Former Red Wings First Round Pick Zadina Eyeing NHL Return

Feb 16, 2023; Calgary, Alberta, CAN; Detroit Red Wings right wing Filip Zadina (11) against the Calgary Flames during the second period at Scotiabank Saddledome.  (Sergei Belski, Imagn Images)

For a lot of Detroit Red Wings fans, winger Filip Zadina is the face of the failure of the late stages of Ken Holland's tenure as general manager, a measure of the mess Steve Yzerman inherited when he took over.  Two summers ago, Yzerman finally cut bait on Holland's failed project, and Zadina signed with the San Jose Sharks.  Zadina didn't stick in San Jose either, heading for Davos of the Swiss National League, where he spent the 2024-25 season.  Now, after a reasonably with Davos, Zadina appears to have his eye on an NHL return.

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Holland selected Zadina with the sixth pick in the 2018 NHL Draft.  Zadina—whom most pundits tapped as a top two or three overall selection—falling to Detroit was considered a draft night coup for the Red Wings at the time, only for reality to prove otherwise.  Zadina totaled just 68 points in five seasons in Detroit.  To make matters worse, Quinn Hughes (whom the Vancouver Canucks selected one pick after Zadina and who finished his amateur career just a few miles down the road from the Red Wings at the University of Michigan) was in the process of blossoming into a Norris caliber defenseman.  His lone season with the Sharks did little to change Zadina's reputation: 23 points in 72 games.  In 2024-25, Zadina registered 34 points in 43 games for Davos in the regular season, before scoring six goals and giving three assists in 10 playoff games.

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In a recent interview with the Czech publication Sport Ceskatelevize, Zadina offered a window into his headspace following his first pro season outside of the NHL.  "We'll see. I think I did the best I could during the season. And if it comes, it comes. If not, of course I won't hang my head. I was there for a few years, I tried it, it was great, but in Davos I felt that they took me as a valid player, they gave me a role and I filled it," the 25-year-old winger said of his time in North America and transition back to Europe.

"If something like that could come from America, I would take it 100 percent. But on the other hand, I want to look to the future, I want to be a good player who helps the team decide games. And I didn't have that role in America. For me, that move was a smarter move for my development. I believe I was better now than last year," Zadina added.

While it was a reasonably successful year for Zadina, his numbers don't exactly leap off the stat sheet to an extent that you'd expect to see NHL clubs come calling to inquire about his services for '25-26. 

As a reference point, two former Red Wings finished in the top five in National League scoring for '24-25.  Austin Czarnik actually topped the league in scoring with 56 points in 49 games, while Dominik Kubalik finished fourth with 49 in 52.  When you consider that context, it seems unlikely Zadina's 34 points would be enough to attract NHL attention.

Do you think Zadina has played his last NHL game?  Let us know in the comments.

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BREAKING: Penguins And Head Coach Mike Sullivan Mutually Parting Ways

Feb 23, 2025; Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA; Pittsburgh Penguins head coach Mike Sullivan address the media after the game against the New York Rangers at PPG Paints Arena. (Charles LeClaire-Imagn Images)

After nearly 10 years, the Pittsburgh Penguins will have a new voice behind the bench for the 2025-26 season.

The Penguins and Mike Sullivan have mutually agreed to part ways, it was announced Monday by president of hockey operations and general manager Kyle Dubas. Sullivan was under contract with the Penguins through the end of the 2026-27 season.

“On behalf of Fenway Sports Group and the Penguins organization, I would like to thank Mike Sullivan for his unwavering commitment and loyalty to the team and City of Pittsburgh over the past decade,” Dubas said. “Mike is known for his preparation, focus and fierce competitiveness. I was fortunate to have a front-row seat to his dedication to this franchise for the past two seasons. He will forever be an enormous part of Penguins history, not only for the impressive back-to-back Cups, his impact on the core of Sidney Crosby, Evgeni Malkin, Kris Letang and Bryan Rust, but more importantly, for his love and loyalty to the organization. This was not a decision that was taken lightly, but as we continue to navigate the Penguins through this transitional period, we felt it was the best course forward for all involved.”

Sullivan has been the coach of the Penguins since Dec. 12, 2015, when he replaced Mike Johnston mid-season after starting the season as head coach of the Wilkes-Barre/Scranton (WBS) Penguins, Pittsburgh's AHL affiliate. He coached Pittsburgh for parts of 10 NHL seasons and led the team to back-to-back Stanley Cup championships in 2016 and 2017.

Between Pittsburgh and the Boston Bruins, Sullivan is 32nd on the NHL's all-time wins list for head coaches, and he is the Penguins' all-time leader in wins. During his 835-game tenure with Pittsburgh - including the regular season and the playoffs - Sullivan was 453-293-89 (.543 win percentage), which is good for 15th all-time for wins with a single franchise.


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Pittsburgh Penguins And Coach Mike Sullivan Part Ways

Mike Sullivan (Charles LeClaire-Imagn Images)

The Pittsburgh Penguins will have a new coach next season.

Penguins coach Mike Sullivan and the team agreed to part ways, GM-president Kyle Dubas announced Monday. The team has missed the playoffs for the past three seasons.

“This was not a decision that was taken lightly, but as we continue to navigate the Penguins through this transitional period, we felt it was the best course forward for all involved,” Dubas said in a news release.

A thorough search for the next coach begins immediately, the team said.

Sullivan joined the team partway through the 2015-16 season after the team started 15-10-3 and fired Mike Johnston. Under Sullivan, the Penguins went 33-16-5 afterward to finish second in the Metropolitan Division and go all the way to win the Stanley Cup. Sullivan's Penguins then won it all again in 2016-17 to become the first team since the Detroit Red Wings in 1997 and 1998 to win back-to-back Cup championships.

 The 57-year-old from Marshfield, Mass., coached 753 regular-season games for the Penguins, going 409-255-89. In 82 playoff games, he went 44-38. He became the 15th coach in NHL history to win 400 games with a single franchise this season.

“Mike is known for his preparation, focus and fierce competitiveness,” Dubas said. “I was fortunate to have a front-row seat to his dedication to this franchise for the past two seasons. He will forever be an enormous part of Penguins history, not only for the impressive back-to-back Cups, his impact on the core of Sidney Crosby, Evgeni Malkin, Kris Letang and Bryan Rust, but more importantly, for his love and loyalty to the organization.”

Sullivan also coached Team USA at the 4 Nations Face-Off, falling one goal short of winning the tournament against Canada.

On top of the Penguins, NHL teams currently without a permanent coach include the Anaheim Ducks, Boston Bruins, Chicago Blackhawks, New York Rangers, Philadelphia Flyers and Seattle Kraken.

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Sullivan, Penguins part ways; is the two-time champion coach a fit for Flyers?

Sullivan, Penguins part ways; is the two-time champion coach a fit for Flyers? originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

As the Flyers search for a new head coach, we’ll look at potential candidates to fill the vacancy.

“Communication and teaching are probably two things that will be at the forefront of our next coach,” general manager Danny Briere said April 19 at his end-of-the-season press conference. “When you have a young team in place, I really think those two attributes are extremely important.”

We start our series with Mike Sullivan, whose tenure in Pittsburgh ended Monday as the coach and Penguins agreed to part ways.

Why Sullivan would be a fit

There’s a lot to like with Sullivan.

He led Pittsburgh to back-to-back Stanley Cup titles in 2016 and 2017. He’s the franchise’s all-time wins leader (409) and had the Penguins in the playoffs for seven of his 10 seasons.

In his 12 seasons as an NHL head coach, eight of them have featured a .610 points percentage or better. For context, since 2012-13, the Flyers have had just one season with over a .600 points percentage: 2019-20 when they posted a .645 mark.

Sullivan’s pedigree would elicit instant respect from a rebuilding team that is starving for the next step. The Flyers have gone five consecutive seasons without a playoff berth, matching the franchise’s longest drought.

The 57-year-old would also check off the box of teacher. He has a Stanley Cup ring with the 2014-15 Blackhawks as a player development coach.

There’s a connection to Briere, as well. The two were teammates with the Coyotes for four seasons.

Why Sullivan would not be a fit

There’s always a concern about a team’s new hire being too similar to its previous coach.

That’s a possibility here. Sullivan was an assistant coach under John Tortorella with the Lightning, Rangers and Canucks. The Flyers fired Tortorella a little over a month ago. Sullivan has a sternness to him like Tortorella, a demanding style of playing the game the right way.

Briere appreciated how the old-school Tortorella laid a foundation of accountability. However, the GM did express the desire for the next coach to strike a balance between hard and lenient.

“Now it’s finding a coach that can take it to another level,” Briere said, “but at the same time, maybe give a little bit more freedom to the players to try things and to let their talent come out.”

While Sullivan wants structure, he does seem to allow for leash. Star players have succeeded under him because of it.

It’s also fair to wonder if Sullivan benefited greatly from Pittsburgh’s established stars, a talent level the Flyers simply don’t have right now. But it would be difficult to argue that Sullivan got the most out of his players and made them better.

He should have options for picking his next stop. Seven clubs are currently looking for a new head coach.

Former Ducks Perry, Fowler Help Fuel Series Ties in Game 4

Apr 27, 2025; Edmonton, Alberta, CAN; Edmonton Oilers forward Corey Perry (90) celebrates after scoring a goal during the second period against the Los Angeles Kings in game four of the first round of the 2025 Stanley Cup Playoffs at Rogers Place. Mandatory Credit: Perry Nelson-Imagn Images

Cam Fowler and Corey Perry have a lot in common. Both were drafted by the Ducks in the first round, they played together for the Ducks and they were both part of one of the most historic moments in Ducks playoff history, the Comeback on Katella.

Both also had unceremonious ends to their Duck careers, as Perry was bought out in June 2019 and Fowler was dealt to the St. Louis Blues last December. Both players were just shy of 1,000 games played for the Ducks, a mark that has only been reached by their former teammate and captain, Ryan Getzlaf.

But Perry and Fowler have both been able to find success outside of Anaheim. Perry made it to four consecutive Stanley Cup Finals with the Montréal Canadiens, Dallas Stars, Tampa Bay Lightning and Edmonton Oilers. 33-year-old Fowler has fit like a glove into Jim Montgomery's system in St. Louis.

Apr 24, 2025; St. Louis, Missouri, USA; St. Louis Blues defenseman Cam Fowler (17) is congratulated by teammates after scoring against the Winnipeg Jets during the first period in game three of the first round of the 2025 Stanley Cup Playoffs at Enterprise Center. Mandatory Credit: Jeff Curry-Imagn Images

On Sunday, both of those players helped their teams even their playoff series at two apiece. In the early game, Fowler contributed an assist in the Blues' 5-1 win to bring his points total to eight for this playoff run. Per NHL PR, he became the fourth defenseman in franchise history with at least eight points in a single series. He also joined Cale Makar (10 in 2022 & 8 in 2024), Paul Martin (8 in 2014) and Al MacInnis (8 in 1999) as the fourth defenseman in the past 30 years to record at least eight points through a team’s first four games of a postseason.

"He's been remarkable," Montgomery told reporters after the Blues' Game 3 win on Apr. 24. "I told him after the game, 'Thank god you're not in Anaheim anymore.' I thought our d-core was really good tonight and I thought (Fowler and Colton Parayko) led us tonight with their skating, their willingness to shoot. That goal by Cam Fowler, that's what our d-core can do and we have a lot of guys who can skate back there (on the blue line)."

Apr 27, 2025; Edmonton, Alberta, CAN; The Edmonton Oilers celebrate a goal scored by forward Corey Perry (90) during the second period against the Los Angeles Kings in game four of the first round of the 2025 Stanley Cup Playoffs at Rogers Place. Mandatory Credit: Perry Nelson-Imagn Images

Perry is no stranger to the playoffs with his laundry list of postseason experience. It can't get much more painful in striving for success than four consecutive Cup Final losses. As he nears age 40, he knows time is running out not only to hoist Lord Stanley again, but continue his playing career.

"The Worm," as he is fondly known to many, scored the Oilers' first goal in Game 4 as they worked to even not only the series, but the score as well, being down 2-0 at the time. Perry deftly batted the puck down before sweeping it past Los Angeles Kings goaltender Darcy Kuemper on the power play. With 56 career playoff goals, Perry is tied with Denis Potvin, Steve Larmer and Brad Marchand for 44th on the all-time playoff goals leaderboard.

"He's just elite," Oilers teammate Leon Draisaitl told reporters after their 4-3 overtime win. "He's nearly 40 years old and he has an impact on every single game. It's incredible. He's one of the smartest hockey players I've ever seen. He's so unique in the way he thinks and plays the game that I honestly feel like he could play till he's 50 just because of his brain."

Once down by two in their respective series, Fowler and Perry have found new life for their postseason hopes thanks to strong performances from themselves and their teammates.

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Why Helge Grans is Forcing His Way Into Flyers' Plans for Next Season

If the Flyers want another right-shot defenseman in their ranks, Helge Grans has been proving his worth in the AHL all season long. (Photo: Eric Hartline, Imagn Images)

As a pending restricted free agent, Helge Grans has done about as much as he possibly can to force his name onto the Philadelphia Flyers roster for the upcoming 2025-26 season.

Grans, 22, made his NHL debut for the Flyers in a 3-2 loss to the Colorado Avalanche on Nov. 18, filling in for the then-injured Jamie Drysdale for six games.

Next season, Grans will have an opportunity to reprise his role as the injury understudy with Rasmus Ristolainen set to miss roughly six months following his surgery to repair a ruptured triceps tendon in his right arm.

The first step for Grans, of course, is earning a new contract with the Flyers, who concluded the season with just six healthy defensemen on their roster.

Cam York and Travis Sanheim, two left-shots, played most of the season together on the Flyers' top defense pair. Youngsters Emil Andrae and Egor Zamula ended the season on a pair together. As a result of Ristolainen's latest injury, the Flyers have had a difficult time striking some balance on the back end.

The same was true last season, too. Ristolainen was limited to just 31 games and Sean Walker was traded to Colorado, leaving Philadelphia with Erik Johnson and Drysdale as their only two right-shot options.

At the time, Grans was not even being considered for a role in the NHL and was even benched by Lehigh Valley Phantoms head coach Ian Laperriere in the second round of the Calder Cup playoffs a few weeks later.

The 22-year-old Swede managed just one goal, seven assists, and eight points in 56 games with the Phantoms last year, but the difference a year makes is front and center.

On top of making his NHL debut and scoring his first NHL point for the Flyers, Grans exploded for eight goals, 15 assists, and 23 points in 66 games. He's showing the potential he flashed in the 2021-22 season, when he scored seven goals, 17 assists, and 24 points in 56 games with the Ontario Reign in his first full season in North America.

It's been a long road for the 6-foot-3 blueliner, who needed to become meaner, more assertive, and more reliable in his own end of the ice. Grans is finally doing that, and he proved to himself that he didn't have to sacrifice his offensive gifts to do it.

Grans scored his first career Calder Cup playoffs goal on Friday, just under a year after watching the Phantoms' last two games of the year from the press box.

Grans used his elite skating to enter the zone, dropping the puck off to Jett Luchanko at the blueline before stick-checking a defender and rotating to set a screen in front of the net.

While Luchanko's pass to Anthony Richard was rebuffed by the Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Penguins' goaltender, Grans was in the right place at the right time to swat the rebound into the goal from the ground, scoring the game-winning goal and powering the Phantoms to a 3-2 Game 2 win to sweep the Penguins in the first round of the Calder Cup playoffs.

"He’s a young guy still, but he’s played a number of years because L.A. put him in the American League as a young player. Over the years, from L.A.’s program to now, he’s steadily getting better,” Flyers assistant GM Brent Flahr said of Grans in September. “Now he has to find a niche for himself. He’s a tall, rangy guy. He can skate. He can move the puck. He just has to find a way to beat out another player.”

With Ristolainen set to miss all of training camp, Grans might not have to beat out another player to make the Flyers. Keeping his spot from there will be up to him and his play, especially if the Flyers continue to evaluate trade packages for Ristolainen as they have in the past.

Grans's sustained elevated level of performance indicates a motivated player who knows he doesn't have a contract next year and wants to take his talents to the NHL. The ball is now in the Flyers' court.

Canadiens: Tough Loss In Hard Hitting Battle

Apr 27, 2025; Montreal, Quebec, CAN; Montreal Canadiens right wing Ivan Demidov (93) plays the puck against Washington Capitals right wing Tom Wilson (43) during the third period in game four of the first round of the 2025 Stanley Cup Playoffs at Bell Centre. Photo Credit: David Kirouac-Imagn Images

The Bell Centre was just as loud for game 4 as it was for game 3 of the Montreal Canadiens’ first-round series against the Washington Capitals, when poor Michel Lacroix tried to announce the anthems, he was drowned out by a very loud “Ole, ole, ole” chant, and you could feel the electricity in the air. To everyone’s surprise, goaltender Logan Thompson was back in the net, while Jakub Dobes was defending the Habs’ cage.

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Asked about what happened in game three, Thompson explained:

I kind of got my bell rung a bit there. It was scary; it definitely could have been a lot worse, but coming back from injury and doing some protocol, I lost my balance getting up. Luckily, things were ok, and I was able to play.
- Thompson on Friday night's injury.

There was no mention of what looked like a knee injury on the play, whether that’s just playoff secrecy or if it was just a big scare, we’ll never know.

After the NHL warned both teams to watch themselves with the extracurricular activities, the referees seemed to want to play a bigger part in the game and establish limits early, calling three penalties in the first frame alone. They added another five in the second, including three against the Canadiens that did not go down well in the Bell Center.

Defending Ovechkin On The Power Play

The Canadiens had a new way to defend against Alexander Ovechkin tonight on the power play. Often, they isolated the Caps’ captain. The Russian sniper stands around waiting for the puck, making it easy to stand right before him to cut off any potential pass.

Montreal decided to do it very closely, almost forcing him out of the play. They sacrificed a player and had to defend four-on-three on the rest of the ice, but it worked well. It would have been a different story had it not been for Dobes’ heroics; the young netminder stole at least three goals on the penalty kill.

Twice, his side-to-side displacement was perfect to stop one-timers, and once, he made a glove save low nearside that looked like a definite goal. The Habs had three penalties in the second frame, but they still came out of the period with two goals on four shots.

The Future Is Now

With Patrik Laine still out of action, the newly formed first power play unit got more ice time, and it became evident that Ivan Demidov could be a key cog of the Canadiens’ man advantage.

The first unit scored the Canadiens two goals tonight, and Demidov shone brightly on each. The youngster has excellent hands and repeatedly dazzled the Bell Centre crowd. On the first goal, he evaded his coverage with a couple of nifty moves, got behind the net, saw Juraj Slafkovsky on the doorstep, and just like that, the puck was behind Tompson.

On the second goal, he got the secondary assist, but it was his puck possession skills that allowed the Canadiens to keep possession and set up properly, allowing Cole Caufield to give Montreal a 2-1 lead.

Hitting The Wall

The Canadiens were less than 17 minutes away from tying the series at two a piece when Tom Wilson rocked Alex Carrier with a big hit and gained puck possession for the Caps. Seconds later, after the puck went up in the air and dropped in front of Dobes, Brandon Duhaime tapped it to tie up the score.

Asked if the Canadiens tried to talk to him after his hit on Carrier and if he just skated away, Wilson explained:

It’s a loud building, there’s a lot of emotion, the last game was really chaotic, and speaking to the coaches and a lot of people that I trust over the last couple of days, it’s good for me to be on the ice. I can’t be sitting in the box for 14 minutes. In the first game, I get coincidental, and I’m in the box for eight to nine minutes, so I want to be on the ice and control my emotions. It’s a tough building to do that, it’s one of the best building in the NHL for a reason, it’s loud, the fans are passionate, it’s one of those buildings you love to play in as a player, it’s stuff you’ll remember when your career is done, but you want to keep your emotions in check.
- Tom Wilson on why he skated away.

From then on, it was a different game. The Canadiens looked somewhat shaken up, and with under four minutes to go, Andrew Mangiapane unleashed a heavy wrister from the high slot that beat Dobes glove side.

Martin St-Louis pulled his goalie early on an offensive zone faceoff, and the Canadiens lost possession. This led to Duhaime getting his second in an empty net. Wilson added another one later, still in an empty cage, to give the Caps a 3-1 series lead.

The coach looked somewhat dejected after the game:

I feel bad for the group a bit; I don’t really know what to tell them. If you have some answers for me, let me know.
-

St-Louis looked more like a player than a coach for the first time this season when providing that answer. Asked why he didn’t know what to say to his players, he answered:

I don’t know…It’s hard…I’ll be careful with my words but, it’s hard to watch some of these calls. Tonight, the mandate was about embellishing.
-

Every morning, the GM meets with the person in charge of the referees and is told what the zebras will be trying to crack down on during the game. On Sunday morning, Kent Hughes was told the zebras would be trying to eradicate embellishment. Listening to the coach, he clearly felt like that wasn’t accomplished. One can imagine he was referring to the high-sticking call on Christian Dvorak, which infuriated the Bell Centre.

The Canadiens now have a few days to lick off their wounds before heading to Washington for game five which will be held on Wednesday night. 


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POSTGAME: Gabe Landeskog and His Two-Point Night Highlight Demanding Game 4 Win Over Stars

Colorado Avalanche left wing Gabriel Landeskog (92) celebrates his goal in the second period against the Dallas Stars at Ball Arena. Mandatory Credit: Ron Chenoy-Imagn Images

Denver, Colo. - The Colorado Avalanche stamped their mark on Game 4 with a resounding 4-0 win over the Dallas Stars to tie the series at 2. Samuel Girard put on one of his best performances of the season, capped off with the fourth goal of the game in the third period. Mackenzie Blackwood earned his first ever postseason shutout in just his fourth ever postseason performance.

And who wasn't a little emotional when Captain Gabriel Landeskog scored his first goal since June 20th, 2022? In just his second NHL game since returning from an injury that kept him away from professional hockey for three seasons, he worked with his teammates on the second line to score the game's third goal.

I've envisioned scoring again for a long time. and then there were obviously days where I didn't know if I was ever going to get the score again. So obviously feels good. It's a tight playoff series and a big game here at home, get to do it in front of our fans. Obviously means a lot. So super exciting. Hopefully more to come."
- Landeskog on scoring his first NHL goal since returning.

How the Game Shook Out

The Avalanche played a dominant game after dropping Wednesday's home match 2-1 in overtime. 

The first period saw Logan O'Connor rise to the occasion while his team was on the penalty kill, creating a turnover at the Avalanche blue line and carrying it up the ice. He found himself one-on-one with Jake Oettinger and snapped the puck over Oettinger's blocker on the near side and scored, putting Colorado up 1-0.

Nathan MacKinnon didn't want to miss out on the fun, though, showing that both special teams came to dominate. He finds himself all alone in the left faceoff circle, receives a pass from Jonathan Drouin, and his shot, somehow, sneaks through Oettinger's pad and into the net. The period ended shortly after that, making it 2-0 heading into the second period.

While the scoring may not show it, the game only became more dangerous thanks to the Avalanche.

While the first period statistics seemed a little even with shots at 12-11 and high-danger chances 3-2, both in favor of the Avalanche, the second period saw Colorado keep Dallas at just 5 shots-for while they nailed 8 high-danger chances on Oettinger. 

Among those high-danger chances, surprisingly, was not Landeskog's one-timer from the slot to make it 3-0. The pass from linemate Brock Nelson was swift and clean, and Landeskog found himself open in the slot to slap it past Oettinger in his first goal in 1,041 days.

Going into the third period, the Stars decided to sit Oettinger in favor of getting some game time in for backup goaltender Casey DeSmith.

The Avalanche played half a period before Girard found the team's fourth goal. Landeskog battled in front of the net with Stars' Lian Bichsel, a 6-foot-7 defenseman, creating a bit of turmoil in front of DeSmith, making it a little easier for Girard's shot from the blue line to make it through. 

The night ended 4-0 in favor of Colorado, who also led shots 48-23 and high-danger chances 17-6.

A Lot to Be Happy With, A Lot to Improve

Saturday's win forces a Game 6, which will bring the series back to Denver on May 1st. This gives Colorado an opportunity to win on home ice to bring the team into round 2 of the Stanley Cup Playoffs.

Head Coach Jared Bednar was pleased with the game, going as far as to say, "I can't find a player on our roster I didn't like tonight."

We were just on our toes. It was highly competitive. Puck decisions were all good. Guys were willing to skate with the puck and force them to defend -- some of the things we've been talking about for a few games now, and it came together there for a while tonight, which was good to see. I thought it continued in the third period a little bit too.
- Coach Bednar on the team's performance on Saturday

Earlier in the series, Bednar talked about not getting enough out of his top guys, which included the second line, and when asked, seemed like the second line he reworked for Wednesday's game also worked in their favor on Saturday, too.

That's two good home games from those guys. [Nichushkin], [Nelson], [Landeskog] on there, that's been a good line for us, in the last two home games, and on both sides of the puck. It's not just about production. Certainly, we need production spread out through our lineup. You got to come up with enough chances to be able to put some by these guys. And we did that tonight. The other night we had a little bit of a tough time. But on the defensive side of it, they've been really good too.
- Coach Bednar on the second line.

Dallas Head Coach Pete DeBoer also seemed a little disappointed following Saturday's game, but during media availability before their flight back to Dallas, seems to have a good view on the series so far: 

If you had told me at Christmas we were going to go into the first round of the playoffs against Colorado, and we were going to be without [Miro] Heiskanen and [Jason] Robertson, and we'd be 2-2 coming home with home ice advantage, I think I would have been pretty happy. Sometimes you have to have that perspective that this group has battled pretty hard under some serious adversity, and we're in a pretty good spot.
- Coach DeBoer on surprises during the series so far.

What's Next?

Game 5 will be played in Dallas on Monday, 4/28, at 7:30 pm MT/8:30 pm CT.

Game 6 is scheduled for Thursday, May 1st, at Ball Arena in Denver. A start time has not been released yet.

If necessary, Game 7 is scheduled for Saturday, May 3rd, at American Airlines Center in Dallas. No start time will be released until the game becomes necessary.

Kings fail to stop another Oilers comeback, losing in Game 4 OT heartbreaker

EDMONTON, AB - APRIL 27: Edmonton Oilers Center Connor McDavid (97) celebrates a goal.
Oilers star Connor McDavid celebrates after an Edmonton goal in the third period of a 4-3 overtime win against the Kings in Game 4 of the first round of the Western Conference playoffs. (Curis Comeau / Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)

What started as a best-of-seven Stanley Cup playoff is now a best-of-three series after the Edmonton Oilers rallied from a two-goal third-period deficit to beat the Kings 4-3 in overtime Sunday, evening the series at two wins apiece.

The winning goal came from Leon Draisaitl, who beat Kings goalie Darcy Kuemper on the power play with 1:42 left in the extra period. Kuemper deserved a better fate on a night he stopped 44 shots.

The teams will meet again Tuesday for Game 5 at Crypto.com Arena, where the Kings have won a league-leading 33 times, including the playoffs. Game 6 is scheduled for Thursday in Edmonton. Game 7, if needed, would be Saturday in Los Angeles.

None of that appeared necessary after the Kings, who won the first two games, took a 3-1 lead into the final 13 minutes of regulation. They were 28 seconds away from winning when Evan Bouchard blasted a slap shot by Kuemper from just inside the blue line, capping a wild third-period rally. It was Bouchard’s second goal of the period and his fourth of the playoffs.

It was also the third goal the Oilers have scored after pulling their goalie for an extra attacker, and it marked the third time in four games the Kings have blown a lead in the final 13 minutes.

The Oilers have outscored the Kings 12-5 in the third period and overtime in the series.

Read more:Kings must overcome power of rabid Edmonton Oilers fans after faltering in Game 3

The Kings’ goals came from Trevor Moore, Warren Foegele and Kevin Fiala, and Phillip Danault had two assists. Corey Perry had the other Oilers goal; Draisaitl assisted on Edmonton's first three goals.

The Kings haven’t beaten Edmonton in a postseason series since 1989 — and haven’t eliminated anyone in the playoffs since 2014, when they won their second Stanley Cup.

The Kings set the tone early, peppering Oilers goalie Calvin Pickard with 10 shots in the first 10 minutes before Moore beat him from the center of the right circle on the 11th shot. The goal, 10:35 into the first period, marked the third time in four games the Kings had scored first.

Read more:Kings rally to take lead, only to collapse in third period of Game 3 loss to Oilers

Foegele, a former Oiler, doubled the lead 91 seconds into the second, spinning into the crease to collect a pass from Danault, then shoving the puck under Pickard.

The Oilers’ pulled that goal back on a power play less than three minutes later when Perry took three whacks at the puck before getting it by Kuemper. Fiala restored the two-goal lead later in the period, reaching up to bat down a high pass from Alex Laferriere, then deflecting the puck into the net off the Pickard's stick side.

But the Oilers wouldn’t quit, cutting the deficit with 12:09 to play on the first of Bouchard’s two goals. That set the stage for a desperate push from the Oilers, who put 15 shots on net in the final period, the last Bouchard’s tying goal that sent the game to overtime.

This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

Tucker Injury Another Tough Blow For Blues

St. Louis Blues players look on as teammate Tyler Tucker (75) is helped off the ice by head athletic trainer Ray Barile late in the third period on Sunday against the Winnipeg Jets. (Jeff Le-Imagn Images)

ST. LOUIS -- It was shaping up to be another signature St. Louis Blues win in Game 4 of the Western Conference First Round against the Presidents' Trophy-winning Winnipeg Jets.

Well, as it turns out, the win was significant, and a signature one since the Blues evened the best-of-7 series at 2-2 with a commanding 5-1 win that came on the heels of a dominant 7-2 win in Game 3. But it ended on a bit of a down note.

Defenseman Tyler Tucker went down late in the third period with an apparent right leg injury.

Tucker was injured when he sort of toe-picked his right skate going to check Winnipeg's Brandon Tanev, then he ran into the corner glass and buckled on both of his legs, with the right one taking the brunt of his weight:

Tucker needed help of the ice and down the tunnel into the Blues' dressing room, and coach Jim Montgomery had no immediate update afterwards but it's believed he will likely miss at least the rest of this series, potentially longer, should the Blues prevail.

The defenseman, playing in his third game of the series, scored his first Stanley Cup playoff goal, which turned out to be the game-winner in the second period:

"His goal was huge for us getting a lead and being able to play with the lead," Montgomery said.

Tucker finished with 17:05 minutes played and was a plus-1 with two shots on goal (three attempts), two hits, two takeaways, two giveaways and two blocked shots.

"I thought he was really aggressive tonight, I thought that was his best game of the three games and I thought he was physical," Montgomery said of Tucker. "His ability, I’ve said it many times but he’s a really good offensive defenseman and it shows with how he gets shots off. They don’t get blocked because he puts himself in a shot-ready mindset."

Blues defenseman Colton Parayko added, "He’s been a big part of this team for a long time. He’s a great player, a great defender and we’re lucky to have him. Just hope everything is OK."

With Tucker sidelined, look for veteran Ryan Suter, a healthy scratch in Games 3 and 4 after playing in all 82 regular-season games and Games 1 and 2 of this series, to jump back into the lineup alongside Nick Leddy.

The Blues are already without talented young forward Dylan Holloway, who hasn't played since April 3 when he suffered a lower-body injury in a 5-4 overtime win against the Pittsburgh Penguins.

Nailers' Quest For Kelly Cup Ends Following Game 5 Loss

Gabe Klassen - Image courtesy of the Wheeling Nailers' Facebook page.

The Wheeling Nailers fought off getting swept in their North Division Semifinals matchup with the Norfolk Admirals with a thrilling win on Friday night.

However, a sloppy third period in Saturday's Game 5 resulted in three goals against, and the Admirals went on to win 5-2, ending the Nailers' 2024-25 campaign. 

It was a difficult start for Wheeling, which fell behind 2-0 before the game was four minutes old. Norfolk opened the scoring at 3:07 with a Denis Smirov goal, followed by a Brandon Osmundson tally at 4:00.

Your Guide To Ex-Penguins In The 2025 NHL PlayoffsYour Guide To Ex-Penguins In The 2025 NHL PlayoffsThe Pittsburgh Penguins may not be participating in the Stanley Cup playoffs this season.

The hometown team finally got on the board at 9:03 when David Jankowski lit the lamp thanks to assists from Chase Pietila and Kyle Jackson. 

Neither team found the back of the net in the second period, while Norfolk's Colton Young tallied the game winner just 2:41 into the third. 

Yet, the Nailers, down 3-1 at the midway point of their final period, kept pushing back, cutting the deficit back to one with a Jack Beck goal at 10:42. Gabe Klassen and Kyle Jackson set up the final goal of Wheeling's season. 

Despite the pressure, Young scored his second of the period at 12:43, all but sealing the win with a little over seven minutes to go. The Admirals then put the game out of reach at 17:20 with a Darick Louis-Jean goal. 

In his return to the Nailers crease, Taylor Gauthier made 21 saves on 26 shots (.807 SV%), suffering his first loss of the playoffs. 

Penguins' Crosby Continues To Pace NHL In Top 10 Scoring Finishes During Salary Cap EraPenguins' Crosby Continues To Pace NHL In Top 10 Scoring Finishes During Salary Cap EraPittsburgh Penguins captain Sidney Crosby just finished his ninth 90-point campaign in the NHL, finishing as the league's 10th highest scorer, the 13th time he's accomplished that feat in 20 seasons. 

Meanwhile, Norfolk switched things up, sitting Thomas Milic for the first time in the series, giving the start to Domenic DiVincentiis, who made 29 stops on 31 shots (.935 SV%). 

Despite outshooting the Admirals 31-29, Wheeling gave up two power-play goals on four chances, while going 0-for-2 on the man advantage.

After compiling the first 40-win season since 2005-06, the Nailers' quest for their first Kelly Cup will need to wait for another season.  

The Hockey News Playoff Frenzy Live: Capitals Take 3-1 Stranglehold Over Montreal With Game 4 Victory

Jakob Chychrun and Logan Thompson (David Kirouac-Imagn Images)

Welcome to The Hockey News Playoff Frenzy Live, streaming nightly during the NHL's Stanley Cup playoffs.

After the big game of the night, our experts go live to react to the match that was, break down the key moments and storylines, provide updates on the rest of the night's NHL slate and read your opinions.

On tonight's show, Michael Augello and Andrew McInnis react to the Washington Capitals defeating the Montreal Canadiens 5-2 to take a commanding 3-1 lead in the series.

They also look around the NHL as the first round continues.

Check out the show right now and share your opinions in the live chat and in our comment section.  

Masters Of Mayhem: NHL Pests Are Thriving This Playoff Season

Tom Wilson (David Kirouac-Imagn Images)

Heading into the NHL’s 2025 Stanley Cup playoffs, there were certain players you knew what to expect from. Specifically, you knew particular players were going to be annoying influences on the opposition. Pests, if you will. And thus far, there are more than a few pests who’ve been living up to their reputation, or down to it, depending on your perspective.

For instance, Washington Capitals right winger Tom Wilson engaged in a massive brawl with Montreal Canadiens counterpart Josh Anderson in Game 3 of their series. Wilson’s theatrics were nearly at professional wrestling levels, mocking the Canadiens' crying with facial expressions that were bordering on comical. Even Wilson himself said after the game, “I just gotta be a little bit better, maybe turning away and playing hockey.”

Wilson hasn't had a bad series by any means, with two assists through three games, but maybe a bigger focus on actual hockey would help him contribute even more.

Meanwhile, in Florida, Panthers super-pest Matthew Tkachuk was mixing things up with the Tampa Bay Lightning in Game 3 of their series, laying a late hit on Bolts star left winger Jake Guentzel with the game well out of hand in Tampa Bay’s favor.

Tkachuk received a five-minute major interference penalty on the play, but he evaded supplemental discipline. And Tampa Bay players knew the type of competitor they were dealing with – an expert player when it comes to getting under the skin of their opponents.

“Obviously, the timing of the hit, (the score is) 4-1 and we’re about to make it 5-1 and Tkachuk goes out of his way to hit Guentzel,” Lightning captain Victor Hedman said. “We can’t control what the league thinks is interference and what’s suspendable and not suspendable. So, we’re just gonna fight through that.”

When it comes to Tkachuk, he's a true star in the NHL, so while he, like his brother Brady, likes to get under the other team's skin, he definitely backs it up with his play. In three games this post-season, Tkachuk has put up three goals and four points in three games.

Over in the 'Battle of Ontario', the Ottawa Senators/Toronto Maple Leafs have seen a couple of Sens pests – winger Ridly Greig and Nick Cousins – trying to make an impact by frustrating the Maple Leafs. Cousins and the Sens were fined by the NHL after he shot a puck at Leafs goalie Anthony Stolarz during warmup before Game 3, while Greig annoyed many Leafs, including causing Stolarz to lash out at him.  

Cousins and Greig have been pure pests this post-season, as between the two of them, they have just one goal and no assists. Clearly, the two are effecting the game more with their antics than with their scoring.

Without a doubt, all these pests aren't new to their profession. None of Greig, Cousins, Tkachuk and Wilson were Lady Byng candidates coming into the playoffs, and they certainly aren't going to make any fans outside of their team's fan bases. But the key to playing against those types of players is to ignore them and not fall for the emotional traps they lay out with their sandpaper brand of play.

Indeed, the more disciplined teams are against the super-pest competitors, the more they take the power away from the pests, and coaches and veteran players understand this. That’s indeed easier said than done when emotions and stakes are sky-high, but one wrong reaction or overreaction can turn out to be the difference between a team winning or losing a playoff game. And if that happens, the pests have done their job.

We’re sure players like Wilson, Cousins, Tkachuk and Greig will continue to push the envelope. As Hedman said, players can’t control what the league deems acceptable behavior. And while that’s a column for another day, the truth is that teams have little choice but to turn the other cheek and not indulge pests when they try to affect the outcome of games.

Ultimately, the better players are at staying calm and focused, the more their team is likely to win the big and small battles in the rest of the playoffs – and the tougher it is for super-pests to have an impact on the game. And that’s the game-within-the-game challenge that super-pests’ targets have to deal with.

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.

Three Takeaways From Blues' 5-1 Win Against Jets In Game 4 Of Western Conference First Round

St. Louis Blues captain Brayden Schenn (10) scores past Winnipeg Jets goalie Connor Hellebuyck (left) in the second period of a 5-1 win in Game 4 on Sunday. (Jeff Le-Imagn Images) 

ST. LOUIS – Well, judging by Sunday’s start to Game 4 of the Western Conference First Round against the Winnipeg Jets for the St. Louis Blues, it was hard-pressed to see a similar result as to the one they got in Game 3.

Boy, was that a wrong assumption.

Only difference for the Blues, who smacked the Jets around for the second time in as many games, 5-1 in Game 4 at Enterprise Center on Sunday to even this best-of-7 series at 2-2, is they fell behind in this one.

And that was that.

The Blues would score five straight goals, led by Jake Neighbours with a goal and two assists; Brayden Schenn had a goal and an assist and Colton Parayko had two helpers. Along with Neighbours, Tyler Tucker, who suffered an awkward injury to his right leg late in the third period, also scored his first Stanley Cup playoff goal; Justin Faulk and Robert Thomas also scored and Jordan Binnington remained locked in with a 30-save performance.

“We knew where we were,” Faulk said of losing Games 1 and 2. “We had a job to do when we came back. Start with the first one, come in and try and play well, get to our game. Obviously, the first one went pretty well and went our way. We knew we had to try and recreate that again today. It was a tough task after losing the first two there. We wanted to get back even in the series and that’s where we are. It’s three games now, series tied up. We’ve got to keep going and keep playing well.”

What now amounts to a best-of-3 series, Game 5 is slated for Wednesday in Winnipeg.

Let’s jump right into Sunday’s Three Takeaways:

* Blues are driving the net with success – Upon returning from losing Games 1 and 2 in Winnipeg, the Blues were focused on a number of improvements upon turning this series back into their favor.

One of them was getting net front traffic.

Jets goalie Connor Hellebuyck had success in the first two games at home because quite simply, the Blues made life too easy on the Vezina Trophy finalist (and likely winner).

That all changed in Game 3, and it continued into Game 4.

Let’s face it, the Blues were only down 1-0 in this game because when Kyle Connor scored at 13:58, it was done so after the Blues took two minors that the Jets feasted off of. They didn’t score but got momentum off of it. It was a lengthy shift after Schenn lost the puck trying to make a play off the wall, and Neighbours whiffed on a failed clear and it would up in their net.

But when Neighbours scored on a tipped goal with 22.7 seconds remaining in the first period, that’s a game-tying goal to make it 1-1 and it wasn’t anything pretty. It wasn’t a tic-tac-toe passing play, it was a Cam Fowler shot/pass that caromed to Parayko to the point, who shoveled a one-timer that fluttered to the net, but there were bodies there, including Neighbours, who got a stick on the puck.

Imagine the feeling of being down 1-0. It would have been a situation where the Blues wouldn’t have felt all that great about their game, but that’s a shot-in-the-arm goal saying, ‘Hey, we’re tied again, now let’s go play our game and take it over.’

“For sure. That was the mindset,” Neighbours said. “We thought we started pretty well actually and then some penalties, we kind of lost the momentum and then, honestly, I thought we finished pretty strong in the last six minutes. It was just nice to get one and tie it up.”

Parayko said, “That was nice. Obviously coming in tied is a little better than 1-0. End of the period, too, I think it was under a minute to go, or close to. It’s a nice feeling to come in and hit the reset button and come back out for the second (period). A little momentum. They had some pressure in the first, but that’s playoff hockey. There’s going to be momentum both ways.”

Five of their seven goals came from the slot on in in Game 3, and three more came at the net, including Schenn’s huge goal to give them a 3-1 lead at 17:23 of the second period that came after a power plat expired.

“It’s playoffs. You have to win the net front battle, you have to go to the net,” Schenn said. “Not even just our series, but look league-wide right now how pucks and goals are going in in the playoffs. They’re not always going to be pretty. It’s such a cliché answer but you get pucks and people and traffic to the net, shoot the puck and hopefully good things happen.”

And Thomas’ goal at 2:01 of the third period was another net front goal that made it 5-1 and chased Hellebuyck for the second straight game.

Neighbours talked after losing the first two games of how the Blues just have to have a mindset and fight through Winnipeg’s big, heavy D-men that make it tough to get to the middle of the ice and they’ve found a way to figure this out.

“I think it’s just the mindset, the attitude to do it,” Neighbours said. “It’s hard, it’s not easy and it’s not a fun place to go, but it can be rewarding as we’ve seen the last couple of games. It’s just as simple as that, it’s just an attitude and a willingness to go there, get there and you know you’re going to create space for others around you, create traffic for shots and things like that. So it’s just a very necessary part of the O-zone that we’ve done a really good job on the last two.”

* Defensemen are filtering into the offense – Blues defensemen had so much success, especially post-4 Nations Face-Off, where the defensemen were contributing to the offense.

The Blues were second in the league during the regular season with 46 goals behind the Colorado Avalanche (54), and it was part of the fuel that stoked the fire of a franchise-record 12-game winning streak.

In Games 1 and 2, they’re D-men produced zero goals and three assists on four goals, and Cam Fowler had two of those assists.

In Game 3, Fowler and Parayko scored. In Game 4, Tucker and Faulk scored goals, and they came from distance in the second period because of a willingness to shoot pucks, and off one-timers knowing full well the forwards are driving the net, getting traffic there and they’re finding the lanes to get through and past what looks like a fragile goalie.

Tucker's one-time blast off a Nick Leddy feed at 10:46 of the second period gave the Blues the lead for good at 2-1.

Then Faulk's goal that made it 4-1 at 18:54 of the second, another one-timer from the blue line that caromed in off Jets defenseman Neal Pionk with Jordan Kyrou running traffic at the net, seemed to be the back-breaking goal.

“That’s what we try to do. We’ve got a lot of D that can skate and play, shoot pucks, make passes, whatever,” Faulk said. “Guys that have played in the league a long time. It’s an emphasis of ours to make sure we’re skating and doing our part to help out, and create offense as much as we can.

“I think we’re trying to skate, make plays moving our feet. It’s tough to make plays sitting back. They’re not strong plays. There’s not as much pressure, you don’t pull guys out of position at all. So if we can skate and make plays and put them on their heels a little bit, it just makes it a little bit tougher on them.” Blues coach Jim Montgomery agreed, that the defensemen are moving their feet more and it’s giving them more opportunities, something that lacked early in the series.

“Yeah, I think by them moving their feet, they get more into a rhythm of the game and they end up getting open looks, especially in the offensive zone,” Montgomery said. “If they’re moving their feet, I thought we were standing still a lot in Winnipeg, and I think as a team, we’re moving our feet and we’re getting to goal lines, we’re getting numbers on the puck and then we’re able to go low to high and our defensemen, because of the way Winnipeg does such a great job in the D-zone, have a little more time if they’re moving their feet to get to middle ice.”

* Binnington outplaying Hellebuyck (again) – There’s something about going up against Hellebuyck that seems to bring out the best in Binnington.

He didn’t have to be at his best -- although Cole Perfetti may object – in Game 3 with 16 saves, but when Binnington sees the guy at the opposite end get pulled from the game for the second straight time here, there’s that mindset of just keep making saves in this one and give your team a chance to win.

The Jets had some good looks, especially in the first period and on their two power players, and Binnington fought through the traffic, he was seeing pucks and when making saves, he was putting them into spots that forced the Jets to retrieve away from high-danger areas.

But right now, Binnington looks solid, confident, unlike his counterpart.

“I think the D-men are doing a good job of helping him in front of the net, but he’s making big saves when he needs to,” Schenn said. “Obviously when ‘Binner’s on, he has the ability to read the play really well. I think he’s done a great job of that. Obviously he’s made timely saves, key saves. He’s gotten better as the year’s gone on.”

“Yeah, he’s playing really good,” Parayko said. “We always have confidence when he’s back there, just a good goal and can’t say enough good things about him as a player, person, teammate. We’re fortunate as the Blues to have him back there and we’re just going to just try to do our best in front of him and do his thing.”

And then on the flip side of it, the Blues have found a way to chase the guy that’s likely to win the Vezina on Monday two games in a row.

Blues fans let it be known they WANTED Hellebuyck to remain in goal:

“We’re just trying to get pucks to the net, and bodies to the net,” Faulk said. ‘It’s a simple recipe. I’m sure every team in the playoffs is saying that. It’s net-front battles. We’ve got to win ours in our end, and win in their end. It’s nothing crazy. We’re just trying to make it tough on them and their D.”

Mission accomplished. Now the question becomes can they keep it up on the road? We’ll soon enough find out.

Montgomery said plain and simple, "I think we’re own the net front and our goaltender’s making saves."

Former Hurricanes Star Has Strong Playoff Performance

Image

During his time with the Carolina Hurricanes, Justin Faulk was known for his ability to produce offense from the point. This is still a notable part of his game now that he is with the St. Louis Blues, which is why he is a key part of the Central Division club's blueline.

In the Blues' Game 4 matchup against the Winnipeg Jets, Faulk made a big impact. The former Hurricane scored a clutch goal at the 18:54 mark of the second period, giving the Blues a 4-1 lead. This goal helped put the game out of reach, and the Blues have now tied their series up with the Jets at 2-2 because of it. 

Faulk's goal was a very nice one, too. The right-shot defenseman one-timed a Jake Neighbours feed from the point past Jets goaltender Connor Hellebuyck with a beautiful slap shot. 

With his latest strong game, Faulk now has one goal, three points, and a plus-3 rating in four games this post-season for the Blues. He has been quite solid for the Blues during the playoffs and will now look to stay hot from here. 

Faulk was selected by the Hurricanes with the 37th overall pick of the 2010 NHL Entry Draft. In 559 games over eight seasons with the Metropolitan Division club, he had 85 goals, 173 assists, and 258 points. He was also named to three All-Star Games during his time with the Canes. 

Recent Hurricanes News 

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