Penguins Forward Boko Imama Nominated For Masterton Memorial Trophy

Mar 21, 2025; Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA; Pittsburgh Penguins left wing Bokondji Imama (14) reacts after being named first star of the game against the Columbus Blue Jackets at PPG Paints Arena. Mandatory Credit: Charles LeClaire-Imagn Images

There is not a more "journeyman" player on the Pittsburgh Penguins than forward Boko Imama.

And he is now a National Hockey League award nominee.

On Wednesday, the Pittsburgh chapter of the Professional Hockey Writers Association (PHWA) selected Imama as the 2024-25 team nominee for the Bill Masterton Memorial Trophy, which is awarded annually from the pool of team nominees to the NHL player who "best exemplifies the qualities of perserverance, sportsmanship, and dedication to hockey."

Last season's nominee for the Penguins was captain Sidney Crosby, while defenseman Kris Letang - a four-time team nominee - won the Masterton Trophy in 2023 after some personal setbacks, including the passing of his father and suffering his second stroke.

Imama - a native of Montreal born to parents who immigrated from the Democratic Republic of the Congo - was drafted by the Tampa Bay Lightning in the 6th round (180th overall) of the 2015 NHL Entry Draft. He has made his rounds through several NHL organizations, including Tampa Bay, the Los Angeles Kings, the Arizona Coyotes, the Ottawa Senators, and the Penguins.

He made his NHL debut with the Coyotes during the 2021-22 season, appearing in just four games and registering one goal. Imama was back and forth between the NHL and AHL for the next several seasons - totaling 15 NHL games combined - until he was finally recalled by Pittsburgh for good mid-season in 2024-25. In 16 NHL games with the Penguins this season, Imama - an enforcer - has one goal and 30 penalty minutes.

'All The Guys Love Him': New Forward Energizes Penguins' Locker Room'All The Guys Love Him': New Forward Energizes Penguins' Locker RoomForward Boko Imama has played in just four games with the Penguins, and he's already making an impression on his teammates.

Recently, he was also dealt a season-ending setback, as biceps surgery will keep him out 4-6 months

Imama's on-ice demeanor and perserverance is tangible. But his intangibles, dedication, and positive energy are what has endeared him to teammates and the organization, and they were the primary factors behind the nomination. His teammates have attested to that throughout the season.

"In the room, he's one of the best guys," forward Blake Lizotte said. "I've known him for a while. Any room he's in, he lights up, and all the guys love him. So, it's great to have him here."

Of the Masterton nominees, three finalists will be chosen at a later date. 


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Vancouver Canucks Eliminated From Post-Season Contention, Will Not Qualify For The 2025 Stanley Cup Playoffs

Mar 24, 2025; Newark, New Jersey, USA; Vancouver Canucks players celebrate after defeating the New Jersey Devils in overtime shootouts at Prudential Center. Mandatory Credit: John Jones-Imagn Images

The Vancouver Canucks have offically been eliminated from playoff contention. Vancouver will not qualify for the 2025 Stanley Cup Playoffs, as the Minnesota Wild defeated the San Jose Sharks 8-7 in overtime on Wednesday. While the Canucks can still collect 93 points, both the Wild and the St. Louis Blues have more regulation wins, which means they have the tie-breaker over Vancouver.

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After making the post-season in 2024, the Canucks will miss the playoffs for the fourth time in the last five season. Vancouver has only qualified for the Stanley Cup Playoffs twice in the previous ten seasons, with the other occasion being back in 2020. In 78 games this season, the Canucks are 36-29-13, and have collected 85 points.

With four games left in the season, the focus shifts to 2025-26 as players compete for spots on the roster. Vancouver currently has multiple players called up from the AHL who are competing for spots next season, including Aatu Räty, Victor Mancini, and Linus Karlsson. All three are also eligable for the 2025 Calder Cup Playoffs and are set to play big roles for the Abbotsford Canucks once returned to the AHL.

There will also be a large focus among the fan base on where the Canucks will finish in this year's draft lottery. Vancouver is projected to finish with the 15th overall pick and is currently ineligible to move up to first overall. Based on point totals around the league, the Canucks will most likely won't move up or down, and head into the 2025 NHL Entry Draft with a top-15 pick.

Vancouver wraps up their mini two-game road trip with a game on Thursday against the Colorado Avalanche. The Canucks have had the Avalanche's number this season, going 2-0 against them so far this season. Puck drop is scheduled for 6:00 pm PT from Ball Arena.

Make sure you bookmark THN's Vancouver Canucks site and add us to your favourites on Google News for the latest news, exclusive interviews, breakdowns, and so much more. Also, be sure to leave a comment at the bottom of the page and engage with other passionate fans through our forum.

The Hockey News

Sharks Rookies Combine For 9 Points; Celebrini Has 3G 2A, Smith 1G 4A, Wild Win 8-7 In OT

Minnesota Wild defenseman Brock Faber (7) celebrates his goal against the San Jose Sharks with forward Joel Eriksson Ek (14) during the first period at Xcel Energy Center. Mandatory Credit: Nick Wosika-Imagn Images

Joel Eriksson-Ek scored four goals in his return from injury, and Macklin Celebrini's five points made him the highest-scoring rookie in San Jose Sharks history in the 8-7 loss.

Eriksson-Ek and Kirill Kaprizov returned from long-term injury absences to lead the Wild to a big win in their playoff push. Kaprizov had two goals. They also got goals from Marcus Johansson and Brock Faber. Marc-Andre Fleury made his final home start for the Wild and stopped 24 shots.

Celebrini had three goals and two assists for the Sharks. Tyler Toffoli, Nikolai Kovalenko, and Carl Grundstrom also scored for San Jose. Will Smith had a goal and three assists, and Alexandar Georgiev had 36 saves.

San Jose did not have a power play in the game to the Wild's four. Mario Ferraro left the game with a lower-body injury at the end of the 

Toffoli gave the Sharks a 1-0 lead at 12:09 of the first period after William Eklund fed him from behind the net to the high slot.

Johansson tied the game 1-1 at 14:16 with a wrist-shot over Georgiev's glove from the high slot.

Faber put the Wild up 2-1 at 18:48 with a wrist shot by Georgiev's glove.

Celebrini ties the game 2-2 at 7:29 of the second period with a patient move around Fleury.

Eriksson-Ek quickly put the Wild back in front 3-2 19 seconds later.

Grundstrom again tied the game with a mad scramble in front at 8:36 to make it 3-3.

Celebrini scored his second goal of the game at 12:26 to give the Sharks a 4-3 lead.

Kaprizov tied the game 4-4 on a four-on-three power play with a shot over Georgiev's blocker.

Eriksson-Ek scored his second goal of the game with a stuff attempt with 11.9 seconds left in the period.

Eriksson-Ek completed the hat trick on the power-play.

He then added his fourth goal of the game.

Nikolai Kovalenko made it 7-5 off a great feed from Celebrini.

Celebrini finished off his hat-trick with a stuff in front of the net with 9:58 left.

Smith tied the game with under a minute to go.

Kaprizov won it in overtime.

Latest On THN's San Jose Sharks site

Sharks Send Prospect Down; Couture Drama Shouldn't Mean Anything

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Rangers on brink of elimination after 8-5 loss to Flyers

NEW YORK (AP) — Tyson Foerster scored a hat trick and rookie Aleksei Kolosov made 24 saves as the Philadelphia Flyers downed the New York Rangers 8-5 on Wednesday night to put the Rangers on the brink of elimination from the playoff race.

After Sean Couturier scored at 11:55 of the third to put the Flyers ahead 5-4, Foerster scored his second and third goals of the game to cement the win. Garnet Hathaway, Travis Sanheim, Jakob Pelletier and Owen Tippett also scored for Philadelphia.

Vincent Trocheck, Artemi Panarin, Jonny Brodzinski, J.T. Miller and Chris Kreider scored for the Rangers, who trail Montreal by eight points for the second wild-card spot in the Eastern Conference. The Rangers and Canadiens each have four games left.

Mika Zibanejad had four assists for New York.

Miller gave the Rangers a 4-3 lead at 7:01 of the third, but Pelletier knotted the contest a minute later before Couturier scored. Foerster’s second of the night came with 4:27 left. He completed his first career hat trick with an empty net goal with 55 seconds remaining.

Tippett also scored into an empty net at 43 seconds later.

Jonathan Quick made 21 saves in defeat.

Takeaways

The Rangers fell to 18-19-3 at Madison Square Garden, where they were 30-11-0 last season.

Philadelphia won for the first time in seven road games. The Flyers are 5-11-1 since March 4.

Key moment

Long-time Rangers television play-by-play voice Sam Rosen, who is retiring after a 40-year career in the booth, was joined by former partner John Davidson for one more broadcast on TNT.

Key stats

Panarin’s goal was the 300th of his career.

Up next

The Rangers visit the New York Islanders on Thursday. The Flyers host the Islanders on Saturday.

Winnipeg Jets Trend Upward On The Ice And In The Stands, But There's More To Prove

Alex Iafallo and Mark Scheifele (James Carey Lauder-Imagn Images)

At this time last season, the Winnipeg Jets faced adversity on and off the ice. 

At the box office, Jets owner Mark Chipman told media that a drop in attendance to just under 9,500 season-ticket holders had to be addressed. On the ice, the Jets followed up a season in which they finished with the second-best record in the Western Conference by getting drummed out of the first round of the Stanley Cup playoffs in a five-game series loss to the Colorado Avalanche.

This year, though, the Jets look to be having much more success, both in attendance and competitively, setting the stage for a crucial playoffs.

They’ve built the NHL’s best record at 53-21-4, and they’ve averaged 14,322 fans in the 15,225-seat Canada Life Centre – a 94.1 percent seating capacity. Their last six home games are sellouts. In sum, things are going about as well for the Jets as can be hoped.

Winnipeg handed the red-hot St. Louis Blues their first loss in 13 games. Barring a collapse in their final four regular-season games, the Jets will enter the playoffs as the West’s best team and likely the Presidents' Trophy winners. 

But don’t take that to mean Winnipeg doesn’t have a ton to prove in the post-season.

To the contrary – as a team and as individuals, the Jets must demonstrate they’re capable of doing big things because their past tells you that people are right to be skeptical of what they can do when it counts.

For instance, Jets left winger Nikolaj Ehlers is a pending UFA this summer, and he’s posted 24 goals and 63 points in 67 games this season – one point away from matching his career high in points. 

However, Ehlers only had a pair of assists in five playoff games last year. And in 37 career playoff games, he’s generated just four goals and 14 points. If the 29-year-old Denmark native wants a big payday starting next season, he must show he can step up when the games matter most.

Similarly, superstar goalie Connor Hellebuyck has been the NHL’s very best netminder this season, putting up a 44-12-3 record, a 2.02 goals-against average and a .924 save percentage – his best numbers in both those categories. But in five playoff games last spring, Hellebuyck posted a 5.23 GAA and an .870 SP. Hellebuyck must demonstrate he can succeed in the post-season or be stuck with the loser label for another year.

To be sure, the challenge for the Jets is clear – nothing less than a lengthy playoff run will be considered a success. If they can’t deliver on that front, Winnipeg fans may again be skeptical about the squad. It could be a vicious cycle for the Jets, and that’s why the stakes are so high for the franchise to build on this positive momentum.

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Even In Passing, Shero Leaves Legacy On Penguins Organization

January 31, 2012; Pittsburgh,PA, USA: Pittsburgh Penguins general manager Ray Shero (left) and Pittsburgh Penguins center Sidney Crosby at a press conference to update the status of Crosby's health before the game against the Toronto Maple Leafs at the CONSOL Energy Center. (Charles LeClaire-USPRESSWIRE)

It's hard to talk about the Sidney Crosby-era Pittsburgh Penguins without talking about former general manager Ray Shero.

Sadly, Shero died Wednesday at the age of 42. And he leaves behind a legacy in Pittsburgh that won't soon be forgotten. 

The organization brought Shero on in 2006, and he made a pretty immediate impact in his first season. His very first draft selection was Jordan Staal (2nd overall), and he took the pieces already in place with Crosby, Evgeni Malkin, Kris Letang and Marc-Andre Fleury to take a lottery team to the Stanley Cup playoffs in year one. 

From there, the Penguins only skyrocketed to new heights. The following season, the young team found themselves vying for the top spot in the Eastern Conference leading up to the NHL trade deadline. Wanting to go all-in, Shero took the initiative to approach ownership about accelerating the timeline for the team's "five-year plan."

And, with the blessing of then-majority owners Mario Lemieux and Ron Burkle, he did just that. His trade for the biggest name on the market that season - forward Marian Hossa - propelled the Penguins to the Stanley Cup Final and set the precedent for all the years to follow with the organization. 

Former Penguins GM Shero Passes Away At 62Former Penguins GM Shero Passes Away At 62Just days after the Pittsburgh Penguins mourned the loss of former netminder and sports reporter Greg Millen, news broke on Wednesday morning that former Stanley Cup-winning General Manager Ray Shero had passed away at 62. 

The Penguins won Shero's only Stanley Cup just one year later in 2009, but his "big move" in 2008 is what catapulted the organization into being the perennial contender that it is. From that point on, the Penguins solified the all-in, win-now approach that they became known for in all the years to follow - something that made them a model franchise for the better part of two decades. 

With a very young core, he knew how to balance that youth and inexperience with valuable veteran acquisitions such as Gary Roberts, Bill Guerin, Chris Kunitz, Pascal Dupuis, and Petr Sykora. He prioritized development and wanted the Penguins' AHL and ECHL teams to be vying for championships, not simply acting as a farm for the big club.

He put Pittsburgh on the map, and - although he was fired by the Penguins in the summer of 2014 - he was a huge reason why the Penguins had the foundation in place for sustained success, even after he moved on to the New Jersey Devils and Minnesota Wild

Ray Shero is synonymous with the Crosby-era Penguins. And his contributions to the franchise - and to hockey - will continue to live on beyond his passing.


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Nashville Predators Sign Goalie To Multi-Year Extension

Matt Murray (© Taya Gray/The Desert Sun / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images)

The Nashville Predators have announced that they have signed goaltender Matt Murray to a two-year, two-way contract extension. At the NHL level, he will carry a $775,000 cap hit.

Murray, 27, signed a one-year deal with the Predators this past off-season. Now, with this extension, he will continue to be a part of the Predators' goalie depth.

Murray has spent the entirety of this season down in the AHL with the Milwaukee Admirals. The St. Albert, Alberta native has been excellent for Milwaukee, posting a 25-10-5 record, a .930 save percentage, a 2.15 goals-against average, and two shutouts in 40 appearances. He was also named to the AHL All-Star Classic because of his strong play. 

With numbers like these, it is understandable that the Predators wanted to keep Murray around. Overall, there is no risk in the Predators signing Murray to this extension, and he will continue to be a key part of the Admirals' roster from here.

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Flyers beat Rangers in high-scoring game at MSG, improve to 4-1-0 under Shaw

Flyers beat Rangers in high-scoring game at MSG, improve to 4-1-0 under Shaw originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

NEW YORK — The Flyers topped the Rangers, 8-5, in a back-and-forth game Wednesday night at Madison Square Garden.

Tyson Foerster, Garnet Hathaway, Travis Sanheim, Jakob Pelletier, Sean Couturier and Owen Tippett all scored goals for the Flyers.

Foerster had a hat trick. His second turned out to be the game-winner. His third was an empty-netter.

“He’s a real diligent young man, a real pro, mature beyond his years,” interim head coach Brad Shaw said. “It shows in his game and I couldn’t be happier for him to get that hat trick tonight.”

Tippett added an empty-netter, as well. Twelve differed Flyers recorded at least a point. Nick Seeler had three assists.

“This building’s pretty sweet to play in,” Foerster said. “Anytime you can score a bunch of goals, it’s obviously nice.”

Couturier scored a go-ahead 5-4 marker off a rebound from a Matvei Michkov shot. Pelletier netted the game-tying 4-4 goal after New York surged ahead with back-to-back goals in the third period.

Hathaway put the Flyers ahead, 2-1, with a shorthanded marker in the second period before Artemi Panarin answered under two minutes later. Sanheim gave the Flyers a 3-2 lead early in the third period, but the Rangers quickly erased it.

The Flyers (32-37-9) are 4-1-0 under Shaw and have scored 25 goals. They have four games to go.

“I don’t know if it’s just the situation, that we’re not in the [playoff race] anymore, but guys seem to be a little more loose, aren’t afraid to make plays,” Couturier said. “The only thing that’s important when you play like that, you’ve got to make sure that you’re accountable for yourself, your teammates. When you turn pucks over, you’ve got to backcheck, work hard to get it back. But it’s nice to see guys not being afraid to make plays and getting rewarded.”

The Flyers went 2-1-0 against New York this season. The Rangers (36-35-7) have had a significant drop-off after winning the Presidents’ Trophy last season.

• A promising development for the Flyers has been Foerster putting up back-to-back seasons of 20 or more goals.

He has 22 this season after putting up 20 as a rookie.

There’s still a ton of upside with the 23-year-old winger. You’ve got to think next season the Flyers would love to see him push for 25 to 30 goals.

• Aleksei Kolosov made just his second start since the calendar turned to 2025 and his first since Jan. 2.

The 23-year-old rookie surrendered three goals in the third period. Kolosov hung in there over the first two periods. The Flyers gave him six goals of support in the final stanza.

He finished with 24 saves on 29 shots.

Panarin scored in close late in the second period to draw New York even at 2-2. After killing off a penalty, the Flyers appeared to have a bad line change, which left them with four in coverage.

Shaw wanted the Flyers to make the first period “as least chaotic as possible” for Kolosov.

“I’m hoping our guys can play smart in the first five, 10 minutes,” Shaw said pregame. “Minimize the shots and the quality of them so that he can sort of work his way into the game.”

The Flyers did not help Kolosov ease back into things. He had to face a penalty shot just 1:15 minutes into the action and then faced a shorthanded breakaway from Vincent Trocheck. The Rangers’ center buried his opportunity to hand the Flyers a 1-0 deficit at first intermission. Kolosov faced 12 shots in the opening stanza.

“I thought Koly was great in the first period,” Shaw said. “I talked about limiting chances against him and we give him a penalty shot and two other point-blank breakaways, so it wasn’t ideal. But maybe it was good for him to get right into the game like that. I thought he held us in, kept it 1-0 after one period where we were kind of struggling and kind of stuck in the mud a little bit. He gave us a chance to regroup and end up with the win.”

Rangers netminder Jonathan Quick stopped 22 of the Flyers’ 28 shots.

• With the win, the Flyers moved ahead of the Bruins via the tiebreaker of fewer games played. They now have the fifth-best odds for the 2025 NHL draft lottery. They entered Wednesday at No. 4.

The Flyers are one point back of the Kraken and three back of the Sabres, Ducks and Penguins.

“Credit to the group, I don’t think this locker room is ever going to quit and give up,” Sanheim said. “We show up every night, we’ve got a job to do. Our main goal right now is just to try to finish the season strong and end on a positive note.”

• The Flyers have a back-to-back set this weekend as they host the Islanders on Saturday (12:30 p.m. ET/NBCSP) and visit the Senators on Sunday (1 p.m. ET/NBCSP+).

Flyers beat Rangers in high-scoring game at MSG, improve to 4-1-0 under Shaw

Flyers beat Rangers in high-scoring game at MSG, improve to 4-1-0 under Shaw originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

NEW YORK — The Flyers topped the Rangers, 8-5, in a back-and-forth game Wednesday night at Madison Square Garden.

Tyson Foerster, Garnet Hathaway, Travis Sanheim, Jakob Pelletier, Sean Couturier and Owen Tippett all scored goals for the Flyers.

Foerster had a hat trick. His second turned out to be the game-winner. His third was an empty-netter.

“He’s a real diligent young man, a real pro, mature beyond his years,” interim head coach Brad Shaw said. “It shows in his game and I couldn’t be happier for him to get that hat trick tonight.”

Tippett added an empty-netter, as well. Twelve differed Flyers recorded at least a point. Nick Seeler had three assists.

“This building’s pretty sweet to play in,” Foerster said. “Anytime you can score a bunch of goals, it’s obviously nice.”

Couturier scored a go-ahead 5-4 marker off a rebound from a Matvei Michkov shot. Pelletier netted the game-tying 4-4 goal after New York surged ahead with back-to-back goals in the third period.

Hathaway put the Flyers ahead, 2-1, with a shorthanded marker in the second period before Artemi Panarin answered under two minutes later. Sanheim gave the Flyers a 3-2 lead early in the third period, but the Rangers quickly erased it.

The Flyers (32-37-9) are 4-1-0 under Shaw and have scored 25 goals. They have four games to go.

“I don’t know if it’s just the situation, that we’re not in the [playoff race] anymore, but guys seem to be a little more loose, aren’t afraid to make plays,” Couturier said. “The only thing that’s important when you play like that, you’ve got to make sure that you’re accountable for yourself, your teammates. When you turn pucks over, you’ve got to backcheck, work hard to get it back. But it’s nice to see guys not being afraid to make plays and getting rewarded.”

The Flyers went 2-1-0 against New York this season. The Rangers (36-35-7) have had a significant drop-off after winning the Presidents’ Trophy last season.

• A promising development for the Flyers has been Foerster putting up back-to-back seasons of 20 or more goals.

He has 22 this season after putting up 20 as a rookie.

There’s still a ton of upside with the 23-year-old winger. You’ve got to think next season the Flyers would love to see him push for 25 to 30 goals.

Foerster’s line with Noah Cates and Bobby Brink has been very effective this season.

“I think he has always been marked as an offensive guy, a scorer,” Shaw said of Foerster. “I’ve been impressed with how he has added to the defensive side with the penalty kill, with how responsible that line plays 5-on-5. We put them out there regularly against the other team’s top unit and they do a fantastic job.

“He’s a big part of that, he’s a big part of our defensive conscience, but tonight’s a good example of what he can do on the offensive side, as well.”

• Aleksei Kolosov made just his second start since the calendar turned to 2025 and his first since Jan. 2.

The 23-year-old rookie surrendered three goals in the third period. Kolosov hung in there over the first two periods. The Flyers gave him six goals of support in the final stanza.

“That was a crazy period,” Shaw said. “We come out on the right side of that one. I thought we made enough good plays to take advantage of what was a pretty wide-open period.”

Kolosov finished with 24 saves on 29 shots.

Panarin scored in close late in the second period to draw New York even at 2-2. After killing off a penalty, the Flyers appeared to have a bad line change, which left them with four in coverage.

Shaw wanted the Flyers to make the first period “as least chaotic as possible” for Kolosov.

“I’m hoping our guys can play smart in the first five, 10 minutes,” Shaw said pregame. “Minimize the shots and the quality of them so that he can sort of work his way into the game.”

The Flyers did not help Kolosov ease back into things. He had to face a penalty shot just 1:15 minutes into the action and then faced a shorthanded breakaway from Vincent Trocheck. The Rangers’ center buried his opportunity to hand the Flyers a 1-0 deficit at first intermission. Kolosov faced 12 shots in the opening stanza.

“I thought Koly was great in the first period,” Shaw said. “I talked about limiting chances against him and we give him a penalty shot and two other point-blank breakaways, so it wasn’t ideal. But maybe it was good for him to get right into the game like that. I thought he held us in, kept it 1-0 after one period where we were kind of struggling and kind of stuck in the mud a little bit. He gave us a chance to regroup and end up with the win.”

Rangers netminder Jonathan Quick stopped 22 of the Flyers’ 28 shots.

• With the win, the Flyers moved ahead of the Bruins via the tiebreaker of fewer games played. They now have the fifth-best odds for the 2025 NHL draft lottery. They entered Wednesday at No. 4.

The Flyers are one point back of the Kraken and three back of the Sabres, Ducks and Penguins.

“Credit to the group, I don’t think this locker room is ever going to quit and give up,” Sanheim said. “We show up every night, we’ve got a job to do. Our main goal right now is just to try to finish the season strong and end on a positive note.”

• The Flyers have a back-to-back set this weekend as they host the Islanders on Saturday (12:30 p.m. ET/NBCSP) and visit the Senators on Sunday (1 p.m. ET/NBCSP+).

Golden Knights Clinch Home-Ice Advantage In First Round Of Playoffs

Vegas Golden Knights right wing Mark Stone (61) tosses a souvenir to a fan after being named Third Star of the Game as the Golden Knights defeated the Detroit Red Wings 6-3 at T-Mobile Arena. Mandatory Credit: Stephen R. Sylvanie-Imagn Images

After picking up a point in a shootout loss to the Colorado Avalanche, the Vegas Golden Knights have clinched home-ice advantage in the first round of the playoffs.

The Golden Knights picked up the point while missing four vital pieces to their lineup, those being Tomas Hertl, Jack Eichel, Alex Pietrangelo and Nicolas Hague. Leading 2-0 halfway through the second period, the Avalanche clawed their way back into the game, scoring on the power play and getting depth contributions. 

Akira Schmid was solid all night long, turning away 34 of the 36 shots he faced. He stopped the first two shootout attempts before Charlie Coyle ended the game.

The Golden Knights would have rather won the game, but they did enough to earn the right to begin the playoffs on home ice. The Golden Knights are 27-9-3 at home this year, compared to their road record of 20-13-6. 

With home ice, the Golden Knights are able to feed off of the atmosphere inside T-Mobile Arena, but more importantly, are able to seek out the matchups they want. They can use William Karlsson in a defensive role or give Jack Eichel shifts against the opponent's bottom six. 

Whatever the case is, the Golden Knights cherish playing at home and have historically performed better at home, both in the regular season and in the playoffs. The final step for the Golden Knights in the regular season is to secure first place in the Pacific Division. The Los Angeles Kings trail by just six points with five games remaining.

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NHL Playoffs: Skinner, Tkachuk Headline New Faces To Watch In The Cup Chase

Jeff Skinner (Danny Wild-Imagn Images)

With just over a week to go in the 2024-25 NHL regular season, our 16 playoff competitors look about set.

This year’s crop includes many of the usual suspects with a few fresh faces added into the mix.

While we often hear a lot about learning to win in the post-season, sometimes things can come together on the first try, whether a player is young or already has NHL experiences.

As a rookie with the Pittsburgh Penguins in 2017, Jake Guentzel put up 13 goals on his way to a Cup. Then, two years ago, Jack Eichel's first playoff run with the Vegas Golden Knights came in his eighth season. He finished with a team-leading 26 points, and the Stanley Cup over his head.

Here’s a look at the key players who will be seeing playoff action for the first time this spring.

The Veterans

This group is 26 or older, with significant NHL resumes. And like Eichel, a lot of them are former Buffalo Sabres — refugees from the long playoff drought in Western New York.

At the top: 32-year-old Jeff Skinner. He missed the playoffs for eight-straight years with the Carolina Hurricanes before spending six seasons in Buffalo. 

Skinner’s adjustment to the Edmonton Oilers this season hasn’t been the smoothest. But he has started to hit his stride over the last month. With five goals in his last nine games, Skinner’s now at 16 for the year. And after playing his 1,000th regular-season game in Buffalo just over a year ago, the 2011 Calder Trophy winner should finally see playoff action this spring for the first time in his 15-year career.

Other former Sabres veterans who will be looking to make their playoff debuts this year include Victor Olofsson with Vegas (age 29, 367 GP) and Zemgus Girgensons with the Tampa Bay Lightning (age 31, 765 GP).

Over in Ottawa, Thomas Chabot will finally make his post-season debut at age 28. Drafted by the Senators in 2015, he played one regular-season game in 2016-17, the last time Ottawa made the playoffs, but was returned to junior for the year and won a QMJHL championship.

Drafted in 2017, Drake Batherson will also get his first crack at the post-season at age 26, with 386 NHL games played.

Over in Montreal, 28-year-old Sam Montembeault should be between the pipes when the playoffs return to the Bell Centre for the first time in four years. After witnessing the intensity in his home arena as Canada’s third goalie during the 4 Nations Face-Off, the native Quebecer is now poised to follow in the footsteps of Carey Price for the NHL’s most decorated franchise.

Johnathan Kovacevic is another late bloomer who’s set to make his first playoff appearance this spring. The 27-year-old is in just his third full NHL season and, despite a loud call-out by coach Sheldon Keefe a couple of weeks ago, the big right-shot defenseman is tied with Nico Hischier for the New Jersey Devils’ team lead in plus-minus, at plus-14.

Also, keep an eye on Andrei Kuzmenko in Los Angeles. In his third NHL season, the 29-year-old is rediscovering the form that helped him score 39 goals with Vancouver in 2022-23. He’s up to 11 points in 17 games since joining the Kings at the trade deadline.

The Tweeners

This group is made up of established players who are 25 or under, making the playoffs for the first time.

Brady Tkachuk is the top name here, and it’s hoped that his injury situation will be sorted out before playoff time. The Senators captain is already at 511 regular-season games at age 25, and his game is tailor-made for the post-season. 

Other key Senators from the young guard who will be making their playoff debuts include Tim Stutzle (age 23, 362 GP), Shane Pinto (age 24, 205 GP) and another former Sabre, Dylan Cozens (age 24, 357 GP).

NHL Power Rankings: Senators Rise, Stars Fall As Playoff Picture Gets ClearerNHL Power Rankings: Senators Rise, Stars Fall As Playoff Picture Gets ClearerWelcome back to The Hockey News' NHL power rankings, where we rank all 32 teams based on their weekly performance.

With the St. Louis Blues back in the playoff picture after a two-year absence, their lineup is also dotted with fresh faces who will be seeing their first playoff action. That list includes depth defensemen Tyler Tucker and Matthew Kessel as well as oft-injured forward Alexandre Texier, all 24, and 25-year-old goaltender Joel Hofer.

Also on the blue line, 24-year-old J.J. Moser will make his playoff debut with the Lightning this spring. He was acquired from Utah as part of the Mikhail Sergachev trade. 

The Young Guns

Teams with playoff aspirations don’t usually have many high draft picks. They also tend to let their top prospects marinate at lower levels for as long as possible. But this year’s playoff mix includes some talented high draft picks who could boost their reputations in a big way under hockey’s brightest spotlight.

The show starts in Montreal. Who doesn’t want to see what kind of magic 2022 No. 1 pick Juraj Slafkovsky and this year’s Calder front-runner Lane Hutson might be able to make at playoff time?

As well as their mid-career talent pool, the Senators’ biggest weapon might be defenseman Jake Sanderson. In just his third NHL season, the 22-year-old served notice that he’s already among the best from his nation when he was tagged to replace Quinn Hughes on Team USA at the 4 Nations Face-Off. 

St. Louis has gotten some good scoring support this year from a pair of first-rounders who will be seeing their first playoff action this year: 23-year-old Jake Neighbours and 22-year-old Zach Bolduc.

A couple of other top 10 picks to watch are the Kings’ Brandt Clarke, who has settled in as a regular on one of the NHL’s stingiest teams at 22, and 21-year-old Simon, who is currently being shuffled in and out of the Devils’ lineup.

Up front, 23-year-old Marco Rossi should make his NHL playoff debuts after a strong campaign that has him approaching 60 points with the Minnesota Wild. And 22-year-old rookie Mackie Samoskevich has filled a regular role and put up 30 points with the defending Cup champs in Florida.

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Every NHL Team's Masterton Trophy Nominee Revealed

Gabriel Landeskog (Geoff Burke-Imagn Images)

The Professional Hockey Writers’ Association revealed all the NHL players nominated for the 2025 Bill Masterton Memorial Trophy. 

The Masterton Trophy is awarded to the player “who best exemplifies the qualities of perseverance, sportsmanship, and dedication to hockey."

A PHWA local chapter for each of the 32 teams nominates one player to be put up for contention for the award. The top three players with the most votes will be finalists. The Masterton Trophy will be awarded during the Stanley Cup final, along with all the other awards being presented. 

Last season, Arizona Coyotes goaltender Connor Ingram earned the Masterton Trophy. He nearly retired because of his off-ice battles with obsessive compulsive disorder and lingering depression. 

After entering the NHL/NHLPA Players Assistance Program in early 2021 and getting claimed off waivers by the Coyotes in October 2022, he played two solid seasons for Arizona. Last season, he recorded six shutouts, tied for the best in the NHL.

Here are the nominees for this season.

Anaheim Ducks: John Gibson

Boston Bruins: Joonas Korpisalo

Buffalo Sabres: Jason Zucker

Calgary Flames: Justin Kirkland

Carolina Hurricanes: Jordan Staal

Chicago Blackhawks: Patrick Maroon

Colorado Avalanche: Gabriel Landeskog

Columbus Blue Jackets: Sean Monahan

Dallas Stars: Jason Robertson

Detroit Red Wings: Patrick Kane

Edmonton Oilers: Calvin Pickard

Florida Panthers: Jesper Boqvist

Los Angeles Kings: Drew Doughty

Minnesota Wild: Marc-Andre Fleury

Montreal Canadiens: Josh Anderson

Nashville Predators: Nick Blankenburg

New Jersey Devils: Jesper Bratt

New York Islanders: Mike Reilly  

New York Rangers: Johnny Brodzinski

Ottawa Senators: David Perron

Philadelphia Flyers: Ivan Fedotov

Pittsburgh Penguins: Boko Imama

San Jose Sharks: Marc-Edouard Vlasic

Seattle Kraken: Jaden Schwartz

St. Louis Blues: Ryan Suter

Tampa Bay Lightning: Ryan McDonagh

Toronto Maple Leafs: John Tavares

Utah Hockey Club: Mikhail Sergachev

Vancouver Canucks: Dakota Joshua

Vegas Golden Knights: Tomas Hertl

Washington Capitals: Alex Ovechkin

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Calvin Pickard Joined By 2 Former Oilers As Masterton Nominees

Calvin Pickard. (James Guillory-Imagn Images)

The NHL regular season is wrapping up, which means that awards season is just around the corner.

First on the docket is the Bill Masterton Memorial Trophy, awarded to "the player who best exemplifies the qualities of perseverance, sportsmanship and dedication to ice hockey." Beat writers from across the league nominate one player from their respective teams before the group is narrowed down to three finalists.

Bookmark The Hockey News Edmonton Oilers team site to never miss the latest news, game-day coverage, and more.

This year's nominee for the Edmonton Oilers, who have never had a Masterton winner, is goalie Calvin Pickard. The longtime journeyman has finally found a long-term home in Edmonton, turning in the best season of his career at age 32. He's only become more important to the Oilers as the season has gone on, slated to make his sixth start in seven games on Wednesday in Stuart Skinner's absence.

Other nominees include players returning from major injuries (Alex Ovechkin, Drew Doughty, Gabriel Landeskog), players who have finally cracked the NHL after years in the minors (Justin Kirkland, Jonny Brodzinski, Bokondji Imama), and longtime veterans nearing the ends of their careers (Marc-Andre Fleury, Ryan Suter, Marc-Edouard Vlasic).

Two former Oilers figure among that last group, with Chicago's Patrick Maroon and Ottawa's David Perron earning the nominations for their respective teams.

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The 36-year-old Maroon has already announced his intention to retire at the end of the season as he closes out his career with the Blackhawks. Maroon bounced between the AHL and NHL until he arrived in Edmonton in 2015-16 and immediately caught on as a rugged power forward and cult hero, spending parts of three seasons with the team.

Maroon then went on to win three consecutive Stanley Cups from 2019 to 2021, first with his hometown St. Louis Blues and then with the Tampa Bay Lightning.

Fellow 36-year-old Perron is a veteran of 18 NHL seasons, eleven of which have come with the St. Louis Blues over three stints. Perron just missed out on two Stanley Cups, first getting traded away from the Cup-winning Pittsburgh Penguins at the 2016 trade deadline and then losing in the finals in 2018 with Vegas. Perron finally got his Cup back in St. Louis the following year, alongside Maroon.

Perron scored five goals and 19 points in 38 games with the Oilers in 2014-15 before being traded to Pittsburgh. He's scored nine goals and 16 points in 40 games with the Ottawa Senators this season.

The winner of the Masterton Trophy will be announced during the Stanley Cup Playoffs.

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(4-9-25) Blues-Oilers Gameday Lineup

Pavel Buchnevich (89) and the St. Louis Blues will look to get back to their winning ways against Vasily Podkolzin (left) and the Edmonton Oilers on Thursday. (Perry Nelson-Imagn Images)

It’ll be another chance for the St. Louis Blues to clinch a playoff spot on Wednesday.

The Blues (43-29-7), who had their franchise-record 12-game winning streak end on Monday in a 3-1 loss against the Winnipeg Jets, will get a second chance at clinching in the second of a season-ending three-game road trip against the depleted Edmonton Oilers (44-28-5) at 9 p.m. (TNT, TruTV, MAX, ESPN 101.1-FM).

Just like the scenario on Monday, the Blues can clinch Wednesday with a regulation win against the Oilers and the Calgary Flames lose to the Anaheim Ducks in regulation.

In the process, the Blues are also trying to stay ahead of the Minnesota Wild for the first wild card in the Western Conference.

The Blues lead the Wild by two points, and the Wild, who host the San Jose Sharks on Wednesday, have a game in hand.

- - -

The Blues appear to be making a couple tweaks to the lineup for Wednesday.

Jordan Kyrou and Jimmy Snuggerud look like will be swapping spots on right wing, while Dalibor Dvorsky, the No. 10 pick in the 2023 NHL Draft, will play in his second NHL game.

Jordan Binnington, who has won seven straight starts, will get the nod in goal on Wednesday.

The Oilers, on the other hand, have been decimated with injuries and will be playing without stars Connor McDavid and Leon Draisaitl along with Ryan Nugent-Hopkins, Mattias Ekholm, starting goalie Stuart Skinner and St. Louis native Trent Frederic, among others.

- - -

Blues Projected Lineup:

Pavel Buchnevich-Robert Thomas-Jordan Kyrou

Jake Neighbours-Brayden Schenn-Jimmy Snuggerud

Dalibor Dvorsky-Oskar Sundqvist-Zack Bolduc

Alexey Toropchenko-Radek Faksa-Nathan Walker

Cam Fowler-Nick Leddy

Philip Broberg-Justin Faulk

Ryan Suter-Tyler Tucker

Jordan Binnington will start in goal; Joel Hofer will be the backup.

Healthy scratches include Matthew Kessel and Mathieu Joseph. Colton Parayko (knee), Dylan Holloway (lower body) and Alexandre Texier (upper body) are out. Torey Krug (ankle) is out for the season.

- - -

Oilers Projected Lineup:

Vasily Podkolzin-Adam Philp-Viktor Arvidsson

Zach Hyman-Adam Henrique-Corey Perry

Jeff Skinner-Mattias Janmark-Connor Brown

Max Jones-Kasperi Kapanen

Jake Walman-Evan Bouchard

Darnell Nurse-Troy Stecher 

Brett Kulak-Ty Emberson

Calvin Pickard will start in goal; Olivier Rodrigue will be the backup.

The Oilers have no healthy scratches. Leon Draisaitl (lower body), Mattias Ekholm (undisclosed), Evander Kane (hip, knee), John Klingberg (undisclosed), Connor McDavid (lower body), Alec Regula (knee), Stuart Skinner (concussion), Trent Frederic (ankle) and Ryan Nugent-Hopkins (illness) are out.

Golden Knights Jack Eichel Day-To-Day; Pair Of Defensemen Battling Illness

Vegas Golden Knights defenseman Nicolas Hague (14) celebrates with Vegas Golden Knights center Jack Eichel (9) after scoring a goal against the Edmonton Oilers during the second period of game five of the second round of the 2023 Stanley Cup Playoffs at T-Mobile Arena. Mandatory Credit: Stephen R. Sylvanie-Imagn Images

Vegas Golden Knights forward Jack Eichel was held out of the lineup against the Colorado Avalanche with an upper-body injury and joining him on the sidelines were Alex Pietrangelo and Nicolas Hague, both battling an illness. 

Prior to the puck drop, the Golden Knights announced on X, formerly known as Twitter, that Eichel would be out with an upper-body injury, and is considered day-to-day.

The 28-year-old had missed just one game before last night. In 76 games, Eichel has scored 27 goals and 93 points, setting a new career-high and the Golden Knights franchise record for points. If Eichel misses no further games, he'll need seven points in four games to record his first 100-point season. 

Pietrangelo recently returned from a lower-body injury after missing four games. He returned to play in three consecutive games before suffering an illness. 

The 2024-25 campaign has been a peculiar one for the 35-year-old. It started strongly, recording great offensive numbers and setting himself on pace to set career highs. The offence faltered, and his consistency has too. He's become prone to major turnovers and defensive blunders but remains a solid overall player. 

Hague dealt an injury earlier in the season, forcing him to miss 22 games. In the 66 games he's played, he's recorded five goals and 11 points, throwing 77 hits and blocking 73 shots. The 26-year-old is a pending RFA, averaging the fewest minutes among the Golden Knights' top six defenders. 

The Golden Knights are back in action on Thursday when they host the Seattle Kraken and will be hoping to add all three players back into their lineup. 

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Golden Knights Forward Tomas Hertl Nominated By Vegas PHWA Chapter For 2025 Bill Masterton Memorial TrophyGolden Knights Forward Tomas Hertl Nominated By Vegas PHWA Chapter For 2025 Bill Masterton Memorial TrophyLAS VEGAS -- The Vegas Chapter of the Professional Hockey Writers Association has nominated Golden Knights forward Tomáš Hertl as their nominee for the 2025 Bill Masterton Memorial Trophy. The award is given annually to the player who best exemplifies the qualities of perseverance, sportsmanship, and dedication to ice hockey.