NHL opts not to make Senators forfeit first-round pick for nullified 2021 trade

NEW YORK — The NHL has decided not to make the Ottawa Senators forfeit a first-round draft pick for their role in a 2021 trade that was later nullified.

The Senators instead will get the 32nd and final pick in the first round after the league decided their change of ownership affected what the appropriate punishment should be. The team will also pay a fine of 1 million Canadian dollars, roughly $735,000, to NHL Foundation Canada.

If Ottawa misses the playoffs and happens to win the draft lottery for one of the first two picks, it will result in a re-draw. After announcing the alteration Thursday, the NHL said it will have no further comment on the matter.

The decision was initially levied on Nov. 1, 2023, that the Senators would forfeit a first-rounder in 2024, ‘25 or ’26. New owner Michael Andlauer fired then-general manager Pierre Dorion that day and named Steve Staois as the replacement for that role.

The Senators traded forward Evgenii Dadonov to Vegas in July 2021 and failed to supply the Golden Knights with the player’s 10-team no-trade list. Vegas attempted to send Dadonov to the Anaheim Ducks in March 2022 before the move was nixed by NHL Central Registry because he had not waived his no-trade clause.

There is precedent to the NHL reducing punishment after the fact. The New Jersey Devils in 2010 were docked a first- and a third-round pick and fined $3 million for a contract with Ilya Kovalchuk that was rejected. They instead were, like Ottawa, forced to the end of the first round in 2014.

NHL 26 Simulation Predicts Avalanche vs. Kraken Result

If NHL 26 has any say in the matter — and Avalanche fans should hope it doesn’t — the Colorado Avalanche are in for a frustrating night in Seattle. A simulation of Thursday’s matchup projects a 4–2 loss to the Seattle Kraken, a result Avalanche supporters will be perfectly happy to see proven wrong once the real puck drops.

You can watch the full simulation here.

Goals from Nazem Kadri and Gavin Brindley accounted for Colorado’s offense, while Mackenzie Blackwood finished with 17 saves.

Seattle received goals from Frederick Gaudreau, Kaapo Kakko, Jordan Eberle and Jared McCann. Adam Larsson, Chandler Stephenson and Matty Beniers each recorded two points, while Philipp Grubauer turned aside 29 shots.

First Period 

Seattle wasted no time setting the tone.

Just 27 seconds into the opening frame, McCann deflected a Larsson point shot past Blackwood to give the Kraken an immediate 1–0 lead.

The early pressure continued. A little more than four minutes later, Kakko doubled the advantage when a relatively harmless shot from the slot slipped past Blackwood, who appeared to misplay the puck as it slid over the goal line to make it 2–0.

Colorado responded midway through the period. After Nicolas Roy poked the puck free from Jacob Melanson behind the net, he quickly fed Brindley in the slot. The rookie made no mistake, snapping a shot past Grubauer to cut the deficit to one.

After 20 minutes, Seattle held a 2–1 lead, though Colorado carried a slight 9–8 edge in shots.

Second Period

Trouble began early in the middle frame.

Less than two minutes in, Nathan MacKinnon was sent off for holding Vince Dunn, forcing Colorado onto its first penalty kill of the night. The Avalanche successfully killed that penalty, but moments later Roy was called for interference after colliding with Dunn, giving Seattle another opportunity with the man advantage.

This time, the Kraken capitalized.

Eberle redirected a shot past Blackwood on the power play, pushing the lead to 3–1.

The Avalanche netminder’s difficult stretch continued shortly after. Gaudreau fired a shot that appeared to glance off Blackwood’s glove before trickling across the line, extending Seattle’s lead to 4–1.

Colorado was handed its first power play of the night when Stephenson was penalized for holding Brock Nelson. The opportunity, however, failed to generate much momentum. Sloppy puck management limited Colorado to just a single shot on goal.

By the end of the period, the Avalanche faced a three-goal deficit heading into the third.

Third Period

Colorado caught a fortunate break early in the final frame.

Kadri was credited with a goal after a bizarre sequence in front of the net. His wrist shot from the top of the right circle deflected off Grubauer’s glove, and when Beniers attempted to clear the loose puck, he inadvertently knocked it into his own net, trimming the deficit to 4–2.

The comeback hopes didn’t gain much traction afterward.

Later in the period, Martin Necas was penalized for holding, sending Seattle back to the power play and further eating into Colorado’s remaining time.

Then came perhaps the most “video game” moment of the night.

Just past the midway point of the period, MacKinnon delivered a cross-check to Ryan Lindgren. In a moment that perfectly summarized the quirks of the Frostbite engine, MacKinnon’s stick somehow appeared to pass directly through Lindgren’s chest.

Naturally, the officials assessed a penalty.

Two minutes for cross-checking… and possibly an additional game misconduct for manslaughter?

EA… come on, man.

Colorado pulled Blackwood for the extra attacker in the final minute, but despite a few late opportunities, the Avalanche couldn’t close the gap. The simulation ended with a 4–2 Seattle victory.

Thankfully for Colorado, this was only a video game.

Real life, as always, has the final say.

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Newly Acquired Blues Prospect Signs Extension With KHL Team

When the St. Louis Blues traded Justin Faulk to the Detroit Red Wings, they received a package that included a 2026 first-round pick. 

While the first-round pick was the sought-after target, Dmitri Buchelnikov is quietly a potential great addition. The 22-year-old winger had an impressive 2024-25 season in the KHL, posting 15 goals and 54 points in 65 games. 

This season hasn’t been as successful for Buchelnikov, scoring 13 goals and 23 points in 41 games, but the talent remains. He’ll have the opportunity to rebound, as he signed an extension to his contract in the KHL. 

The former Red Wings second-round pick (52nd overall) in the 2022 NHL draft has signed a one-year contract with CSKA Moskva, meaning he’ll remain in Russia until May 31, 2027. 

Standing 5-foot-10, 163 pounds, Buchelnikov isn’t the biggest player you’ll find, but his speed and skill more than make up for his lack of size. 

The Red Wings thought very highly of Buchelnikov, and it’s no wonder why the Blues wanted him involved in the deal. There are concerns that he may not be interested in coming to the NHL, but signing just a one-year extension should give the Blues confidence that he will come to North America.  

Although it is unfortunate for the Blues, there could have been opportunities for him to earn an NHL roster spot out of training camp, or at the very least start the season with the Springfield Thunderbirds and earn a call-up.

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Bobby Farnham, Brett Jefferson and Marc Grandisson buy stakes in the NHL's Hurricanes

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) — Tom Dundon has sold a portion of the NHL’s Carolina Hurricanes to three new minority owners.

The team announced Thursday that Brett Jefferson, Marc Grandisson and retired hockey player Bobby Farnham had joined the ownership group.

“Brett, Marc and Bobby are accomplished business executives whose experiences and knowledge will help us continue to grow our team’s success and impact,” Dundon said. “Brett lives in the (area) and Marc will soon relocate to Raleigh, so their influence will be locally-based. As a former NHL player, Bobby is uniquely positioned to help our ownership group as we move forward.”

The Hurricanes did not disclose financial terms. Sportico reported last week that Dundon had agreed to sell 12.5% at a valuation of $2.66 billion for approximately $332.5 million.

Dundon last summer led a group that bought the NBA’s Portland Trailblazers from Paul Allen’s estate. Dundon has been Carolina’s majority owner since 2018 and took sole possession of the club in 2021 when he bought out the remaining stakes held by Peter Karmanos and others.

Jefferson founded an asset management firm. Grandisson, now retired, worked as an executive in the insurance industry. Farnham, who's just 37 years old, played 67 NHL games before going into the private investment business.

The Hurricanes said they would be introduced prior to their home game against Pittsburgh on Wednesday.

___

AP NHL: https://apnews.com/hub/nhl

Dodgers on Deck: Friday, March 13 at Mariners

GLENDALE, ARIZONA - MARCH 1: Landon Knack #96 of the Los Angeles Dodgers gets set to throw a pitch during a game against the Los Angeles Angels at Camelback Ranch on March 1, 2026 in Glendale, Arizona. (Photo by Brandon Sloter/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Dodgers are back under the lights, this time for the first time on the road, on Friday against the Seattle Mariners in Peoria.

Landon Knack starts for the Dodgers, making his fourth appearance this spring. Cade Anderson is on the mound for Seattle.

Friday game info
  • Teams: Dodgers at Mariners
  • Ballpark: Peoria Sports Complex
  • Time: 6:10 p.m. PT
  • TV: SportsNet LA
  • Radio: KIRO 710 AM (Mariners broadcast)

Team USA believes Italy loss was needed wake-up call to win WBC gold

HOUSTON — The USA players hung out in their posh team hotel Wednesday night watching the Mexico-Italy game, while manager Mark DeRosa and the staff had a watch party at pitching coach Andy Pettitte’s home with steaks on the grill.

The tension ended halfway through the game, once Italy scored five runs, and all of the stress was over.

They could exhale.

They were still alive in the World Baseball Classic.

The moment Italy took a 5-0 lead in the fifth inning over Mexico, it guaranteed USA would advance because of the tiebreaker rules, making no difference that Italy would win, 9-1. San Francisco Giants ace Logan Webb, who was with his family in the hotel restaurant, got up from his table and immediately high-fived Dodgers catcher Will Smith, who was with his family. The next they knew, the entire restaurant was fist-bumping.

“We were all excited,’’ said Webb, USA’s starting pitcher in Friday’s quarterfinal against Canada (8 p.m. ET, FOX) at Daikin Park. “It's tough when stuff is not in your control. I think that was the hardest part. But shout-out to Italy for getting it done.’’

So instead of packing their bags and scurrying out of town, here they were Thursday afternoon, back at Daikin Field relaxed, taking batting practice, but more determined than ever to take advantage of this new lease on life in this World Baseball Classic.

They were given a scare, received a stay of execution, and now fully plan to capitalize beginning in the single-elimination quarterfinals. If they win, they’ll fly to Miami on Saturday with a semifinal game Sunday against the winner of the Dominican Republic and Korea quarterfinal.

They learned their lesson after getting smacked in the mouth by Team Italy, who went undefeated in pool play.

“New lease on life for the boys, certainly,’’ USA manager Mark DeRosa said. “Put ourselves in a tough spot. Tip our hat to Vinnie Pasquantino and Italy, truly. Went into that game a little overly confident and got a huge wake-up call. We turned the page and got Canada.

“Bottom line, the guys are fired up to be in that room and get rolling.’’

There will be no late get-togethers, no brash comments, and no getting ahead of themselves talking about playing in the World Baseball Classic championship game.

Yet, they do want to make it perfectly clear that they are taking this seriously, with DeRosa and the USA players insisting everyone knew all along what was at stake against Italy. The loss forced them to rely on Italy either winning Wednesday, or scoring at least four runs, to advance to the quarterfinals instead of Mexico.

“I think there's a couple false narratives out there,’’ DeRosa said. “I was well aware that we had to win that game based on all the scenarios that could take place. I mean, they [Italy] went in 2-0. We went in 2-0. And we knew they were playing Mexico the next day. We knew there was tiebreaker rules involved.

“So, I can understand the questions about lineup and pitching situations. We were up against a lot of guardrails with regards to teams, the deployment of certain relievers, how many pitches they can use, whether they can go back out, whether they can clean up innings. And you're just trying to piece it together in real time.’’

The only real mistake DeRosa made was saying they had “punched their ticket’’ to the quarterfinals Tuesday morning on MLB Network when they still had not clinched a spot. He knew when he arrived at the ballpark that he made a mistake on air but insists it had nothing to do with his lineup. He drew criticism playing Paul Goldschmidt at first instead of Bryce Harper, Gunnar Henderson at third instead of Alex Bregman or even Pete Crow-Armstrong instead of Byron Buxton. And the only reason Clayton Kershaw was warming up in the eighth inning was in case David Bednar reached his pitch count of 25 pitches.

“It was just an overly confident statement on 'Hot Stove,' period,’’ DeRosa said, “the end. And it's my fault. I felt good about where we were after Mexico.’’

And about that late night get-together in the clubhouse after defeating Mexico, with DeRosa offering that a few players were “dragging’’ the next day.

“Listen, us hanging out in a clubhouse is everything I ever dreamed of creating,’’ DeRosa said. “You've got to buy into this thing super quick and try and create a team. For those players to invite the coaches in and for us to spend time together, and enjoy a huge win that we hadn't had in 20 years [over Mexico] was something that was super special to me.

“We did not lose sight of the fact that we had to go out and play well against Italy. They played a hell of a game. They smacked us in the mouth early. They got up big. We went into that game prepared to win it.’’

The players backed up DeRosa, saying that while they might have been overconfident, everyone knew was at stake, and were startled to see the outcry.

“I don’t understand that,’’ USA captain Aaron Judge said. “We want to win every single game. Yeah, we got kicked in the mouth. That’s how you respond now. We got to go out there and take care of business. We’re going to treat it like every other game.

“We’re out there to win. We’re out there to beat some teams down.’’

USA slugger Kyle Schwarber also was exasperated by the narrative that USA treated the Italy game like a spring training exhibition, and that they didn’t care whether they won or lost, believing they already had a quarterfinal berth clinched.

“That was the furthest thing from the truth ...’’ he said. “I don’t like that perception. We have a baseball team full of great players, and we got beat. You tip your hat. But it wasn’t because we 'sold it,' or whatever you want to say. They beat us, fair and square. We put ourselves in that position and we’re moving on.

“We’re moving on, and now we’ve got to find a way to keep it going.’’

If Team USA wasn’t taking it seriously, Schwarber and Bryce Harper would have sent text messages to Italy starter Aaron Nola, imploring him to beat Mexico. They left him alone. They’re all competitors wanting the same gold medal. It was only after Nola came out of the game that Schwarber congratulated him for his five shutout-inning performance, but as a Phillies teammate, not as Team Italy pitcher.

“The reality is that it was out of our control, and you got to swallow the pill, but I’m happy that it ended up where we’re moving on,’’ Schwarber said. “Nobody wanted to go back home. It just wouldn’t have felt right.

“Now, we’re at the point where we can control our own fate.’’

While the DeRosa controversy died down with USA qualifying for the quarterfinals, a new one arose Thursday with several pitchers leaving the WBC and returning to their spring training camps. Yankees reliever Ryan Yarbrough, Royals starter Michael Wacha and Mets starter Clay Holmes left the team. Future Hall of Famer Clayton Kershaw, who was their emergency pitcher, will be removed from the roster after Friday’s game, DeRosa said. They will be replaced by Tigers reliever Will Vest, Blue Jays reliever Tyler Rogers and Yankees reliever Tim Hill. Minnesota Twins starter Joe Ryan, who is scheduled to pitch the potential championship game along with Mets starter Nolan McLean, will replace Kershaw.

“I completely understand that,’’ DeRosa said. “There's a lot of pressure from the parent clubs to get these guys ramped up for the start of the season. If [Boyd] is going to be the Opening Day starter for the Cubs, we had to guarantee him innings. The game’s going to dictate now. Pool play is a different animal. Trying to weave our way through it from a pitching standpoint, all bets are off now.’’

Webb, who won the first game against Brazil, says he also understands why so many pitchers have returned to camp. Yet, he never considered departing, and even after he pitches Friday, he’ll remain with the team in Miami.

“I completely understand where all those guys are coming from, especially guys that have come out of the bullpen that are starters during the season,’’ Webb said. So, it's difficult. For me it wasn't. I guess I was just kind of one of the lucky ones that got to kind of keep [the routine] it the same.’’

And even though he won’t pitch again after Friday, there’s no way Webb is about to depart back to Scottsdale, Arizona, and leave his USA teammates behind.

“I want to see it through,’’ Webb said. “No offense to the teams that I've played on before, I love all those guys, but this is probably the most fun I've had with a group of guys.

“We've got three games to go, and then hopefully winning a gold at the end.’’

It’s not as if USA needed any motivation, but their Italy loss does remind them that anything can happen on any given night, and with it now being a single-elimination tournament, one bad night can send your home.

“We all know that no one’s invincible,’’ Schwarber said. “There’s always a good time to have a little slap in the face. I think that brings guys more together at the end of the day.’’

So could the Italy loss be a blessing in disguise, a much-needed wake-up call?

“We'll see,’’ Judge said, “if we’re holding that gold medal.’’

Follow Bob Nightengale on Bluesky and X @Bnightengale.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Team USA has added motivation going into WBC quarterfinal vs. Canada

Justin Gaethje and other UFC stars to lead training exercise at the FBI Academy

Interim lightweight champion Justin Gaethje will be among several UFC fighters who will demonstrate their training techniques to academy students and FBI staff at the FBI Special Agent Academy in Quantico, Virginia, on Saturday and Sunday.

Gaethje also will headline a July 4 card on the south lawn of the White House when he goes against Ilia Topuria for the lightweight championship.

“This is a tremendous opportunity for our FBI agents to learn and train with some of the greatest athletes on earth — helping the world’s premier law enforcement agency be even better prepared to protect the American people,” FBI director Kash Patel said in a statement.

Jorge Masvidal, Chris Weidman, Claudia Gadelha, Michael Chandler, Manel Kape and Renzo Gracie are the other mixed-martial arts fighters who will take part.

"It’s an incredible opportunity for our athletes to experience, and we’re proud to support the FBI in strengthening their defense techniques,” Dana White, the UFC CEO and president, said in a statement.

___

AP sports: https://apnews.com/sports

Projecting the Astros Opening Day Roster 2.0

With the 2026 season opener two weeks away, most of the Astros’ Opening Day 26-man roster is coming into focus. A few spots, however, remain unsettled. After the signing of Christian Vázquez and the announcement that Josh Hader will start the season on the IL, here’s my second pass at how things could shake out:

Starting pitchers: Hunter Brown, Christian Javier, Tatsuya Imai, Mike Burrows, Spencer Arrighetti, Lance McCullers Jr

Also considered: None

Everything appears to have gone according to plan for the four perceived rotation locks — Brown, Javier, Burrows, and Imai — along with Arrighetti and McCullers, the favorites for the final two spots. All six are healthy, and all six have been effective in most of their outings.

Bullpen: Bryan Abreu, Bryan King, Steven Okert, AJ Blubaugh, Ryan Weiss, Bennett Sousa, Enyel De Los Santos

Also considered: Roddery Muñoz, Peter Lambert, Nate Pearson, Kai-Wei Teng

We know Josh Hader will start the season on the IL, but I’m working under the assumption that Enyel De Los Santos, who is scheduled to throw a live BP on Friday, will be ready for Opening Day.

Slow-playing things and having De Los Santos start the season on the IL would open a roster spot for Rule 5 pick Muñoz, who must remain on the roster all season or be sent back to Cincinnati. His velocity and strikeout numbers have been impressive this spring. The Astros could send Muñoz back to the Reds and then try to re-acquire him via trade.

Former second round pick Peter Lambert has put himself on the radar with an impressive spring following a season in Japan.

Catchers: Yainer Diaz, Christian Vázquez

Also considered: Cèsar Salazar

Vázquez has been with Puerto Rico in the WBC since rejoining the Astros on a minor league deal last week, but I don’t think he signed with the intention of starting the season in Sugar Land. Salazar is out of options, however, so sending him down risks losing him on the waiver wire. I think the Astros will ultimately take that risk.

Infielders: Jose Altuve, Carlos Correa, Jeremy Peña, Christian Walker, Isaac Paredes, Nick Allen

Also considered: Brice Matthews, Zach Dezenzo

I am working under the assumption that Peña will not need to start the season on the IL. He’s scheduled to be re-evaluated next week, so we’ll have a clearer picture then.

Outfielders/DH: Yordan Alvarez Jake Meyers, Zach Cole, Cam Smith, Joey Loperfido

Also considered: Taylor Trammell, Zach Dezenzo

Loperfido has hit in four straight games after a dreadful start, so I have him moving ahead of Trammell, who has had a nice spring himself. Cole’s numbers haven’t been great, but he has done a good job of getting on base, and I think the Astros would like for him to make the Opening Day roster.

Spring Training Game #20: Braves vs. Pirates

Pittsburgh Pirates vs. Atlanta Braves, March 12, 2026, 6:05 p.m. ET

Location: LECOM Park, Bradenton, FL

How to Listen: KDKA-FM 93.7


The Pittsburgh Pirates are at home against the Atlanta Braves, where they will try and pick up another win in the Grapefruit League.


Please remember our Game Day thread guidelines.

  • Don’t troll in your comments; create conversation rather than destroying it
  • Remember Bucs Dugout is basically a non-profanity site
  • Out of respect to broadcast partners who have paid to carry the game, no mentions of “alternative” (read: illegal) viewing methods are allowed in our threads
  • The commenting system was updated during the summer. They’re still working on optimizing it for Game Day Threads like ours. If you don’t like clicking “Load More Comments”, remember that the “Z” key can be your friend. It loads up the latest comments automatically.

BD community, this is your thread for today’s game. Enjoy!

Former Canucks First-Rounder Having Career Season With Division-Rival

The Vancouver Canucks have made their fair share of interesting trades throughout the past few seasons. One could argue that the J.T. Miller trade flopped for both sides, while fans have soured on the trade that sent a 2025 first-round pick to the Pittsburgh Penguins

A trade that has stood out as of late is Vancouver’s decision to move on from former first-round pick Vasily Podkolzin, who they sent to the Edmonton Oilers in exchange for a fourth-round pick in the 2025 NHL Draft — the very pick that was sent back to Edmonton in exchange for Evander Kane a little less than a year later. 

Podkolzin was drafted 10th overall by Vancouver in 2019 but spent three seasons playing for the Canucks. During this span of time, he scored 18 goals and 17 assists in 137 games. With Vancouver, he never quite got back to his previous career-high of 14 goals and 12 assists in 79 games during his rookie NHL season. 

Since joining the Oilers, Podkolzin has put up back-to-back 20-point seasons and has already surpassed his previous career-high this year. Through 65 games in 2025–26, he’s scored 15 goals and 14 assists. This ties him with Vancouver’s current goal-scoring leader, Drew O’Connor. Were he still on the Canucks now, he’d be tied for the fourth-most points on the team. Podkolzin has also scored the Oilers’ lead in game-winning goals with five. 

Looking past his offensive capabilities this season, the forward has developed into a more well-rounded player for Edmonton, as he’s been killing penalties for the Oilers while also skating on lines with high-end players like Leon Draisaitl. As it stands, he currently has a +/- rating of +14 (third-highest on the Oilers) and has averaged 15:09 minutes played per game. 

Mar 6, 2026; Edmonton, Alberta, CAN; The Edmonton Oilers celebrate a goal scored by forward Vasily Podkolzin (92) during the second period against the Carolina Hurricanes at Rogers Place. Mandatory Credit: Perry Nelson-Imagn Images
Mar 6, 2026; Edmonton, Alberta, CAN; The Edmonton Oilers celebrate a goal scored by forward Vasily Podkolzin (92) during the second period against the Carolina Hurricanes at Rogers Place. Mandatory Credit: Perry Nelson-Imagn Images

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, don't forget to leave a comment at the bottom of the page and engage with other passionate fans through our forum. This article originally appeared on The Hockey News.

Latest From THN’s Vancouver Canucks Site

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Public Skate: Bruins vs. Sharks

SAN JOSE, CA - NOVEMBER 23: Adam Gaudette #81 of the San Jose Sharks and Andrew Peeke #26 of the Boston Bruins watch the puck during a NHL game on November 23, 2025 at SAP Center at San Jose in San Jose, CA. (Photo by Matthew Huang/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images) | Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

Welcome to another night of Bruins hockey, folks!

We have a California crew in town once again tonight, as the Los Angeles Kings headed out and the San Jose Sharks moved in.

Every game is a big game if you believe in yourself, but for the Sharks, points are at a premium as they cling to playoff hopes.

While the Bruins aren’t exactly super secure in a playoff spot at the moment, San Jose is outside of the picture for now and has lost three games in a row — though two of those losses have come beyond regulation.

These young Sharks are an entertaining team to watch, so we probably shouldn’t expect another round of three-shot periods like we saw on Tuesday night.

Bruins! Sharks! On planet Earth!

Discuss.

Pittsburgh Penguins At Vegas Golden Knights Preview: Lineup Changes, Where To Watch

The Pittsburgh Penguins will play the second game of their five-game road trip on Thursday against the Vegas Golden Knights

This will be the second of two meetings against the Golden Knights this season after the Penguins won 5-0 back on Mar. 1. It's one of their most complete performances of the season. 

They'll take on a Golden Knights squad that continues to struggle. They have lost three in a row and four of their last five games since the Mar. 1 game. They're still in a playoff spot in the Western Conference, but are really going through it.

Despite that, they still have some great high-end talent led by Jack Eichel and Mitch Marner. Eichel is a force in all three zones, compiling 23 goals and 72 points in 57 games. Marner has been a great fit in his first season with the team, racking up 18 goals and 65 points in 64 games. 

Mark Stone has also been one of their best players, but hasn't played since that first game against the Penguins. He did participate in Thursday's morning skate and hasn't been ruled out for the game. 

Don't forget about Tomas Hertl and Pavel Dorofeyev, either. Hertl and Dorofeyev have combined for 54 goals this season and can strike at any time. 

Adin Hill will start in goal for the Golden Knights. He's having a really tough season, winning only six games with an .859 save percentage. He gave up five goals in the first matchup.

The Penguins are set to run with the same lineup from Tuesday's game in Raleigh, except for in net. Arturs Silovs will be the starting goaltender for Thursday's game. 

Here's a look at the projected lineup:

Forwards

Chinakhov-Rakell-Rust

Mantha-Novak-Koivunen

Soderblom-Kindel-A. Hayes

Dewar-Lizotte-Acciari

Defensive pairs

Wotherspoon-Karlsson

Shea-Letang

Solovyov-Clifton

Puck drop is set for 10 p.m. ET on SportsNet Pittsburgh. Fans can also listen to the game on 105.9 'The X.'


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Yankees reassign George Lombard Jr. and Ben Hess to minor league camp

TAMPA BAY, - MARCH 16: George Lombard Jr. #26 of the New York Yankees singles in the first inning during the 2024 Spring Breakout Game between the Toronto Blue Jays and the New York Yankees at George M. Steinbrenner Field on Saturday, March 16, 2024 in Tampa Bay, Florida. (Photo by Mike Carlson/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images

The Yankees continue to make some cuts at spring training, this afternoon announcing that they had reassigned their top prospect George Lombard Jr. to minor league camp. Right-handed pitchers Ben Hess and Brendan Beck also were reassigned.

Lombard had an uneven but tantalizing run at big league camp, flashing his huge potential at times. His mammoth home run off of Garrett Crochet earlier in the month stands as one of the most impressive swings from a Yankee this spring training:

As impressive as that showing was, Lombard is still just 20 and hit .185 in 11 exhibition games, with 12 strikeouts in 33 plate appearances. His time with the big club in spring was never about making the actual team, but to see how the fledgling prospect looked in a short spurt against high level competition. Lombard showed just fine in that regard, largely not looking out of place in games with actual big leaguers. He’s the team’s consensus top-ranked prospect, and his arrow is still pointed upward as he prepares to start his regular season in the high minors.

Though perhaps not as starry a talent as Lombard, Hess has played well in spring training, and is a dark horse to potentially help out the major league team this year. He impressed in a three-inning outing against the Pirates, striking out five and generating 11 whiffs in 48 pitches. Carlos Lagrange and Elmer Rodríguez are higher up on the organizational depth chart, but Hess, the Yankees’ 2024 first-round pick, could be a pick to click this summer if he can wring a little more velo out of his heater, or else make improvements to other parts of his arsenal.

Beck was part of Great Britain’s squad at the World Baseball Classic, throwing four hitless, shutout innings in a start against Brazil. The 27-year-old posted a 3.36 ERA across 131.1 innings in the high minors last year, and comes in ranked 22nd on MLB Pipeline’s Yankees top 30 list.

MacKinnon’s Major Penalty Against Oilers’ Connor Ingram Rescinded by NHL

The NHL has told Nathan MacKinnon that they have rescinded his major penalty, the goalie interference against the Edmonton Oilers Connor Ingram. It’s a notable action, as if you get two major penalties in a certain number of games, it will be an automatic suspension along with a hefty fine. 

Why? Well, because a familiar situation happened to former Avalanche Mikko Rantanen, where in one week he was called for two major penalties, both being boarding, and since they were so close to each other, the NHL automatically suspended him for one game under Rule 23.6, which is;

“Any player who incurs a total of two (2) game misconduct penalties in the “Physical Infractions Category”, before playing in 41 consecutive regular season League games without such penalty, shall be suspended automatically for the next League game of his team. For each subsequent game misconduct penalty, the automatic suspension shall be increased by one game.”

This raises the issue that the internet has been all over it, which was, was MacKinnon's action warranted a five-minute major or a simple two-minute one, and it's clear, even the NHL agrees it should have been two minutes.

The initial review was justified. I like it when referees call a five-minute penalty so they can take a closer look at the play to determine whether it warrants a 5-minute penalty and automatic ejection, or a simple 2-minute penalty, with the help of the NHL’s Centralised Situation Room.

MacKinnon Ejection Raises Familiar Questions About NHL Officiating ConsistencyMacKinnon Ejection Raises Familiar Questions About NHL Officiating ConsistencyNathan MacKinnon’s controversial ejection in Tuesday’s Avalanche–Oilers game once again exposed the NHL’s ongoing struggle to apply goaltender interference consistently.

The problem with this is that major penalties are called and reviewed by the on-ice officials, referees Kelly Sutherland and Brandon Schrader, who officiated that game. 

From the TNT panel to the Sportsnet panel, a lot of analysts agreed that MacKinnon was simply making a scoring play. Slow-motion shots showed his skates were pointed outward to try to dodge around Ingram after his play, and, at most, if he did come into contact, it wouldn't be as gruesome as it originally was.

This brings in Darnell Nurse, trying to make a play for the puck, who plowed headfirst into MacKinnon's hips and smashed MacKinnon into his own goalie. A lot of discussion came up about why, after review, it should have been at least a two-minute penalty, because there was contact, but his own defensemen was a major part of why the contact was that bad.

Often, after a game in which such a call is made and spirals out of control on social media, there are no “take-backs”; the game is over, and the winning and losing teams have to get ready for their next game. 

This now raises the rare moment, to say the least, that the NHL offices didn’t agree with the original on-ice call or the one made after video review.

Bednar Rips Officials After MacKinnon Ejection In Avalanche Loss To OilersBednar Rips Officials After MacKinnon Ejection In Avalanche Loss To OilersNathan MacKinnon was ejected after a controversial collision with Connor Ingram, and Jared Bednar didn’t hold back after the Avalanche’s 4–3 loss to the Oilers.

Penguins Recall Big Defenseman, Send Another On AHL Conditioning Loan

With yet another notch in the injury department for the Pittsburgh Penguins, the team is taking more measures to offset some of their losses and keep legs fresh.

And they made another move to address that on Thursday. 

With recently acquired blueliner Sam Girard out day-to-day with an upper-body injury, the Penguins shuffled a few things around with their defensive corps ahead of their matchup against the Vegas Golden Knights on Thursday evening. They recalled 6-foot-4, 230-pound left defenseman Alexander Alexeyev from Wilkes-Barre/Scranton (WBS) - Pittsburgh's AHL affiliate - and sent Ryan Graves to the AHL on a conditioning loan.

Alexeyev, 26, has yet to appear for the Penguins in an NHL game this season, and he has three goals and seven points to go along with a plus-4 and 15 penalty minutes at the AHL level this season. The former first-round pick (31st overall in 2018) was signed to a one-year deal this offseason by the Penguins after spending parts of four NHL seasons with the Washington Capitals.

Penguins Provide Injury Updates On Several PlayersPenguins Provide Injury Updates On Several PlayersThe Pittsburgh Penguins provided a few injury updates on Tuesday.

In 80 career regular season games, he has one goal and eight points, and he also appeared in 10 playoff games for the Capitals last season, registering no points and coming in at a minus-2.

Graves, 30, is in the third season of a six-year contract that pays him $4.5 million annually. He has appeared in only 19 games at the NHL level this season for Pittsburgh after getting waived following training camp, and he has not played since Jan. 21 against the Calgary Flames

4 Penguins Who Have Stepped Up Big Without Crosby, Malkin4 Penguins Who Have Stepped Up Big Without Crosby, MalkinOne look at the <a href="https://thehockeynews.com/nhl/pittsburgh-penguins/">Pittsburgh Penguins</a>' schedule in the month of March was enough for a whole lot of people to question whether or not a team that was - according to outside noise - supposed to be a lottery team would be able to sustain playoff-level hockey.&nbsp;

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