Looking at some bounce-back candidates for the 2026-27 Penguins

PITTSBURGH, PA - MARCH 31: Samuel Girard #49 of the Pittsburgh Penguins in action during the game against the Detroit Red Wings at PPG PAINTS Arena on March 31, 2026 in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. (Photo by Joe Sargent/NHLI via Getty Images) | NHLI via Getty Images

There were a lot of things that contributed to the Pittsburgh Penguins strong 2025-26 performance and their return to the playoffs, and one of the biggest was the number of players that exceeded individual expectations. In some cases, it was not just a case of exceeding expectations, but having career years.

When that happens across an entire roster you do not have many bounce-back candidates for the following season.

There are, however, still a handful of players that the Penguins will be hoping for a bounce-back performance from during the 2026-27 season. So let’s take a look at a few of them and how likely it will be for them to perform better on an individual level.

Most-likely bounce-back: Sam Girard

Girard’s brief time with the Penguins has produced some mixed results, and I would say the majority of those results have been on the disappointing side. He initially struggled after coming over from the Colorado Avalanche in the trade for Brett Kulak. His work alongside Kris Letang produced some ugly moments in both the regular season and playoffs. Early on, he looked like a player that was doing more thinking on the ice than playing. Sometimes he seemed more interested in just spinning around with the puck than making a decision with it.

But for all of the negatives there were still some flashes of strong play (both with and without Letang) and some games where he truly did shine. It was not all bad.

I have seen enough defenseman come through Pittsburgh, initially struggle while trying to fit in with a new team and system, have people get down on them, only to have them bounce back with a fresh start in the next season and play at a really high level.

Sergei Gonchar had some rocky moments early on and then became a pivotal part of a Stanley Cup winning team.

Paul Martin was viewed as a liability with an albatross contract after one year before playing like the rock-solid, two-way defender he was in New Jersey.

Erik Karlsson was completely written off by many until he bounced back this season.

Is Girard going to be Gonchar or Karlsson next season? No. Because even at his peak he was never that type of player. But given his talent and track record as an NHL player (which is very good!) I do not think it is a stretch to believe he can come back next season and be a productive, top-four defenseman. It would be a welcome addition if he does.

Possible bounce-back: Arturs Silovs

Recency bias might tell us there is nothing for him to bounce back from because of how he played in the playoffs when he got his opportunity. And he was fantastic in those three games, giving the Penguins a fighting chance and nearly pushing them to a Game 7 out of a 3-0 series hole.

But his season overall wasn’t great.

His .887 save percentage ranked 44th out of the 59 goalies that appeared in at least 25 games.

His minus-8.3 goals saved above average ranked 79th out of 98 goalies that played in at least one game.

His minus-11.9 goals saved above expected ranked 89th of 98 goalies.

Objectively speaking, he was not great. His rebound control needs work, his puck-handling needs work and sometimes he has a tendency to just let in some absolutely ugly goals.

Even with that being the case, he is still only 25 years old and has shown flashes of being a good goalie at both the AHL and NHL levels, especially in big-game moments. Goalie performance is also completely unpredictable at times and it wouldn’t be a shocking development to see him come back next season and put together a strong season in a platoon role with Sergei Murashov.

You need to bounce-back: Ville Koivunen

There were some reasonably high expectations for Koivunen going into the 2025-26 season, and he started off with a prominent role on the NHL roster. He did not always take advantage of it, finishing the season with just two goals and seven assists in 39 games.

The AHL numbers since coming over in the Jake Guentzel trade have been consistently excellent.

The talent and vision are not in question.

The underlying numbers when he is on the ice are consistently solid, and he always seems to find himself in good positions with open looks.

But none of it has translated over to NHL production just yet, and those open looks too often turn into harmless possessions with blocked shots, deflected shots or shots that just do not find their way into the net.

He is going to be 23 years old at the start of next season and with 94 points in 97 games over the past two years he is going to have nothing left to prove in the AHL. It is time for him to take the next step and start to show something at the highest level. If he doesn’t, he officially goes from NHL prospect to NHL suspect.

Not likely to bounce-back: Ryan Graves

Kyle Dubas’ first year running the Penguins produced more strikeouts than home runs. The only strikeout from that offseason that has not either 1) bounced back, or 2) been jettisoned somewhere else is Ryan Graves. And unless it is part of another salary dump from another team, or unless he gives up an asset to get rid of him (which he should not do) the Penguins are going to still have Graves playing somewhere in the organization. Most likely in the AHL.

He is going to be 31 next season. He has had three seasons here under two different head coaches. It is just not in the cards here for him to be anything more than an organizational depth defenseman with a high price tag. Sometimes when you swing big, you miss. They missed with Graves. It happens more often than not in free agency.

Devils GM Sunny Mehta makes first front-office hire with Braden Birch as an assistant

NEWARK, N.J. (AP) — The New Jersey Devils have hired Braden Birch as an assistant general manager, the first front-office addition by Sunny Mehta since taking over as the team's head of hockey operations.

Mehta, who was named GM last month, announced the hire Monday. He and Birch worked together with the Florida Panthers and were part of back-to-back Stanley Cup championships in 2024 and ’25.

“His blend of on-ice experience, management background, and intellect will serve him well in his new role," Mehta said. "Braden will work to bolster all areas of our operation, and I look forward to him joining our existing front office, where his personality and work ethic will fit in excellently.”

The Devils, as expected, did not renew the contracts of executives Dan MacKinnon and Chuck Fletcher as Mehta remakes the organization. They had reported to longtime GM Tom Fitzgerald, who parted ways with the Devils in early April.

Birch spent more than a decade with the Panthers, much of it as director of hockey operations and most recently overseeing salary cap management.

“I am really excited to take this next step in my professional career,” said Birch, who turns 37 just before the NHL season begins in late September. "I want to thank Bill Zito, the Viola family, and the entire Florida Panthers organization for 12 amazing years, and the ability to help a front office achieve the ultimate goal of Stanley Cup championships.

"I also greatly appreciate them giving me the opportunity to grow my professional career in New Jersey. I look forward to working with Sunny and his group on returning the Devils to the levels of success that we believe they can achieve.”

Zito called Birch a great person who will be missed by the Panthers and wished him the best.

“When you have success like we had the past few seasons, individuals are going to get opportunities to advance and it’s only a good thing for everyone,” Zito said.

___

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

What’s The Plan For Senators UFA Lars Eller?

When the Senators signed veteran centre Lars Eller last summer, he was viewed as a ready-made replacement for their outgoing fourth-line centre, Adam Gaudette.

At 36 years old, Eller arrived with a reputation as a reliable two-way player, a strong defensive presence and a Stanley Cup pedigree that clearly appealed to Senators GM Steve Staios. The previous year, he had brought in Cup-winning veterans Michael Amadio, Nick Cousins, and David Perron.

Eller checked a lot of boxes. He skates and defends better than Gaudette, but it always felt like a tall order to expect him to replace the secondary offence Gaudette provided in 2024-25, when he scored 19 goals for Ottawa.

Steve Warne discusses Drake Batherson's hopes for a contract extension this summer.

Eller actually got off to a solid start in that area, posting six points in October. But his offensive production slowed dramatically after that. He finished the season with just 15 points in 68 games. In fairness, part of that dip was injury-related. Eller missed 14 games after breaking his foot blocking a shot against the Columbus Blue Jackets in December.

Now, with his one-year, $1.25 million contract set to expire on July 1, Staios has another veteran decision to make.

Postmedia’s Bruce Garrioch recently reported that the expectation is that the Senators will move on from Eller this summer.

It’s understandable why head coach Travis Green appreciated having Eller in the lineup. He still skates well and remains one of Ottawa’s most trustworthy defensive forwards. Coaches love the guys they can trust, and Eller rarely hurt the Senators structurally.

But the Senators would probably like to see more impact from the position, whether it’s more edge and physicality or more offence.

And that’s where Stephen Halliday may enter the fray as a plan B.

In Staios’ first act in what’s sure to be a busy offseason (spoiler: they all are), Halliday recently signed a two-year extension for almost half the money (including bonuses) that Eller made this season.

While the 23-year-old still has work to do defensively, he already looks capable of providing significantly more offence than Eller can at this stage of his career.

For a Senators team that doesn’t really have that 100+ point superstar carrying the attack, the offence has to continue as it has, by committee, and the Sens can’t afford to ice too many low-event forwards.

As a sidebar, the Senators would love to see one of their drafted players come up and establish themselves as a full-time NHLer. The prospect cupboard needs restocking, as there are very few players who are slam-dunk NHL prospects, let alone future stars.

That can partially be blamed on poor drafting, but also on the organization’s pre-Andlauer era misread that it was ready to contend and time to sacrifice some of their future to make splashy, go-for-it deals.

Ottawa’s 2020 draft class produced several NHLers, but since then, Halliday is the only drafted prospect to appear in more than four NHL games with the club.

That doesn’t automatically mean Halliday is ready for a full-time NHL role. But internally, it’s Halliday or bust, because there’s no other obvious forward in Belleville ready to make the jump to Ottawa this fall.

Whether it’s Halliday or a more impactful forward brought in through free agency, it feels like the Senators need a different look in Eller's spot.

Prediction: Eller is a respected teammate and a good soldier, but after his year in Ottawa, it feels like Staios is more likely to try something new this fall rather than run it back.

By Steve Warne
The Hockey News

This article was first published at The Hockey News Ottawa. Check out more great Sens features from The Hockey News at the links below:  

Batherson Wide Open To Signing Extension: 'Ottawa Feels Like Home'
Dylan Cozens Will Represent Canada At World Championships Next Week
Will The Senators Re-Sign 38-Year-old UFA Claude Giroux?
Halliday Reacts To New Deal With Ottawa: 'Super Excited I Got A Chance'
Another NHL Chance For Former Senators GM Pierre Dorion?

How the top young players in the Penguins’ organization are doing at this point

PITTSBURGH, PA - MARCH 31: Avery Hayes #85 of the Pittsburgh Penguins in action during the game against the Detroit Red Wings at PPG PAINTS Arena on March 31, 2026 in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. (Photo by Joe Sargent/NHLI via Getty Images) | NHLI via Getty Images

The 2025-26 hockey season is winding down, with many leagues deep into their playoffs, if they haven’t concluded business for the year. Let’s check in on the summer 2025 Top 25 Under 25 list for the Penguins and see what the young players have been up to since the last update we made back in February.

The list:

No. 25: Quinn Beauchense
No. 24: Cruz Lucius
No. 23: Travis Hayes
No. 22: Brady Peddle
No. 21: Finn Harding
No. 20: Sam Poulin
No. 19: Joona Vaisanen
No. 18: Avery Hayes
No. 17: Tanner Howe
No. 16: Tristan Broz
No. 15: Emil Pieniniemi
No. 14: Mikhail Ilyin
No. 13: Peyton Kettles
No. 12: Melvin Fernström

No. 11: Arturs Silovs
No. 10: Sergei Murashov
No. 9: Philip Tomasino
No. 8: Owen Pickering
No. 7: Joel Blomqvist

No. 6: Bill Zonnon
No. 5: Will Horcoff
No. 4: Ben Kindel
No. 3: Harrison Brunicke
No. 2: Ville Koivunen

No. 1: Rutger McGroarty

We broke this down into informal tiers to group the players. That’s been working out pretty well and helps to give an idea of which players belong where at this point of their respective journeys, so we’ll stick with it.

Tier 7: #22 – honorable mentions; Long-term prospects with some upside

Beauchesne, T. Hayes and Peddle were all on ATOs (amateur tryouts) with Wilkes-Barre this spring until all three got released from those ATOs yesterday. The AHL roster is too big, none of these teenagers played an AHL playoff game but they did get to spend a few weeks and learn how a pro hockey team operates, practices and pick up some experience that could help in the future (Beauchesne played a late regular season AHL game, T. Hayes got into two games). Of course, there won’t be a future for Cruz Lucius in the Pittsburgh organization after he told the Pens to take this job and shove it (though probably in more professional terms) but Lucius has decided to go the free agent route and pick which NHL team to sign with instead of joining up with the Pens.

Tier 6: #15 – 21; Slightly more developed prospects still a ways away

Of this grouping, A. Hayes and Broz are well-established as key personnel for Wilkes and helping them to win games by being two quality AHL players. That’s been that way for some time now, they don’t belong as “a ways away” by this point. Pieniniemi fits the category, currently working in the ECHL playoffs with Wheeling. Harding had a solid rookie season but has been rotated in and out of the AHL playoff lineup on a very deep WBS team. Tanner Howe is one of the more intriguing prospects, finishing his season to come back from a major knee injury and occasionally appear in some highlights via his hard-working style. I wouldn’t expect Howe to make the NHL Penguins out of traning camp but if he keeps going on this trajectory it’s not out of the question that he could be a candidate as a mid-season injury replacement to get a game or two at this rate.

Tier 5: #12 – 14; Intrigue, but patience required

Fernstrom has been a scratch in all the AHL playoff games so far, Kettles has long been injured and out. Ilyin is certainly the player in this tier worth talking about now that he has more points in the AHL playoffs (3 in 4 games) than he did in the AHL regular season (2 in 5 games). It looks like his learning curve to figure out how to perform in North America is coming along quite nicely, making him an exciting watch as he continues to acclimate and get the opportunity to perform.

Tier 4: #9 -11; The wildcards

This tier has turned into the young goalie area now that Tomasino is long since departed the organization. Silovs proved again he’s got big game performance in his DNA after a great turn in the NHL playoffs, despite dealing with a knee injury. Say what you will about his performance or numbers over the long haul but if nothing else he is a player with a growing history of rising play to meet the moment in the key times. Murashov continues to shine brightly, he’s got a 3-1 record, 1.99 GAA and .937 save% in the AHL playoffs so far. Sky continue to looks like the limit for him.

Tier 3: #7-8; Older, near ready players

Meh, disappointing tier here. Blomqvist hasn’t been needed to play, he’s a good AHL goalie (maybe even very good) but Murashov is clearly a notch ahead and a team only needs one goalie at this time of year. That might be developing into the story of Blomqvist’s career by getting surpassed by Murashov. Pickering scored a game-winning goal in the series against Hershey and is playing a featured role in the lineup for the AHL playoffs, so that’s something at least, but the Pens re-signing Ilya Solovyov shows that they’re not holding their breath for Pickering to step all the way up to the NHL level and anything they get out of him is about a bonus at this point.

Tier 2: #4-6; Recent first round picks

Kindel wrapped up a tremendously successful NHL season, looking at his age-18 stats compared to others is very promising. His year had a tough ending but is little to worry about, the experience gained will prove invaluable as he continues to grow. Horcoff has confirmed an expected return to the University of Michigan for 2026-27, so he’ll be off the pro radar for a while longer aside from summer prospect camp.

The story of the moment in this segment is Zonnon. Zonnon’s QMJHL career came to a close with a playoff elimination (he had 15 points in 17 games) and he quickly joined Wilkes on an ATO once freed up. The Pens have confirmed Zonnon will make his AHL debut coming up soon in the playoffs, a big step and key moment of trust to throw a young player in at the most important moments. Seeing what he does with the opportunity will be a treat.

Tier 1: #1 -3; Cream of the crop

Though all three players in this category (Brunicke, Koivunen, McGroarty) surely didn’t have the season that they (or the team) would have liked to have had, but they’ve shrugged it off and are making meaningful impacts on the WBS playing run as some of the very best and top players on that team right now. Brunicke is playing as a top pair defenseman and having a massive contribution all over the ice with his skills – including a shorthanded goal. McGroarty’s out there tipping in overtime goals and Koivunen, ever-productive at the AHL level, has four points in four playoff games. All three of these players are pulling the rope in the right direction and looking to build momentum moving forward. That’s good for Wilkes in the short-term, it might be good for Pittsburgh down the road.

Weekly Cupcakes:

DENVER, COLORADO - MAY 05: Gabriel Landeskog #92, Nathan MacKinnon #29, Martin Necas #88 and Cale Makar #8 of the Colorado Avalanche celebrate after a goal during the first period against the Minnesota Wild in Game Two of the Second Round of the 2026 Stanley Cup Playoffs at Ball Arena on May 05, 2026 in Denver, Colorado. (Photo by Michael Martin/NHLI via Getty Images) | NHLI via Getty Images

Avalanche will have a couple tough decisions this summer now that NHL salary cap is set. [The Denver Post]

Pressure falls on Avalanche as they aim to purge playoff ghosts. [Sportsnet]

Avalanche remain confident in goaltending duo entering Game 4 against Wild. [NHL]

Necas’ breakout year with Avs includes 100-point season, playoff success and locker-room pranks. [TSN]

Gavin McKenna’s mom allegedly snuck teen hockey phenom alcohol at Pennsylvania bar. [Edmonton Journal]

Sharks an example for Canucks, Flames in their respective rebuilds. [USA Today]

Hockey icon Ernie ‘Punch’ McLean killed in northern B.C. crash. [CBC]

P.K. Subban speaks with The Gazette on Canadiens’ playoff run. [Montreal Gazette]

Hurricanes gift for rolling in playoffs? Another lengthy rest between rounds. [The Score]

NHL gambles away its credibility with draft lottery. Even if the Leafs winning it was on the up-and-up, and it probably was, a blatant conflict of interest remains. [Ottawa Citizen]

Vancouver Canucks 2026 NHL Draft Target: Maddox Dagenais

The Vancouver Canucks enter the 2026 NHL Entry Draft with 10 picks. Leading up to the draft, we at The Hockey News will profile a different prospect who the Canucks could take with each of their picks. Today's prospect is Québec Remparts center Maddox Dagenais, who Vancouver could select 33rd overall.

If the Canucks want to continue to build out their center depth, Dagenais would be a smart selection to kick off the second round. The left-shot center had a productive season in the QMJHL as he posted 62 points in 62 games. Dagenais followed up his regular-season success with a strong playoff run, as he recorded three goals and six points in 11 games. 

After his season was complete, Dagenais represented Canada at the 2026 U18s. He played in the middle-six and finished the tournament with two points in five games. Dagenais also represented Canada at the 2024 U17s where he won a Silver. 

Dagenais is the 15th-ranked North American skater according to NHL Central Scouting. The 18-year-old is listed at 6'3", 196 lbs. Overall, Dagenais is a physical player who understands how to use his size to his advantage. 

When Dagenais hears his name in June, he will become the second member of his family to be drafted into the NHL. His dad is Pierre Dagenais, who the New Jersey Devils famously drafted in both 1996 and 1998. Dagenais' dad would go on to play 142 NHL games, scoring 35 goals and recording 58 points. 

While there will be a lot of focus on his point total, one area of Dagenais' game that does not get enough recognition is his ability to win faceoffs. During the regular season, he took 380 draws and had a win percentage of 51.3%. As for the playoffs, he lined up for 72 faceoffs and won 52.8% of them. 

In the offensive zone, Dagenais has shown the ability to be both a playmaker and a finisher. He is a player who likes to shoot from everywhere on the ice and averaged 4.4 shots per game during the regular season. Ultimately, if Dagenais has the puck in the offensive zone, he consistently finds a way to create scoring chances. 

Maddox Dagenais of the Québec Remparts (Photo Credit: Erica Perreaux/CHL)
Maddox Dagenais of the Québec Remparts (Photo Credit: Erica Perreaux/CHL)

As for the transition game, Dagenais likes to have control of the puck when in the neutral zone. This allows him to dictate the play and decide whether the best option is to carry the puck past the blue line or make a pass to a teammate. Dagenais' ability to read the play also comes in handy, as he can anticipate when it's best to leave the defensive zone.

Dagenais has been on the radar for this draft ever since he was drafted first overall in the QMJHL Draft back in 2024. He is a skilled center who won the QMJHL's Best Professional Prospect award this year. If selected, Dagenais would be a solid addition to Vancouver's prospect pool. 

Make sure you bookmark THN's Vancouver Canucks site and add us to your favourites on Google News for the latest news, exclusive interviews, breakdowns, and so much more. Also, don't forget to leave a comment at the bottom of the page and engage with other passionate fans through our forum. This article originally appeared on The Hockey News.

Latest From THN’s Vancouver Canucks Site:

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DitD & Open Post – 5/11/26: Front Office Jobs Edition

NEWARK, NEW JERSEY - APRIL 21: New Jersey Devils introduce General Manager Sunny Mehta at Prudential Center on April 21, 2026 in Newark, New Jersey. (Photo by Andrew Maclean/NHLI via Getty Images) | NHLI vis Getty Images

Here are your links for today:

Devils Links

A couple names to keep an eye on for front office positions:

Hockey Links

The Hurricanes are having a dominant playoff run:

Playoff scoring leaders as of Saturday:

Hart Trophy finalists:

“Auston Matthews remains uncertain about his future with the Toronto Maple Leafs despite the team’s recent NHL draft lottery win, an NHL source tells ESPN. Matthews, 28, has two more seasons left on his contract with a salary cap hit of $13.25 million and a full no-movement clause. A source confirmed a report by The Athletic earlier this week that the star center is unsure if he’ll return to the Maple Leafs for the 2026-27 season or seek a trade to a Stanley Cup contender.” [ESPN]

 A look at the upcoming free-agent market: “The upcoming free-agent class is a little short on headline names, but there are plenty of quality players eligible to hit the open market on July 1. And many of them are bound to land eye-popping contracts in a rising-cap environment.” [The Athletic ($)]

“Former Canadiens star P. K. Subban has completed the $10-million pledge he made to the Montreal Children’s Hospital more than a decade ago. The Montreal Children’s Hospital Foundation said Friday that Subban and his foundation had completed the commitment as part of the hospital’s ‘Unexpected Ways to Heal’ fundraising campaign, describing Subban’s fundraising as the largest philanthropic commitment by a professional athlete in Canada.” [Montreal Gazette]

Feel free to discuss these and any other hockey-related stories in the comments below.

Canadiens Get Another Big Win And Take 2-1 Series Lead

The Montreal Canadiens took to the Bell Centre ice for the first time since eliminating the Tampa Bay Lightning on Sunday night when they hosted the Buffalo Sabres for Game 3 of their second-round series. While each team had won a game in Buffalo, the momentum was definitely with the Canadiens, given how dominant they were in their 5-1 win on Friday night, and they picked up right where they left off with a 6-2 win on Sunday night.

With 50 minutes to go before puck drop, the seats were already filling up nicely, and fans were warming up with “Go Habs Go” chants, a prelude to how electric the building would be. With a building packed to the rafters, it was former captain Kirk Muller who carried the torch in the Bell Center to thunderous applause.

Canadiens' Farm Team Eliminated As Number 1 Goalie Rides The Pine In Montreal
Canadiens’ Dobes Is No Battlin’ Billy, But He Can Handle Himself
Exclusive: Annakin Slayd Could Have A Big Surprise For Canadiens’ Fans

Missed Chances Galore

Despite the noisy crowd, it was the Sabres who drew first blood with Tage Thompson finding the back of the net off a missed Cole Caufield clearance. While that would have quieted down a lot of building around the league, it wasn’t the case on Sunday night, and the Habs faithful remained just as noisy.

From then on, the Canadiens forechecked relentlessly and took over the first frame. They had several great opportunities alone and up close with Alex Lyon. The Sabres goalie, who wasn’t very proactive in Game 2, cut a dangerous feed that was going straight to Nick Suzuki, who was alone in acres of space. The puck still got to him, but he had to take some time to steady it before taking a shot that Lyon saved.

The captain got another chance on the power play. He got the puck in the bumper position but couldn’t unleash a shot. Caufield also got a chance in close, just like Veleno did. Lyon had an answer to everything until Alex Newhook scored on a rebound, his fourth goal in as many games. He would also go on to add another one, in an empty net in the dying minutes.

No Love Lost

Unsurprisingly, the game started just like Game 2 ended with plenty of hits, slashes and other shenanigans. Some calls were missed on both sides, including an elbow to Lane Hutson’s head, but the most worrying came when Zach Benson sent Juraj Slafkovsky headfirst into the boards.

Both goalies also saw some action they would rather not have seen. Beck Malenstyn was sent to the box for two minutes for goaltender interference after literally flying into Jakub Dobes, while Joe Veleno avoided a penalty call when he landed skates-first into Lyon.

Unsurprisingly, there were a lot of scrums in the dying minutes, and chances are we’ll see more rough stuff in Game 4.

Caufield Finally Found The Back Of The Net Again

After missing multiple golden chances, including one where he was in the blue paint with an open net, the Canadiens’ sniper finally got his second goal of the playoffs. It came on the power play, but the diminutive winger won’t complain about that; the relief in his face spoke for itself. Speaking after the game, Martin St-Louis said:

It’s not down to luck that Cole is a 50-goal scorer. If he had scored on more chances this season, he could have scored 60. He’s going to get his scoring chances, and he’ll miss some, but I’m not worried about Cole Caufield scoring goals in the playoffs.
-

Later in the second frame, Juraj Slafkovsky also found the back of the net on the power play by deflecting a Lane Hutson shot. That was the big Slovak’s fourth postseason power play goal; he now only needs two more to tie Jacques Lemaire’s franchise record. The goal came after a high-sticking call on Alex Tuch, which Slafkovsky drew himself, before heading to the Sabres bench to do a bit of chirping.

After the game, Lindy Ruff was asked what his team had to do to get better results, and he replied:

We have to be smarter. You know, we took five offensive zone penalties. Our discipline for that wasn’t good enough.
-

Even though his goaltender allowed five goals, the coach refused to hang anything on his door:

He was very good all night. I’ll stop you right there. He was very good all night; there was nothing about Alex Lyon in this game.
-

Game 4 is scheduled for 7:00 PM on Tuesday, and the Sabres will be desperate to bounce back; another loss would give the Canadiens a commanding lead in the series. After three games, Montreal has outscored Buffalo 13-7, and Ruff’s men will have to find a way to stop the hemorrhage if they want to have a chance to come back into this series.


Follow Karine on X @KarineHains Bluesky @karinehains.bsky.social and Threads @karinehains.  

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2025-26 Season in Review: Bryan Rust

PITTSBURGH, PA - NOVEMBER 21: Bryan Rust #17 of the Pittsburgh Penguins skates during the game against the Minnesota Wild at PPG PAINTS Arena on November 21, 2025 in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. (Photo by Joe Sargent/NHLI via Getty Images) | NHLI via Getty Images

Vitals

Player: Bryan Rust
Born: May 11, 1992 (Age 33 season)
Height: 5’ 11”
Weight: 202 pounds
Hometown: Pontiac, Michigan
Shoots: Right
Draft: 2010 third round (80th overall) by the Pittsburgh Penguins
2025-26 Statistics: 72 games played, 29 goals, 36 assists = 65 points; 6 games played, 1 goal, 1 assist in playoffs.
Contract Status: Rust has two seasons remaining on a six year deal signed back in 2022 with an AAV of $5.125 per season.
History: 2024-25; 2023-24(58% A, 40% B); 2022-23 (65% C, 23% D); 2021-22 (80% A, 20% B); 2020-21 (61% A, 37% B); 2019-20 (91% A, 9% B); 2018-19 (60% B, 27% C); 2017-18 (40% A, 52% B).

Monthly Splits

via Yahoo!

What jumps out here when looking at Rust’s monthly splits for the season is March. Without Sidney Crosby and Evgeni Malkin for extended stretches during this time and with a heavy schedule to boot, Rust stepped up his game to post 20 points in 16 games to help the Penguins through their toughest stretch of the season and put a firm grip on a playoff spot down the stretch run. Rust was exceptional as well in the month of December when the team was struggling, but his play was enough to help them keep treading water until they found their game again.

The sample wasn’t as big as it could have been after the NHL suspended Rust for three games due to an illegal check to Brock Boeser on January 27th. It was Rust’s first career NHL suspension.

Story of the Season

In 2024-25, Bryan Rust posted a career year and many believed he was going to be a prime trade candidate last offseason as the Penguins entered another year of a rebuild. No one figured he could ever repeat the production from that season and his value on the market was never going to be higher. Everything pointed towards Rust being shipped out once his no trade clause expired and the Penguins stocking up more assets for their path back to contention.

The summer came and went, and no trade involving Rust ever materialized, and the fourth longest tenured Penguins returned to Pittsburgh for a 12th season. Still, matching his career numbers from the season prior seemed like a stretch as he entered his age 33 season and the Penguins expectations were closer to bottom-five team in the league than a playoff contender.

Of course, the story of Rust’s entire career has been proving people wrong and 2025-26 was the perfect microcosm of just that. Back alongside Sidney Crosby on the top line, Rust didn’t quite hit the 30-goal mark for a second straight season, falling just shy with 29, but that mark was still good enough to make it seven straight seasons with at least 20 goals scored. On top of the goal scoring, Rust did set a new career high in assists with 36 and was able to replicate his career best point total of 65 points, set in 2024-25, good for third best on the team.

In the playoffs, Rust struggled to find his scoring touch like much of the rest of the team, registering just one goal and one assist in the six game loss to the Philadelphia Flyers.

Regular season 5v5 advanced stats

Data via Natural Stat Trick. Ranking is out of 18 forwards on the team who qualified by playing a minimum of 150 minutes.

Corsi For%: 48.8% (12th)
Goals For%: 53.6% (11th)
xGF%: 50.0% (15th)
Scoring Chance %: 47.6% (18th)
High Danger Scoring Chance%: 51.5% (15th)
5v5 on-ice shooting%: 13.1% (4th)
On-ice save%: .889% (14th)
Goals/60: 1.02 (6th)
Assist/60: 0.96 (10th)
Points/60: 1.97 (7th)

Not a great season analytically from Rust, but his scoring rates were still solid and shooting percentage remains near the very top of the Penguins lineup. His play driving numbers have dipped in recent years and the Penguins top line continues to be all gas, no breaks which leaves them exposed on the defensive end. On the whole, the entire team’s analytics improved the season which was evident from their place in the standings. Rust’ numbers did improve individually in several areas but not at the same rate as others so he was pushed down the rankings a bit.

Charts n’at

Via Advanced Hockey Stats and NHL Edge

Rust has never been higher in EV Offense than he has been in the past two seasons, and interestingly his EV Defense impacts have noticeably dropped away recently too. In some ways Rust is putting up the EV Offense/Defense impacts of Jake Guentzel on the high-flying first line as the new winger focal point with Crosby. The Crosby line statistically is one not always covering things up defensively but leaning hard towards generating offense, which they still do just about as good as anyone in the NHL.

The microstats show why Rust is one of the top offensive performers in the game today. He scores a ton of goals, his in-zone shooting and creating shot assists is impressive. He gets a lot of shots from high danger passes (no doubt heavily influenced by the number of chances his superstar center creates for him). Unlike members of the second line, the damage is not coming off the rush. These guys are getting on the forecheck, grinding along the walls and driving to the net. Also impressive (and relevant) is his skating speed at age-33 hasn’t much faded to make him among the faster players on the ice.

The NHL Edge data plays into the picture painted above in this section. Rust is a very active player in terms of staying busy and keeping his legs moving. He shoots a lot, and from all over the ice – with an emphasis on trying to get to the front of the net. Unlocking the simple secret that players talented enough to convert from in close are going to feast by getting there is how he’s averaged almost 30 goals in the last three seasons. Missing 10+ games in each year could also be seen as a possible byproduct of paying the price by dealing with damage to do so.

The zone time splits are interesting too, one doesn’t have to be a defensive wizard if they are spending as much time as possible in the offensive zone. Thanks in part to generous zone starts, Rust and the Pens’ first line excel at keeping the play alive and thinking offense.

Rust plays a lot of minutes to give a lot of opportunities to pile up more speed bursts than most forwards in the NHL, and he did just that despite only playing 72 total regular season games. The wheels still look pretty good, and at this point, age is nothing but a number for how Rust can use his legs to get around the ice in order to do what he’s trying to do.

Highlights

Questions to ponder

As another major offseason awaits the Penguins, fans may wonder if Rust could be a trade candidate once again. If it were up to Rust, a trade will never be in the cards as he has stated his desire to be a Penguin for life, a sentiment shared by many in the fan base as well.

As the fourth longest tenured player in the organization, Rust has all the makings of a future captain should he remain in a Penguins jersey once Crosby, Malkin, and Letang hang up the skates.

Unfortunately that is not how is always plays out of course, and with his trade protection expired, there could once again be questions surrounding his future with the franchise, unless of course Dubas has already determined his value to the team outweighs anything he could return in assets from being dealt away.

Ideal 2026-27

If Bryan Rust can keep copying and pasting seasons like he posted the last two years, then it’s an easy success for the Penguins. Rust turns 34 today and 2026-27 will be his 13th season in the league. Being on the wrong side of 30 is typically when players start to slow down, but Rust has posted the three best seasons of his career all after that mark. He may have failed just shy of reaching 30 goals again this past season, but he bumped his assist total just enough to post consecutive 65 point seasons.

When the puck drops in the fall, you can expect to see Rust back on the top line alongside Sidney Crosby, a place he has called home for the better part of his career. As long as Crosby is on the ice and scoring at his regular pace, Rust will stack points simply by being a direct beneficiary of playing on his right wing. For a third round lottery ticket in the draft, it’s hard to ask for much more than Rust continues to give the Penguins year after year.

Bottom line

Death. Taxes. Bryan Rust producing.

That’s been to story of Rust’s entire career and he somehow keeps posting more productive seasons the older he gets, bucking the conventional aging curve. From a bottom-six role player when he first broke into the league, to making his name with clutch playoff moments, all the way to being a staple on the Penguins first line with Sidney Crosby, Rust has paved quite the career path for himself.

Now, as he inches into his mid-30s, Rust remains a constant with the Penguins and developed not just as a hockey player, but also a leader in the locker room. When one of the alternate captains is out, the “A” gets moved to his chest with little thought. Facing a daunting March schedule and missing Crosby and Malkin, Rust posted his best month of hockey all season when the team needed him most. That’s just simply the player he has become and continues to be 12 years into his career.

Final Grade

A.

Rust just does what he does and it works. 2025-26 saw another 65 point season and a new career high in assists. His play helped carry the Penguins through March when Crosby and Malkin missed significant time. He wasn’t great in the playoff series against the Flyers but neither was most of the team. He still has two years left on his contract and hasn’t showed many signs of slowing down.

Leave your grades for Rust in the comments and feel free to agree or disagree with our analysis of his season there as well.

Islanders News: Pulock under the knife

Get well soon, and properly. | NHLI via Getty Images

We’re still in the quiet, other-teams-are-competing part of the offseason, but there was one bit of news on an Islanders player who was grinding through some injuries during the final third.

Meanwhile, among those still-competing teams, Minnesota has restored possibility in its series with the Avalanche, the Canadiens have taken the lead on Buffalo, and the Ducks pulled level with Vegas.

Islanders News

Turns out Ryan Pulock did need shoulder surgery. Here’s hoping he comes back at 100%. [Post]

Elsewhere

  • The Canadiens returned home and thrilled their fans in Game 3. [NHL]
  • After many years of having his playoff credentials questioned, Frederik Andersen is “locked in” for the 8-0 Hurricanes. [NHL]
  • Scott Wedgewood has had a looooong journey toward NHL regular and he’s happy to talk about it. [Sportsnet]
  • BUT, he was pulled in Game 3 and isn’t guaranteed the start in Game 4 for Colorado. [NHL]
  • After a hat trick, John Tortorella took the opportunity to lay into Mitch Marner’s critics. [Sportsnet]
  • Should the Leafs shop the #1 pick? Is Tampa in trouble? etc. [Sportsnet]
  • Kirk Muller leads the…whatever, go take a long walk on a short pier. [NHL]

Canadiens take 2-1 series lead into game 4 against the Sabres

Buffalo Sabres (50-23-9, in the Atlantic Division) vs. Montreal Canadiens (48-24-10, in the Atlantic Division)

Montreal, Quebec; Tuesday, 7 p.m. EDT

LINE: Canadiens -135, Sabres +113; over/under is 6

NHL PLAYOFFS SECOND ROUND: Canadiens lead series 2-1

BOTTOM LINE: The Montreal Canadiens host the Buffalo Sabres in the second round of the NHL Playoffs with a 2-1 lead in the series. The teams meet Sunday for the eighth time this season. The Canadiens won the previous matchup 6-2. Alexander Newhook scored two goals in the victory.

Montreal has a 22-11-3 record in Atlantic Division games and a 48-24-10 record overall. The Canadiens are 48-8-9 in games they score three or more goals.

Buffalo has gone 50-23-9 overall with a 21-9-5 record in Atlantic Division play. The Sabres are 49-4-8 in games they score three or more goals.

TOP PERFORMERS: Nicholas Suzuki has scored 29 goals with 72 assists for the Canadiens. Lane Hutson has two goals and seven assists over the last 10 games.

Tage Thompson has 40 goals and 41 assists for the Sabres. Alex Tuch has scored five goals with three assists over the last 10 games.

LAST 10 GAMES: Canadiens: 6-2-2, averaging 2.9 goals, five assists, 6.6 penalties and 16.1 penalty minutes while giving up 2.2 goals per game.

Sabres: 5-3-2, averaging three goals, 4.8 assists, 5.6 penalties and 14.7 penalty minutes while giving up 2.6 goals per game.

INJURIES: Canadiens: Patrik Laine: out (abdomen).

Sabres: Noah Ostlund: out (lower body), Jiri Kulich: out for season (ear), Sam Carrick: day to day (arm), Justin Danforth: out for season (kneecap).

___

The Associated Press created this story using technology provided by Data Skrive and data from Sportradar.

Golden Knights, Ducks meet with series tied 2-2

Anaheim Ducks (43-33-6, in the Pacific Division) vs. Vegas Golden Knights (39-26-17, in the Pacific Division)

Paradise, Nevada; Tuesday, 9:30 p.m. EDT

LINE: Golden Knights -148, Ducks +124; over/under is 6

NHL PLAYOFFS SECOND ROUND: Series tied 2-2

BOTTOM LINE: The Vegas Golden Knights host the Anaheim Ducks in game five of the second round of the NHL Playoffs with the series tied 2-2. The teams meet Sunday for the eighth time this season. The Ducks won 4-3 in the last matchup.

Vegas is 39-26-17 overall with a 17-7-6 record against the Pacific Division. The Golden Knights have a +22 scoring differential, with 264 total goals scored and 242 given up.

Anaheim has a 43-33-6 record overall and a 21-14-1 record in Pacific Division games. The Ducks have gone 18-6-5 in games they score one or more power-play goals.

TOP PERFORMERS: Jack Eichel has scored 27 goals with 63 assists for the Golden Knights. Brett Howden has seven goals and two assists over the last 10 games.

John Carlson has 14 goals and 46 assists for the Ducks. Cutter Gauthier has four goals and six assists over the last 10 games.

LAST 10 GAMES: Golden Knights: 6-4-0, averaging 3.6 goals, 5.9 assists, four penalties and 8.4 penalty minutes while giving up 2.7 goals per game.

Ducks: 6-4-0, averaging 3.6 goals, six assists, 3.2 penalties and 6.7 penalty minutes while giving up 3.2 goals per game.

INJURIES: Golden Knights: Jeremy Lauzon: out (undisclosed), Mark Stone: day to day (undisclosed).

Ducks: Radko Gudas: out (lower body), Petr Mrazek: out for season (lower-body), Drew Helleson: day to day (undisclosed).

___

The Associated Press created this story using technology provided by Data Skrive and data from Sportradar.

Takeaways from the Ducks 4-3 Win over the Golden Knights, Series Tied 2-2

After the steepest one-sided result through the first three games of the second-round series between the Anaheim Ducks and the Vegas Golden Knights in Game 3, a 6-2 Vegas victory, the Ducks hosted the Knights again on Sunday for Game 4, with the Knights up 2-1 in the series. 

The Ducks were looking to avoid a 3-1 series deficit returning to Vegas. They reinserted Mason McTavish into the lineup and on his typical spot on the left wing of Ryan Poehling and Cutter Gauthier. 

2026 Stanley Cup Playoffs: Round 2, Game 4 - Ducks vs. Golden Knights Gameday Preview (05/10/26)

Lukas Dostal to Start Game 4 for Ducks, Evaluating Dostal's Performance Against Poor Playoff Numbers

Defenseman Drew Helleson was ruled out, considered day-to-day with an undisclosed injury. Ducks head coach elected to inject some mobility to his bottom pair, placing Ian Moore on the blueline for the first time since April 1, next to Olen Zellweger, who made his playoff debut and hadn’t played since April 7. 

Vegas captain Mark Stone was ruled out for this game after exiting Game 3 early with an apparent lower-body injury. Brandon Saad replaced him, as Knights head coach John Tortorella was forced to do some surgery to his lineup for Game 4.

Here’s how the Ducks lined up to start this game:

Kreider-Carlsson-Terry

Killorn-Granlund-Sennecke Gauthier-Poehling-McTavish

Johnston-Washe-Viel

LaCombe-Trouba

Mintyukov-Carlson

Zellweger-Moore

Lukas Dostal returned to the Ducks’ cage after he was pulled after the first period in Game 3. In this game, he stopped 18 of 21 shots in this game. Vegas expectedly went back to Carter Hart in their net, and he saved 19 of 23. 

Game Notes

The Ducks were more prepared for the start of this game than they were for Game 3. Neither team dictated tempo or gained a significant advantage in volume or quantity of chances, especially at 5v5. 

This game brought with it promised emotions and chipiness synonymous with playoff hockey, as liberties were taken, tempers flared, and animosity was apparent. Vegas attempted to physically engage the Ducks’ younger stars (Leo Carlsson, Cutter Gauthier, Beckett Sennecke) whenever they could. 

Though the Ducks pushed back and returned the favor when the situation called for it, the Ducks made the Knights pay where it counted most: the scoreboard. The Ducks’ power play, which had gone 0-11 through the first three games, notched two goals on four attempts and was the difference in this game. 

“Both teams played hard. That was a man’s game out there today,” Ducks head coach Joel Quenneville said after the game. “We worked hard. I thought we did a lot of good things. A little dangerous at the end again, but certainly a lot of positives.”

Cycle: While goaltending wasn’t spectacular, and the defensive structure was faulty, perhaps the most significant issue pertaining to Anaheim’s Game 3 was their lack of creativity or variety offensively. 

In this game, they threw more looks Vegas’ way. Defensemen were far more involved and active throughout the offensive zone. They attacked downhill while opening, looking for, and finding seams to dangerous areas of the ice. They didn’t just funnel pucks and fight their way to the front of the net; they carried pucks there and made precise cuts away from the puck to render themselves dangerous options. 

Ian Moore/Olen Zellweger: Though the Ducks’ bottom pair received very limited ice and very sheltered minutes, they added that needed dynamism from the backend to aid in breaking down Vegas’ extremely solid defensive structure. 

Zellweger was involved from the opening puck drop, not dipping his toe into his first playoff action, but diving headfirst. He joined rushes, led rushes, and activated when needed. He was a step late in reading how plays developed in his zone, but recovered nicely with his flawless skating.

Moore is a natural defenseman, and he operates best when he has the entire ice in front of him. He’s just as impactful defensively from the backend, and his poise and paitence led directly to what turned out to be Anaheim’s game-winning goal. 

Power Play: The Ducks’ power play broke the seal in this game and notched a pair of goals on four attempts. LaCombe’s unit notched both tallies, with Killorn and Sennecke providing the goals. Both units were more cohesive in this game, determined to get Vegas’ killers to move away from the middle of the ice.

Player movement was a key contributing factor, as was their ability to win ensuing puck battles that followed shots and shot attempts. They were able to create chances off broken plays as Vegas’ killers were forced to spread to the perimeter in attempts to win pucks back, creating open space behind them and through the zone. 

Mason McTavish: McTavish, like Moore and Zellweger, didn’t receive ample ice time in this one, and he was the least-played forward in this game. However, his impact was felt on a shift-by-shift basis, as he won a multitude of puck battles, kept plays alive, and created looks from the tight areas of the ice.

McTavish played well enough to find the scoresheet, and if he continues to put forth similar efforts going forward, the Ducks may have found the key depth scoring they’d been needing through the first few games of this second-round series. 

This series will now shift back to Vegas, as it’s now a best-of-three between these two Western Conference semifinalist clubs. Game 5 will be at 6:30 PM PST at T-Mobile Arena. 

Takeaways from the Ducks 6-2 Loss to the Golden Knights, Vegas Leads Series 2-1

Ducks Won Game 2 vs Golden Knights with a lot of Money Sitting in the Press Box, Future of Key Players in Question

Ducks Prospect Tarin Smith Commits to University of Minnesota for 2026-27

The Good, The Bad, The Ugly: 3 Takeaways from Golden Knights Game 4 Loss

The Vegas Golden Knights never had the upper hand over the Anaheim Ducks in Game 4— the Ducks recorded more shots on goal, threw more hits, and won the special teams battle. This was also the case in Game 1, but the Golden Knights found a way to win that one.

They didn’t get so lucky on Sunday. The Ducks capitalized on almost every scoring chance and survived a late push to secure a 4-3 win.

The series is tied 2-2. Game 5 is scheduled for 6:50 p.m. PST on Tuesday at T-Mobile Arena.

1. Off the Schneid

Tomáš Hertl, who was second on the team in goals last season, entered tonight on an all-time goalless streak. The last time he scored a goal was on March 4th, 29 games ago. If there’s one very shiny silver lining that Golden Knights fans should look at following this loss, it’s that it finally happened: Hertl scored a goal. The monkey is officially off his back.

“With goal scorers, an empty netter, a 6-on-5, it doesn’t matter [as long as] the puck goes in the net. Hopefully, it just releases him a little bit,” said Golden Knights head coach John Tortorella postgame. “He’s been close for quite a while. He bangs one in, and hopefully, that’ll help him as we move forward.”

2. Penalty Kill? Nope. Penalties are Killer.

Coming into Game 4, the Golden Knights were nearly perfect on the penalty kill. They were 26-for-27 this postseason and hadn’t allowed their opponent to score a power play goal since Game 3 against the Utah Mammoth. Tonight, they allowed two.

This Ducks team can do some real damage when up a man; in the First Round, they went 8-for-16 on the power play against the Edmonton Oilers. If they want to beat Anaheim, the Golden Knights need to ensure that tonight was a fluke and get their penalty kill back to what it was in the first three games of this series.

3. Glass Half Empty, Glass Half Full

There are two ways to look at this series. On one hand, the Golden Knights have been thoroughly outplayed in three of the four games this series. That’s concerning. They can’t quite seem to shut down Anaheim’s speed, and now the Ducks have broken through on the power play.

On the other hand, the Golden Knights have been thoroughly outplayed in three of the four games this series… and yet, it’s tied 2-2. They have been the second-best team on the ice, and the Golden Knights are still in a situation where all they have to do is win a best-of-three to advance to the Western Conference Final.

“I have zero worry about this team,” said Golden Knights head coach John Tortorella following the 4-3 loss. “As far as how we’re going to go about the next few games here, whatever it goes to, I have total trust.”

Golden Knights Lose All-Important Game 4, Ducks Even Series

The Vegas Golden Knights entered Sunday’s Game 4 with a chance to go up 3-1 in their Second Round series against the Anaheim Ducks. Instead, they fell 4-3 in a coin-flip game and will return to Las Vegas with the series tied 2-2.

If you asked a magic eight-ball about the start of the game for the Golden Knights, it would respond: outlook not so good. Despite a shaky performance in Game 3 from Lukáš Dostál that resulted in an early goaltender change, it took the Golden Knights nearly seven minutes to record their first shot.

The Ducks broke the ice on the power play at 8:43 in the first. Alex Killorn found Beckett Sennecke above the right circle, and the Calder finalist blasted a one-timer past Carter Hart far-side.

The Golden Knights responded on the power play at 10:22 in the first. Lukáš Dostál couldn’t secure the puck after Mitch Marner got a piece of Jack Eichel’s shot, and Pavel Dorofeyev was out in front to collect the change.

The Ducks regained the lead at 15:25 in the first. Jeffrey Viel made a play along the boards to find Mikael Granlund cutting towards the center of the ice. Cole Smith lunged to try to knock Granlund’s shot away, but the puck took an odd bounce and fluttered through Carter Hart.

The Golden Knights found the equalizer just 4:04 into the second. Mitch Marner dumped the puck in, and William Karlsson got to it behind the net. Karlsson backhanded a centering pass past Jackson LaCombe, and Brett Howden chipped a shot past Lukáš Dostál with Tim Washe draped all over him.

For the rest of the second, the Ducks generated the lion’s share of chances and outshot the Golden Knights 9-7. Cole Smith took a penalty at the end of the period, and Anaheim cashed in on the ensuing power play to retake the lead.

Beckett Sennecke spun away from Brett Howden, entered the zone, and threaded a cross-ice pass to Alex Killorn at the point. Cutter Gauthier couldn’t handle Killorn’s pass, but he chipped a return feed to the 36-year-old. Unmarked, Killorn pressed deeper into the zone, swung towards the net, and banked a shot in.

“I think we needed to get out of the second period tied 2-2. That gave them some life,” said Golden Knights head coach John Tortorella postgame. “They scored their fourth goal, and they’re just filling the neutral zone, just stacking it. I thought that was the most important part of the game.”

At the start of the third, the Golden Knights looked like they were shot out of a cannon. They recorded the first three shots of the period and swarmed in waves. But despite the Golden Knights tilting the ice, Anaheim got the ever-important next goal.

The Ducks doubled their lead just 3:43 into the third. Cutter Gauthier found Ian Moore at the point, and the defenseman fired a wrister through traffic that found its way home.

Down by two, the Golden Knights took risks defensively to produce offense. For every look they generated, they gave one to Anaheim as well; both teams generated five scoring chances.

The Golden Knights pulled Carter Hart for the extra attacker with just under three minutes remaining, and it eventually paid off. The Golden Knights entered the zone, and Mitch Marner threaded a cross-ice pass to find Tomáš Hertl back-door.

Now down by just one with over a minute remaining in regulation, the Golden Knights again pulled Hart for the extra attacker. They managed just one shot on goal, and iced the puck with 11 seconds remaining to effectively end the game. Jack Eichel lost the ensuing defensive zone draw, and the Golden Knights fell 4-3.

Read More: 3 Takeaways from Golden Knights Game 4 Loss