Every year, the American Hockey Coaches Association presents an award to a former college coach or player who ‘has distinguished himself in his profession after college.’ The award was named after former Providence College player, coach, and athletic director Lou Lamoriello. This year, the honor goes to Vegas Golden Knights President of Hockey Operations George McPhee.
“I am honored beyond words to accept the Lou Lamoriello Award as the Frozen Four prepares to arrive here in Vegas,” said McPhee in response. “Lou is among the very best hockey minds and human beings to grace college hockey and the National Hockey League. Lou’s impact on these institutions, as well as the lives of thousands who have worked for him and competed against him, is extraordinary.”
As a forward at Bowling Green State University, McPhee won the Hobey Baker Award in 1982. He went on to have a seven-year NHL career, playing for the New York Rangers and New Jersey Devils. After retirement, he began a career in management and had success with the Vancouver Canucks, Washington Capitals, and New York Islanders before making his way to Vegas.
On July 13, 2016, McPhee became the inaugural General Manager and President of Hockey Operations of the Golden Knights. He won the NHL General Manager of the Year Award in 2018 after the success of his team’s inaugural season.
McPhee stepped aside as General Manager in favor of Kelly McCrimmon on September 1, 2019, but remained as the President of Hockey Operations. He won his first Stanley Cup with the Golden Knights in 2023.
The Lou Lamoriello Award will be presented on April 10 during this year’s NCAA D1 Men’s Ice Hockey Frozen Four.
“George is widely respected throughout hockey and has consistently made a positive impact during his career,” said AHCA Executive Director Forrest Karr. ”His many contributions to the sport make him a natural choice for the Lou Lamoriello Award, and we look forward to presenting this well-deserved recognition during Frozen Four weekend.”
Photo caption: Feb 2, 2026; Sunrise, Florida, USA; Florida Panthers defenseman Tobias Bjornfot (22) shoots the puck against the Buffalo Sabres during the first period at Amerant Bank Arena. (Sam Navarro-Imagn Images)
The Philadelphia Flyers have announced that they have signed defenseman David Jiricek to a two-year, $3 million contract extension. Starting next season, he will have a $1.5 million average annual value.
The Flyers acquired Jiricek from the Minnesota Wild at the 2026 NHL trade deadline in exchange for forward Bobby Brink. Since then, the right-shot defenseman has played well at the AHL level with the Lehigh Valley Phantoms. Now, he has landed himself a solid contract extension from Philadelphia because of it.
In 10 games with the Phantoms since being acquired, Jiricek has recorded two goals, eight assists, and 10 points. This is after he had two goals and 10 points in 24 AHL games with the Iowa Wild before the trade.
Jiricek also played in 25 games for Minnesota before the deal, where he had zero points and 14 penalty minutes. In 84 career NHL games over four seasons, the 2022 sixth-overall pick has recorded two goals, 11 assists, and 13 points.
Pittsburgh Penguins defenseman Erik Karlsson was on another level in March, and the NHL took notice of it.
Karlsson was named the NHL's Second Star for the month of March on Wednesday. He finished the month with nine goals and 24 points in 17 games, helping the Penguins go 8-6-3 in those games.
He had nine multi-point games in March, including four three-point games. It was his best month as a Penguin and has helped him compile 13 goals and 60 points in 70 games this season.
Karlsson's nine multi-point games in March are the most by a Penguins defenseman in a single month in franchise history.
Star status secured ⭐
Defenseman Erik Karlsson has been named the @NHL’s Second Star for the month of March.
Karlsson was putting the Penguins on his back for a good chunk of these games, especially since Sidney Crosby and Evgeni Malkin were both hurt. He hasn't made the Stanley Cup Playoffs since the 2018-19 season, when he was with the San Jose Sharks, and is looking to change that this year.
Karlsson and the Penguins will be back in action on Thursday against the Tampa Bay Lightning.
How do the St. Louis Blues recover from that gut punch they took on Monday?
Nothing they can do but get right back on the horse, and after taking a direct kick to the gut when they allowed a game-winning goal with 22 seconds left in a 5-4 loss to the San Jose Sharks, the Blues (31-31-11) have no choice but to pick themselves up when they play an almost certain must-win game against the Los Angeles Kings 29-26-18) at 8 p.m. on Wednesday in the race for the final wild card out of the Western Conference.
The task is daunting for the Blues, who are only four points behind the Nashville Predators with a game in hand, but the bigger issue is not only do they have to climb over the Predators but they also have to pass the Kings, who are one point back of the Predators and host Nashville on Thursday; they also have to pass the Winnipeg Jets, who are also one point back of Nashville, and the Sharks and Seattle Kraken, each two points back.
Having to pass five teams makes it almost a certainty that the only way for that to happen, and with the teams in front of them having head-to-head matchups, the Blues almost certainly need to someone win out their remaining nine games, or come awfully close to doing that, in order to have a chance.
- - -
Blues coach Jim Montgomery will not tinker with the lineup for Wednesday, other than starting Jordan Binnington in goal.
"The lineup is the same. I've talked to the five guys that haven't played (lately)," Montgomery said to the media in Los Angeles of Oskar Sundqvist, Jonathan Drouin, Nathan Walker, Tyler Tucker and Matthew Kessel. "(I told them) keep being great teammates. They're working hard, they're staying in shape, they have to for when we call upon them. You know we're going to call upon them sooner or later. If we don't have success again tonight, there are going to be changes."
- - -
Blues Projected Lineup:
Dylan Holloway-Robert Thomas-Jimmy Snuggerud
Jake Neighbours-Pavel Buchnevich-Jordan Kyrou
Otto Stenberg-Dalibor Dvorsky-Jonatan Berggren
Alexey Toropchenko-Jack Finley-Pius Suter
Philip Broberg-Logan Mailloux
Theo Lindstein-Colton Parayko
Cam Fowler-Justin Holl
Jordan Binnington will start in goal; Joel Hofer will be the backup.
Healthy scratches include Jonathan Drouin, Oskar Sundqvist, Nathan Walker and Matthew Kessel. Tyler Tucker (lower body) is on the road trip and is close to being an option for selection.
- - -
Kings Projected Lineup:
Artemi Panarin-Anze Kopitar-Adrian Kempe
Trevor Moore-Quinton Byfield-Alex Laferriere
Mathieu Joseph-Scott Laughton-Joel Armia
Jeff Malott-Samuel Helenius-Jared Wright
Mikey Anderson-Drew Doughty
Joel Edmundson-Brandt Clarke
Brian Dumoulin-Cody Ceci
Darcy Kuemper will start in goal; Anton Forsberg will be the backup.
Healthy scratches include Alex Turcotte, Jacob Moverare and Taylor Ward. Andrei Kuzmenko (meniscus) is out.
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The Flyers didn’t waste much time with re-signing David Jiricek.
They inked the 22-year-old defenseman Wednesday to a two-year, $3 million contract extension not even four weeks after acquiring him in the Bobby Brink trade.
Jiricek was a pending restricted free agent. He’ll remain an RFA when his new deal expires.
The righty shot has played at a point-per-game pace through 10 games with AHL affiliate Lehigh Valley. He has two goals, eight assists, 30 shots and a minus-6 rating for the Phantoms.
As the sixth overall pick in the 2022 NHL draft, Jiricek has a lot upside. His size and shot are big strengths, but he’ll have to improve his skating and reads. The Flyers are his third organization. He already has 84 career NHL games under his belt.
“We still see a high potential — 21-, 22-year-old, 6-foot-4 defensemen of his caliber are tough to find,” general manager Danny Briere said after the trade. “We know we have to work with him, we need to be patient, we need to give him a little bit of rope to develop him.”
NHL games on Tuesday, March 31 brought about a shift in the Eastern Conference playoff bracket.
The Tampa Bay Lightning lost in regulation and dropped out of the top seed in the conference and out of first place in the Atlantic Division. The Buffalo Sabres' victory gave them the division lead and the Carolina Hurricanes' win gave them the top seed in the East.
The Wednesday, April 1 games could affect the Western Conference standings.
The Los Angeles Kings could pass the idle Nashville Predators and move into the second wild card spot if they win. A San Jose Sharks victory would let them pass the Predators based on percentage points because they'll have played one less game.
Also Wednesday, the Minnesota Wild can become the third NHL team to clinch a 2026 postseason berth.
Here's what to know about the NHL standings, including the latest playoff bracket and the tiebreaker procedures for the 2025-26 season:
Who's in the 2026 NHL playoffs?
Eastern Conference: None
Western Conference: Colorado, Dallas
Who can clinch today?
The idle Minnesota Wild will clinch a playoff berth if the Kings lose to the Blues or if the Sharks lose to the Ducks in regulation.
NHL games today (Wednesday, April 1)
All times p.m.Eastern
Vancouver at Colorado, 8:30
St. Louis at Los Angeles, 9
Anaheim at San Jose, 9, TNT
NHL Eastern Conference standings 2025-26
As of March 31. x-clinched playoff spot. z-eliminated
Metropolitan Division
Carolina Hurricanes (100)
Pittsburgh Penguins (92)
New York Islanders (89)
Atlantic Division
Buffalo Sabres (100)
Tampa Bay Lightning (98)
Montreal Canadiens (96)
Wild card
Boston Bruins (94)
Columbus Blue Jackets (88)
Sitting out of playoff position: Ottawa Senators (86), Detroit Red Wings (86), Philadelphia Flyers (86), Washington Capitals (85), New Jersey Devils (78), Toronto Maple Leafs (77), Florida Panthers (75), z-New York Rangers (71)
NHL Western Conference standings 2025-26
As of March 31. x-clinched playoff spot. z-eliminated
Central Division
x-Colorado Avalanche (108)
x-Dallas Stars (100)
Minnesota Wild (94)
Pacific Division
Anaheim Ducks (87)
Edmonton Oilers (85)
Vegas Golden Knights (82)
Wild card
Utah Mammoth (82)
Nashville Predators (77)
Sitting out of playoff position: Los Angeles Kings (76), Winnipeg Jets (76), San Jose Sharks (75), Seattle Kraken (75), St. Louis Blues (73), Calgary Flames (70), Chicago Blackhawks (68), z-Vancouver Canucks (50)
NHL Eastern Conference playoff bracket
Here is how the Eastern Conference playoff bracket would look if the season ended on March 31.
Carolina (M1) vs. Columbus (WC1)
Pittsburgh (M2) vs. N.Y. Islanders (M3)
Buffalo (A1) vs. Boston (WC2)
Tampa Bay (A2) vs. Montreal (A3)
The winner of the first series would play the winner of the second in the second round. The winner of the third series would play the winner of the fourth. Key: M - Metropolitan Division. A - Atlantic Division. WC - wild card
NHL Western Conference playoff bracket
Here is how the Western Conference playoff bracket would look if the season ended on March 31.
Colorado (C1) vs. Nashville (WC2)
Dallas (C2) vs. Minnesota (C3)
Anaheim (P1) vs. Utah (WC1)
Edmonton (P2) vs. Vegas (P3)
The winner of the first series would play the winner of the second in the second round. The winner of the third series would play the winner of the fourth. Key: C - Central Division P - Pacific Division. WC - wild card
NHL tiebreakers: What is the first tiebreaker in NHL standings?
If two teams are tied in points at the end of the regular season, here are the tiebreakers:
Regulation wins
Regulation and overtime wins (ROW)
Total wins
Most points earned in head-to-head competition: If teams had an uneven number of meetings, the first game played in the city that has the extra game is excluded.
Goal differential
Total goals
When does the NHL regular season end?
The NHL regular season is scheduled to end on Thursday, April 16, with six games.
When do the NHL playoffs start?
The NHL's Stanley Cup playoffs are expected to begin on Saturday, April 18.
The St. Louis Blues are in California tonight to take on the Los Angeles Kings in what can be considered a must-win game.
While most outcomes of tonight’s game still leave the Blues with very slim odds of making the playoffs, a loss would almost put the nail in the coffin.
According to moneypuck.com, the Blues currently have a 4.8 percent chance of making the playoffs. That number falls to 1.4 percent if they lose in regulation and 3.0 percent if they are defeated in overtime or a shootout, according to Mike Meyer. If they win in regulation, their chances jump to 9.0 percent, and an overtime/shootout win increases their odds to 7.1 percent.
Needless to say, the Blues have a tough hill to climb either way, but a loss gives them little to no hope.
The Blues suffered a heartbreaking loss to the San Jose Sharks on Monday. The Blues tied the game at 4-4 after trailing by a pair of markers, but with 22 seconds remaining, the Blues gave up an odd-man rush, and Adam Gaudette squeaked a shot past Joel Hofer to give the Sharks a late 5-4 lead.
The Blues were unable to tie it and lost in regulation. That result witnessed the Sharks spring two points ahead of the Blues, and the Blues now trail the Nashville Predators by four points for the second wild card spot. Additionally, four teams are ahead of the Blues in the race for the wild card spot.
One of those teams sitting ahead of the Blues is the Kings, who are just one point back of the Predators with a game in hand. The Kings and Blues have squared off twice this season, with the Kings winning both contests after regulation.
The importance of this game cannot be understated, which should lead to a spirited affair with plenty of great hockey.
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Things went from bad to worse to soul-crushing for the Detroit Red Wings on Tuesday night, as their playoff hopes took another significant hit in a lopsided 5-1 loss to the Pittsburgh Penguins.
The defeat marked yet another discouraging chapter in a difficult stretch for Detroit. Over their last 21 games, the Red Wings have posted a 7-11-3 record, the third-worst mark in the NHL during that span. On a night when several teams around them in the playoff race also lost, Detroit failed to capitalize, leaving them still sitting two points outside of a wild card position.
The playoff implications are becoming increasingly stark. According to MoneyPuck, the Red Wings’ postseason odds dropped to a season-low 32.2 percent on Wednesday. That figure marks their lowest point since opening night, when their chances sat at 23.1 percent, underscoring just how far their outlook has slipped.
Detroit’s remaining schedule does little to inspire confidence as it is considered one of the toughest in the league, featuring multiple matchups against surging opponents like the Philadelphia Flyers twice more, a team riding a wave of momentum after top prospect Porter Martone made his NHL debut Tuesday in a 6-4 loss to the Washington Capitals.
Beyond Philadelphia, Detroit must also contend with a gauntlet that includes the Minnesota Wild, the red-hot New Jersey Devils, and the Tampa Bay Lightning. Their most critical showdown will be with the Columbus Blue Jackets and could ultimately define Detroit’s season. Columbus currently holds the wild card spot the Red Wings are chasing, and a victory would give Detroit a direct opportunity to leapfrog them in the standings.
With time running out, the margin for error has all but disappeared and if the Red Wings hope to keep their playoff aspirations alive, they will need to reverse course quickly and begin turning close games into crucial wins before the window closes entirely.
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At multiple points during both losses to the Penguins and Sabres, you thought the Islanders might at least get a point or more. In each case, things shifted suddenly and maddeningly.
They wake up still in a playoff spot, but also still with their biggest competitors for that spot having a game or two in hand. Pittsburgh is now three points ahead with a game in hand, giving them the lead on home ice for a 2 vs. 3 matchup should the Islanders hang on.
The gap between the Isles and the Canadiens and Bruins has likely widened too far, so they pretty much need to claim the Metro third spot or final wild card spot or else, with several other teams also in the running. Their six remaining games include two against the automatic-loss Hurricanes, so there’s that, too.
But things change quickly in the bubble of teams that only kinda deserve to be in the playoffs; there are surely more turns, surprises and frustrations in store over the next two weeks.
Islanders News
Yet again, the Islanders were in position to get some much-needed points only to fritter it all away. [LHH | Newsday]
The AHL has approved relocating the Isles’ affiliate from Brideport to #makeitseven Hamilton. [Newsday]
The Skinny: Thursday will be a big night on the schedule as some of these games-in-hand are (momentarily) used. [Isles]
Elsewhere
At least scores last night largely broke in the Islanders’ favor…the Senators, Red Wings, Blue Jackets and even the Flyers all lost in regulation. Pittsburgh won, but that was the price of a Red Wings regulation loss. Tonight’s schedule is just three games, all of the Westerly variety.
Goalie fight! Pretty good one, too, in Rangers vs. Devils. [Post]
The Leafs have fired GM Brad Treliving and the Kyle Dubas Choir is enjoying their victory lap. [Athletic-Mirtle | Athletic-Segal]
Elliotte Friedman says there were even discussions of extending Treliving or maybe keeping him in a different role… [Sportsnet]
After picking up a crucial two points in a 4-3 overtime victory over the Chicago Blackhawks on Tuesday, the Winnipeg Jets are within striking distance of what once seemed like an impossible playoff push. Winnipeg now sits just one point out of a wild card spot, turning a late-season surge into a legitimate postseason bid.
Since returning from the Olympic break, the Jets have been one of the hottest teams in the league, earning points in 14 of their last 18 games and posting a 10-4-4 record over that stretch. Their ability to keep games close has been a defining factor, allowing them to steadily climb the standings while other contenders have stumbled.
Among the teams battling for the final wild card positions, Winnipeg holds a subtle but important edge as they have the best goal differential at minus-15, significantly better than the current holders of those spots, the Nashville Predators at minus-26 and the next closest contender with the Jets in the Los Angeles Kings at minus-27.
Despite the momentum, the path to the playoffs remains complicated as Los Angeles controls its own destiny with what is considered the easiest remaining schedule in the league. The Kings also have two pivotal head-to-head matchups against Nashville, games that could dramatically reshape the standings.
The Predators, meanwhile, face a demanding stretch run in addition to their games against the Kings as they must take on the San Jose Sharks and the Utah Mammoth, both of whom are still part of the playoff picture. Nashville’s schedule becomes even more daunting with upcoming matchups against the Minnesota Wild and two games against the Pacific Division leading Anaheim Ducks.
Winnipeg’s road is no easier as they will need to maintain their strong play against direct competitors like San Jose and Utah while also navigating a series of tough games against top-tier opponents. Their remaining schedule includes clashes with the Dallas Stars, Columbus Blue Jackets, Vegas Golden Knights, and the surging Philadelphia Flyers.
According to MoneyPuck, Winnipeg’s playoff odds currently sit at 15.6 percent. While those numbers remain modest, they reflect a team that has given itself a real chance down the stretch. If the Jets can sustain the level of play they have shown over the past 18 games, their late-season push may yet become one of the most remarkable turnarounds in recent memory.
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Tonight will feature a battle between the NHL’s worst and the best, as the 32nd-place Vancouver Canucks (21–44–8) will take on the first-place Colorado Avalanche (49–14–10). Vancouver is coming off their sixth-consecutive loss, having dropped their Monday-night matchup against the Vegas Golden Knights by a score of 4–2. Colorado, on the other hand, is coming off a massive 9–2 win against the Calgary Flames.
The biggest news about Vancouver’s opponent heading into tonight’s game is the fact that Cale Makar departed from Colorado’s last game due to an upper-body injury. While the Avalanche have already clinched a playoff spot, Makar’s absence is still something that will impact Colorado moving forward. For the Canucks, a Makar-less Avalanche team will be massive in suppressing Colorado’s offence, as the defenceman has registered three goals and 15 assists in 14 career games against Vancouver.
One interesting stat that Vancouver ranks higher than Colorado in is their power play success rate, of which the Canucks are tied for 20th in the NHL with the Toronto Maple Leafs (19.7%) and the Avalanche sits at 24th with 18.1%. With that being said, Colorado has scored on the man-advantage in six of their past seven games, including a four-game power play goal streak. The Canucks, on the other hand, have scored a power play goal in five of their last seven.
Players To Watch:
Brock Boeser
Through his past 10 games, Boeser has scored three goals and seven assists, going without a point in only three of these games. Boeser is also sandwiched between two franchise records, having just slid into ninth all-time in points as a Canuck while also being one power play goal away from entering the franchise’s top-five. The career-Canuck is also six points away from passing Pavel Bure for eighth all-time in the stat.
Sam Malinski
With Makar expected to miss some time, Colorado’s blueline could look a little different when the Canucks face the Avalanche later tonight. One player who has found some offensive success on the Avalanche’s blueline this season is Malinski, who has scored five goals and 29 assists in 73 games played so far this season. Given Makar’s potential absence, Malinski could see a potential promotion from his spot on Colorado’s second pairing.
Dec 2, 2025; Denver, Colorado, USA; Vancouver Canucks center Max Sasson (63) takes a shot on goal in the third period against the Colorado Avalanche at Ball Arena. Mandatory Credit: Ron Chenoy-Imagn Images
Vancouver Canucks (21–44–8):
Points:
Elias Pettersson: 15–31–46
Filip Hronek: 8–34–42
Brock Boeser: 18–21–39
Jake DeBrusk: 16–19–35
Evander Kane: 13–18–31
Goaltenders:
Thatcher Demko: 8–10–1
Kevin Lankinen: 8–26–5
Nikita Tolopilo: 5–7–2
Jiří Patera: 0–1–0
Colorado Avalanche (49–14–10):
Points:
Nathan MacKinnon: 49–71–120
Martin Nečas: 35–57–92
Cale Makar: 20–55–75
Brock Nelson: 33–28–61
Nazem Kadri: 16–34–50
Goaltenders:
Scott Wedgewood: 27–5–6
MacKenzie Blackwood: 21–9–1
Trent Miner: 1–0–3
Game Information:
Start time: 5:30 pm PT
Venue: Ball Arena
Television: Sportsnet
Radio: Sportsnet 650
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At this time in 2025, the Bruins were on their way to finishing with the NHL’s fifth-worst record and missing the Stanley Cup Playoffs for the first time in nine years. Fast forward to April 1, 2026, and the B’s have a 98.2 percent chance of reaching the postseason, per MoneyPuck.
And not only are the Bruins almost guaranteed a playoff spot at this point, they look like a team that could actually do real damage in the postseason.
The latest example came Tuesday night against the Dallas Stars.
The score was tied 2-2 entering the third period, then the B’s dominated with an aggressive attacking mentality and outscored the Stars 4-1 in the frame to earn a 6-3 victory and extend their win streak to four games. Viktor Arvidsson tallied a hat trick, David Pastrnak had three assists, and Elias Lindholm had another multi-point performance (one goal, one assist).
During this win streak, the Bruins have beaten the team with the second-best record overall (Stars), the team with the best record in the Eastern Conference (Buffalo Sabres), a top contender in the Western Conference (Minnesota Wild) and the team in the East’s second wild card spot (Columbus Blue Jackets).
”Everyone was talking about the schedule. ‘The Bruins have the toughest schedule,'” Bruins head coach Marco Sturm told reporters after Tuesday’s win. “Yeah, I believe that, too. But what I liked about it is it always seems like we play better when we’re playing against better teams.”
The Bruins came out of the Olympic break on Feb. 23 barely holding on to a playoff spot. Since then, only one team (Sabres) has collected more points in the standings than the Bruins’ 25 (11-4-3).
Based on their recent play, could the Bruins win a round (or more) if they qualify for the postseason?
Yes, and there are several reasons why.
They have a deep lineup of players who can provide offense. Last year, if David Pastrnak or Morgan Geekie didn’t score, the B’s were in trouble. This year’s roster has much more scoring depth.
Pastrnak is on pace for a fifth consecutive 100-point season, and his 66 assists are a career high. Morgan Geekie has a career-high 34 goals. Pavel Zacha has a career-high 28 goals and needs one more point to hit 60 for the first time. Arvidsson has 50 points in 63 games after tallying 27 points in 67 games for the Oilers last season.
Marat Khusnutdinov’s 15 goals are a career high. Fraser Minten’s 33 points are a career high as well. Casey Mittlestadt and Mark Kastelic have provided valuable scoring production, too. And if that wasn’t enough, top defenseman Charlie McAvoy’s 58 points are also a career-high.
The Bruins are not reliant on one or two lines. They are a four-line team on a lot of nights, with the blue line also creating scoring chances, and that’s why they’ve improved from 28th in goals scored last season to eighth in 2025-26. The Bruins also have the second-best 5-on-5 goal differential since Jan. 1, along with a much-improved power play that ranks eighth in success rate.
The mental makeup of the Bruins is strong, too. They don’t fold in pressure situations. This team doesn’t quit and keeps fighting. We saw that in the comeback wins over the Sabres and Blue Jackets during this win streak. Overall, the Bruins have scored the third-most goals in the third period this season. When the pressure increases late in games, these guys typically respond in a positive manner.
Goaltending is another strength of this team and a reason why it could win a round or two.
Jeremy Swayman ranks third among all goalies in wins above replacement and goals saved above expected. He has been a top-five goalie this season and the No. 1 reason why the Bruins are in the playoff mix. Swayman was excellent in the 2024 playoffs, and based on his play this season, we could see a repeat of that in 2026.
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The Bruins are also battle-tested. They have played one of the toughest schedules since the Olympic break and have taken points from 14 of 18 games in that span. The playoff race in the East has been super competitive all season, so the B’s have been in playoff mode for a while now.
They won’t need to make any adjustments in that regard once the playoffs actually begin.
“For us, the playoffs already started a long time ago,” Sturm said postgame Tuesday. “I think that’s a good thing about our team right now. We want to get challenged right now against really good hockey teams.”
The Bruins’ first-round matchup will be tough whoever they play. The Sabres, Lightning and Hurricanes — their three most likely opponents — are all really talented teams. But the Bruins are becoming the one team nobody in the East wants to see early in the playoffs.
This Bruins squad is peaking at the perfect time. And as a result, expectations have risen. Not only should the Bruins qualify for the playoffs, they should also be a pretty tough out for whoever stands in their way.
LAS VEGAS, NEVADA - JUNE 02: General manager Kelly McCrimmon (L) and head coach Bruce Cassidy of the Vegas Golden Knights attend Media Day for the 2023 NHL Stanley Cup Final between the Florida Panthers and the Golden Knights at T-Mobile Arena on June 02, 2023 in Las Vegas, Nevada. (Photo by Ethan Miller/Getty Images) | Getty Images
The Vegas Golden Knights made the decision over the weekend to fire head coach Bruce Cassidy and replace him with John Tortorella with eight games remaining in the regular season.
On the surface, it might be surprising to some. After all, Cassidy is one of the best head coaches in the entire league. Cassidy won a Stanley Cup with the Golden Knights back in 2023. He has a long track record of success dating back to his days in Boston, as do the Golden Knights since they came into the league. The Golden Knights currently sit in third place in the Pacific division and should comfortably be a playoff team with just under ten games remaining.
For most organizations, that would be good enough as we head into the final few weeks of the regular season.
The Vegas Golden Knights aren’t most organizations.
Since the day they entered the league, they have operated with a ‘win at all costs’ mentality. It doesn’t matter who their coach is or what he has done there. The coach is as disposable as a tissue if they’re not winning. It doesn’t matter who their players are. It doesn’t matter if Marc-Andre Fleury is a fan favorite Vezina trophy winner. If Vegas can upgrade in net, they will try to do so. If they can swing a trade for Mark Stone, Jack Eichel, Tomas Hertl, Noah Hanifin, or Rasmus Andersson, they’ll do it. If they can sign a Mitch Marner or Alex Pietrangelo, they won’t hesitate. Perhaps just as importantly, they don’t let sentimentality get in the way when it comes to holding onto longtime original Misfits like Reilly Smith (who has since returned to Vegas at a discount) and Jonathan Marchessault, among others. Vegas is as ruthless and cold-hearted when it comes to personnel decisions as it gets.
Some might ask what’s the point of firing the coach with eight games left in the regular season. But if you’ve already decided as an organization that you’re going to move on once the season ends anyways, why would you wait to lose to the Oilers in six games in the first round of the playoffs to do so? Wouldn’t you make a change now just to see if you can light a fire under the team just in time for the most important games of the season?
How’s this for a novel concept…..wouldn’t you try to save your season?
It might not be the most people-friendly way of treating your own to just discard them when they’re deemed to be no longer useful when it comes to achieving your goals. But the Vegas Golden Knights have shown time and time again that they don’t care about your feelings. This isn’t summer camp where we all get a participation ribbon. It’s an environment that might rub some the wrong way and might not always work, and in this instance with Tortorella replacing Cassidy, it very well might not work. Heck, this approach has only worked once in eight seasons for the Golden Knights where they’ve won a championship.
But like it or not, that’s the high standard that Vegas has set for themselves and the culture they’ve built in their short time in the league. The standard is to win, and if you’re not helping to achieve that goal, you won’t be around for very long. If they can find someone who is better equipped to help them win, they won’t hesitate to pull the trigger and make that change. And if it does work out and they do win? Flags fly forever. See you at the parade at the Las Vegas Strip. The end justified the means.
Part of what makes the Golden Knights the Golden Knights is knowing that good enough isn’t actually good enough. Hoping things just magically get better and doing nothing isn’t a strategy, and they’re not going to just settle. It’s not good enough that they lost three in a row and six of seven before making the coaching change. It’s not good enough that at this point of the season that they barely have more points than the Devils do. It’s not good enough that Edmonton, their most likely playoff opponent in the first round, has had their number. Vegas has lost 9 of their last 10 to the Oilers, including playoffs, dating back to last season. Going from Cassidy to Tortorella might not work out, but at least they’re trying to do something to flip the script. They know they only have a limited number of kicks at the can with their core. Punting seasons for no good reason isn’t acceptable.
There will come a day where Vegas continuing to trade futures won’t work. Where signing a big free agent won’t extend their window. Where making a coaching change won’t bail them out because the roster is what it is. There will be a day where the entire house of cards that the Golden Knights are built upon collapses. They will have to do a much dreaded rebuild, and the rest of the league will show no sympathy towards them when it comes to paying them back on the ice after Vegas was on or near the top of the league for so long. Heck, its possible they’re already at that point and they’re in denial.
But the Golden Knights clearly don’t think they’re at that point yet.
They’re operating with a sense of urgency that we don’t see most teams operate with by channeling their inner Lou Lamoriello and replacing a head coach with a handful of games remaining in the regular season. They hold their own accountable, at every level. That ‘win at all costs’ approach is who Vegas is as an organization.
By the way, I’m using the words I’m using to describe Vegas for a reason. Words like ‘culture’, ‘identity’, ‘standard’, ‘accountable’ and ‘urgency’. Because when people think of the Golden Knights, what do they associate with them? Winning, first and foremost, but also, doing whatever it takes to win.
Must be nice.
So why am I waxing poetic about the Golden Knights on a Devils-centric blog?
For starters, I do admire their conviction in their beliefs and their willingness to not just accept their fate and blame injuries or bad luck. I respect that they operate in the manner they do, and I’m not ashamed to admit that I wish the Devils were more cutthroat chasing what should be the ultimate goal, which is winning a championship.
I’m not entirely sure I even agree with the decision to fire Cassidy for Tortorella. Yes, both of them are Stanley Cup championship winning coaches. I don’t know that I consider Cassidy to be the problem though when most of their issues are goaltending, shooting, and PDO related. In fact, I consider Cassidy to be one of the three or four best coaches in the league, to the point where there should be a bunch of teams holding meetings this week discussing whether or not they should fire their current coach immediately to hire Cassidy. I do think Vegas as an organization could use a kick in the pants though, and there’s probably not a better coach to do that in the short-term and get the attention of the room than John Tortorella, so from that standpoint, I get why they made this particular change.
More importantly, I respect how aggressive they are to try to achieve their goals. I respect the sense of urgency with which they operate. Why sit around and wait until the trade deadline to go get Rasmus Andersson when you can get him in January? Why go into the playoffs as flat as any team in the league when there’s a chance you get the coaching bump from Tortorella screaming at everyone and go on a run?
Some might argue that this is a panic move or an act of desperation on the part of the Golden Knights. And perhaps it is to some extent. But it also says something about who you are when you can look in the mirror and admit that what you’re doing isn’t working. If you know what you’re doing isn’t going to work, why are you continuing to do it?
That’s not desperation. That’s reading the room, seeing things aren’t going as you expected, being honest with yourself in your self-assessment, reacting with new information that has since been presented to you, and doing something to try to fix it before its too late and you threw a season away for no good reason.
Again, must be nice.
How many times have we, as Devils fans, sat around on these forums over the years and complained about the Devils not doing enough? How many times have we complained about Tom Fitzgerald sitting on his hands and not doing anything? How many times have we been told to be patient? That there’s no coaching change coming. No trades. How many times have excuses been made for why the Devils aren’t doing more, whether it’s because the team is capped out, injured, or both. How many times have the Devils refused to even so much as go and call someone up from Utica just to see if they can create a spark. How many times have we begged for scraps from top Devils brass over the years only to be given nothing?
If the roles were reversed and the Devils operated with the same standard and same urgency that Vegas does, does anyone think Tom Fitzgerald survives this season when someone above him looks at the mess he created? Would an organization like Vegas tolerate some of the terrible contracts handed out and massive draft misses that have happened under Fitzgerald’s watch?
Does anyone think Sheldon Keefe survives the season when the Devils are going through their prolonged stretch where they can’t score? Or do the Devils make a change sometime in December or January when the season was still salvageable….not unlike what Buffalo or Columbus did when those organizations fired their GM and head coach, respectively. Not unlike what Vegas is trying to do now with Tortorella.
Do you think the Golden Knights would tolerate keeping Dave Rogalski continually employed for six plus years despite no actual positive results from any of the goaltenders?
Do you think the Golden Knights, a team that has manipulated the salary cap and found loopholes more than any other team to find a way to squeeze every last dollar under the cap, would’ve unnecessarily paid Evgenii Dadonov a $250K bonus that gets charged to next year’s cap when Dadonov has done nothing and every penny matters? Or would they have said tough luck and played some rando from their AHL affiliate instead?
I think we all know the answer to those questions.
Instead, we have what we have with the Devils. A country club atmosphere where people remain in their positions for years and years despite the lack of on-ice success. That’s the culture the Devils have fostered in the post-Lou Lamoriello era. One where the Devils ‘identity’ is a jumbled mess in part because the GM had steered the roster away from what they were building. One where there is zero sense of urgency from the top down when things are going poorly. One where the Devils are content to sit on their hands while playing poorly for months on end. One where the Devils still have no answers for the Carolina problem that has plagued them for years.
One where winning, while it would be nice, isn’t the highest priority.
That’s the difference between a team that is serious about winning and one that isn’t.
At the end of the day, we’re asking for the bare minimum here from ownership and management. We want to watch a competitive hockey team that has a realistic chance of winning. And when we’re not getting that, we want to know that the people in charge are at least aware of the problem. That they give a damn about this team as much as we do as fans. That they’re not just content to see how things go or see if they can work their way out of this. I don’t pretend to have all the answers, but I also know doing nothing and expecting the problem to fix itself isn’t a plan.
The Calgary Flames will look to snap a three-game road skid when they visit the Vegas Golden Knights on Thursday night in Paradise, Nevada, with puck drop scheduled for 10 p.m. ET.
Vegas enters the matchup with a 33–26–16 overall record and a solid 11–5–5 mark within the Pacific Division. The Golden Knights have been especially dangerous when their offense clicks, boasting a dominant 32–6–10 record in games where they score at least three goals. Their ability to generate offense consistently has been a key factor in keeping them competitive in a tightly contested division.
Calgary, meanwhile, comes in at 31–35–8 overall. The Flames have shown resilience within the division, holding a 12–7–3 record against Pacific opponents. Like Vegas, Calgary’s success is closely tied to its offensive output, posting a strong 22–7–3 record when scoring three or more goals. However, defensive inconsistencies have contributed to their sub-.500 overall record.
Recent Form And Key Trends
This will be the fourth meeting of the season between the two clubs. Calgary claimed the most recent matchup, a 6–3 victory highlighted by a two-goal performance from veteran forward Mikael Backlund. That win remains a notable reference point as the Flames look to replicate that success on the road.
From an individual standpoint, Vegas continues to lean on the production of forward Tomas Hertl, who leads the team with 24 goals and 31 assists. His consistent scoring presence has been vital to the Golden Knights’ offensive structure. Forward Pavel Dorofeyev has also provided a spark recently, contributing four goals and five assists over his last 10 games.
For Calgary, Backlund remains a steady contributor with 16 goals and 24 assists on the season, continuing to play a two-way role for the club. Forward Morgan Frost has added momentum in recent games, tallying four goals and two assists over his last 10 outings, offering secondary scoring support that Calgary has needed.
Looking at recent form, Vegas has gone 4–4–2 over its last 10 games, averaging 2.6 goals per game while allowing 2.5. The Golden Knights have also been disciplined in limiting penalties compared to Calgary, averaging 11.4 penalty minutes per game during that span.
Calgary enters with a slightly stronger 6–3–1 record over its last 10 contests, producing 3.1 goals per game. However, defensive issues remain a concern, as the Flames have allowed an average of 3.3 goals during that stretch. Special teams and defensive zone execution will likely play a decisive role in determining whether Calgary can maintain its recent scoring uptick while tightening up at the back.
In terms of availability, both teams are dealing with notable absences. Vegas will be without William Karlsson (lower body), as well as depth players Carter Hart (leg) and Jonas Rondbjerg (lower body). Calgary’s injury list is longer, with Jonathan Huberdeau out for the season (hip), along with Samuel Honzek (upper body), Jake Bean (undisclosed), Joel Hanley (upper body), and Yan Kuznetsov (day-to-day, upper body). Connor Zary is also day-to-day with an upper-body injury.
With both teams still jockeying for positioning in the Pacific Division, Thursday’s matchup carries added importance. Vegas will aim to defend home ice and capitalize on its offensive strengths, while Calgary looks to build on recent scoring trends and reverse its road struggles.