot that Rangers lacked.

Over the ensuing 38:47, the Blueshirts managed just six shots on the Flames net. The visitors – coming off a 6-3 drubbing in Toronto and the lowest-scoring team in the NHL – fired 24 shots on Shersterken in net, beating him twice in the first and holding on for a 2-1 lead entering the third period.

Nazem Kadri leveled the score, slipping it through Shersterken’s legs, after New York failed to clear the puck on two rebounds in front of the net just past the midway point of the first. With just over two minutes to play, Matt Rempe’s left elbow caught Jake Beam's head in front of the Rangers bench. The Flames needed just 17 seconds of the man advantage to find an open Matt Coronato in the center of the ice for the go-ahead score.

- Rangers forwards didn’t manage a single shot on goal in the goalless second period and had not put one in on Vladar since the Panarin score.

The drought continued deep into the third, until Chris Kreider was fed the puck in the center of the ice and had a golden chance but despite the lack of action, Vladar was up to the task. The Kreider slapshot was the Blueshirts’ third of the period and first by a forward in 46:33 of action.

The Blueshirts generated a few chances as their intensity increased, but failed to generate any high-quality opportunities, even in the game's final two minutes when the net was left empty.

Only Kreider (2), Panarin (2), Miller (1), and Mika Zibanejad (1) tallied shots among the 12 forwards in blue. The defenseman generated seven.

- The Flames – who kill just 71 percent of penalties on the road, the lowest rate in hockey – allowed the Maple Leafs to score on all three of their attempts on Monday. Less than 24 hours later, they killed the only Rangers power-play of the night with ease.

The Rangers entered the game stuffing through a 1-for-21 stretch when up a man in their last eight games. They heard boos from the crowd at MSG sixty seconds into their first chance on the power play in the second period. The second half of the penalty was equally as uneventful as the Blueshirts couldn’t even gain the zone to set up the opportunity to create a chance.

It was Calgary who got a golden chance to make it 3-1 as Martin Pospisil hoped out of the box and had a chance on a breakaway against Igor Shesterkin, but the netminder was able to put off the attacker who put the puck over the crossbar.

- Panarin extended his season-high point streak to 10 games with his first-period marker giving him seven goals and seven assists during his hot run of form. He now has 23 points in his last 30 games.

Highlight

What's next

The Rangers, after dropping the first two games of a four-game homestand, host the Maple Leafs on Thursday for a 7:00 p.m. puck drop.

Pittsburgh Penguins and Nashville Predators to play NHL Global Series games in Stockholm in November

NHL: Global Series-Detroit Red Wings at Ottawa Senators

Nov 16, 2023; Stockholm, SWEDEN; General view of the scoreboard during a Global Series NHL hockey game between the Detroit Red Wings and the Ottawa Senators at Avicii Arena. Mandatory Credit: Per Haljestam-USA TODAY Sports

Per Haljestam-USA TODAY Sports

MANALAPAN, Fla. — The Country Music Association Awards ceremony kicks the Nashville Predators out of their arena for a long stretch every November. This year, they'll use that absence to travel to Sweden.

The NHL announced Tuesday the Predators are facing the Pittsburgh Penguins in regular-season games in Stockholm on Nov. 14 and 16 as part of the league's Global Series.

“I think it’ll be a good event for us,” Predators general manager Barry Trotz told The Associated Press. “We’re either going on a long trip out West or we can go to Europe.”

The games at newly renovated Avicii Arena are set to be the 47th and 48th games the league has held in Sweden and make it the 15th season with regular-season action outside North America.

The visit is perhaps one last chance for aging Pittsburgh captain Sidney Crosby and Swedish defenseman Erik Karlsson to play in Scandinavia. The Predators have a prominent Swede in top-line winger Filip Forsberg, with starting goaltender Juuse Saros hailing from neighboring Finland.

“It's going to be really fitting for us,” Trotz said after a session at the NHL GMs meeting in South Florida. “Not only we have some Swedish players - a guy like a Filip and a couple others that are really proud that they will go back and showcase their country, and I think Filip’s going to try to showcase his hometown. I think for our players, there’s not a better learning environment than travel and going to another country to learn more about the culture and understanding of that.”

The Penguins have not played in Europe since 2008, fresh off winning the third Stanley Cup championship in franchise history. They have since won it twice more, in 2016 and '17.

For Trotz, it will be a return overseas a quarter-century after he coached Nashville against Pittsburgh for two-season opening games in Saitama, Japan, in 2000. He wants his players to look forward to and enjoy the trip while also appreciating they will be meaningful games.

“You’ll have the excitement of the start of the season and then you get into November and it starts to get into a little bit of the grind,” Trotz said. “It might be a really good thing for us just to focus on that. But we’ve got to focus on it’s not a vacation.”

The NHL is returning to Sweden for the first time since 2023 after staging games in Finland and Czechia this season. Stockholm has hosted more NHL games than any other European city.

Predators CEO Sean Henry said being selected to participate in a marquee event like this is a testament to the organization’s support at home and abroad.

“This event will be particularly special for Filip Forsberg, who adores his home country, and the other Sweden natives on our team and in our organization,” Henry said in a statement. “We had such an incredible time with our fans at the 2022 Global Series in Bern and Prague, and we can’t wait for them to bring even more energy and enthusiasm in November.”

The Most Important Dozen Questions And Answers In Hockey

Brad Penner-Imagn Images

1. When do you figure the Rempe-Rippers will agree that Matt is a legitimate big-leaguer? (Answer: Only after he wins the Hart Trophy?),

2. Name the 2025 Stanley Cup-winner? (Answer: Winnipeg, or Florida, or Edmonton or Washington or Colorado or Dallas, but never Toronto!)

3. Who's better as the Best NHL Player – McDavid or Draisaitl? (Answer: Neither. Sorry, you have to win The Stanley Cup. Ovechkin!)

4. What's wrong with NHL officiating? (Answer: Nothing. The only thing that can keep up with hockey's supersonic speed is instantreplay.)

5. Who's the best fighter in the NHL? (Answer: If you ask Matt Rempe he'll tell you that it's Mathieu Olivier of Columbus. So will The Maven.)

6. Why can't the Maple Leafs ever win The Stanley Cup?  (Answer: There is such a thing as "tradition!")

7. Will John Tavares return to Toronto next season? (Answer: There is such a thing as "Pyjamas!")

8. When will the Rangers get around to naming a captain? (Answer: What's the rush? It's only the middle of March!)

9. Seriously: Why can't Toronto win The Cup this year? (Answer: Same as every year –  goaltending, goaltending, goaltending.)

10. How did Marty St. Louis get to be such a good coach? (Answer: He played for John Tortorella in Tampa Bay.)

11. What has Barry Trotz learned in Nashville? (Answer: That managing and coaching are as similar as bluebirds and crocodiles.)

12. Which NHL coach could be a stand-up comic if he ever left hockey. (Answer: Listen to a Paul Maurice presser and you'll know soon enough!)

Nashville Predators vs. St. Louis Blues: Live Game Thread

The Nashville Predators (25-33-8, 58 points) kick off a three-game home stand when they host the St. Louis Blues (33-28-7, 73 points) Tuesday at Bridgestone Arena.

The Blues are currently in fifth place in the Central Divsion, eight points behind the Minnesota Wild. They are also tied with the Vancouver Canucks for the second Wild Card spot in the Western Conference, though Vancouver holds the tiebreaker.

Predators forward and alternate captain Filip Forsberg enters play on an eight-game home point streak against the Blues dating back to Nov. 21, 2018 (5-8—13). He has posted just one longer run in his career against a single opponent (11 games vs. CBJ; active).

Tuesday's matchup marks Michael Bunting's first game at Bridgestone Arena as a member of the home team. The forward, acquired from the Pittsburgh Penguins ahead of the March 7 NHL traded deadline, made his Predators debut Friday on the road against the Anaheim Ducks after being activated off of IR (appendectomy). 

Juuse Saros will get the start in goal for Nashville, while the Blues are expected to go with backup goaltender Joel Hofer against the Predators.

Jonathan Marchessault, Filip Forsberg and Ryan O'Reilly, Nashville Predators

How the Predators Lined Up vs. St. Louis

Forsberg-O'Reilly-Stamkos
Bunting-Sissons-Marchessault
L'Heureux-Svechkov-Evangelista
Bellows-McCarron-Smith

Skjei-Blankenburg
Del Gaizo-Stastney
Englund-Barron

Saros
Annunen

Extra: Oesterle, Vrana
IR: Lauzon, Wilsby, Josi

Predators vs. Blues: Live Updates

First Period (STL 0, NSH 0)

How Have The Stars Fared Without Miro Heiskanen? He Might Miss Round 1 Of Playoffs

Miro Heiskanen (Stephen R. Sylvanie-Imagn Images)

The Dallas Stars could be without Miro Heiskanen for the first round of the playoffs, coach Pete DeBoer told reporters on Tuesday.

Heiskanen has been out of the lineup since Jan. 28 with a left knee injury. He suffered against the Vegas Golden Knights, getting the worst of an awkward collision with Mark Stone.

One week later, Heiskanen underwent surgery and was set to miss about three to four months. That would bring him to late April or May. The playoffs begin on April 19.

However, DeBoer said it’s “a realistic possibility” the Stars will have to play a playoff series without their No. 1 defenseman. He added that he hasn’t been on the ice but is progressing off the ice and in the gym.

Stars Defenseman Still Has to Clear Several Hurdles Before ReturnStars Defenseman Still Has to Clear Several Hurdles Before ReturnWith the playoffs starting next month, Dallas Stars fans are chomping at the bit to find out when both Tyler Seguin and Miro Heiskanen can return to the lineup. Heiskanen has not played since January 28th after taking a hit from a falling Mark Stone. 

Heiskanen could be a huge loss for Dallas going into the playoffs, considering his role and play this season.

“We’re going to get Colorado, Winnipeg, somebody really good in the first round,” DeBoer said ahead of Dallas’ clash with the Anaheim Ducks Tuesday evening. “On paper, we’re going to have similar lineups to whoever we’re playing.”

As of Tuesday, the Stars are set to host the Colorado Avalanche in the first round of the playoffs if the standings stay the same. Dallas’ defense, minus Heiskanen, will have to handle the likes of Nathan MacKinnon, Martin Necas, Cale Makar and more.

In 50 games this season, Heiskanen scored five goals and 25 points. The 25-year-old was on a five-game point streak before his injury. 

In addition to his offensive abilities, the reliable Heiskanen plays well over 20 minutes per game. This season, he’s averaged 25:10 and has never averaged less than 23 minutes per game in his seven-year career.

Since the injury to Heisakanen, the Stars haven’t dropped from their second-place position in the Central Division. But they had the third-fewest goals against per game in the NHL, with 2.46. Since then, they rank 17th in that statistic at 3.13 goals against. They’ve outscored any defensive issue with 4.13 goals-for per game since Jan. 29, which leads the league.

The Avalanche closed in on Dallas in the standings and only sit two points behind them. The Stars have two games in hand.

Dallas lost its last two games to the Avalanche and the Winnipeg Jets. Later in the month, the Stars will face the Minnesota Wild, Edmonton Oilers, and Calgary Flames, three more teams in a Western Conference playoff spot or in the race.

Get the latest news and trending stories by following The Hockey News on Google News and by subscribing to The Hockey News newsletter here. And share your thoughts by commenting below the article on THN.com.

Penguins V. Isles Preview: Game Notes, Lineup, and More

Dec 29, 2024; Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA; New York Islanders goaltender Marcus Hogberg (50) defends Pittsburgh Penguins center Sidney Crosby (87) during the third period at PPG Paints Arena. (Charles LeClaire-Imagn Images)

The Pittsburgh Penguins will look to build on their four-game win streak when they take on the New York Islanders Tuesday at PPG Paints Arena in Pittsburgh, Pa.

And they'll give their hot goaltender the net yet again.

Tristan Jarry, who is 4-0 with a .930 save percentage over those four consecutive games, has earned a fifth-straight start. He has regained his form after struggling most of the season, and he will be given another opportunity to earn the Penguins a much-needed win.

In addition, forward Joona Koppanen was recalled from Wilkes-Barre/Scranton on an emergency basis and will slot in the lineup in place of Emil Bemstrom.

"He can kill penalties, he can play a checking role, he can play center, he can play the wing," head coach Mike Sullivan said. "The biggest reason [for the call-up], quite honestly, is because he's played really well."

Here is the rest of the lineup:

As it stands now, the Penguins are six points out of the second wild card spot in the Eastern Conference. The Islanders - who are 5-4-1 in their last 10 games - are two points ahead of the Penguins in the standings with three games in hand, so earning a clean two points will be critical.

"They're a good team," Sullivan said. "They're a sound defensive team, they play with structure, they've got a team game. They have solid goaltending, and they're stingy defensively. So we've got to make sure that we make it as hard on them as they're going to make it on us."


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

Here's How Avalanche Superstar MacKinnon Became One Of The Best Hockey Players On Planet Earth

(MAR 5, 2018 / VOL. 71, ISSUE 12)

Colorado Avalanche star center Nathan MacKinnon has just about done it all -- winning a Stanley Cup, winning individual awards, and winning a 4 Nations Face-Off tournament. The only reason he hasn't won an Olympic gold medal is because NHLers haven't been allowed to play at the Olympics during his incredible professional career. And in this feature story from THN's March 5, 2018 edition, editor-in-chief Ryan Kennedy profiled MacKinnon as he rose through the ranks of the best players on the planet and became the Avs' best player:

MAC’S BACK

By Ryan Kennedy

NATHAN MACKINNON HAS NEVER cared much for being an underdog. He never had to. Until his sophomore year in the NHL, winning came as easily and often as the comparisons to his Cole Harbour hometown buddy Sidney Crosby.

Even off the ice, MacKinnon expected to win. At Shattuck-St. Mary’s in Minnesota, where he helmed the same powerhouse prep school team that Crosby once did, MacKinnon used to play basketball with teammate Taylor Cammarata and a small group of others. MacKinnon, a huge hoops fan, would always pretend to be Kobe Bryant, while Cammarata, to this day listed at just 5-foot-7 and 161 pounds, would be the diminutive legend Allen Iverson. “It would start off with us just fooling around,” Cammarata said. “But it would get competitive. There were some hard fouls.”

One of the reasons MacKinnon chose Bryant was because the L.A. Lakers icon was never the underdog. ‘Black Mamba’ was expected to win, and he almost always did, helping the Lakers capture five NBA titles and getting to the final on two other occasions. “Kobe was one of the best ever to play sports,” MacKinnon said. “He showed what a killer mentality could do. He was like Michael Jordan, one of the best closers.”

The winning followed MacKinnon to Halifax where he led the Mooseheads to the QMJHL championship and the Memorial Cup in 2013. The good times kept rolling when Colorado drafted him No. 1 overall that summer and MacKinnon jumped straight to the NHL. He put up a Calder Trophy rookie season and the Avalanche surprised everyone with 52 wins and 112 points for an out-of-nowhere Central Division title. But the analytics community hated how Colorado played under new coach Patrick Roy and predicted doom in the post-season. Sure enough, the possession-deficient Avalanche came crashing back to reality in the first round, losing to the seventh- seeded Minnesota Wild.

Then, the franchise began wandering in the desert. The Avs finished 21st overall twice in a row after MacKinnon’s freshman year, then bottomed out last season, posting the worst record in the NHL’s shootout era with just 48 points. “My first year in the league, we clinched with, like, 10 games left in the season and won the division,” he said. “You start to think the game is easy, you’re just used to it. After that, the past three years we missed the playoffs and last year was a disaster. It’s good, though. Obviously, I’d like to have four Cups in my first four years right now, but I don’t. It makes you appreciate it. Last year, we would have given anything just to be in the mix, so we’re not going to take this lightly. We haven’t gotten complacent.”

But this season, MacKinnon is starting to win again, and the superstar potential that brought continual comparisons to Crosby is starting to come to fruition (they’re even both repped by agents Pat Brisson and Judd Moldaver). All it took was for his mind to finally catch up with his body – and that’s saying something since, short of Connor McDavid, few players in the NHL are as fast as MacKinnon, who has brought respect back to the once laughingstock Avalanche and put himself into Hart Trophy contention in the process.

In his first four years in the NHL, MacKinnon relied on the talent and emotional tenacity that had made winning come so natural to him as an amateur. Yet for all his blazing speed and spectacular skill, he remained a step or two behind the league’s elite. To become one of the big boys, MacKinnon realized he didn’t need to actually get faster. Instead, he had to rethink his explosive skating and learn the art of deception at the NHL level. Basically, he was a fastball pitcher who needed to add a change-up to his arsenal. “You can’t have one gear,” MacKinnon said. “You’re too predictable like that. A lot of times, I just tried to go full speed. I’m trying to change speeds more and slow down in the neutral zone. My linemates obviously can skate, but when I slow down the pace it helps them and it helps me.”

Changing speeds isn’t the only mental magic MacKinnon has conjured this season. He has also overcome the emotional roadblock he’d put up between his sublime skill set and his approach to the game. MacKinnon admits his maturation process took longer than it does for other players thrust into the spotlight and that it was the mental side of the game that had been holding him back. “It’s been a tough process,” he said. “I had a good first season, but it’s been tough the past three years. You do a lot of growing. Mentally, it takes time to get a hold of things and be consistent.”

Keeping an even keel and solving Wayne Gretzky’s equation for NHL success (90 percent mental, 10 percent physical) hasn’t been easy for MacKinnon since coming into the league. He was used to winning and was expected to be an instant superstar, so when losing became the norm in Colorado and stardom wasn’t immediate, he struggled.

Erik Johnson has been with the Avalanche for eight seasons now. He too was taken first overall (by St. Louis in 2006) and has watched MacKinnon since he entered the league. “He came in at 18 years old…you’re still a kid then,” Johnson said. “He’s a really emotional guy, and when things weren’t going well for him it could hold him down. Now he has really calmed down and is taking things in stride more. He’s always been a heart-on-his-sleeve guy, and he has found a way to reset after every game, to not let things go to his head, either good or bad.”

Perhaps most impressive is that MacKinnon doesn’t have a fancy sports psychologist to credit for his growth. He just gutted his way through the grind and finally figured out how to approach the game the right way. Undoubtedly, it helps he has spent every summer training with Crosby, who also played with high emotion when he entered the NHL. (MacKinnon has even upped his golf game, to the point where he now gets the better of Crosby on the links in the off-season.)

“Last year was tough (for him),” Crosby said. “He wasn’t happy with the way it went, both individually and as a team. I’m sure he wanted to bounce back this year. He works hard. He’s really committed to winning, and he cares a lot about being at his best…He’s been dominant this year.”

Although the stars of the Tampa Bay Lightning have rightly been dominating the awards conversations, MacKinnon is looking like a front-runner for his first Hart Trophy. His Avs have gone from a depressing bunch of misfits to an exciting young outfit featuring one of the most potent lines in the league. Colorado had a 10-game winning streak in January and by mid-season had already surpassed their point total for all of 2016-17. Even in the suffocating West, a playoff spot is within reach, and should the Avalanche clinch a post-season berth, it’d be their first time playing an 83rd game since 2013-14.

Of course, Colorado’s woes hadn’t strictly been about MacKinnon finding his inner peace. The Avalanche were just plain bad, and last season was rock bottom. “There’s a handful of guys from last season that aren’t even in the NHL anymore,” Johnson said. “We had a lot of older guys and a lot of younger guys, and it just wasn’t a very good fit. When things went downhill in December (three wins, 12 losses), we never recovered. There wasn’t enough jam in our group to right the ship. The group this year is much more tight-knit.”

While Colorado got off to a decent start this season, the mega-trade that sent Matt Duchene to Ottawa in a three-way deal with Nashville really cleared things up in Denver. It only makes sense that the uncertainty surrounding a star player who believed his time was up in town would weigh on his teammates. MacKinnon agreed with the sentiment, though he doesn’t blame Duchene personally, so much as the situation itself.

There’s no question now who runs the Colorado offense. MacKinnon flanked by heavy and talented wingers Gabriel Landeskog and Mikko Rantanen has been one of the NHL’s best units, ranking with Steven Stamkos, Nikita Kucherov and Vladislav Namestnikov in Tampa and Patrice Bergeron, Brad Marchand and David Pastrnak in Boston. For the Avs’ trio, the key has been the line’s diversity. Rantanen can be a finisher or a setup man, while Landeskog plays a great two-way game. In MacKinnon, the line has a center who drags defensemen toward him because of his trademark speed, which creates space for everyone else.

Jared, who took over behind the Avalanche bench last season, is a big fan of MacKinnon’s new skating philosophy. “He’s a more dangerous 1-on-1 player now because he has mixed up his attack,” Bednar said. “Sometimes he’ll drive the ‘D’ deep in the zone and try to take it to the net, sometimes he pulls up and tries to cut to the middle of the ice and get into the interior to use his shot. We’re seeing him shoot and use the D-man as a screen a little more, but he’s also a threat to pull up and look for other guys on the ice.”

MacKinnon has been distributing the puck a lot better, too. Perhaps it’s because of the offensive weapons he now has as linemates, but he had already surpassed last season’s total of primary assists (25) with 27 by the All-Star Game. While there are no guarantees in the wild West, a playoff berth for Colorado this spring would really cement MacKinnon’s claim to MVP credentials. “I said it all along the past couple years, this guy can be as good as he wants,” Landeskog said. “There are no boundaries, he’s got all the tools. It’s just a matter of staying level-headed.”

Although it seemed like an agonizing past three seasons for MacKinnon, it’s amazing to think he’s only 22 years old. It hasn’t been that long since he was living with veteran goalie Jean-Sebastien Giguere, trying to convince ‘Jiggy’ to let him blast hip-hop on their commute to the rink. MacKinnon is still a quiet presence in the dressing room, but after wins it’s almost guaranteed he’ll have celebratory rap tunes playing in the gym for the boys.

And if you’re looking for MacKinnon, there’s a good chance he’s at the gym or on the ice – he’s one of the first players out there for practice or morning skates. That commitment has allowed him to excel when it comes to the physical side of the game, and now he has the mental fortitude to make it all come together. “I can stick with the game longer now,” he said. “I don’t get down on myself as much and I trust my game more than I have in years past. I try to give my full attention to 60 minutes of hockey.”

With the passengers of the past gone, the Avalanche are finally starting to look like a dangerous team once again. While the front-office skills of franchise legendturned- GM Joe Sakic had been questioned heavily in the past, the return for the Duchene trade – multiple picks and prospects plus rookie puck-moving defenseman Samuel Girard – have turned that narrative on its head. Landeskog is just 25, Rantanen is but a sophomore and MacKinnon has entered his peak playing years with a forceful 2017-18 performance.

Winning at the highest level may take a little longer, but there’s a lot less losing in MacKinnon’s world right now. Kobe would be proud. 

Ottawa Senators vs Montreal Canadiens: Can Linus Ullmark Complete An Original Six Sweep?

The Ottawa Senators will be in Montreal on Tuesday night, aiming for their seventh consecutive victory. Not only will they be facing a desperate Canadiens team, but it's a club that's had their number this year.

Feb 22, 2025: Senators goalie Linus Ullmark (35) covers the puck in front of Montreal Canadiens defenseman Jayden Struble (47) at the Canadian Tire Centre (Marc DesRosiers-Imagn Images)

This is the third of four meetings between the two clubs, with the Canadiens winning the first two games by a combined score of 9-3.

After losing three of four games on their recent Western road trip, including two in overtime, the Canadiens are feeling good about a 3-1 victory over the Stanley Cup champion Florida Panthers on Saturday night.

With a win tonight, Senators goalie Linus Ullmark has a chance to achieve something truly Original: an Original Six sweep. This is his sixth consecutive start where he'll face an Original Six team, something no goalie has done since 1971. 

And just as unlikely is the fact that he has a chance to win them all.

In his last five starts, Ullmark has defeated the Chicago Blackhawks, New York Rangers, Detroit Red Wings, Boston Bruins, and Toronto Maple Leafs. A victory over the Canadiens would make him part of a great trivia question: Name the only NHL goalie to face all of the Original Six teams in a consecutive six-game span and win every game.

More importantly, the Senators are in control of the Wild Card race, sitting in the top spot with 77 points, five points ahead of the New York Rangers, who hold the second Wild Card spot with 72 points.

The Canadiens have 71 and hold two games in hand on the Rangers, so Montreal will be hoping for a strong performance from the Calgary Flames when they visit Madison Square Garden on Tuesday night.

Ottawa’s hopes of climbing to third place in the Atlantic Division took a hit on Monday night, with both Toronto and Tampa Bay winning their respective games. The Senators are now six points behind the top three in the division.

The Senators will go with the same lineup in Montreal that they used in Toronto on Saturday night. Defenseman Nick Jensen will miss his second consecutive game due to a lower-body injury. Ullmark and Brady Tkachuk missed practice on Monday, but both are expected to play against the Canadiens.

Winger Nick Cousins remains sidelined after knee surgery. If the projected recovery timeline of 6-8 weeks holds, he could return soon. It's now been nearly seven weeks since his surgery.

Senators Projected Lineup:

 Forwards:

  • Brady Tkachuk – Tim Stutzle – Claude Giroux
  • David Perron – Dylan Cozens – Drake Batherson
  • Ridly Greig – Shane Pinto – Michael Amadio
  • Matthew Highmore – Adam Gaudette – Fabian Zetterlund

Defense:

  • Jake Sanderson – Artem Zub
  • Thomas Chabot – Travis Hamonic
  • Tyler Kleven – Nikolas Matinpalo

Goalies:

  • Linus Ullmark
  • Anton Forsberg

Scratched: Dennis Gilbert Injured: Nick Cousins (knee), Nick Jensen (lower body)


Canadiens Projected Lineup:

Forwards:

  • Cole Caufield – Nick Suzuki – Juraj Slafkovsky
  • Joshua Roy – Alex Newhook – Patrik Laine
  • Josh Anderson – Christian Dvorak – Brendan Gallagher
  • Emil Heineman – Jake Evans – Joel Armia

Defense:

  • Mike Matheson – Alexandre Carrier
  • Jayden Struble – Lane Hutson
  • Arber Xhekaj – David Savard

Goalies:

  • Sam Montembeault
  • Jakub Dobes

Scratched: Michael Pezzetta Injured: Kaiden Guhle (lacerated quadriceps muscle)

Face-off is at 7 pm (TSN5, TSN 2, RDS).

By Steve Warne
Site Editor at The Hockey News Ottawa

Stay updated with the most interesting Ottawa Senators stories, analysis, breaking news and more at The Hockey News OttawaTap the star here at Google News to add us to your favourites and never miss a thing.