No One Remembers Who Came in Second: Golden Knights to Face Biggest Challenge Yet

The sun hasn’t yet set on the season for the Vegas Golden Knights, but it’s getting to be very late in the afternoon. 

The Golden Knights are no strangers to adversity. In the regular season, they survived nine different stretches of three or more losses, a bottom-five goaltending rotation, and long-term injuries to key players. Ultimately, this added up to a year full of underachievement, and, in a desperate attempt to break through, one of the more memorable Hail Marys in the history of the National Hockey League. 

With just eight games remaining in the regular season, the Golden Knights made a coaching change. Despite being in a playoff position, they relieved Bruce Cassidy of his duties as head coach and brought in John Tortorella. 

There were a million ways this late-season coaching change could have gone wrong, and a million reasons that it should have. But it didn’t. 

With Tortorella behind the bench, the Golden Knights ended the regular season on a 7-0-1 run. In Round 1, they battled through close calls against the Utah Mammoth and came out victorious. In Round 2, they dispatched the Anaheim Ducks in six games, which were so unremarkable that the biggest bit of news was that they lost a second-round draft pick for refusing to speak with the media after their Game 6 win. And in the Western Conference Final, the Golden Knights shocked the world and swept the Presidents’ Trophy-winning Colorado Avalanche.

But now, down 3-2 to the Carolina Hurricanes in the Stanley Cup Final, the Golden Knights face their biggest challenge yet. 

John Tortorella isn’t concerned about the predicament his team is in. Following Thursday’s Game 5 loss, he took the stand and vowed that his team would return to Raleigh for Game 7. 

“We’ll be back here,” he swore. “We’re just gonna do it in a different order… I’m gonna leave my clothes here, that’s for sure. They’ll be at the hotel.”

A Mark Messier guarantee for a Game 6 victory wasn’t the only promise Tortorella made on Thursday night. Mere moments later, he backed goaltender Carter Hart, who entered the series with a .924 save percentage but is now setting records for all the wrong reasons.

In Game 4, Hart became the first goaltender to allow 4+ goals through the first four games of the Stanley Cup Final; last night, he extended that to five straight. Hart’s average save percentage in this series is .856, and for the first time since April, he has lost two games in a row. 

It is also worth noting that Hart hasn’t been made available to the media following any of the five Stanley Cup Final games. Despite being the starting goaltender, he hasn’t spoken since a hastily relocated availability during media day that ended very abruptly.

And yet, there is no question that Hart will start Game 6 on Sunday. 

When asked if he considered going to Adin Hill in the third period of Game 5, Tortorella scoffed, “Oh, for– Christ, that could be the stupidest question I heard.”

Tortorella has made his decision, and time will tell if it was the right one. On Sunday night, the Golden Knights will either be one win away from the Stanley Cup or headed towards locker cleanout day.

Golf legend Walter Hagen used to say, “No one remembers who came in second,” and that’s where the Golden Knights stand right now. Win, and they force a Game 7 back in Raleigh for all the marbles. Win, and they get one step closer to etching their names in history as well as on Lord Stanley’s Cup. Lose, and they risk being forgotten.

It all comes down to Sunday.

Golden Knights pushed to brink: How Hurricanes turned around Stanley Cup Final

The Carolina Hurricanes were trailing the Vegas Golden Knights in the Stanley Cup Final two games to one heading into Game 4.

Now they are up 3-2 after becoming the first team in the series to win two in a row. They are in position to clinch their first Stanley Cup title since 2006 if they win Game 6 in Las Vegas on Sunday, June 14.

The Golden Knights will try to stave off elimination at home and force a Game 7 back in Raleigh, North Carolina. Coach John Tortorella vows that they will, even saying that he's going to leave his clothes at the team's Raleigh hotel.

Here is what happened to both teams in the last two games as the series turned around:

CAROLINA HURRICANES

Brandon Bussi took over the net

He replaced Frederik Andersen for the third period of Game 3 with the team down 4-0. He stopped a Mitch Marner penalty shot and allowed only a fluke goal in the second overtime after the Hurricanes rallied to tie the game in the third period.

Bussi got the starts the past two games and was solid in Game 4 and even better in Game 5.

"It's been a lot of fun," Bussi said after Thursday's game. "You work hard, you enjoy the moment, then you put your head down and grind."

Andersen − who needed a break, coach Rod Brind'Amour said, quoting goalie coach Paul Schonfelder − hasn't dressed for either game and hasn't practiced with the team. He did skate before players showed up for Thursday's practice and is available, if needed, Brind'Amour said.

As an aside, the Hurricanes also made a goalie change during their 2006 championship run. It was much earlier as Cam Ward replaced Martin Gerber in the first round and went on to be voted playoff MVP.

Jordan Staal is on fire

The 37-year-old Hurricanes captain is known for his faceoff prowess and defensive ability. But he has turned back the clock with his first five-game goal streak since he was a rookie in 2006-07. Doing it in the Stanley Cup Final puts his name alongside Hall of Famers Yvan Cournoyer, Jean Beliveau, Maurice Richard and Fred "Cyclone" Taylor.

Staal has the size and strength to be a scoring threat in front of the net − and now the goals are going in. He knocked in a rebound for his first goal of Game 4 then forced a turnover and scored while falling down on the second goal. His Game 5 goal was on a deflection.

Balanced scoring after first line comes through

The second line of Logan Stankoven, Taylor Hall and Jackson Blake has been a constant throughout the playoffs. Staal took off in the Final. But top-line players Andrei Svechnikov and Sebastian Aho had been relatively quiet.

That ended in Game 5. Svechnikov scored twice on the power play and Aho ended a five-game drought. Brind'Amour kept those two together and changed up the third person to get the line going.

They're playing better defensively

Marner had a hat trick in Game 3 because he was getting behind the Hurricanes' defense. Brind'Amour adjusted and Marner has one point in the last two games after getting seven in the first three games.

The Carolina coach didn't like the way the team played in the first period of Game 5, but the Hurricanes were able to play their style for much of the rest of the game. They even outscored Vegas 2-0 in the second period after being outscored 9-1 in the first four games.

VEGAS GOLDEN KNIGHTS

Carter Hart's play has dropped off

When a reporter asked whether John Tortorella considered inserting backup goalie Adin Hill in the third period of Game 5, the Golden Knights coach said it could be "the stupidest question I've ever heard."

But Hart hasn't been as strong in this round as he was in the first three rounds. He had a 2.22 goals-against average and .924 save percentage heading into the series. But he has given up four goals in every game in the Final and has an .856 save percentage in the series.

Golden Knights can't control Staal

Tortorella usually doesn't discuss players on the other team but he did mention Staal after Game 4, saying, "He's killing us in front of the net."

The Golden Knights thought they had Staal tied up on his first goal in Game 4, but he got to a rebound. In Game 5, he checked Golden Knights defenseman Brayden McNabb along the boards to create space to skate toward the front of the net and redirect a pass.

William Karlsson injury hurts

He left Game 5 and didn't return after being checked by Sean Walker. The trainer was looking at his arm. Tortorella said the team "probably" will be without Karlsson, a two-way center who kills penalties and plays the power play. The Golden Knights had to juggle lines without him, hurting their ability to come back.

Penalty killing woes and penalty woes

The Hurricanes struggled in the first three rounds on the power play but have found their game. They use Staal at the start of a power play. If he wins the faceoff, he stays on the ice and provides a big body in front. If not, he goes off and the speedy Nikolaj Ehlers comes on.

The Hurricanes have had two games in the Final in which they scored two power play goals. Golden Knights' injuries contributed. McNabb left Game 2 after being hit by a puck, and Karlsson left in Game 5.

The Golden Knights didn't help themselves with the number of penalties they took. They were called for back-to-back penalties in Game 5 and Carolina scored on the second one. The Hurricanes also scored on Vegas' four-minute high-sticking penalty in the third period.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: How Hurricanes turned around Stanley Cup Final vs Golden Knights

Blues' Jimmy Snuggerud Named To NHL All-Rookie Team

St. Louis Blues winger Jimmy Snuggerud has been named to the NHL’s All-Rookie team.

The 22-year-old scored 22 goals and 51 points in 70 games in his rookie season, ranking fourth in goals and points among rookies. 

Snuggerud had a slow start to the season before missing 11 games due to a wrist injury, but upon returning, the young sniper turned his season around. Paired with Robert Thomas and Dylan Holloway, the trio formed one of the best lines in hockey down the final stretch of the season. 

Heading into the 2026-27 season, the Blues’ top line will almost assuredly be this aforementioned trio. 

Joining Snuggerud on the NHL All-Rookie team upfront were Montreal Canadiens winger Ivan Demidov and Anaheim Ducks winger Beckett Sennecke. On the backend, New York Islanders Calder Trophy winner Matthew Schaefer and Carolina Hurricanes’ Alexander Nikishin were selected, with Canadiens’ Jakub Dobes in goal. 

Blues' Jimmy Snuggerud Finishes Fifth In NHL Calder Trophy VotingBlues' Jimmy Snuggerud Finishes Fifth In NHL Calder Trophy VotingSt. Louis Blues rookie Jimmy Snuggerud finished fifth in Calder Trophy voting.

Snuggerud earned 136 points, the third-most among rookie forwards. 

No other St. Louis Blues rookies received any votes. 


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The Hockey Show: Steve Goldsten Talks Stanley Cup Playoffs, Panthers Offseason

From the Stanley Cup Final nearing its end to coaching hirings around the league, there was plenty to discuss on the latest episode of The Hockey Show.

This week, THS hosts Roy Bellamy and David Dwork were pleased to be joined by Florida Panthers play-by-play voice Steve Goldstein.

Goldie has kept very busy during the playoffs, calling games in each of the first three rounds and cross-crossing the country in the process.

He spoke to the boys about the Carolina Hurricanes being one win away from the Staley Cup and the Vegas Golden Knights struggling with injuries and goaltending, as well as

And how he can be a Miami Heat fan that can root for the New York Knicks.

Dave also made sure to ask Steve if he keeps his “Let’s go home, baby!” call exclusive to just the Panthers or if he’s used it while calling playoff games around the league.

Additional topics discussed on this week’s show included the Edmonton Oilers trying to hire Mike Babcock, Oilers defenseman Darnell Nurse requesting a trade, the Los Angeles Kings hiring Peter Laviolette, Nikita Kucherov winning the Hart Trophy and other award winners.

You can check out the full show and interview in the videos below:

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Report: 'The Preference Is The Eastern Conference': Darnell Nurse's Trade Wish Revealed

After Edmonton Oilers defenseman Darnell Nurse requested a trade Thursday afternoon, the teams at the top of his list were the Los Angeles Kings and Pittsburgh Penguins

David Pagnotta of The Fourth Period broke the news on Thursday afternoon that Nurse has 3-5 teams he would be willing to sign off on for a trade, with LA and Pittsburgh the only two teams revealed so far. 

However, a report from NHL insider Elliotte Friedman on Friday morning suggests more news about Nurse's preferred destination. The 31-year-old is believed to prefer a move to the Eastern Conference, with another Canadian franchise unlikely to be among his preferred destinations. 

REPORT: Darnell Nurse Includes The Kings On His List Of Preferred Trade DestinationsREPORT: Darnell Nurse Includes The Kings On His List Of Preferred Trade DestinationsDarnell Nurse has requested a trade from the Edmonton Oilers. The Los Angeles Kings, who have long been linked to the polarizing defender are included on his short list of preferred trade destinations.

Despite the complicated issues with Nurse's contract, there appears to be strong interest from several teams around the league in signing off on a trade. Friedman indicated that the Oilers should have "no problem" finding a legitimate hockey trade should they decide to move forward with a deal.

While today's report suggests that the Eastern Conference is the preferred landing spot for Nurse, Friedman added that if a Western Conference team enters the mix, the Los Angeles Kings could emerge as a potential destination.

Nurse has spent his entire career with the Edmonton Oilers since being selected seventh overall in the 2013 NHL Draft. The former 2019 IIHF World Champion still has a lot left in him; with the physicality and grit he brings, he is very valuable to the Oilers, and a team like the Kings would be the perfect fit for how the team likes to operate. 

With legitimate interest reportedly building and trade discussions expected to intensify, all eyes will be on Edmonton's front office to determine whether Nurse's long tenure in Oil Country is nearing its end.

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Canadiens' Prospect Getting First Taste Of Montreal

During the Montreal Canadiens’ dressing room clear-out day, Ivan Demidov revealed that he would be training with the Habs’ second-round pick of the 2025 draft (and their first pick of that draft), his childhood friend Alexander Zharovsky. While Demidov and his significant other have been vacationing in Mexico, Zharovsky made his way to Montreal and arrived on Wednesday.

On both Thursday and Friday morning, he was seen skating on the CN Sports Complex ice in Brossard and Paul Byron, who’s now a Player Development Consultant with the Canadiens, was with him on Friday morning, closely monitoring his every move. After Dans les coulisses had exclusive images of his Thursday skating session, RDS sent a crew to Brossard on Friday morning to capture more images.

TVA Sports’ Nicolas Cloutier has obtained confirmation from Dan Milstein, Zharovsky’s agent, that the youngster will leave Montreal from June 20 to June 24 to attend the Gold Star pre-draft camp. He also attended last season when the Canadiens had an appointment with him, a clear sign that they were hoping to select him at the draft days later.

After that camp, he will come back to town and attend the Canadiens’ development camp, which he missed last year because of a visa issue. He’ll remain in Montreal until it’s time to head back to Russia in mid-July in time for Ufa’s Salavat Yualev training camp. The young Russian has one year left on his contract, which expires at the end of May 2027. Should his team miss the playoffs or be eliminated early, he could be released early, just as Demidov was by St. Petersburg’s SKA back in the spring of 2025. Until then, though, attending the Development camp in July is your best option to see what the promising winger can do.


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Canucks Sign Defenceman Jack Thompson To One-Year Contract Extension

Vancouver Canucks defenceman Jack Thompson is returning to the organization for the 2026-27 season.

The 24-year-old defenceman, who was set to become a restricted free-agent at the end of this season, signed a one-year, two-way contract extension earlier today. 

Thompson was acquired via trade for Jett Woo back at the start of March, heading to the Abbotsford Canucks from the San Jose Sharks organization. He impressed in his first few games with Abbotsford, recording two goals and three assists in his first two games. Thompson finished the 2025-26 season with three goals and 10 assists in 14 games with Abbotsford. 

A third-round pick in the 2020 NHL Draft by the Tampa Bay Lightning, Thompson parted ways with the Lightning organization in the 2023-24 season. During the 2024-25 season, he split his time with the Sharks and the San Jose Barracuda, putting up four goals and six assists in 31 games at the NHL level. In 85 career games with the Barracuda, Thompson registered seven goals and 28 assists. 

Thompson's signing comes less than 24 hours after the Canucks announced the hiring of new Abbotsford General Manager and Vancouver Assistant GM Richard Seeley. The defenceman was one of seven Canucks who were set to be restricted free agents come the 2026 off-season. 

Photo Credit: @AbbyCanucks - X
Photo Credit: @AbbyCanucks - X

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.

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Hurricanes vs Golden Knights Prediction, Picks & Odds for Sunday's Stanley Cup Final 6

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The Carolina Hurricanes are one win away from ending the 2026 Stanley Cup Final, and they'll look to do so in the desert on Sunday, June 14.

My Hurricanes vs. Golden Knights predictions and NHL picks expect Carolina to hoist the Cup in Game 6, with goaltender Brandon Bussi turning in another tidy performance in Game 6.

Puck drop is set for 8 p.m. ET from T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas, with the game airing on ABC and Sportsnet. 

Hurricanes vs Golden Knights Game 6 prediction

Hurricanes vs Golden Knights best bet: Brandon Bussi Over 21.5 saves (-110)

This total is too low for Carolina Hurricanes netminder Brandon Bussi.

In addition to winning consecutive starts, Bussi was particularly sharp in Game 5 with 23 saves and 2.84 goals saved above expected.

Meanwhile, the Vegas Golden Knights have consistently tilted the ice in their favor for stretches throughout the series:

  • 11 shots on 26 attempts in the second period of Game 1
  • 23 shots on 35 attempts in the second and third periods of Game 2
  • 23 shots on 43 attempts in the second and third periods of Game 3
  • Nine shots on 22 attempts in the third period of Game 4
  • 13 shots on 25 attempts in the third period of Game 5

The Golden Knights should place an even higher emphasis on testing Bussi early and often in Game 6, and I'd recommend playing this prop down to -125.

Hurricanes vs Golden Knights Game 6 same-game parlay

Carolina’s edge in overall depth in front of Bussi will be the difference in Game 6.

Vegas starter Carter Hart has surrendered at least four goals in all five games of the series, sporting an .856 save percentage and 5.06 goals saved below expected, and the loss of William Karlsson (wrist) is a huge blow to the Golden Knights.

The two teams have also combined for 39 goals with six or more in all five games, and with the potential for earlier empty-net situations in an elimination game, I’m anticipating another high-scoring bout.

Carolina winger Seth Jarvis has marked the scoresheet in three of the past four games and paces Carolina forwards in ice time and on-ice expected goals during the series.

I'd play this SGP down to +280.

Hurricanes vs Golden Knights SGP

  • Hurricanes moneyline
  • Over 5.5
  • Seth Jarvis Over 0.5 points

Hurricanes vs Golden Knights odds for Game 6

  • Moneyline: Hurricanes -115 | Golden Knights -105
  • Puck Line: Hurricanes -1.5 (+210) | Golden Knights +1.5 (-260)
  • Over/Under: Over 5.5 (-125) | Under 5.5 (+105)

Hurricanes vs Golden Knights trend

Carolina has won 20 of its last 25 games (+13.75 Units / 34% ROI). Find more NHL betting trends for Hurricanes vs. Golden Knights.

How to watch Hurricanes vs Golden Knights 6

LocationT-Mobile Arena, Las Vegas, NV
DateSunday, June 14, 2026
Puck drop8:00 p.m. ET
TVABC, Sportsnet

Hurricanes vs Golden Knights latest injuries

Odds are correct at the time of publishing and are subject to change.
Not intended for use in MA.
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Avalanche's MacKinnon And Makar Named To NHL All-Star Teams

The NHL has announced the First and Second All-Star Teams, and Colorado Avalanche's Cale Makar has made the First Team, and Nathan MacKinnon has made the Second Team.

For Makar, this is his sixth consecutive season earning an All-Star honor; it's his third time being named to the All-Star First Team. With his nomination, he becomes the first player in Avalanche/Quebec Nordique history to earn six career postseason all-star honors and the first to be named to theNHL First All-Star Team on four occasions. 

This is MacKinnon’s fifth total selection, which tied him with Michel Goulet for the 2nd most. This is also the 11th time in Avalanche history that multiple players were named to postseason All-Star Teams in the same season, which included All-Rookie Teams as well.

Historic Performances From Both Players.

Makar finished last season with 79 points (20g/59a) in 75 games, ranking among NHL rearguards in points (3rd), assists (T-4th), goals (6th), even-strength goals (16, 3rd), and time on ice per game (24:51, 7th). He was the runner-up for the 2026 James Norris Memorial Trophy, which helped him become the second player in NHL history to be a finalist in six of the first seven full seasons.

During the season, we saw Makar score his 500th career point in his 467th game against the Winnipeg Jets on March 28th, helping him become the fourth-fastest defenseman in NHL history to reach 500 points, only behind Bobby Orr (396 GP), Paul Coffey (422 GP), and Denis Potvin (465 GP).

He also became the fastest defenseman in NHL history to reach 25 career game-winning goals (399 GP) when he notched the game-winner on Oct. 16 against the Columbus Blue Jackets. He tied his career-high in assists with four against the New Jersey Devils on Oct. 28. With the hot start of the team this season, he helped by starting the season with 10 points in his first 10 road games, which tied for the third-longest streak to start a season by a defenseman in NHL history.

MacKinnon capped off his historic season by taking home his first career Rocket Richard Trophy after leading the NHL in goals with 53, joining Milan Hejduk in 2002-03 as the only other Avalanche player to win the trophy. He also finished third in Hart Memorial Trophy voting.

Nathan MacKinnon Had The NHL Wondering If History Was About To Repeat ItselfNathan MacKinnon Had The NHL Wondering If History Was About To Repeat ItselfNathan MacKinnon’s explosive start briefly fueled rare Triple Crown conversations before he finished another dominant season with 52 goals, 74 assists, and a Maurice “Rocket” Richard Trophy, reaffirming his place among the NHL’s most unstoppable forces.

His 127 points in 80 games are the third most points in franchise history, only behind his own 140 he set during the 2023-24 season and Peter Stastny’s 139 in 1981-82. Of his 127 points, 97 were even-strength points (42 goals and 55 assists), the most in a single season since Wayne Gretzky's 103 (33 goals and 70 assists) back in the 1990-91 season with the Los Angeles Kings. He also paced the NHL in multi-goal games (14), three-point games (20), third-period points (56), shots (350), and rating (+57) and was tied for third in assists.

During his campaign, he surpassed Joe Sakic for the most points by an Avalanche player (1,015) in October. He became the first player in NHL history to score a game-winning goal against 32 different franchises when he scored against the Utah Mammoth on Oct. 9. 

While if you ask any Avalanche fan, or even Makar or MacKinnon, that this season would be even better with a Gold medal at the Olympics or another Stanley Cup, it's still important to look back at this season and admire the feats that these players are achieving. They put so much pressure on themselves that, yes, it's disappointing not seeing them win it, but it cements their legacy in what they are doing, not just with the team but in the NHL as a whole, and they are sure that they will look to improve even more next season.

Avalanche’s End-of-Season Media Availability: What Sakic & Kronke Had To SayAvalanche’s End-of-Season Media Availability: What Sakic & Kronke Had To SayGeneral Manager and President of Hockey Operations Joe Sakic and KSE Vice Chairman Josh Kronke spoke with the media today about the past Colorado Avalanche season and how things look for the future of the team

Three NHL Teams That Can Trade For Blues' Jordan Kyrou

Jordan Kyrou is the subject of plenty of trade chatter heading into the 2026 off-season, and it’s becoming increasingly likely that his time with the St. Louis Blues is done.

Kyrou was originally drafted by the Blues in the second round (35th overall) in the 2016 NHL draft. Since then, he’s played 488 regular-season games, scoring 168 goals and 378 points.

Signed to an eight-year, $8.125-million contract, Kyrou owns a no-trade clause, so he’ll have to sign off on any deal. Reports have indicated that, depending on the team, Kyrou is willing to sign off on a trade. 

Without further ado, here are three teams that could be great potential fits for Kyrou.

Ottawa Senators

The Ottawa Senators underwhelmed in the playoffs, losing to the Carolina Hurricanes in a sweep. The Senators didn’t generate enough offense, and Kyrou’s speed and skill could help make the Sens a competitor. 

With centers like Tim Stutzle, Dylan Cozens and Shane Pinto, Kyrou could work with any of those three centers. 

According to a recent report, Bruce Garrioch said the Senators are interested in Kyrou, as are several other teams. 

Report: Insider Believes Jordan Kyrou Won't Be With The St. Louis Blues In 2026-27Report: Insider Believes Jordan Kyrou Won't Be With The St. Louis Blues In 2026-27A new report suggests that Jordan Kyrou won't be a member of the St. Louis Blues next season.

Edmonton Oilers

The Edmonton Oilers are another team where Kyrou’s skill and speed would thrive. Whether he’s paired on the top line with Connor McDavid or the second line with Leon Draisaitl, Kyrou could put up excellent numbers in Edmonton’s top six.

The Oilers are starved for secondary scorers outside of McDavid, Draisaitl, Zach Hyman, and Ryan Nugent-Hopkins up front. Kyrou can come in and provide a major boost.

The one challenge facing the Oilers is whether they have the assets to acquire Kyrou. 

Jordan Kyrou's Underrated Two-Way Play & How He'd Fit On The IslandersJordan Kyrou's Underrated Two-Way Play & How He'd Fit On The IslandersThe Blues star offers more than elite scoring; his defensive dominance and long-term contract align perfectly with New York’s core to fix the roster’s most glaring weaknesses.

New York Islanders

The New York Islanders were linked to the 28-year-old around the trade deadline, but the Islanders decided to trade for Brayden Schenn rather than Kyrou. There is reason to believe that the Islanders and Blues can revisit trade discussions again this off-season. 

Kyrou fits the bill of what the Islanders are looking for: a two-way scoring winger to pair with Mathew Barzal or Bo Horvat. The Islanders are building their team around superstar rookie Matthew Schaefer, and adding a skilled winger like Kyrou will help improve the roster. 


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John Tortorella rips ‘stupidest question I’ve heard’ with Golden Knights in Stanley Cup hole

An image collage containing 2 images, Image 1 shows Vegas Golden Knights Head Coach John Tortorella speaks at a press conference, Image 2 shows Vegas Golden Knights goalie Carter Hart (79) warms up with arms outstretched on the ice during the Stanley Cup Final

John Tortorella is in Stanley Cup form.

The Golden Knights coach lambasted a reporter who asked about the possibility of changing goaltenders with Las Vegas down 3-2 to the Hurricanes in the Stanley Cup Final.

“Oh, for Christ, that could be the stupidest question I heard,” the fiery Tortorella said Thursday night after a 4-2 road loss in Game 5.

The reason for the question, though, is rather obvious.

Carter Hart has become the first goalie in Stanley Cup history to let up four-plus goals in the first five games of the series — allowing exactly four in each.

The Golden Knights are out of rope with Carolina now one win from the Stanley Cup after back-to-back victories in Games 4 and 5.

One would think the idea of making a change could be tantalizing for Tortorella, given that their opponent has found success with the switch.

John Tortorella at the Game 5 post-game press conference NHLI via Getty Images

Hurricanes coach Rod Brind’amour pulled Frederik Anderson in the middle of Game 4 with the Hurricanes trailing 4-0. Backup Brandon Bussi held strong before giving up the game-winner in overtime.

He has since led the team to back-to-back wins.

Hart has played all 21 games this postseason for Las Vegas. He shut down one of the best offensive teams in the NHL in the Colorado Avalanche in the Western Conference finals in a shocking sweep.

Carter Hart warming up for Game 5 of the Stanley Cup Finals IMAGN IMAGES via Reuters Connect

Backup Aidan Hill had a somewhat uninspiring regular season with a 3.04 goals against average in 27 appearances.

For Hart, it is just his first season back after two years away due to the Canada World Juniors sexual assault case that stemmed from an incident during the 2018 World Juniors championships. 

After a lengthy trial, all players were found not guilty on July 24, 2025.

Hart then signed a one-year deal with the Golden Knights.

Game 6 returns to Vegas on Sunday at 8 p.m. ET.

Sabres Face Some Intriguing Options Leading Into The Draft And Free Agency

The Buffalo Sabres, as with many clubs looking to gain entry to the playoffs or advance further in the postseason, face a number of options depending how the dominoes fall leading up to the start of free agency. Some of those potential options were mentioned by The Fourth Period’s David Pagnotta on a Thursday podcast.  

Along with the revealed trade requests of Detroit’s Dylan Larkin and Edmonton’s Darnell Nurse, Pagnotta reports of unconfirmed reports that multiple Vezina Trophy winner and Olympic gold medal winner Connor Hellebuyck may be looking to play elsewhere. The 33-year-old has five years remaining on an eight-year deal at $8.5 million. 

Sabres GM Jarmo Kekalainen said at his season-ending media availability that he was content with the three-headed monster of Ukko-Pekka Luukkonen, Colten Ellis and Alex Lyon, but the inconsistency of UPL and Lyon in the playoffs was a big factor in Buffalo’s second round loss to Montreal. The cost for Hellebuyck would likely be prohibitive, which may prevent the Sabres from being serious challengers, but Kekalainen could be willing to investigate other possibilities on the goalie market.   

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What possible options do the Sabres have if Alex Tuch leaves

Pagnotta reiterated reports from Sportsnet’s Elliotte Friedman earlier in the week that the is a gap between what the Sabres are willing to offer and what winger Alex Tuch is looking for. He went further to say that if the two sides were close, the deal would get done. 

The 30-year-old is expected to draw the most attention on July 1 and is reportedly looking for more than $10 million per season on a long-term deal. The Sabres have only $12.9 million in available cap space this summer, and might have to make other moves to clear cap room if they wanted to re-sign Tuch. If Kekalainen does not trade his negotiating rights or do a sign-and-trade at or around the NHL Draft later this month, the Sabres could lose one of their top forwards without any kind of return. 

Coming off an impressive showing in the playoffs, the speculation regarding a trade involving defenseman Owen Power has quieted, but if the Sabres lose Tuch in free agency, some clubs reportedly have kicked tires on the 2021 top overall pick to see what it would take to acquire him. 

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Islanders' Matthew Schaefer Makes NHL's All-Rookie Team

New York Islanders Calder Trophy-winning defenseman Matthew Schaefer has, unsurprisingly, been named to the NHL's All-Rookie team.

Joining Schaefer is Montreal Canadien's Ivan Demidov, Anaheim Ducks' Beckett Sennecek, St. Louis Blues' Jimmy Snuggerud, Carolina Hurricanes' Alexander Nikishin and Montreal Canadiens' Jakob Dobes:

Per the NHL's release:

Schaefer, the first unanimous Calder Memorial Trophywinner since 1992-93, rewrote the League’s record book for production by an 18-year-old defenseman with 23-36—59 across 82 games. The No. 1 overall pick in the 2025 NHL Draft, Schaefer became the youngest blueliner in NHL history to register a point in his League debut, the youngest player (at any position) in NHL history to score an overtime goal and the first defenseman in more than 90 years to lead rookies (outright or tied) in goals. His 23 goals matched the single-season NHL record for a rookie blueliner (of any age), while his goal and point totals surpassed Phil Housley (17-40—57 in 1982-83 w/ BUF) for the most by an 18-year-old defenseman in NHL history. Schaefer, who placed fifth among rookies in plus/minus (+13), achieved these feats while topping New York and all NHL rookies with 2,023:59 of total time on ice – more than 500 minutes ahead of the next-closest rookie in 2025-26 and the second-highest figure by any rookie since the statistic began being tracked in 1997-98. Schaefer is the third defenseman in Islanders history who has been selected to the All-Rookie Team, following fellow Calder Trophy winner Bryan Berard (1996-97) as well as Vladimir Malakhov (1992-93).

Two Canucks Receive Votes For The 2026 NHL All-Rookie Team

While they didn’t quite make this list, two Vancouver Canucks rookies received votes for this season’s All-Rookie NHL Team.

For forwards, Linus Karlsson came ninth in voting throughout the NHL with one point, finishing behind Montréal Canadiens forward Oliver Kapanen. Zeev Buium finished third among defencemen with nine points total, with Cole Hutson (Washington Capitals), Yan Kuznetsov (Calgary Flames), and Axel Sandin-Pellikka (Detroit Red Wings) all finishing in fourth behind him. 

Despite this not being his first stint in the NHL, Karlsson experienced a breakout during the 2025–26 season — the first in which he played more than 25 games. He scored a career-high of 15 goals and 20 assists in 79 games, finishing the season tied with Marco Rossi for fifth on the team in points. At the beginning of January, he signed a two-year deal worth $2.25M AAV. 

Buium’s journey with the Canucks began when he was traded to Vancouver in the Quinn Hughes deal conducted with the Minnesota Wild. In his first game as a Canuck, he scored both the game-winning goal and an assist to defeat the New Jersey Devils by a score of 2–1. He finished the 2025–26 season with three goals and nine assists in 45 games with Vancouver and a grand total of six goals and 20 assists on the season. 

The 2026 NHL All-Rookie Team features Ivan Demidov (Montréal), Beckett Sennecke (Anaheim Ducks), and Jimmy Snuggerud (St. Louis Blues), defencemen Matthew Schaefer (New York Islanders) and Alexander Nikishin (Carolina Hurricanes), and goaltender Jakub Dobeš (Montréal). 

Dec 16, 2025; New York, New York, USA; Vancouver Canucks center Linus Karlsson (94) and defenseman Zeev Buium (24) fight for the puck against New York Rangers defenseman Matthew Robertson (29) and left wing Will Cuylle (50) during the first period at Madison Square Garden. Mandatory Credit: Brad Penner-Imagn Images
Dec 16, 2025; New York, New York, USA; Vancouver Canucks center Linus Karlsson (94) and defenseman Zeev Buium (24) fight for the puck against New York Rangers defenseman Matthew Robertson (29) and left wing Will Cuylle (50) during the first period at Madison Square Garden. Mandatory Credit: Brad Penner-Imagn Images

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Matthew Schaefer first Islanders defenseman to crack NHL All-Rookie Team

Matthew Schaefer continues to rack up accolades from his spectacular rookie season. 

Schaefer already took home the Calder Trophy unanimously a few weeks ago, and now he’s become the first defenseman in Islanders history to crack the NHL All-Rookie Team. 

The youngster is one of six skaters to earn the honors, as voted on by the PHWA. 

He’s also the sixth player in franchise history to crack the team -- joining David Volek (1989), John Tavares (2010), Michael Grabner (2011) and Mathew Barzal (2018).

Schaefer completely took the league by storm, sliding in seamlessly on the backend for New York after being selected with the top pick in last year’s NHL draft. 

He set the franchise record for average time on ice by an 18-year-old (24:41). 

Schaefer also broke the Islanders' record for the most goals (23), points (59), power-play goals (8), overtime goals (4), and game-winning goals (4) by a rookie defenseman.