Tyler Bertuzzi's Overtime Hat Trick Lifts Blackhawks Past Golden Knights

CHICAGO - The Chicago Blackhawks have struggled in the second half of back-to-back situations. Heading into Sunday, that put some emphasis on playing well against the Vegas Golden Knights. 

One night prior, the Blackhawks defeated the Washington Capitals on the road in a shootout. Although they've been better again since coming back from the holiday break, not getting blown out in this situation was important to them as a group. 

This game was the first of "The Banner Years" chapter for the Blackhawks' centennial season. Throughout the chapter, they will be celebrating the era that saw them win three Stanley Cups in six years. 

Fittingly, Brandon Saad scored the first goal of the game to give the Vegas Golden Knights a 1-0 lead. Saad, of course, won two Stanley Cups with Chicago in 2013 and 2015. 

Just under two minutes later, Tyler Bertuzzi scored to tie the game. This was Bertuzzi's 20th goal of the season, and it was a great wrist shot. 

43 seconds into the second period, Jack Eichel drove the puck to the net and Mark Stone found the rebound before shooting it home to give Vegas a 2-1 lead. 

There wasn't a whole lot of scoring after that. Things were quiet on the scoreboard until Tyler Bertuzzi put in his second of the game at 11:36 of the third period. Ryan Greene's never-say-die mentality allowed him to make a cross crease feed to Bertuzzi, who slid it into the open cage. 

With there being no more goals in regulation, the Blackhawks went to overtime for the second game in as many days. That is also the fourth time in six games that Chicago has seen the game reach the fourth period. 

In overtime, Tyler Bertuzzi completed the hat trick for the 3-2 win. The puck narrowly crossed the goal line, and then the hats started to fly onto the ice. 

While the crew was still cleaning up all of the hats, the officials were reviewing the play for offside. It was a strange scenario to see both teams stay on the ice with all these hats and the Blackhawks celebrating, but the goal was upheld. 

Now, the Blackhawks are 3-0-0 in their last three games. All of this good play is coming with Connor Bedard and Frank Nazar out of the lineup. Before the game, head coach Jeff Blashill said that Bedard would be back before the Olympic break, but he couldn't confirm the same update for Nazar. 

One night after Spencer Knight played well to help the Blackhawks to a win, Arvid Soderblom did the same thing. He made 13 saves on just 15 shots, but Vegas has some supreme shooters who had their chances. 

Chicago finally exercised some demons when it comes to the second half of back-to-back situations. They were winless in these coming in, but this time, they locked it down against a great team and finished the job. 

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What’s Next For The Blackhawks?

The Blackhawks are back in action on Wednesday night. This will be a national broadcast against the St. Louis Blues on TNT. 

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Takeaways: Penguins Roar Back From Three-Goal Deficit, Beat Blue Jackets In OT

Approximately two weeks ago, it felt like the Pittsburgh Penguins' season was starting to slip away. The team was mired in an eight-game losing streak, and - at one point - they found themselves just three points out of last place in the Eastern Conference. 

And now, they're just four points out of first place in the Metropolitan Division. 

On Sunday, the Penguins roared back from a three-goal deficit and beat the Columbus Blue Jackets in overtime, 5-4. Rickard Rakell tied the game with 12.8 seconds left in regulation with the extra attacker, and captain Sidney Crosby ended it two and a half minutes into overtime on a backhanded breakaway shot. 

Goaltender Arturs Silovs was a bit shaky early on, but he came up with some huge stops late in the third period to keep it a one-goal game. He stopped 21 of 25 Columbus shots.

And as for the Penguins? They had 43 shots on goal and 92 shot attempts - which was a tell for how dominant they were for all but approximately 10-15 minutes of this game, when Columbus scored all of their goals. 

The Penguins got started early in this one, and it was courtesy of Ville Koivunen, who was back in the lineup in place of Rutger McGroarty after a healthy scratch against the Detroit Red Wings. Just 1:50 into the first period, Koivunen was hanging around the net-front, and he buried a rebound to put Pittsburgh up, 1-0. 

Then, Columbus took control of the momentum for a spell. Dmitri Voronkov, Mason Marchment, and Kirill Marchenko scored three consecutive goals for the Blue Jackets before the end of the first period, and Zach Werenski added a goal just 47 seconds into the middle frame to put Columbus up, 4-1. 

'You Can Never Be Satisfied In This League': McGroarty Taking Strides At NHL Level With Penguins'You Can Never Be Satisfied In This League': McGroarty Taking Strides At NHL Level With PenguinsPittsburgh Penguins' forward Rutger McGroarty is learning every day at the NHL level - and he only figures to get even better with more experience at the highest level of hockey.

Not long after the Werenski goal, the Penguins started to tilt the ice the other way a bit, even if it took them a bit to capitalize on an opportunity. That finally happened late in the second when Noel Acciari took a feed from Connor Dewar after a turnover by the Jackets at the blue line, putting it past goaltender Jet Greaves to bring the game to within two. 

And in the third period, the Penguins simply took over. Tommy Novak scored a power play goal a little more than three minutes in to make it 4-3, and the score remained that way for a while despite a heavy onslaught by Pittsburgh. Columbus had some chances late that Silovs was able to neutralize, and the Penguins finally got possession in the offensive zone with two minutes left in the game so they could pull Silovs. 

Aside from one zone clear, the Penguins maintained possession for nearly the entirety of the two minutes and were generating chances left and right. Finally, Rakell took a feed from Anthony Mantha in the low slot area, and he sniped it past Greaves to force overtime in the waning seconds of regulation. 

Possession switched back and forth during the overtime period, but eventually, ex-Blue Jacket Yegor Chinakhov - playing in his first game against his former employer - reset and had the puck near the defensive blue line. He connected with Erik Karlsson on the offensive blue line, who saw a fresh-from-the-bench, breaking Crosby. 

He slipped a pass right on the tape, and Crosby didn't miss. 

In December, the Penguins often found themselves on the other side of blown three-goal leads. This time, they were the beneficiary, and the result was earned after how dominant a performance they had. 

They also now find themselves tied with the Philadelphia Flyers for third in the Metro, and with a Carolina Hurricanes win to the New Jersey Devils Sunday, they're just four points back of the division lead with a game in hand.


Here are some takeaways and observations from this big comeback win for the Penguins:

- If you're not entertained by the product on the ice this season, you're just nuts. 

Prior to the holiday break, fans were writing eulogies for this team, fair or not. But the crazy thing is that, no matter how dark things got in December, the Penguins were never that far out of a playoff spot, even in the aftermath. No one in the East really pulled away, and that happened at the best possible time for Pittsburgh. 

Because since the break? They've accrued more points than any team in hockey, and they're on a five-game winning streak - their longest such streak since Nov. 4-14 of 2023. And, sure, oftentimes, mediocre teams can go on winning stretches. 

But given how the Penguins have played in these games - and how they've played some of the best teams in the league at five-on-five for most of the season - it's becoming more and more difficult to say that the Penguins being as competitive as they are this season is some kind of fluke. Because, if you think about it, even in the games against the Utah Mammoth and San Jose Sharks - when the Penguins surrendered three-plus-goal leads - Pittsburgh was the better team for the majority of those games before falling apart. 

At the end of the day, this is, at worst, a slightly above average five-on-five team with remarkably good special teams (despite a penalty kill slide in December) and questionable goaltending. But it just so happens that the Penguins have also been a much better team when they're not riddled with injuries, as they have gotten some important supporting cast members back in the lineup in recent weeks. 

This is not a bad hockey team. I think this is a good hockey team with inconsistent goaltending as its fatal flaw and a tendency to lapse defensively at times. The Penguins aren't dominating games by accident this season. When they play simple and stay committed to defense - especially as they did against Detroit on Saturday - this is, plainly, a good hockey team.

And it will be an even better one once Evgeni Malin makes his return to the lineup. 

Takeaways: Penguins Put Up Defensive Clinic Against Red Wings, Sweep Home-And-HomeTakeaways: Penguins Put Up Defensive Clinic Against Red Wings, Sweep Home-And-HomeThe Pittsburgh Penguins put together arguably their best performance of the season on Saturday against the Detroit Red Wings.

- Of course, the captain deserves all the flowers after this game for notching the game-winner and becoming the most productive overtime player in NHL history with 50 OT points. 

But an immense amount of credit for the Penguins even getting to that point is owed to the work of Erik Karlsson, especially late in this game. 

Immediately preceding Rakell's game-tying goal, Karlsson executed a tough zone keep at the blue line and got the puck to Crosby, who fed Mantha down low to ultimately set up Rakell's chance. Then, in overtime, Karlsson made a one-on-one defensive play to stymie a breakaway opportunity, which would have been a high-danger chance. He did the same thing against Detroit in overtime on Thursday during an OT two-on-one. 

Just like the Penguins' play dipped in the month of December, so did Karlsson's. But he and defense partner Parker Wotherspoon are back in full force, and they generated 34 chances for and just four chances against the entire night. 

Yeah, that's good. And the Penguins are a markedly better team when their top pairing is humming.

'It's A Dream Come True For Me': Rakell, Karlsson Thrilled To Represent Sweden At Olympic Games'It's A Dream Come True For Me': Rakell, Karlsson Thrilled To Represent Sweden At Olympic GamesPittsburgh Penguins' players Erik Karlsson and Rickard Rakell will have the opportunity to represent Team Sweden at the 2026 Olympic Winter Games in Milano Cortina, Italy - and it's an opportunity years in the making for both of them.

- Good for Rakell to get a goal like that. I think he really needed it. 

Rakell is, by nature, a goal-scorer, so when the puck isn't going into the net with frequency for him, he tends to grip his stick a bit tight. Prior to registering an empty-net goal against Detroit on Saturday, he had just one goal and five points in the 10 games since returning from injury. 

So, when he sniped that shot from the low-slot area to tie the game, that had to feel pretty good.

When he is on, Rakell is a threat every time he's on the ice, and especially in the offensive zone. Hopefully, this tally will get him going and give him back the goal-scoring touch that we've become so accustomed to seeing during his tenure in Pittsburgh.

- Speaking of "good for him" sentiment, good for Chinakhov getting that assist on the OT winner against his former team.

Prior to the game, Columbus head coach Dean Evason declined comment on Chinakhov, who - allegedly - had a rift during his time there. Nationwide Arena also posted a "tribute" after a whistle, and not even during a TV timeout, to "honor" a former first-round pick who played more than 200 games with the team and, at times, looked like a very promising player. 

None of that had to feel awesome for Chinakhov, so I'm sure there were few happier humans in the building than him when Crosby's shot found the back of the net. It was a pretty good night for him otherwise, too. I like what I've seen so far.

- Following the game, multiple players praised the work of the Penguins' fourth line and attributed the Acciari goal as a turning point of sorts. 

I have to say I agree.

Jan 4, 2026; Columbus, Ohio, USA; Pittsburgh Penguins center Noel Acciari (55) celebrates scoring a goal against the Columbus Blue Jackets in the second period at Nationwide Arena. Mandatory Credit: Aaron Doster-Imagn Images

For a while in the second period, it was looking like one of those games where the Penguins were going to have an abundance of chances and nothing to show for it. But Acciari's late goal gave them some much-needed life, and that carried over into the third.

I fell like I'm saying it after every game now, but this fourth line is such a difference-maker for the Penguins. They are a much different and much better team with the trio of Acciari, Dewar, and Blake Lizotte on that checking energy line. 

- Ben Kindel recorded two assists in this game, and he won 13 of 17 faceoffs as well. He also made a costly play on Columbus's second goal. 

I think, lately, there has been some very good moments for Kindel as well as some learning moments. As a whole, I didn't think this was his best 200-foot performance, but he continues to display instincts on both sides of the puck that are typically not there with 18-year-old centers. 

Oh, and he's definitely here to say, as the Jan. 3 game was the Penguins' 40th, meaning Kindel has not only year one of his entry-level contract, but he's also lost a year of restriced free agency (and, therefore, team control). 

I'm quite intrigued by the addition of Chinakhov to that line, as he provides some size, defensive ability, physicality, and finishing touch for that line. I think both McGroarty and Koivunen have looked like solid complementary pieces in his two games with Pittsburgh, too.

But Chinakhov is the exact kind of player who can help Kindel rack up a whole lot more points. Chance creation has never been an issue with that third line, but the finishing has been the problem. Chinakhov could fix that. And if he does, it's going to create a matchup nightmare for other teams, as the Penguins will have four lines that are very hard to play against. 

Chinakhov Trade Shows Penguins Are Starting To Shift GearsChinakhov Trade Shows Penguins Are Starting To Shift GearsKyle Dubas and the Pittsburgh Penguins traded for Yegor Chinakhov from the Columbus Blue Jackets on Monday, and it could be a sign of things to come over the next several months.

- Since this was a largely positive performance, I don't want to focus too much on negatives. But I'll start with a bit of commentary on the goaltending (and, maybe, this isn't all that negative).

Silovs did not look comfortable for the entire first half of this game. The last two Columbus goals, especially, were not good looks for him, and he looked very slow and unsure of himself post-to-post. At times, he looked surprised that a puck ended up in his glove. 

But he was brilliant in the third period when it counted most. 

Yes, Silovs has not had a good run of games since November, and it's something that the Penguins need to keep a close eye on if they hope to make the playoffs. But one thing about Silovs is that he tends to get it together in the game's biggest moments and make saves when the stakes are highest.

He's been better on breakaways. His last shootout against Montreal - a win - was an improvement. He stands tall when teams pressure late in games and doesn't seem to crater much.

It's still hard to say whether or not he can find enough consistency to be a starter at the NHL level. But he sure knows how to make saves when he absolutely has to. 

- I haven't loved Jack St. Ivany's game since his return. And I'm not convinced he should be playing instead of Connor Clifton or, even, Harrison Brunicke, who is playing at the World Junior Championship (WJC) for Team Canada and who the Penguins need to make a decision on immediately after the tournament. 

Penguins' Rookie Defenseman Loses Some Chiclets At The World Junior Championship - Community PostPenguins' Rookie Defenseman Loses Some Chiclets At The World Junior Championship - Community PostThey say it's hard to find a hockey player who has all of their real teeth intact.

Even though Clifton hasn't done anything special this season, I thought he was, at least, serviceable before exiting the lineup in favor of St. Ivany. I'd give him another run of games if the plan is to send Brunicke back to the WHL after the WJC. 

- When Malkin is ready to return, it will be interesting to see what happens with this roster. 

The easiest and most likely outcome is that at least one of McGroarty or Koivunen will be sent back to the AHL. They are waivers-exempt, and everyone else in the lineup is playing too well to swap out at this point in time. One or both of them going back will also, likely, depend on what decision they make on Brunicke, as the Penguins are only carrying seven defensemen right now. 

That said, I don't think Kevin Hayes is going to find his way into the lineup for the same reasons that the kids won't. Of course, it's more palatable for Hayes to be a 13th forward and not see much ice time than it is for two developing players, but if Koivunen plays the way he did Sunday or either young guy keeps making a case for himself, it could make things tough for management. 

Pittsburgh Penguins' New Year's Resolutions: 2025 EditionPittsburgh Penguins' New Year's Resolutions: 2025 EditionThere were some ups and downs for Pittsburgh Penguins' players in 2025. So what can they resolve to accomplish in 2026?

I don't think there's an easy answer. My guess is that Brunicke goes back to the WHL - there's no point in losing a year of restricted free agency if he isn't going to play very much - and that the Penguins elect to keep 14 forwards. But I'm not sure it's the best thing for either Koivunen or McGroarty to, mostly, be sitting in the press box - in that case - when they could be getting regular minutes in the AHL. 

It will be interesting, especially if the Penguins keep winning hockey games with the lineup as-is. 

- Fun little note: As Rakell was scoring the game-tying goal, Bryan Rust was flattened to the ice at the net-front. In celebration of Rakell's goal, he laid face-down on the ice where he was planted, and he pumped his fists behind his head a few times in celebratory fashion. 

It made me cackle quite a bit. Funny moment for a fun team. 


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Matthew Tkachuk nearing return, will travel with Panthers on upcoming road trip

The Florida Panthers are on the cusp of welcoming one of the best players in the league back into their lineup.

All-Star forward Matthew Tkachuk will be joining the Panthers on their upcoming road trip with the hopes of making his season debut with the Cats.

Florida will visit Toronto, Montreal, Ottawa, Buffalo, Carolina and Washington over the course of 11 days, with the only back-to-back coming at the very end of the trip, and a four-day break preceding it. 

Tkachuk has not played since Game 6 of last year’s Stanley Cup Final, undergoing surgery for a torn adductor muscle and sports hernia after helping the Panthers win their second straight Stanley Cup.

Speaking during the first intermission of Florida’s 2-1 win over the Colorado Avalanche on Sunday, Tkachuk said that he excited to get back with his teammates on the road and continue working toward getting back in the lineup.

“Hopefully it’s not much longer before you’re seeing me back out there with the boys,” he said with a grin.

“Whether I’m playing on this six-game road trip, if it were to happen, it would probably be toward the end of it, just because I am still in the non-contact jersey. I don’t even have a target right now. It’s going to be nice to be on the road, get in the routine and figure it out from there.”

Tkachuk has gotten a few full team practices under his belt, wearing a gold jersey that is meant to signify a player who has not been cleared for regular physical contact.

The hope is that he will soon be able to shed that jersey for a blue or white one and start banging around and truly testing his healed injuries.

“I'd been going pretty hard for, I don't even know, like, over a month by myself, so it’s been way easier to be out there with the guys,” Tkachuk said. “You kind of forget what it's like to have the stick on puck, or a body in the lane, or the quick two-on-one, so that's why starting to mix in a little bit of pushing, and once guys are able to bump into me and hit me, that'll feel more real.”

Panthers Head Coach Paul Maurice has been very consistent during his team with the team that when a player is returning from an injury, he wants them to get in one or two full practices without limitations before penciling them back into the lineup for a game.

That could be a challenge only because Florida’s potential opportunities to practice are limited due to their game schedule.

Starting with Friday’s Winter Classic, the Panthers have a game every other day until Jan. 13, the day after they play in Buffalo.

However many more days it may take, Tkachuk is clearly getting close to on the brink of cracking the Cats’ lineup.

It’s an exciting time for Tkachuk and the Panthers, who have already shown the kind of boost they can get simply by adding another body to their forward ranks.

As we all know, the deeper this team gets, the more dangerous they become.

“Every box that has had to be checked so far, has been,” Tkachuk said. “I guess the last one before playing is taking off the no-contact jersey, which we'll have another few skates here and a couple calls, and figure it out from there, but we're feeling pretty good right now.”

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Photo caption: Oct 28, 2024; Buffalo, New York, USA; Florida Panthers left wing Matthew Tkachuk (19) waits for the faqceoff during the second period against the Buffalo Sabres at KeyBank Center. (Timothy T. Ludwig-Imagn Images)

NHL Rumors: Oilers' Andrew Mangiapane Linked To Rival

Edmonton Oilers forward Andrew Mangiapane has become a popular name in the rumor mill as of late. It is understandable, as he has had trouble finding his fit with the Oilers and has also been the subject of multiple healthy scratches. 

Now, Mangiapane has been connected to one of the Oilers' division rivals. 

During the latest edition of Saturday Headlines, NHL insider Elliotte Friedman reported that the Anaheim Ducks are among the teams interested in Mangiapane. 

"I do think there's interest in the player," Friedman said about Mangiapane. "I heard Anaheim was one of the teams kind of poking around."

Hearing that the Ducks have interest in Mangiapane is understandable, as they could use another forward in their top nine. Furthermore, while the Ducks still hold a playoff spot, they have also been struggling lately. At the time of this writing, the Ducks have lost each of their last five games and eight out of their last 10 games. Thus, they could use a boost right now. 

Yet, while Mangiapane has struggled with the Oilers, there could be some risk in trading him to a division rival like the Ducks. This is especially so when noting that the Ducks are just one point behind the Oilers right now. 

Nevertheless, it will be interesting to see what happens between the Oilers and Mangiapane from here. In 40 games so far this season with Edmonton, he has posted five goals, 11 points, and a minus-17 rating. 

NHL Rumors: Blackhawks Center's Trade Market Could Heat Up

The Chicago Blackhawks currently have a 16-18-7 record and are seventh in the Central Division. With this, there is certainly a good chance that they will be sellers at the 2026 NHL trade deadline. 

The Blackhawks have multiple pending unrestricted free agents (UFAs) who have the potential to generate interest around the league. One of them is center Jason Dickinson, as he is the type of two-way forward that playoff teams like to add to their depth ahead of the playoffs.

Now, based on a recent move in the NHL, the possibility of Dickinson's trade market starting to heat up should not be ruled out. 

The San Jose Sharks made a significant move on Jan. 4, as they re-signed forward Alexander Wennberg to a three-year, $18 million contract extension. Wennberg was one of the top centers creating chatter in the rumor mill due to his pending UFA status, but that can now be forgotten with him extending with the Sharks. 

With Wennberg now off the board for contenders, more teams could start to keep an eye on Dickinson. While Dickinson does not produce the same kind of offense as Wennberg, he is still a notable pending UFA center on a struggling Blackhawks club. With this, teams in need of help at center certainly could look to bring him in as a rental. This is especially so when noting that he kills penalties. 

In 28 games this season with the Blackhawks, Dickinson has recorded four goals, four assists, eight points, and 31 hits. 

Landeskog Injury Looms Large as Avalanche Fall 2-1

Gabriel Landeskog suffered an upper-body injury in the second period, and the Colorado Avalanche went on to lose 2–1 to the Florida Panthers at Amerant Bank Arena on Sunday.

Artturi Lehkonen scored the lone goal for Colorado, with Josh Manson and Brock Nelson each recording an assist.

In net, Scott Wedgewood made 23 saves on 25 shots, while the Avalanche penalty kill was perfect, going 3-for-3 against the Panthers.

However, the struggles on the power play continued and the Avs went 0/4 on the man advantage. The loss snapped a 10-game winning streak for Colorado and marked just their third regulation loss of the season. 

Reigning Conn Smythe recipient Sam Bennett and Aaron Ekblad scored for the Panthers. Daniil Tarasov made 27 saves in relief of regular starter Sergii Bobrovsky. 

First Period

Jack Drury took a diving swipe at a loose rebound nearly two minutes into the game, but Tarasov came up with the save. Less than a minute later, Brent Burns fired a shot from the point in an effort to set up Parker Kelly for a deflection in front, but Tarasov’s reflexes were sharp once again.

Just over four minutes into the period, a scary moment unfolded when Mackie Samoskevich blasted Wedgewood in the mask with a hard wrist shot, sending the goaltender down to the ice. After being evaluated by the trainer, it was determined that Samoskevich’s shot—clocked at approximately 83.9 mph—had cracked Wedgewood’s mask. As a result, Wedgewood was forced to switch to his Nordiques mask, the same one he wore in the previous game against the Carolina Hurricanes.

Bennett opened the scoring at 6:33 when Sam Malinski turned the puck over in the defensive zone. Bennett pounced, deked, fired a shot on Wedgewood, and buried his own rebound to give Florida a 1–0 lead.

With 8:25 remaining in the period, Jeff Petry attempted to beat Wedgewood top shelf, but his wrist shot glanced off the goaltender’s glove and rang off the crossbar.

On the very next sequence, Colorado answered. Lehkonen redirected Josh Manson’s one-timer past Tarasov to tie the game 1–1, with Brock Nelson setting up Manson for the initial shot.

Florida defenseman Uvis Balinskis was whistled for interference on Lehkonen, giving the Avalanche a power play. Colorado failed to convert, and moments later Landeskog was sent to the box for roughing after accidentally catching former Avalanche forward Evan Rodrigues in the face with the butt end of his stick. Landeskog was visibly upset with the call at first, but after seeing the replay from the penalty box, he could only laugh at himself.

Former Av A.J. Greer then drew an interference penalty with under a minute remaining, sending Manson to the box. Manson was livid on the bench, but the Avalanche penalty kill was forced back to work to close out the period.

Second Period

Early in the second period, Landeskog suffered a frightening fall after catching his left skate caught a weird edge, and sent him crashing ribs-first into the Panthers’ net. The captain remained down as the trainer rushed onto the ice, and Landeskog ultimately needed assistance from both the medical staff and Nathan MacKinnon to get to his feet. The arena fell nearly silent before rising in applause as he was helped off the ice and into the dressing room.

Samoskevich was later called for holding Samuel Girard, but Colorado’s power play again came up empty despite generating several quality looks. Florida then handed the Avalanche additional opportunities when Petry high-sticked Zakhar Bardakov, followed by a lapse in discipline from Rodrigues, who cross-checked Parker Kelly in a brief case of #17-on-#17 harassment.

That sequence gave Colorado its fourth power play of the game, but special teams continued to frustrate. Panthers forward Brad Marchand stripped the puck and broke in alone, forcing Wedgewood to make a key save—though his stick shattered in half during the play.

Florida regained the lead late in the period when Ekblad unloaded a 90-mph slap shot from the right circle through traffic, beating a screened Wedgewood. The Panthers carried a 2–1 lead into the third period.

Third Period

Just over two minutes into the third, it was announced that Landeskog had suffered an upper-body injury and would not return.

Nearly seven minutes into the period, Girard was sent off for slashing after catching Anton Lundell with his stick. The Avalanche penalty kill went back to work for the third time, and Wedgewood came up with a crucial stop on Petry’s one-timer with 30 seconds remaining in the kill, setting up an important defensive-zone faceoff.

With roughly 2:15 remaining, Wedgewood headed to the bench for the extra attacker. Moments later, MacKinnon blasted a shot that struck Tarasov’s mask and popped straight up and out of play. Tarasov effectively used his mask like a soccer header, a heads-up play that prevented Colorado from tying the game.

Bednar called timeout with 1:06 left on the clock. But the Avs were denied an 11th straight win and suffered just their third regulation defeat on the year.

Next Game

The Avalanche (31-3-7) square off against the Tampa Bay Lightning (25-13-3) at Benchmark International Arena. Coverage begins at 5 p.m. local time. 

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Tarasov, Panthers shut down Colorado, hand Avalanche third regulation loss of season

The Florida Panthers picked up a big win over a tough competitor on Sunday night in Sunrise.

Looking to avoid a third straight defeat, Florida dug in and came up with one of their gutsiest efforts of the season, handing the NHL-best Colorado Avalanche only their third regular loss of the season by a 2-1 final score.

Florida got on the scoreboard first, and it was thanks to a great all-around play by Sam Bennett.

Directly off a faceoff in the Avalanche zone, defenseman Zam Malinski carried the puck from one corner to the other with Bennett hot on his trail.

Bennett stole the puck with a nice stick check, quickly taking it to the net and getting a shot on Scott Wedgewood.

The rebound sat in the crease for a moment and Bennett wacked it into the net before Wedgewood could pounce on it, giving Florida an early 1-0 lead and extending his career-best point streak to nine games.

Colorado tied the game at one with 8:09 to go in the period when a long shot by Josh Manson was deflected by Artturi Lehkonen on its way to the net.

It would take until late in the second period, but Aaron Ekblad would be the one to give Florida their lead back.

Similarly to their first goal, Ekblad capitalized on a turnover, picking up a puck while moving back into the Avs’ zone and blasting a shot past a screened Wedgewood to send Florida into the intermission with a 2-1 lead.

From there, the Panthers clamped down defensively, holding Colorado to just five shots on 12 attempts during the final frame.

A couple of those shots came off the stick of Nathan MacKinnon in the final minutes, but Daniil Tarasov came up big for the Cats and helped seal the victory.

Tarasov finished with 27 saves, including 10 off Colorado’s 11 high danger shots on a night the Avs’ expected goals was 3.04.

On to Toronto.

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Photo caption: Jan 4, 2026; Sunrise, Florida, USA; Florida Panthers goaltender Daniil Tarasov (40) makes a save against Colorado Avalanche center Brock Nelson (11) during the second period at Amerant Bank Arena. (Sam Navarro-Imagn Images)

Patrick Kane Admits Disappointment After Being Left Off Team USA Olympic Roster

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Detroit Red Wings team captain Dylan Larkin was one of a handful of players selected to represent his country in the 2026 Winter Olympics, marking the first time in over a decade that the NHL will be sending their players to international Olympic competition. 

Along with Larkin, Moritz Seider (Germany) and Lucas Raymond (Sweden) were also selected.

However, Patrick Kane, arguably the greatest U.S.-born player to suit up in the National Hockey League, was ultimately not selected. 

Neither was his longtime teammate in both Chicago and Detroit, Alex DeBrincat, who leads the club in goals with 22. 

Following Sunday's practice at Little Caesars Arena, Kane admitted that he was feeling some disappointment over being left off the Team USA roster. 

"Of course, it was disappointing," Kane said. "I thought that when Todd came in last year, from that time to the end of the season, I gave myself a chance to be considered. This year, I thought I had a good start, but I got into some injury trouble." 

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Kane has missed a total of 15 games this season. He was sidelined for nine games after suffering an upper-body injury during a 2–1 overtime victory over the Tampa Bay Lightning on Oct. 17, then missed six games in December after being injured against the Blackhawks in the same game in which he scored his 498th career goal.

"You can make all the excuses in the world, but at the end of the day, I didn't make it, and it's disappointing for sure," Kane continued. "Just have to move on." 

Kane has represented the United States in Olympic competition twice before, starting with the in 2010 in Vancouver, where he and his teammates won the silver medal, and again in 2014 in Sochi, which resulted in a fourth-place finish. 

He's an American hockey icon, and currently trails Mike Modano by only seven points for the most in NHL history by a U.S.-born player. In the 28 games that Kane has played so far this season, he's tallied six goals with 18 assists, just short of a point-per-game pace. 

Modano, who spent the final season of his NHL career with the Red Wings, has expressed support for Kane and also said he would like to be in attendance if possible for the occasion. 

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Thoughts In Bold: Full Analysis Of GM Steve Staios' Mid-Season 'State Of The Senators Address'

Ottawa Senators general manager Steve Staios met with the media this morning as his hockey team nears the halfway point in the offseason. With the Senators being four points out of an Eastern Conference playoff spot, the moment represented the opportune time to reflect on his team’s 19-15-5 record through their first 38 games.

If you are not familiar with the format of these posts, they are pretty straightforward. The full video of Staios’ availability can be found here, but the general manager’s comments are transcribed below. Following each of his thoughts, I’ve included my own, which are highlighted in bold.

Enjoy.

Staios’ opening remarks...

“There are a couple of things I think that are different this year. One is expectations. The expectations that come with how well the team played last year, particularly post-trade deadline, are well earned. Teams aren't taking us lightly now, and we have higher expectations for ourselves.      

What are the expectations for our group? We talked about taking a step last year. We want to take another step this year towards wanting to be a contending team. This is certainly part of the process, but expectations are different. Coming into this year, we're two points better than we were at this point last year.      

Do we want to be better than that? Of course, we're always striving to be better, but I watch our team, and objectively, there's a lot to like about the way we've been playing. We use the underlying numbers to confirm what we're seeing with our eyes. We've improved in some of the most important categories.      

When you look at the numbers, we went through a 2-7-1 stretch when I was watching our team play. I felt pretty good about the way we were playing, but we weren't getting the results. So, keeping with the theme of being process-driven, I think those are some of the things I look at to make sure we understand exactly who we are as a team.      

The other thing that is unique, and we've talked a lot about it, is the parity in the league, and in particular in the Eastern Conference and in the Atlantic Division. It puts greater emphasis on each and every game. The margins are tighter than ever, and we've got to be up for the challenge to get through some of those areas and improve our game.”

The Eastern Conference is a logjam, particularly because the Western Conference is an absolute mess, where only four teams have positive goal differentials. Another problem is the frequency of three-point games. According to an article by The Athletic’s Shayna Goldman in December, almost 30-percent of games this season were determined after regulation.

Staios is not wrong when he says that many underlying metrics portray his team favourably. The Senators rely on their own proprietary datasets, but publicly available metrics on sites like Natural Stat Trick show that they have done an excellent job of suppressing the shots, chances, and expected goals they allow at five-on-five.

According to that site, the Senators rank in the top 10 in the percentage of total shots (52.98 CF%, 4th), shots on goal (52.46 SF%, 6th), total goals (50.60 GF%, 10th), and expected goals (54.45 xGF%, 3rd). The rate at which the Senators allow these events is impressive, too.

- Shots allowed per 60 (CA/60): 51.48, second-lowest

- Shots on goal allowed per 60 (SA/60): 24.57, fifth-lowest

- Expected goals allowed per 60 (xGA/60): 2.24, lowest in the NHL

The Senators’ five-on-five offence is trending in a positive direction, but there are a few reasons the team should be doing much better than its record and current position in the standings suggest. I will get to these shortly.

On this team struggling with consistency...

“We live in reality. There are a couple of areas of our game that aren't up to our expectations, and we can talk about goaltending. If the goaltenders were in here right now, they would be honest that they haven't lived up to expectations.      

Now, the optimism comes from the fact that over the last month or so, they have played to expectations. It wasn't the best of starts for them, but it has stabilized, and I would feel comfortable saying it's going to continue to stabilize and move in the right direction.”

The Senators’ goaltending has statistically been awful. Linus Ullmark has the second-lowest goals saved above expected metric in the NHL, trailing only the St. Louis Blues’ Jordan Binnington. Leevi Merilainen has the third-lowest in the NHL, and he has played in fewer (12) than half the games Ullmark has appeared in (28). The weird dynamic is that, visually, I feel like the duo hasn't given up many soft goals. They simply have not saved enough shots that would have tilted winnable games in the Senators’ direction.

From a team-perspective, the Senators have the third-lowest save percentage in the league at five-on-five per Natural Stat Trick. According to Evolving-Hockey’s historical data, the Senators’ 80.45 shorthanded save percentage is the third-lowest recorded total since the beginning of the 2007-08 season.

On the Senators’ goaltending depth...

“Linus (Ullmark) knows he's got our full support, and we're going to respect not having a comment on that situation. We have full belief in Linus, along with Leevi (Merilainen), a good young goaltender who continues to develop, and in our depth with Mads Sogaard and Hunter Shepard.     

"We know what Linus is as a goaltender. He knows what he is as a goaltender, but at this point in time, we just have our full support and respect his privacy until we have him back.”

The Senators and Staios will never disparage their players or their performances publicly, but admitting that, if the goaltenders were present at that availability, they would say they need to be better is the closest they will come to it. Supporting this group publicly is not much of a surprise either, considering Staios could actively be shopping around the league for alternatives.

Sportsnet’s Elliotte Friedman had an interesting point on a recent episode of his ‘32 Thoughts Podcast’.

“We talk about how life throws you curve balls, and how do you handle it?  It's going to be interesting for Ottawa because what's their goalie combination going to be? It's not the easiest thing to ask right after an announcement like that. You kind of have to let it breathe a bit and see how things develop. But if you look at their Sportlogiq numbers, like limiting scoring chances against, they're very good. And so you're sitting there, and you're looking at their situation, and you're saying, ‘Okay, how do the Senators handle this?’ They've got a good defensive team. They do a really good job of defending themselves, particularly at even strength, and the goaltending has been a struggle. How do they let this play out? And I admit, I don't have the answers right now, and I don't want to jump to any conclusions, but it's probably something they were even thinking about before the unfortunate announcement on Sunday about Ullmark.”

It is interesting because what Friedman says sounds like the organization was having initial discussions about what it could do to bolster the goaltending position. Does it mean strengthening the backup option given the struggles, or were the Senators thinking about Ullmark’s future?

Ullmark had a hot stretch from November 11 through December 12 last season, in which he went 8-0-1 while recording a .954 save percentage, two shutouts, and a 1.43 goals against average.  Removing those nine appearances, Ullmark has compiled a 31-22-7 record, an .889 save percentage, and a 3.01 goals against average in 63 appearances for the Senators. Aside from that one stretch of games, Ullmark has failed to live up to the expectations that come with a goaltender who was awarded a four-year, $33 million deal.

On when the Senators can expect Linus Ullmark back...

“No, I’ll just leave it at we'll give him the time afforded to make sure that things are in order.”

It is unfair to speculate as to what is going on. All that you can do is offer unconditional support to his family.

On whether the Senators are in the market to add a goaltender...

“Like I said, with the depth that we do have being relatively unproven. Leevi’s had some time, but Mads (Sogaard) is continuing to develop and is in the right spot right now, where he's got the net in Belleville and getting that time, but he's always been a top prospect goaltender turning into a top pro prospect on the cusp of getting an opportunity.”

Goaltenders can often take time to develop, but if Mads Sogaard was not a second-round pick in 2019, I feel like fewer people would be throwing his name around as an alternative.

On whether the organization would be comfortable trading some of its highest value prospects in Carter Yakemchuk or Logan Hensler to bolster its NHL lineup...

“Oh, I wouldn't go so far to that. We're looking at trades.  We're always active (in trade talks), and I think that goes for most general managers. We speak often on ways to continue to improve our team. But you know, as far as the assets that we have at the right time, if it's the right player, it's just kind of too hard to really put a finger on what might go out for, for what's out there.”

The Senators obviously do not want to part with their most well-regarded prospects. With a system that is relatively barren of high-end talent thanks to the drafting, development, and short-sighted deals of Staios’ predecessor, the Senators should have more talent in their cupboards than they presently do. Staios did stop short of outright saying that he would not consider trading either of these right-shot defencemen, but with guys like Brady Tkachuk having three years left on his contract, Drake Batherson having another season beyond this one on his deal, and Thomas Chabot expiring at the conclusion of the 2027-28 season, the Senators’ window to push is now.

On whether the Senators have any insight into whether they could get their 2026 first-round pick back...

“No indication.”

Everyone would feel better in the nation’s capital if there were an indication.

On whether the Senators are comfortable with their goaltending depth with Ullmark away from the team...

“Yes, and we continue to evaluate. They're all good goaltenders, and again, with (Shepard) and (Sogaard), who haven’t had the opportunity yet, they're quality goaltenders. And Leevi, like I said, continues to build.      

The goaltending position, you can talk to any team in the league, it's under a microscope. You can have players that go through stretches that don't have a good month or a good 10 games, or whatever it might be, but obviously, there is an emphasis on goaltending. We've had full faith in the goaltending, and we have full faith in Linus once he gets back heavy, and then (Sogaard) and (Shepard).”

Again, Staios is not going to disparage his players or depth in the public realm. I would be curious to hear his thoughts on why the underlying five-on-five metrics portray the Senators so favourably while both goaltenders have allowed more goals than were expected, but maybe that’s a conversation for another day.

On the Eastern Conference’s parity and whether the team is where he thought they would be at this point in the season.

: “Absolutely no. I mean, could we be five points better? Watching our team play over 82 games, you hope that it levels out. If we play to that level over 82 games, you hope that would get us back to the level we were last year from a point-total perspective.      

But we can't get wrapped up in looking at the standings. We have to stay focused on what we do in the day-to-day, which is... we've talked about being process-driven. And the expectation is that we continue to take a step forward. And it's not that we have enough of a sample size; that's 39 games where we have taken a step forward in some of the most important categories, but certainly we hope it reflects in wins.      

We're going to get judged on wins and losses and where we end up standings, but the margins are so fine that we can't you want to stay on top of these areas to continue to improve, but there has we're not where we want to be, for sure, from a point total perspective, but I don't think our game's far off.”

To Staios’ point, the Senators’ underlying metrics have improved significantly from last season to the 2025-26 campaign. The difference has been the goaltending and the penalty killing unit's performance, which, ironically, relies heavily on its goaltenders making saves.

On the Senators' window of competitiveness...

“I'll start with the contention window of the next couple of years. We'll contend when we're ready to contend. I think that we're continuing to build towards that. Putting a timeline on when our contending window is, I think we have a good young team that continues to develop. And we continue to evaluate and watch as the team moves forward.

Now, I felt last year that there was an opportunity, under sort of tight cap constraints, to try and improve our team, lengthen our lineup. Had a couple of players who are in our top six. If we're moving towards that, I'll be looking to do the exact same thing, and we're always trying to get better. And last year we had the opportunity to do that. 

We'll look at it again. I think what you're getting at is, if the team doesn't get to a certain level, which direction do we go? I mean, we'll continue to evaluate. But there's enough optimism with this group that I'm hopeful that we're looking at it a different way.

The “We’ll contend when we’re ready to contend” quote is going to get a lot of play in this market, but Steve Staios is the hallmark of the modern front-office executive. To me, he is reminiscent of Ross Atkins and Mark Shapiro era with the Toronto Blue Jays. Both took and continue to take a ton of heat for their ability to be verbose without revealing much of anything in their media availabilities.

Fans may bemoan the fact that Staios does not articulate an expectation of when the Senators should compete for a Cup, but it simply does not make sense for an executive to hang an arbitrary date on something for fans and media to measure this organization’s success against.

On whether there are areas the Senators can improve in to tip the scales in their favour down the stretch...-

“I think when you look at five-on-five play, it's so tight. Across the league, teams are so prepared to play. The parity is incredible. I think mentally, we've done a good job. The other thing that's becoming clearer in our league is the swings, whether we’re up two goals, down two goals, you're never really out of it. I think we've done a good job being able to stay level headed and maintaining our play.      

Certainly, the margins in special teams, when I look at the underlying numbers, there's a lot of good in our game. Our defensive game is very strong. Our structure is great. The coaching has held our players accountable to winning hockey, and they've bought into it. So there's been a couple of areas for sure that we look to improve.”I t

Staios is not wrong. If the Senators can get a higher percentage of saves at five-on-five and while on the penalty kill, they should, theoretically, be in great shape down the stretch. Of course, the caveat to that is that it would rely on the Senators preserving their current five-on-five metrics, but if they can continue to do that, the hope is that the luck will swing the team’s way and afford them the chance to make up ground in a tight Eastern Conference.

On experiencing the postseason and the assumption that this team can continue to be a playoff team...

“Now we just keep building, and how hard that can be from year to year in the work that needs to go into being right where you got to last year. I feel that they're game for it. There's a mindset with this group that they wanted, and you guys said after the 20-game market, early on, we may have gotten away from that process-driven approach.     

I'm not sure if it was the eagerness, but they're a very coachable group. They're very motivated. Sometimes, when you want it so bad, you're not doing yourself any favours. I think coming out of the gate, I was a little surprised. I think we didn't really play to our identity, which is probably the best way to describe it. I feel like we're getting closer to playing to our identity more consistently.”

Not coming out of the gate strong is a nice reminder that momentum from season to season does not necessarily carry over in the short term.

On his assessment of the penalty kill and whether improvement can come from adjustments, adding another penalty killer or changing the coaching staff...

“All of that's in discussion. I'm in and around the coaches' room. I see how hard they work, and it's not just on one coach. They all work together on all these areas. They recognize that it's an area that needs to improve. There's no panic in it. We go through a process to try and find ways, whether it's personnel who're playing, which defense pairings (are on), how we deploy them, all of that comes in  from a structure perspective.      

Most of the league plays it the same way we do now. We just have to execute better. Certainly, we live in reality, our penalty kill hasn't been good enough. But it's not like there haven't been adjustments along the way. It's seen a little bit of an improvement in that area.      

The players that go out there for the penalty kill take a ton of pride in it, and I'm hoping, with some of the adjustments that we've made, and some confidence you get on the other side of it, and momentum is an interesting thing, and it goes for five-on-five, power play or penalty kill, and we're hoping we have some positive nights and we can continue to improve.”

The Senators’ penalty kill ranks 31st in the league, but there is an obvious discrepancy in how they kill penalties with their hybrid diamond formation kill. When the group is aggressive and making proactive reads on the puck, they assertively do a much better job of forcing plays and creating opportunities for turnovers. If the group falls into a more passive structure, they afford the opposition too much time and space while putting too much pressure on their goaltenders to make high-danger saves.

On whether the Senators have continued to “piss away” points as the team did in the first 20 games of the season...

“The 2-7-2 stretch that we played, we played really well. Yeah, you'd hope that you get a few more points. But we can't look back on it. We have to keep moving forward. If we're five points better right now, how much better do we feel about it?      

You know, you'd hope again, over 82 (games) that with a consistent effort, that our group puts in improvement in some some of those areas that that that comes back to us, and you got to believe that some of the things that I see as I watch, and what we're we're reading as well, as far as tracking our team that that it gets to that level.”

Staios is not wrong. If the Senators keep doing what they’re doing at five-on-five, they should theoretically put themselves in a great position down the stretch. At the same time, if those five-on-five numbers suffer while the goaltending and special teams play continue to struggle, they will be sunk. It works both ways. The encouraging thing is that the team is healthier now and will hopefully remain so for some time. If they can ice their best lineups while continuing to hold their own at five-on-five, they should be competitive down the stretch.

On the state of the trade market right now...

“I continue to add, that with the standings being so tight, that puts another variable into how the conversations are going to go. Typically, when you see a bit more of a divide, you have teams looking to recoup some assets and move on. And it's, it'll be interesting, for sure.     

There's been lots of dialogue, even leading into the holiday freeze there. There has been some dialogue, but I sense that there are a lot of teams that are sort of just in the middle right now, trying to continue to evaluate where their group is.”

With so few out of the postseason market, it is a seller's market. The wrinkle to this, of course, is that middle-of-the-pack teams may recognize that the likelihood of Cup contention is small. Knowing that, they may feel compelled to make a deal given the market conditions.

On evaluating Brady Tkachuk’s game since returning from his thumb injury...

“Well, I don't feel like that's fair to cherry-pick on one player or another. We talked about players going through stretches where they're not on their game. We know what Brady means to our team. We know what he's all about and what he brings to our group. So to bring up one player specifically, I don't think that's right. There are plenty of players that, if it were 10 games ago, you could have brought them up as well, and we've had players that have now turned the corner that had questions on them, so I don't think it's fair.”

Again, Staios is not wrong. At various points during the season, it would have been easy to criticize the contributions of Fabian Zetterlund or Ridly Greig. Both of whom have found their games and have begun contributing at both ends of the ice. It is noticeable that Brady Tkachuk has not necessarily played his most dynamic of games, but maybe that is a sign of optimism.

He did have that thumb injury that forced him out of the lineup for a quarter of the season, so there is no shortage of context to explain why he may not be at the top of his game. Tkachuk still wears a wrap to protect his hand and thumb, so if he continues to progress from his surgery, there is reason to believe he can reach another level as a player.

On Tkachuk’s importance to the team and why his play is under the microscope...

“Yeah, but we have other players on the team that when you know one of our players isn't, maybe at the top of their game... We could, at any point in the season, come up here after every five games and talk to me about a certain player that maybe isn't at the top of his game.      

Brady is what he is for our group, and you know whether he's getting points or not. He brings it for our group. Now, we've played well enough to keep winning games. And if we can get to some of these areas that we need to improve on, I feel like this group can turn the corner.     

And let's be honest, I saw a graphic on one of the broadcasts. They went through after every game, and they showed our division. I watched the teams move around, moving up three or four spots. When you get on the right side of it for a few games, things change.

The one thing the Senators have not done this year is win consistently. For whatever reason, the Senators have curbed streaks. Whether it was a winning streak or a losing streak, the team has basically traded wins with losses. Their longest winning streak of the season was four games, while they have had three separate three-game losing streaks.

On assessing the Senators’ defensive depth...

“In losing (Donovan) Sebrango, we brought in (Dennis) Gilbert for depth on the left side. Jorian Donovan continues to develop as a potential call-up for us as well.      

Carter Yakemchuk, unfortunately, is injured. It is nothing too serious, but we probably would have seen him recalled by now. He has continued to impress and round out his game in the American Hockey League with Belleville.      

When you have Jake Sanderson and Thomas Chabot, you have the top guys, and you can continue to bring in guys who can play alongside them. And then, with our bottom pair, I feel good about our depth.”

Carter Yakemchuk’s defensive aptitude continues to develop in Belleville, but 12 of his 18 points have come while Belleville was on the power play. Before his firing, former head coach David Bell was on the ‘Coming in Hot’ Podcast articulating how Yakemchuk was playing well but still had ways to develop defensively, but the organization and management are not going to downplay the development of their top prospect.

Perhaps there was a chance that the Senators considered bringing up the offensive defenceman when Thomas Chabot reaggravated an upper-body injury during the team’s western coast swing in November, but the team has not suffered any injuries on the right side.

Would the Senators have benched any of their current right defencemen in Jordan Spence, Nick Jensen or Nik Matinpalo to make room for Yakemchuk at this juncture? To quote Daniel Alfredsson, probably not.

On whether Nick Jensen was rushed back too quickly...

“Nick Jensen might have rushed a little bit too early with what he had. I think you saw (Jensen’s) game is interesting. When Jensen’s game hit full stride, and he was back to being (himself), that was probably the timeline we originally had in mind. But credit to him for coming back and pushing, and for wanting to be here for his teammates.”

I recently wrote a piece on how Jensen’s skating metrics have noticeably improved in the past few weeks, but most of his mistakes are reads and mental errors. Some of those mistakes could stem from a player working his way back from a major surgery and the adjustments he needs to make to recognize and play with whatever limitations exist.

The optimistic belief is that the further Jensen is removed from surgery, the better he should play. The skating results are beginning to take effect, but if he can limit the mental mistakes, it will markedly improve the Senators’ performance. If he cannot, it will inevitably put the organization in a spot where it will have to look for outside help.

On whether improvements to the penalty kill and goaltending will put the Senators in a better spot...

“Yes, and I think that's pretty clear. We live in reality. When we look at it, we watch it, we look at the numbers, that's really and we have faith that both can improve.”

If the Senators’ goaltenders can make a higher rate of saves at five-on-five and while on the penalty kill, they will be in great shape. Heading into Saturday’s games, the Senators allowed 31 goals on 152 shots. If they had an 85.74 league-average save percentage while shorthanded, they would have allowed 11 fewer goals.

League average goaltending of 90.66 percent at five-on-five would have saved the Senators an additional 12 goals. Those are 23 goals that the Senators could have back just by being average. Considering how the Senators have a .455 win percentage in one-goal games while only the Winnipeg Jets and Utah Mammoth have lost more one-goal games, if the Senators miss the postseason, blaming the goaltenders for not making enough quality saves will be at the forefront of stories this offseason.

On Jordan Spence’s acquisition and his role...

“Well, it had a little bit to do with Nick (Jensen)'s injury, but probably the role that he has now is very versatile. He can play up and down our (defensive) pairings. He is a very good puck mover, very good at going back for pucks and breaking pucks out. So I think he’s exactly what we’ve seen now. I know it didn't sort of meld in perfectly at the beginning because Nick was back, and we had the depth. It's harder on the player, but it's a good problem to have for a team that knows it has NHL players who can step in.”

The underlying metrics that Staios alluded to earlier, when describing why he has faith in his club, have been exemplary while Jordan Spence has been on the ice.

Hockeyviz.com

Spence tilts it in the Senators’ favour through his efficient puck collection and movement. At his best, Spence makes quality reads in the neutral zone, stepping up into the play to disrupt outlet passes and create turnovers before the puck has a chance to enter the Senators’ zone. There, he can get exposed because of the limitations of his size, but as a whole, he has been a nice addition to the Senators’ blue line.

On evaluating the Senators’ draft record under his watch and whether he’s happy with the job his amateur scouts are doing...

“Yeah, positively. I think when you look at some of the players that you know, couple players that we picked in the fourth round that looked like they're real players, that's hard to do, you know, so I think that, and it's a, there's no science to it, you know, draft is it comes with a we do the best that we can to, you know, build a profile in the player, make a decision, and then it's up to us to continue to develop them.

That's why Belleville is so important. So the player that we draft is one thing. Scouts have to go and identify them, and then we have a big job to make sure that we put them in the right environment so they can develop.”

I was unable to attend Staios’ availability due to family commitments, but given the timing of the World Junior Championship, I was curious to hear Staios’ reflections on his organization’s draft record now that he has had two years under his belt. 

Unlike other parts of the Senators’ hockey operations department, Staios’ amateur staff is largely inherited from the previous regime without any turnover, so as a group that prides itself on a ‘best in class’ mantra, I was curious whether this was one of the few remnants of the previous regime that was headed for change.

As I’ve detailed elsewhere, the Senators have done a good job procuring prospects who have played NHL games. The issue is the philosophical divide over weighing the importance of playing games against the value these players add when they do play.

I respect the fact that the Senators found value in the fourth round by drafting Stephen Halliday. He appears to have skill and size that could lend itself to future NHL success, but historically, the Senators have drafted a ton of players who have played NHL games without providing much impact. The obvious caveats to this are players drafted in the top five (Jake Sanderson, Tim Stützle, and Brady Tkachuk), Shane Pinto and to a lesser extent, Ridly Greig.

Considering how 20 of the organization’s 48 picks between the 2018 and 2022 NHL Drafts were slotted between the first and second rounds, it is inexcusable that the team did not churn out more talent given what was available to them when they were making selections. It is a problem that has persisted in recent years, but if you’re interested in their amateur draft record, give this old piece a read.

On his evaluation of Belleville’s season and the development being done down there...

“A big part of my job is to make sure that the environment is right, and so Belleville continued to take a step from the beginning here, and it's a big step forward in that regard. That environment has to be right for us to nurture and develop players, and we continue to improve from day one.      

When I got here and met all of you for the first time, we were talking about the different areas that needed improvement within the organization. We can look back and feel good about a lot of that. Now. We talk about the day-to-day. We talk about the points, the standings, and where we want to be. But I think when you start to reflect sort of on the longer-term vision, including Belleville, it's taken a step in the right direction. It's critical that we make sure that the environment is right, that we can develop our players.”

Ultimately, the success of the farm team will be predicated on the quality of players added, and the Senators have struggled to add impactful young players to the farm.

On whether the Senators are looking to add a coach in Belleville...

“I'm comfortable with where it's at right now, and Matt Turks is on it on the day-to-day, so we feel good about where we're at. We'll continue to evaluate, as we do anywhere. And if they need more support, Sam Gagner is on staff and has been a big support, not only in player development but also with the coaches. He has been on the bench for them down there as well. He's an incredible resource who played there.”

The Senators have done an exceptional job building up the facilities and support that the organization’s players have at every level, but it will take time to build up the pool of talent. It just feels like their amateur scouting and decision-making have not caught up to the rest of the progressive and modern decision-making that the organization is undertaking in other areas.

On his evaluation of the coaching staff at the NHL level...

“No issues with my coaching staff here. Maybe the hardest, most cohesive group that I've seen. It's impressive. I wish you guys could see it like, the amount of work, the passion, the commitment, the dedication, the understanding, the way Travis (Green) has included all the coaches. It's as good as it gets, from what I've seen, and no issues there.”

The underlying metrics are impressive, but at some point the results have to begin to mirror what is happening on the ice. If the goaltending continues to submarine their five-on-five play and exacerbate some ill-timed passive tendencies on the penalty kill, it will sink an otherwise impressive season. This will, in turn, fuel questions about who bears responsibility for these shortcomings. Is it the player(s)? Is it the specialized coaches or, by and large, the coaching staff? Or is it on management for acquiring the player or not addressing the coaches?

On what management’s message to the players is right now...

“Continue to stay with it, you know, continue to stay with it, to be able to take that next step. With the margins, I think, like everything that we've talked about, we feel like we're close. But in this league, you cannot take that for granted at all. On every given night, it feels like every game is tight. The emphasis on each and every game now, now this year, I think, has never been highlighted with the parity that we have.      

So, improvements in some areas; margins are very tight, so make sure you're prepared for every game. With a condensed schedule, look after yourselves leading into the Olympic break. We've taken a lot of time for rest and recovery as well in a year like this. Those are the margins if we're looking at every single detail to make sure we're prepared.”

The margins are small, and if the Senators fall short, we may be looking back at a relatively soft December schedule, rueing the fact that the team did not take advantage and build a points cushion. Their margin for error is much smaller than it should be and obviously, there is context for it, but every team in the NHL experiences trouble and hardships over the course of a full 82-game schedule.

On Fabian Zetterlund’s performance and whether he has adjusted to help provide secondary scoring to this group...

“Now, the one thing about him is that, even when he wasn't scoring, he has a fallback, which was always comforting. He's on the forecheck. He's heavy. He's got great speed. You know, he was a little snake bitten for a while there, but seems to have found it. He continues to create opportunities. He's fit in well.

It is just the transition for a player in particular coming from a system where, if you're coming from a system to a team that plays similarly, I think the transition may be a little bit more seamless, and maybe it took Fabian a little bit longer, but certainly feels like he's fitting quite well there.”

Fabian has 10 goals in 39 games, putting him on pace for 20, but he is generating more chances. A large part of that is his improved play away from the puck, where it feels like he is more engaged and working harder to battle and turn pucks over, creating more opportunities for him and his linemates.

By Graeme Nichols
The Hockey News - Ottawa

NHL Rumors: Sabres Should Make Big Push For Flames Forward

The Buffalo Sabres' 10-game winning streak came to an end, as they lost to the Columbus Blue Jackets by a 5-1 final score in their last contest. Although the Sabres lost, they undoubtedly put themselves in a far better place than they were with their big winning streak. 

The Sabres currently have a 21-15-4 record and are just one point behind the Pittsburgh Penguins for the final wild card spot in the Eastern Conference. With this, it would not be surprising in the slightest if the Sabres look to add to their roster by the trade deadline. This is especially so when noting that Buffalo is desperately looking to snap their 14-year playoff drought. 

When looking at trade candidates around the NHL, Calgary Flames forward Blake Coleman would have the potential to be a nice pickup for the Sabres.

The Sabres could use another impactful forward for their top nine, and acquiring Coleman would provide them with just that. The 34-year-old forward is also capable of playing multiple positions, which certainly adds to his appeal. He would also give the Sabres another option to work with on their penalty kill.  

Coleman's experience also makes him a fascinating potential target. With the Sabres looking to take that next step and be a playoff team, bringing in a player who has won the Stanley Cup twice like Coleman certainly could benefit them.

In 41 games so far this season with the Flames, Coleman has recorded 13 goals, 21 points, and 103 hits. With numbers like these, the 10-year veteran would give the Sabres both secondary scoring and plenty of grit if brought in.

Takeaways: Flyers Close Out West Coast Trip With Victory Over Oilers

The Philadelphia Flyers didn’t simply leave Edmonton with two points — they left with a performance that showed clarity in how they wanted to play and discipline in how they executed it.

In a 5–2 win over the Oilers to close out their West Coast road trip, Philadelphia delivered a game that balanced patience with assertiveness, matched skill with detail, and responded decisively when momentum threatened to swing. 


1. The Flyers Managed Edmonton’s Stars Without Chasing the Game.

Beating the Oilers often comes down to resisting the temptation to overreact. Connor McDavid and Leon Draisaitl are going to generate chances; the danger comes when teams start cheating offensively or abandoning assignments trying to stop them outright. Philadelphia largely avoided that trap.

The Flyers kept McDavid and Draisaitl from dictating pace through the middle of the ice, forced plays to the outside, and limited second opportunities around the net. When Edmonton did generate looks, they were rarely off broken coverage or extended chaos — a key difference from the Flyers’ earlier loss to the Oilers this season.

Dan Vladar benefitted from that approach, but he also earned his night. The shots he faced were competitive, not overwhelming, and his rebound control prevented Edmonton from turning single chances into game-shifting sequences. The Flyers didn’t neutralize Edmonton’s stars — they managed them, which is often the more realistic and effective goal.


2. Denver Barkey’s First NHL Goal Fit the Night Perfectly.

Denver Barkey’s first career NHL goal was a highlight, but what made it notable was how naturally it arrived within the flow of the game. He's fit in so naturally with the NHL game since his debut on Dec. 20 (where he recorded his first two NHL assists) that it only felt like a matter of time until he started making an impact through goals. 

His goal mattered not just on the scoreboard, but in reinforcing how the Flyers are integrating younger players into meaningful situations without overexposing them. Barkey didn’t look overwhelmed by the stage or the opponent, and his ability to contribute without needing to dominate touches speaks well to his adaptability at the NHL level.


3. The Blue Line Helped Drive the Outcome.

Travis Sanheim’s goal and continued climb up the franchise’s all-time scoring list for defensemen is worthy of recognition, but the broader takeaway is how involved the Flyers’ defense was across all three pairs.

Sanheim, Cam York (1A)), Nick Seeler (1G, 1A), and others consistently supported the attack without abandoning defensive responsibilities. Pucks were moved efficiently, pressure was relieved quickly, and Edmonton was rarely able to hem the Flyers in for extended stretches.

Sanheim’s milestone goal — moving him into sole possession of fourth all-time in points by a Flyers defenseman — was the headline, but it was the collective reliability of the group that allowed Philadelphia to control large portions of the game.


4. Depth Scoring Continues to Define This Team’s Ceiling.

The Flyers didn’t win this game on a single dominant line or a one-off performance—and they rarely do anymore. They won it because production came from everywhere.

Bobby Brink’s 11th goal, Nick Seeler’s first goal of the season (along with an assist), Owen Tippett’s multi-point night, and contributions from Matvei Michkov, Sean Couturier, Cam York, and Rodrigo Abols all added up to a balanced offensive night that Edmonton struggled to contain.

The Magic of Owen Tippett: Unpacking His Impact On Flyers Beyond The ScoresheetThe Magic of Owen Tippett: Unpacking His Impact On Flyers Beyond The Scoresheet<a href="https://thehockeynews.com/news/latest-news/owen-tippett-speaks-on-individual-season-closeness-of-current-flyers-group">Owen Tippett</a> is a player who makes you sit up in your seat.&nbsp;

When 12 different players factor into the scoresheet, it becomes far harder for opponents to game-plan or survive momentum swings. Philadelphia’s ability to generate offense without relying exclusively on its top-end skill has quietly become one of its most reliable traits.


5. The Flyers Know What They're Capable Of, and They're Hungry For More.

Closing a West Coast trip with a win against Edmonton wasn't simply about energy or emotion alone. It’s about decision-making when tired legs meet elite opposition. The Flyers were smart with the puck, selective with their pressure, and opportunistic when Edmonton overextended.

The Flyers didn’t need to be perfect to win this game. They needed to be deliberate, composed, and committed to doing the hard things consistently—a mindset that has defined this group since Rick Tocchet took over this season.

Dan Vladar summed up where the Flyers are at pretty perfectly, telling media postgame, “Those are the moments that I think a lot of guys in here are living for. If you want to be the best, you’ve got to beat the best… Obviously, we’re still not the best, but we are doing everything we can to get to the best spot we can. We still know it’s a lot of hockey left, but I think that if you’re going to follow our leaders and the coaching staff, we are going to be in a good spot.”


Bonus: Welcome Back, Garnet Hathaway!

Garnet Hathaway returned to the Flyers lineup in Edmonton, and didn't take long to drop the gloves with Darnell Nurse in an entertaining—and also quite dizzying—first period brawl.

Blackhawks Vs Golden Knights: Projected Lineup, How To Watch, & More Ahead Of Game 42

The Chicago Blackhawks and Vegas Golden Knights are set to face off on Sunday night at the United Center. After defeating the Washington Capitals in DC on Saturday night, this is another back-to-back with travel for Chicago. 

So far this season, they have had terrible results in these situations. This is their fifth opportunity to make it right, as plenty more loom in the second half of the season. With the team carrying some momentum as they’ve played well following the holiday break, this is as good a time as any to get a back-to-back sweep. 

Scouting Vegas

The Vegas Golden Knights have one of the best rosters in the NHL when healthy. The problem for them is that they are not very healthy. They’ve also lost three in a row coming into this game and are 3-5-2 in their last 10 games. 

They do now, however, have Jack Eichel back in the lineup. Eichel is their best player as he creates chances, scores goals, and has a heavy two-way game that brings out the best in everyone. It is only a matter of time before this group finds its groove.

Barbashev-Eichel-Marner

Dorofeyev-Hertl-Bowman

Smith-Howden-Stone 

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Jack Eichel playing with Mitch Marner is pure hockey magic. These two are both playmaking wizards, and Eichel has an all-world shot. This duo, on a line with Ivan Barbashev, is one to focus on for Jeff Blashill and his staff. 

Although Eichel is back, they are still missing two-way forward William Karlsson and Team Canada defenseman Shea Theodore. Brayden McNabb, who is also a pretty good defenseman, is out as well. 

Projected Lines, Defense Pairs, & Goalie For Chicago

The Chicago Blackhawks have two straight wins with the same lineup. There really isn’t much of a reason to mess with it unless there is any sort of injury or return of an injured player. 

In the last couple of games, they’ve seen veterans like Ryan Donato, Ilya Mikheyev, and Teuvo Teravainen produce in the absence of Connor Bedard and Frank Nazar. Even Nick Foligno and Andre Burakovsky coming up clutch in the shootout on Saturday night were big moments for this team, trying to gain some steam again. 

When Bedard and Nazar come back, they will be returning to a team that learned how to play without them. That may help everyone overall once the lineup is at full strength. There will be no reason for the young guys playing well or the veterans to slow down once those two return, which would make it a much more balanced attack. 

Bertuzzi-Greene-Burakovsky 

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Soderblom

After Spencer Knight shut down the Capitals on Saturday night, Arvid Soderblom will certainly go against the Golden Knights at home on Sunday. To have success in the NHL these days, you need two good goalies. Soderblom has played well, and this is another good test for him. 

How To Watch

The game can be heard locally on AM 720 WGN in the Chicagoland area. To view this game, it can be found locally on CHSN. Nationally, it can be streamed on ESPN+. The puck will drop shortly after 6:00 PM CT. 

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In a chippy game, Nashville Predators get last laugh over Calgary Flames

There has been no love lost between the Nashville Predators and the Calgary Flames this season. 

While Nashville has won the regular-season series, picking up a 4-3 win on Saturday in Calgary, there have been 118 penalty minutes combined across those three games. 

The most recent matchup featured two fights, a 10-minute misconduct and a missed sucker punch that left Predators head coach Andrew Brunette irate at the officials.

It was a chippy game that was a lot closer than the previous one, but in the end, it was the impact of Nic Hague that resonated and gave the Nashville Predators the win. 

"It's never going to be easy for us, and it hasn't been all year, and tonight was another example of that, but I'm really proud of the group," Hague said. "We stuck together and kept pushing for that next goal."

John Beecher's impact in the game could debatably led to the Predators' win. During a scrum in the first period with Michael McCarron, Beecher got a punch in that caused McCarron to fall to the ice. 

Brunette and the Predators argued that Beecher should've been given a match penalty as his lick in on McCarron could've been deemed a suck punch. Beecher was not given an extra penalty, as both he and McCarron were given roughing and misconduct calls. 

Fast forward to the second period, right as Ryan Lomberg broke into the Predators zone, creating a prime scoring chance, Hague dropped the gloves with Beecher.

It's unknown whether or not Hague was aware of the Flames' offensive chance generating down the ice, but the fight stopped the play dead in its tracks. 

"We believe that we're a good team. There's going to be ups and downs through the season and throughout a game, but there was no better example than tonight," Hague said. "We just never backed down, no matter if it was physically or finding our own play. That's what good teams do and it took us right to the end." 

In the final minute of the game, tied, McCarron and Cole Smith worked the puck up the boards to Hague at the point. He let a slapshot go that went in, beating Dustin Wolf's glove side for the game-winning goal with 27 seconds left in the game. 

Jan 3, 2026; Calgary, Alberta, CAN; Nashville Predators defenseman Nicolas Hague (41) and Calgary Flames center John Beecher (18) fight during the second period at Scotiabank Saddledome. Mandatory Credit: Sergei Belski-Imagn Images

"They (Calgary) get one late to tie it up, but there wasn't any discouragement on the bench and we gotta go out there and work for that next one," Hague said. "Mac's (McCarron) line did an unbelievable job all night getting it (the puck) on the forecheck and (generating) the last goal." 

In addition to the game-winning goal, it was announced on Sunday that Beecher is scheduled to have a hearing with the NHL Department of Player Safety on the McCarron sucker punch. 

With the win, Nashville is still very much in the hunt for the final Wild Card spot in the west, now just one point out after the San Jose Sharks lost to the Tampa Bay Lightning. 

Nashville is now at 19-18-4, with 42 points and can move into that final Wild Card spot if it defeats the Edmonton Oilers on Tuesday. 

"We've had a lot of grit all year," Brunette said. "We've gone through stuff together, stayed together and we've never been tighter. We grow every day and we're continuing to get better, but we also believe in each other...It's nice to get the win in a hard place to play." 

GM Steve Staios Addresses Ottawa Senators' Goaltending Situation

Three days into the new year, as the Ottawa Senators approach the midway point of the season, GM Steve Staios held a state-of-the-union address with the local media on Saturday morning.  

As the team got ready to host the Winnipeg Jets later in the day, Staios began with a prepared statement that described expectations being different this year, the incredible parity in the league, and that there is a lot to like about the "process-driven" way the club is playing this year.

But as former NFL head coach Bill Parcells once said, "You are what your record says you are." Silver linings and moral victories will only go so far with this hungry Ottawa fan base, which was hoping the club would take a step forward after making the playoffs last spring. Instead, the Senators will have to take some major steps forward in the second half just to replicate last season's success.

The Senators opened play on January 3rd near the bottom of the Eastern standings. Three points out of a wild card spot doesn't sound all that bad, but when you have seven teams ahead of you, someone is always going to be winning games to keep you stuck in the logjam. 

NHL East Standings as of January 3, 2025.

It's not unreasonable to suggest that it will take a five or six-game winning streak to break on through to the other side of this wild-card jungle. And if they manage to do it, they'll have to keep playing well consistently.

When asked about the team's lack of consistency this season, goaltending was the first thing Staios brought up.

"I don't know if it's been consistency in player effort," Staios told the media. "We live in reality, and there are a couple of areas of our game that aren't up to expectations. We can talk about goaltending, and if the goaltenders were in here right now, they would be honest that they haven't played up to expectations.

"I think the optimism comes from, over the last month or so, they have played to expectations. It wasn't the best of starts for them, but it had stabilized, and I would I would feel comfortable saying that it's going to continue to not only stabilize, but move in the right direction."

That's all well and good to say, but between having the worst save percentage in the NHL, combined with Linus Ullmark on indefinite personal leave, and their current two goalies with just 31 games of NHL experience between them, this all seems like the complete opposite of stability.

Staios was asked if he knew roughly when Ullmark might return.

"Well, Linus knows he's got our full support, and we're going to respect him by not having a comment on that situation. We have full belief in Linus, along with Leevi, who's a good young goaltender who continues to develop, along with our depth with Mads Sogaard and Hunter Shepard.

"We know what Linus is as a goaltender, and he knows what he is as a goaltender. But at this point in time, he has our full support, and we'll respect his privacy until we have him back.

"We'll give him the time afforded to make sure that things are in order."

When asked about the possibility of pulling the trigger on a deal to get more goaltending depth, Staios shoehorned Mads Sogaard into the discussion.

"Mads is continuing to develop and in the right spot right now where he's got the net in Belleville and getting getting that time. But he's always been a top prospect goaltender turning into a top pro prospect, on the cusp of getting an opportunity."

For now, though, Merilainen is the emergency plan A and has been since last summer. Staios is now executing what he believed was the very best plan available to him if something happened to Ullmark.

He believed it, knowing that Merilainen is the sixth-youngest goalie in the league; he believed it the day he let Anton Forsberg walk into free agency; and he believed it, knowing that Ullmark had never played more than 50 games in a season.

Now we're about to find out if he was right or not. 

By Steve Warne
The Hockey News-Ottawa

Read more Ottawa Senators news and features at The Hockey News:

Senators Announce That Linus Ullmark Is Taking Leave Of Absence
Top Ottawa Senators Prospect Suits Up Again At World Juniors
Josh Norris: 'I Really Felt Like (Ottawa Fans) Had My Back, Even When I Was Injured
'
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