Anton Frondell Scores First Career NHL Goal, Blackhawks Lose To Jets In Overtime

The Chicago Blackhawks welcomed Jonathan Toews and the Winnipeg Jets into the United Center on Tuesday night. This was the second time that Toews has returned to the United Center as a visiting player, and the fourth matchup between the two clubs this season. 

Winnipeg won both meetings in Manitoba, while the Blackhawks took a 2-0 victory to the bank when the two met in Chicago back on January 19th. 

In the first period, Toews received a standing ovation when he came out onto the ice for the first time, but he didn't acknowledge it. It was clear from the jump that Winnipeg, which came in just three points below the playoff line, was on a business trip. Their playoff chances seemed bleak on their first trip to Chicago, but not as much these days. 

The Blackhawks were the first team to find the back of the net, as Anton Frondell scored his first career NHL goal at 4:42 of the opening frame. Louis Crevier threw one towards the net, Ilya Mikheyev found the rebound, and sent it to Frondell for the goal. 

Blackhawks Third-Overall Pick Anton Frondell Scored His First Career NHL GoalBlackhawks Third-Overall Pick Anton Frondell Scored His First Career NHL GoalAnton Frondell of the Chicago Blackhawks has scored his first career NHL goal.

Scoring the first goal of the game has not been the problem for the Blackhawks. They have actually been solid in first periods overall. It's playing well for 60 minutes and sustaining leads that have been the problem. 

That problem continued in the second period. Just 1:06 into the middle frame, the Jets tied the game on a goal scored by Josh Morrissey. This was Winnipeg's three best skaters stepping up as Kyle Connor and Mark Scheifele assisted on the goal. 

About 10 minutes of game-clock later, the Jets scored two goals in under a minute. Cole Perfetti and Isak Rosen combined to make it 3-1. 

Before the period ended, Tyler Bertuzzi saved the Blackhawks from going into the second intermission down by two. His incredible spin-o-rama fooled Connor Hellebuyck and found twine. The 3-2 score held through the second intermission. 

In the third period, the Blackhawks continued to even the playing surface. That included Bertuzzi's second of the game to tie it up at three. His 30th and 31st goals of the season not only helped his team even the score, but they also set a new career high.

In the third period, the Blackhawks ended up outshooting the Jets 10-2, but no more goals were scored. Overtime was required. 

Just 33 seconds into the extra period, Kyle Connor scored to give the Winnipeg Jets a 4-3 victory. The Blackhawks didn't have much time to even try to possess the puck, as Winnipeg ended it before Chicago was able to even make a line change. 

This loss was a complete flip from their four games on the East Coast, including the one in which they earned a win. Chicago's defense was better, their compete was better, and they found a way to score a couple of goals when they needed them in regulation. 

Watch Every Chicago Goal

What’s Next For The Blackhawks?

The Chicago Blackhawks will be back in action again on Tuesday night when they will be back on the road for a handful of games, starting with a visit to Alberta to take on the Edmonton Oilers. 

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In Like A Lion, Out Like A Lamb: Senators Close March With Third Straight Loss

It will surely go down as one of the most disappointing losses of the Ottawa Senators’ season.

In a nearly must-win game, the Senators fell behind 5-0 in the first period and lost 6-3 to the Florida Panthers, an injury-ravaged team with absolutely nothing to play for. Matthew Tkachuk led the way with four points in the game, earning bragging rights for the next podcast.

Linus Ullmark carved out an extra day of rest for himself on Saturday in Tampa, but you wouldn't know it from his performance. He was chased from this game after allowing five goals on 16 shots. They certainly weren’t all his fault, but he helped put the Senators on their heels straight away.

Despite all the rest, he was part of a clumsy miscommunication just eight seconds into the game. After the Panthers dumped the puck in, it bounced to the front of the Sens net and Ullmark motioned like he was going to play it, then changed his mind.

By that point, Jordan Spence had peeled off, so the puck was left sitting there for ex-Senator Noah Gregor to score an easy goal.

It was a nightmare start for Ullmark, who’d been a target of criticism after needing rest and making himself unavailable to start on Saturday.

The Panthers then made it 3-0 on a pair of power-play goals, both set up by Ottawa high sticks. The first was a tip-in goal by Mackie Samoskevich to make it 2-0 just over a minute into the game.

Eight minutes later, Carter Verhaeghe scored his 22nd of the year, beating Ullmark from below the goal line, banking it in off his knee and back through his legs. Five minutes after that, AJ Greer tucked home his 14th goal, and 34 seconds later, Verhaeghe got another one to make it 5-0.

It was around that moment when the Blue Jays TV ratings suddenly spiked.

The Senators did battle back to make it semi-respectable on goals by Drake Batherson, Jordan Spence, and Michael Amadio. Batherson’s goal marked the first time in his career he’s hit the 30-goal mark. But despite having a 6 on 3 for over a minute in the third period, the Sens couldn't get any closer.

To add to their woes, the Senators’ already banged-up blue line endured yet another loss. Carter Yakemchuk left the ice woozy, dealing with what looked like a probable concussion. Noah Gregor caught him with a shoulder or elbow on a fly-by near the boards.

“Disappointing,” head coach Travis Green told the media after the game. “We talked about the importance of a good start in this building, and that was the opposite. We take three penalties in the first five or six minutes, give up two power-play goals, it’s 3-0 nine minutes into the game.”

The good news is that the much-maligned out-of-town scoreboard finally came through in every way for the Senators on a night they deserved it the least.

The Blue Jackets lost in regulation to Carolina.

The Islanders lost in regulation to the Sabres.

The Red Wings lost in regulation to Pittsburgh.

The Flyers lost in regulation to Washington.

The Capitals are suddenly a factor again, just one point back of the Flyers, Red Wings, and Senators, who are all two points behind Columbus for the final wild-card spot.

So it's no harm, no foul. But moving forward, out of town results really won’t matter if the Sens can’t get some healthy bodies back on the blue line. They'll also need to come up with a hell of a lot more than they did against a banged-up Panthers team that's been out of it for weeks, and slowly saying goodbye to their time as champions.

Ottawa came into March like a lion, going 9-2-1. They went out like a lamb at 0-2-1.

The Senators will be back at it on Thursday night, hosting the Buffalo Sabres, a team that's 25 points better than the team that throttled them on Tuesday.

Steve Warne
The Hockey News

Matthew Schaefer focused on different moment after making more Islanders history

New York Islanders defenseman Matthew Schaefer (48) making a pass during a game against the Buffalo Sabres.
Islanders defenseman Matthew Schaefer (48) looks to make a pass during the first period against the Buffalo Sabres at KeyBank Center.

BUFFALO — In a season that, regardless of how far the Islanders go, will always be remembered as the debut campaign of Matthew Schaefer, their rookie phenom made some more history Tuesday night. But, in the context of a 4-3 loss to the Sabres, he didn’t want to focus on it.

Schaefer’s assist on Anders Lee’s third-period goal gave him 57 points for the season, moving him past Stefan Persson (1977-78) and into first place all time for most points by an Islanders rookie defenseman. He’ll enter Friday’s game one point behind Phil Housley for most points by an 18-year-old defenseman in NHL history, and Schaefer has collected 20 points — including seven goals — across the past 20 games.

“Obviously you hear things and people say stuff,” Schaefer said when asked if he was aware of breaking the record, “but, I mean, I don’t really care. I mean, obviously, it’s something pretty cool, and there’s so many great players that have gone through this organization and things like that. I’ve put up so many points, but at the end of the day, we’re in a playoff push right now and this was a big game.”

Matthew Schaefer looks to make a pass during the first period of the Islanders’ 4-3 loss to the Sabres on March 31, 2026 at KeyBank Center in Buffalo. Timothy T. Ludwig-Imagn Images

At that moment, Schaefer was more concerned about being on the ice for the Sabres’ game-winning goal, when Alex Tuch pulled possession around the net and fed Peyton Krebs in front. “I mean, if that doesn’t go in it’s still a tie game,” he said. Schaefer was in front of the crease when the puck snuck past him and went right to Krebs’ stick.

And that moment was enough to take away from his historic night.




The Islanders were forced to operate without a piece of their power play and a consistent offensive producer Tuesday, as Simon Holmstrom didn’t play due to an upper-body injury and was listed as day to day by head coach Patrick Roy.

That meant Anthony Duclair, who hadn’t appeared in a game since March 21 amid another roller coaster of a season, slotted back into the lineup, skating alongside Mathew Barzal and Brayden Schenn on the second line. He finished with 11:29 of ice time and didn’t attempt a shot. Holmstrom, who has collected 19 goals and 30 points this season, had finished the Islanders’ game Monday.

Anders Lee (27) and Sam Carrick (10) fight during the third period of the Islanders’ road loss to the Sabres. AP

When asked what he wanted to see from Duclair during his return to the lineup, Roy, during his answer pregame, cited his connection with Barzal earlier in the season. Duclair strung together 13 points in 13 January games — including a hat trick against the Devils on Jan. 6.

He only managed one point across the eight games he has appeared in since, though, but Roy wanted to see if that Barzal chemistry could work again.


Roy didn’t think the fight between Lee and Sam Carrick — which Carrick initiated to stand up for a hit by Lee on the Sabres’ Josh Norris in the second period — was warranted. Carrick remained down on the ice with an apparent left shoulder injury and exited with a trainer.

“I thought that was — it was a very good non-call,” Roy said. “I don’t think we needed that fight personally, but, I mean, [Lee] looked good.”


The AHL Board of Governors unanimously approved the relocation of Bridgeport — the Islanders minor league affiliate — to Hamilton, Ontario, the league announced. The move will happen for the 2026-27 season.

Viktor Arvidsson scores three goals, Elias Lindholm gets tiebteaker in Bruins' win over Stars

BOSTON (AP) — Viktor Arvidsson had three goals including two empty-netters, Elias Lindholm scored a tiebreaking, power-play goal 13 seconds into the third period and the Boston Bruins helped their playoff push with a 6-3 win over the Dallas Stars on Tuesday night.

Marat Khusnutdinov and Henri Jokiharju also scored for the Bruins, who won their fourth straight game and hold the Eastern Conference’s top wild-card spot. David Pastrnak collected three assists, and Joonas Korpisalo made 13 saves.

Jamie Benn, Matt Duchene and Wyatt Johnston each had a goal for Dallas, and Jake Oettinger stopped 17 shots. Johnston’s was his 41st.

SABRES 4, ISLANDERS 3

BUFFALO, N.Y. (AP) — Bowen Byram flipped a long shot into an empty net with 1:43 remaining to lead Buffalo to a victory over New York.

The Sabres became the NHL’s 11th franchise to reach 2,000 wins — and the first team not added in the league’s first expansion in 1967 when the NHL went from six teams to 12. Buffalo joined in the second wave of expansion joining the NHL with Vancouver in 1970.

Jack Quinn and Tage Thompson had a goal and an assist, and Peyton Krebs also scored for the Sabres, who reached 100 points for the 10th time in franchise history and first since finishing with 100 in 2009-10. Ukko-Pekka Luukkonen made 25 saves for the Sabres.

Brayden Schenn, Calum Ritchie and Anders Lee scored, and Bo Horvat added three assists for the Islanders. Ilya Sorokin made 29 saves.

CANADIENS 4, LIGHTNING 1

TAMPA, Fla. (AP) — Jakub Dobes stopped 36 shots and Montreal won their sixth straight game, beating Tampa Bay.

Juraj Slavkovsky, Mike Matheson and Cole Caufield each had a goal and an assist. Nick Suzuki added an empty-net goal as the Canadiens moved to within two points of Tampa Bay for second place in the Atlantic Division.

Dobes won his fourth consecutive start and recorded his sixth consecutive game allowing two-or-fewer goals.

Jake Guentzel scored for Tampa Bay, which lost in regulation for the first time in nine games. Andrei Vasilevskiy finished with 19 saves.

PANTHERS 6, SENATORS 3

SUNRISE, Fla. (AP) — Noah Gregor scored eight seconds into the game to open an early five-goal barrage by Florida, Matthew Tkachuk had his first four-point game since December 2024 and the Panthers defeated Ottawa.

Carter Verhaeghe scored two goals and added an assist for Florida, while Seth Jones had three assists — including one on Gregor’s history-making goal.

Gregor’s goal was the fastest to open a game in Panthers history — two seconds ahead of Johan Garpenlov’s goal at the 10-second mark of a game against Colorado in October 1996 — and the fastest to start a game in the NHL this season.

A.J. Greer and Mackie Samoskevich also scored for Florida, while Sam Bennett added two assists and Daniil Tarasov stopped 22 shots for the Panthers.

RANGERS 4, DEVILS 1

NEW YORK (AP) — Conor Sheary and J.T. Miller scored first-period goals and Igor Shesterkin made 22 saves as New York defeated New Jersey

Rookie Jaroslav Chmelar and Mika Zibanejad also scored for the Rangers, who won their third straight on home ice in regulation. They only had four wins in 60 minutes in their first 34 home games this season. Adam Fox added two assists.

The game also included a rare goalie fight between Shesterkin and Devils goalie Jacob Markstrom midway through the third period.

Connor Brown scored for New Jersey, who have six wins in their last nine games to keep slim playoff hopes alive.

PENGUNS 5, RED WINGS 1

PITTSBURGH (AP) — Egor Chinakov had a goal and an assist, Evgeni Malkin added an assist in his return to the lineup and Pittsburgh raced past sagging Detroit.

A night after blowing out the New York Islanders on the road, Pittsburgh followed it up with another impressive performance against one of the teams it is trying to fend off for a playoff spot.

Chinakov, Rickard Rakell, and Anthony Mantha scored first-period goals to give the Penguins a massive early cushion that the Red Wings never really threatened to overcome. Justin Brazeau ended a 12-game goal drought, and Stuart Skinner stopped 22 shots for Pittsburgh, which remained in second place in the Metropolitan Division with seven games left in the regular season despite missing veteran forward Bryan Rust, who was a late scratch with a lower-body injury.

Detroit, which was in first place in the Atlantic Division at the season’s midway point, has dropped four of five and remains on the outside of the chase for one of the two Eastern Conference wild-card spots. Dylan Larkin scored to reach the 30-goal plateau for the fifth straight season, but John Gibson, a Pittsburgh native, struggled early and was pulled after the first period while falling to 6-10-1 all-time against his hometown team.

CAPITALS 6, FLYERS 4

WASHINGTON (AP) — Alex Ovechkin scored twice and hit the 30-goal mark for the 20th time in his NHL career, and Washington beat Philadelphia.

Tom Wilson also had two goals, Jakob Chychrun had a goal and two assists, and Ryan Leonard added a goal and an assist. Pierre-Luc Dubois had four assists for the Capitals, who have won three straight as they try to climb back into playoff position.

Travis Sanheim, Carl Grundstrom, Christian Dvorak and Denver Barkey scored and Porter Martone made his NHL debut for the Flyers, whose three-game winning streak came to an end.

HURRICANES 5, BLUE JACKETS 2

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — Nikolaj Ehlers scored the go-ahead goal with 7:18 remaining and Carolina reached the 100-point mark for the fifth time in franchise history, defeating reeling Columbus.

Ehlers added two assists as the Hurricanes remained tied with Buffalo for the top seed in the Eastern Conference.

Carolina’s Andrei Svechnikov had a power-play goal and an assist. Shayne Gostisbehere and Logan Stankoven also scored with the man advantage, and Jordan Martinook added a short-handed, empty-net goal. Brandon Bussi stopped 23 shots.

JETS 4, BLACKHAWKS 3, OT

CHICAGO (AP) — Kyle Connor scored 33 seconds into overtime to lead Winnipeg Jets to a win over Chicago.

Josh Morrissey, Isak Rosen and Cole Perfetti also scored, and Mark Scheifele added three assists for the Jets, who were coming off a 4-2 win over the NHL-leading Colorado Avalanche.

Tyler Bertuzzi scored twice and Anton Frondell also scored for Chicago, which has lost four in a row.

Bertuzzi’s wrist shot 9:46 into the third period sent the game to overtime.

Connor Hellebuyck made 18 saves in the win for the Jets. Spencer Knight made 20 saves for the Blackhawks

OILERS 3, KRAKEN 0

EDMONTON, Alberta (AP) — Connor Ingram celebrated his 29th birthday Tuesday by making 27 saves for his second shutout of the season as Edmonton extended their winning streak to four games by beating Seattle

Max Jones, Kasperi Kapanen and Connor McDavid scored for the Oilers who have won six of their last eight.

Edmonton moved two points back of Pacific Division-leading Anaheim and three points up on third place Vegas. The Oilers are now 28-5-5 when scoring first this season.

The Kraken have lost six of their last seven and remain two points out of a wild-card playoff position.

Philipp Grubauer made 21 stops for Seattle.

Sabres 4, Islanders 3 (EN): Another game, another collapse

BUFFALO, NEW YORK - MARCH 31: Sam Carrick #10 of the Buffalo Sabres punches Anders Lee #27 of the New York Islanders during the third period at KeyBank Center on March 31, 2026 in Buffalo, New York. (Photo by Rebecca Villagracia/Getty Images) | Getty Images

After yesterday’s 8-3 loss, the Islanders really needed this game to go well. And it almost did, as they came back twice, with Cal Ritchie and Anders Lee finding the back of the net for game tying goals. But then the Sabres reclaimed the lead late, taking advantage of bad defensive play by the Islanders, and I think we all knew they weren’t going to come back again.

Brayden Schenn did pick up a true garbage time goal with almost no time left at all, but by then the Sabres had locked down the 4-3 win and two points that the Islanders really could have used. For now, the Islanders sit in third in the Metropolitan Division, now three points behind the Pittsburgh Penguins.

[NHL Gamecenter | Game Summary | Event Summary | Natural Stat Trick]

First Period

There was no Simon HolmstrĂśm for the Islanders tonight as he was out with an upper body injury. Anthony Duclair got back into the lineup in his place. Ilya Sorokin also, unsurprisingly, started tonight, playing both games of the back to back for the second time, I believe, this season.

Carson Soucy took an early high sticking penalty against Zach Benson, but the Sabres’ power play would be canceled out when Josh Norris was called for interfering with Matthew Schaefer. Neither team could convert on the 4 on 4, and the Islanders couldn’t make anything work on the power play.

Adam Pelech was hit awkwardly against the boards and was holding his arm while he skated over to the bench in pain, but he ended up okay, fortunately, and played the rest of the game.

He later took a high sticking penalty, and Jack Quinn gave Buffalo the lead with a power play goal.

Second Period

Kyle MacLean took a high sticking penalty that the Islanders killed.

Anders Lee was given a penalty shot but Ukko Pekka Luukkonen made the save.

Ilya Sorokin and Scott Mayfield helped stop the Sabres from going up 2-0, and then Mattias Samuelsson took a delay of game penalty. On that power play, Brayden Schenn set up Cal Ritchie backdoor to tie the game.

Lee hit Josh Norris into the boards at an awkward angle, and he was down for a while bleeding, but no penalty was called on the play.

Third Period

Not unexpectedly, Sam Carrick challenged Lee to a fight at the start of the period. Lee won the fight, and Carrick was hurt after, needing the trainers to come out after he landed awkwardly on his arm.

Soucy took a hooking penalty, and Tage Thompson made it 2-1 on the power play.

Sorokin saved some chances by Zach Benson, and then Norris and Mayfield got into it, sending both of them to the box. Norris crosschecked Mayfield, and Mayfield tried to go at him and drew a crowd. Norris picked up an extra two penalty minutes, giving the Isles a power play that the Sabres killed.

But a few minutes later, Lee tied it at 2, banking the puck in off Owen Power.

Unfortunately, though, Peyton Krebs made it 3-2 shortly after, after Alex Tuch got around Soucy and set him up from behind the net.

Then, the Islanders pulled Sorokin, and Bo Horvat couldn’t intercept a clear heading towards the empty net, and so Bowen Byram got credit for the 4-2 goal.

Schenn made it 4-3 with barely a second left in the game, but it was too late for any chance at even salvaging a point.

Up Next

Next, the Islanders have a couple of days off before they head back to UBS Arena to take on the suddenly back in the playoff race Philadelphia Flyers on Friday night.

Sluggish Red Wings Falter Again Early, Lose 5-1 To Penguins

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The Detroit Red Wings used all the right kind of words and phrases following their 5-3 loss to the Philadelphia Flyers on Saturday.

Alex DeBrincat called their slow start "unacceptable". Lucas Raymond said they needed to play "with more desperation". 

Those words rang hollow on Tuesday evening against the Pittsburgh Penguins, who raced out to a 3-0 lead and a 14-5 shots advantage in the opening 20 minutes of play en route to a 5-1 win at PPG Paints Arena. 

Once again, the Red Wings were plagued by a slow start against an opponent that, like the Ottawa Senators and Philadelphia Flyers, had played the previous night. 

The Penguins scored barely four minutes into the game on their first shot of the night, courtesy of Rickard Rakell.

Former Red Wings forward Anthony Mantha haunted his old team minutes later by increasing the lead to 2-0, giving him 30 goals in a season for the first time in his career. Egor Chinakhov then gave Pittsburgh a 3-0 advantage late in the frame. 

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For the second straight game, goaltender John Gibson was pulled in favor of Cam Talbot, who played the final 40 minutes.  

While team captain Dylan Larkin scored on a rebound at 3:17 of the second period, Pittsburgh kept them off the scoresheet the rest of the way and later went up 4-1 thanks to Justin Brazeau. 

A tally from Noel Acciari would cap the scoring for the Penguins in the third period. 

The Red Wings entered March well aware of their struggles during the month in past seasons and said all the right things about delivering a different result this time around.

Just like their words after the loss to Philadelphia on Saturday, their actions didn't match what they ultimately delivered on the ice. 

The Red Wings have eight games remaining on their schedule. While there is still a path to the playoffs, their margin of error continues to shrink. 

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Islanders drop both games of back-to-back after 4-3 loss to Sabres

BUFFALO, N.Y. (AP) — Bowen Byram flipped a long shot into an empty net with 1:43 remaining to lead the Buffalo Sabres to a 4-3 victory over the New York Islanders on Tuesday night.

The Sabres became the NHL’s 11th franchise to reach 2,000 wins — and the first team not added in the league’s first expansion in 1967 when the NHL went from six teams to 12. Buffalo joined in the second wave of expansion, joining the NHL with Vancouver in 1970.

Jack Quinn and Tage Thompson had a goal and an assist, and Peyton Krebs also scored for the Sabres, who reached 100 points for the 10th time in franchise history and first since finishing with 100 in 2009-10. Ukko-Pekka Luukkonen made 25 saves for the Sabres.

Brayden Schenn, Calum Ritchie and Anders Lee scored, and Bo Horvat added three assists for the Islanders. Ilya Sorokin made 29 saves.

Some three minutes after Lee tied the game at 2, Krebs scored with 3:01 left.

Alex Tuch set it up by circling the Islanders net and feeding Krebs in front for a one-timer.

And Bowen Byram sealed it by flipping a long shot into an empty net with 1:43 remaining.

Schenn scored with 1 second left, bringing the Islanders within 1.

Up next

Islanders: Host Philadelphia on Friday.

Sabres: Visit Ottawa on Thursday.

Goalie fight! Jacob Markstrom, Igor Shesterkin fight in Devils vs. Rangers

It's been a season to forget for the New York Rangers and New Jersey Devils.

The Broadway Blueshirts are the worst team in the Eastern Conference, already eliminated from playoff contention, and the Devils are well on their way to missing the playoffs as well. But fans taking in Tuesday night's rivalry matchup at least got one good memory from this campaign: a goalie fight.

Rangers goaltender Igor Shesterkin and Devils netminder Jacob Markstrom threw down on March 31 during a heated moment in the third period between the teams.

It was a pretty good scrap all in all, with Shesterkin — the 2021-22 Vezina Trophy winner — in particular unleashing a good flurry of punches.

Hilariously, as a result of the fight, the goaltenders ended up with the most penalty minutes of any players on the night with 7 each (5 for fighting and 2 minutes for leaving the crease). Their penalties were served by Timo Meier (Devils) and Conor Sheary (Rangers).

The Rangers won the game, 4-1.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Jacob Markstrom, Igor Shesterkin get in goalie fight in Devils-Rangers

Islanders fall to Sabres for second straight loss in tough blow in tight playoff race

An image collage containing 1 images, Image 1 shows Peyton Krebs celebrates after scoring a key goal on Ilya Sorokin during the third period of the Islanders' 4-3 loss to the Sabres on March 31, 2026 in Buffalo

BUFFALO — This was always going to be about the response. About how the Islanders rebounded less than 24 hours after allowing eight goals against the Penguins and dropping a critical game in the playoff race.

This was always going to be about Ilya Sorokin, when Patrick Roy — after leaving the door open for a David Rittich start Monday night — went back to his star goaltender and trusted him because, as he said pregame, it worked in the past.

And while Sorokin kept them in a game where they struggled to generate much offensively, they dropped a second consecutive match with a 4-3 defeat against the Sabres.

Peyton Krebs celebrates after scoring a key goal on Ilya Sorokin during the third period of the Islanders’ 4-3 loss to the Sabres on March 31, 2026 in Buffalo. NHLI via Getty Images

Cal Ritchie extended his point streak to a career-best five games with a goal, Anders Lee gave the Islanders life with a late goal to tie the game and Matthew Schaefer set the record for points by an Islanders rookie defenseman with an assist, but then they surrendered the decisive tally.

“Sorokin’s always at his best,” Schaefer said. “I mean, we gotta help him. He’s always the best, but we gotta help him — and a lot of those chances and a lot of those goals, we can’t let those pucks go through to the sweet spot down the middle. And he’s not gonna always be able to stand on his head for us. So we gotta help him.”

Still, the Islanders received some help in the playoff chase.

The Red Wings (86 points) lost. The Flyers (86 points) lost. The Blue Jackets (88 points) and Senators (86 points) dropped their matches, too.

So as the Islanders packed up at KeyBank Center and departed for Long Island, they occupied third place in the Metropolitan Division with 89 points.

Ilya Sorokin makes one of his 29 saves in the Islanders’ road loss to the Sabres. Timothy T. Ludwig-Imagn Images

But in the one game the Islanders could control, everything shifted for good with 3:01 remaining, when Peyton Krebs deposited a pass from Alex Tuch past Sorokin for the game-winning goal.

Brayden Schenn brought the Islanders within one with a second remaining after Buffalo’s empty-net goal, but they didn’t have any time to generate an equalizer.



A chaotic few minutes earlier in the frame — Sam Carrick fought Lee for his hit on Josh Norris in the second and then exited with the help of a trainer, then Carson Soucy committed a hooking penalty — ended with Tage Thompson ripping a shot from the slot on the power play.

There wasn’t much Sorokin could do. The Islanders left the Sabres’ best player wide open with space. And Thompson made the unit pay.

Anders Lee celebrates with teammates after scoring a third period goal during the Islanders’ road loss to the Sabres. NHLI via Getty Images

That caused the Islanders to lose any momentum they had gained back with a power-play goal of their own in the second period.

Ritchie knocked in a pass from Schenn to tie game at 1 with 2:03 left, erasing an advantage that Buffalo had carried since Jack Quinn veered into the Islanders zone with the man advantage in the first period and sent a shot past Sorokin.

But really, the Islanders were only in that position to tie the game because of Sorokin.

They didn’t manage a high-danger chance in the opening 20 minutes and had just two through two frames, per Natural Stat Trick. Lee couldn’t capitalize on a penalty shot, as he couldn’t tuck his backhand shot past Ukko-Pekka Luukkonen.

Cal Ritchie scores a goal on Ukko-Pekka Luukkonen during the Islanders’ road loss to the Sabres. NHLI via Getty Images

In a fitting end to the first period, Schaefer, long before his record-setting 57th point, had a chance to step into a shot from the point, but he whiffed on it.

“I mean, we played a playoff hockey-type game,” Roy said. “It was a hard-fought game, and I thought both teams had some good looks and both teams played well defensively.”

It all, by the end of an eventual third, added up to another disappointing loss, one that won’t crush the Islanders’ playoff hopes but one that certainly won’t boost them, either.

It only makes a back-to-back at the end of the week — against the Flyers and Hurricanes — even more important. That’s what happens when four key points are left on the table.

“It’s a game we need,” Schenn said of Friday, “and we know it.”

Buffalo Sabres Forward Keeps Building On Career Year

The Buffalo Sabres picked up a hard-fought 4-3 win over the New York Islanders on Tuesday night. With this, the Sabres have improved to a 46-21-8 record and now have 100 points on the season. 

Peyton Krebs certainly played a role in Buffalo's win, as he scored a goal at the 16:59 mark of the third period to give the Sabres a 3-2 lead. Bowen Byram would then score an empty-net goal to give the Sabres a 4-2 lead before Brayden Schenn with one second left for the Islanders. 

With this goal, Krebs has now reached a new career high with 11 goals in 74 games this season. This comes after he already hit new career bests with 25 assists and 35 points this season with the Sabres. The 6-foot forward had 10 goals, 18 assists, and 28 points in 81 games during the 2024-25 season. 

When looking at the secondary offensive production that Krebs has been giving the Sabres this season, there is no question that he has been making a positive impact for the Sabres. This is especially so when noting that he has also been giving the Sabres plenty of grit, as evidenced by his 173 hits on the year.

Overall, it has been a very solid year for Krebs, and it will be interesting to see how he builds on it from here. 

Insider Update Brings Hope After Scary Cale Makar Injury Exit

Following a dominant 9–2 victory over the Calgary Flames, concern quickly shifted among Colorado Avalanche fans toward the status of star defenseman Cale Makar.

Makar recorded three assists in the win, including the primary helper on Nathan MacKinnon’s power-play goal late in the second period. However, the defenseman absorbed a hit from Flames forward Adam Klapka with 5:28 remaining in the frame and did not return for the third period, marking the end of his night.

Head coach Jared Bednar confirmed post-game that Makar is dealing with an upper-body injury but declined to provide a specific timeline for his return.

Medical insight from Dr. Harjas Grewal suggests the injury could involve a separated shoulder at worst. Encouragingly, NHL insider Pierre LeBrun reported that the injury is not believed to be serious, with the expectation that Makar may miss a handful of games to ensure full health ahead of the postseason. ESPN's Emily Kaplan also echoed the same sentiment.

With just six games remaining in the regular season, it appears increasingly likely the Avalanche will proceed cautiously, prioritizing Makar’s recovery in preparation for the playoffs, which begin April 18.

Makar's Impact Remains Significant

The potential absence of Makar, even in the short term, underscores his importance to Colorado’s success. Widely regarded as one of the NHL’s premier defensemen, Makar combines elite offensive production with strong two-way play.

Entering Monday’s contest, he had compiled 20 goals and 72 points in 71 games. On March 28, he became the fourth-fastest defenseman in league history to reach the 500-point milestone. His recent body of work includes back-to-back 90-point seasons and a 30-goal campaign in 2024–25, while 2025–26 marks his third consecutive 20-goal season and fourth overall.

Avalanche Eye Presidents’ Trophy

As of March 31, the Colorado Avalanche hold the NHL’s top record at 73-49-14, maintaining an eight-point cushion over the Dallas Stars.

With the regular season winding down and the Stanley Cup Playoffs on the horizon, Colorado remains firmly positioned to secure the Presidents’ Trophy, further solidifying its status as a leading contender for the Stanley Cup.

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Matthew Tkachuk Logs 4 Points, Helping Panthers Defeat Ottawa 6-3

It was a fun night in Sunrise for the Florida Panthers and their fans as the Cats continue counting down on their regular season.

Florida put on one of their best offensive performances seen by their fans in what probably felt like a while, taking down the Ottawa Senators 6-3 Tuesday at Amerant Bank Arena.

The Panthers got off to a fast start thanks to a miscommunication between Senators defenseman Jordan Spence and goaltender Linus Ullmark.

Almost immediately after the game’s opening faceoff, the puck was shot into Ottawa’s zone and it bounced off the boards in the corner and came back toward the slot.

The two Senators appeared to think the other was going to play the puck, and instead it went through them and right to a cutting Noah Gregor, who one-timed the puck past the out of position Ullmark just eight seconds into the game

Less than a minute later, Mackie Samoskevich finished off a pretty passing play that saw the puck go from Sam Bennett to Matthew Tkachuk to Seth Jones before finding its way back down to Mackie for a quick goal at the side of the net.

Just 66 seconds into the game and Florida found itself with a 2-0 lead.

Florida wasn’t done there.

About midway through the period, Carter Verhaeghe picked up a Jones rebound at the side of the net and wired the puck through Ullmark to make it 3-0 Cats just 9:09 into the game.

After about a five-minute break, the Panthers got back to the offense.

Goals by Verhaeghe and A.J. Greer just 34 seconds apart gave Florida an eye-popping 5-0 lead on Ottawa with 5:24 still left on the first period clock.

As one might expect, the Senators came out after the first intermission appearing to have had a fire lit under their backsides.

After keeping Florida hemmed in their zone from the start, Drake Batherson scored right off an offensive zone draw, beating Daniil Tarasov over the glove, exactly 100 seconds into the second period.

The goal didn’t spark a Senators comeback attempt, though.

Later in the period, Matthew Tkachuk got in on the fun, taking a nice pass from Sam Bennett and beating James Reimer to make it 6-1 Florida with 7:19 left in the middle frame. It was Tkachuk’s fourth point on the evening.

Spence then decided it was time to make up for his opening-shift blunder, picking up the game’s next goal on a shot that deflected off Verhaeghe on its way past Tarasov, cutting Florida’s lead back down to four with under five minutes to go until the intermission.

Michael Amadio picked up the game’s next goal, one-timing a pass from Ridly Greig past a sliding Tarasov at the 4:29 mark of the third period to cut further into the Cats’ lead.

Ottawa spent a large chunk of the third period on the power play after Noah Gregor was handed a match penalty for a hit to the head of Carter Yakemchuk, who needed help to the locker room by a couple of his teammates.

Despite spending five straight minutes up a man, including a lengthy two-man advantage in the middle of the power play, the Senators failed to get one past Tarasov and the Panthers.

On to the Bruins.

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Photo caption: Mar 31, 2026; Sunrise, Florida, USA; Florida Panthers left wing Matthew Tkachuk (19) scores a goal past Ottawa Senators goaltender James Reimer (47) during the second period at Amerant Bank Arena. (Jim Rassol-Imagn Images)

Penguins/Red Wings Recap: No one can stop Mantha and Rakell; Pens win 5-1

PITTSBURGH, PENNSYLVANIA - MARCH 31: Anthony Mantha #39 of the Pittsburgh Penguins celebrates after scoring a goal in the first period during the game against the Detroit Red Wings at PPG PAINTS Arena on March 31, 2026 in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. (Photo by Justin Berl/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Pregame

The Penguins welcome Evgeni Malkin back from a four-game absence with a hand injury, but they have a scratch so late it doesn’t make the lineup card. Bryan Rust does NOT play tonight after taking warmup, his lower body injury keeps him out so Avery Hayes is in the game in place with the top lines all scrambled around at the last moment.

The visiting Red Wings bring the following lineup to town.

First period

Great start for the Penguins, who are able to keep the momentum from last night’s seven-straight goals to close the game against the Islanders going for a while longer. Pittsburgh strikes 4:19 in, Sidney Crosby wins a puck off the wall and centers for Rickard Rakell. Rakell patiently waits and holds, traffic builds in front of the net and Rakell shoots back against the grain to the top corner. 1-0 Pens.

It’s Anthony Mantha time a few minutes later after a scramble happens right at the goal in front of John Gibson. Mantha is able to collect himself, pull the puck out of the mayhem far enough to lift it back over the dogpile. 2-0 Pens, and Mantha is now a 30-goal scorer in the NHL.

Looks like Jacob Bernard-Docker is trying to give his team a lift by talking Connor Dewar into a fight, which is pretty admirable since it doesn’t look like Bernard-Docker actually knows how to fight. Or maybe he bit off more than he could chew and just hung on for dear life as Dewar sent some glancing blows off him before wrestling him down.

Pittsburgh gets the first power play of the game when Elmer Soderblom gets high-sticked by a former teammate, a most unusual power play occurs where neither team changes any players, it’s all zone time for the Pens and a few looks off the stick of Erik Karlsson, but no goals.

Undeterred, the Pens score shortly after the power play. Egor Chinakhov kinda pulls up on the rush and fires a shot that glances off the defenseman and make the puck change directions to end up going short-side on Gibson. He was already leaning the other way. 3-0 Pens.

Dominant performance, shots are 14-5 PIT. Had Gibson not made a few nice saves there could have been even more damage done than the 3-0 score after 20.

Second period

The Red Wings put Cam Talbot in the net for the start of the second period.

Detroit gets their first power play of the game after Mantha gets himself in trouble on the forecheck for holding/hooking the defender and gets on the board five seconds into it. The Red Wings win the faceoff, Patrick Kane fires a low shot to create a rebound and Dylan Larkin is able to punch in the rebound. 3-1.

The Pens find an answer, Connor Clifton steps in front of a slow clearing attempt and sends a shot back. Justin Brazeau is there to get a small deflection on it near the front of the net. 4-1 game.

Detroit gets a few chances late but can’t shrink the score again in the second period. Sam Girard and Lucas Raymond get too chippy with each other after a whistle in a scrum and we get 4v4 hockey as a result.

Shots in the second are 9-8 Red Wings, the Pens aren’t going full throttle but they’re still engaged enough to maintain.

Third period

Larkin gets called for a tripping minor to grant Pittsburgh a 4v3 power play for a limited amount of time.

In the second night of the b-2-b and up big in this one, the Pens are drifting off now. The Red Wings hit a crossbar really hard, it barely stays out.

Total coast mode for the Pens at this point, Detroit’s able to get into the zone, work it around, Pittsburgh keeps them mostly to the outside and then chips the puck out for the process to repeat. Stuart Skinner earns his supper with some saves, the clock keeps heading to the end.

The Pens get one more goal for the road with 7:51 remaining. Ryan Shea shoots from the point with two players posted up near the goal. Noel Acciari is the closest to the rebound and he fights off no less than Mo Seider to win a battle to punch the puck in. 5-1.

Detroit gets caught with six players on the ice. The top power play gets to work a little stress-free practice, they snap the puck around but don’t score.

Both teams come together and exchange pushes and shoves after the final whistle, won’t change the score at this point. Pens secure the victory.

Some thoughts

  • Sidney Crosby entered the night two points behind Steve Yzerman for 7th place all-time on the NHL scoring list. Yzerman, GM and legend of the Red Wings, shame Crosby could only tack on one point to inch closer but not tie or pass on this night. Given the bigger picture, hardly a note anyone ought be concerned with.
  • Anything and everything was going the Pens way early. Bryan Rust a very last minute scratch? No worries, just kinda make some last minute changes as you go, it all works out. Rakell and Mantha will score anyways.
  • Those two are just scorching hot right now. Rakell now has seven goals in the last five games. Mantha, per Bob Grove, scored three goals over the course of six shots. Always a thing of beauty when really good players start performing at clincal levels.
  • A lot has been made (well, OK, maybe more accurately a little) about Blake Lizotte’s absence from the penalty kill. It’s true the PK has been bad without him. Would it be any better with him? Perhaps but that’s a hypothetical that could have any answer you’d want to imagine. Statistically though, there’s a good case to be made it wouldn’t have mattered on the first DRW PPG: Lizotte has only won 43.6% of his 126 PK faceoffs this season. Noel Acciari (the player who took the faceoff and lost it) had won 50.6% of his 189 PK draws. So probability-wise, it’s not like Lizotte would have been likely to prevent the exact same result on that play. (That example aside, it certainly is a big loss and harmful to the PK and team in general to not have Lizotte available).
  • Crosby had four hits on the nights officially and these were not getting credit for little bumps, a couple were big hits. One sent Andrew Copp crashing down off his feet. The intensity is definitely ramped up.
  • Five shots on goal and eight total attempts for Malkin. Looked pretty good in his return considering his hand was banged up.
  • The more I’ve seen of Soderblom, the more I’m liking it. He’s an active player and certainly makes the most of his opportunities to stand out in limited moments. His size alone can kinda make him a novelty in ways but beyond that you can see why the Penguins wanted him. He’s still just scratching the surface of the type of player he could be and seemingly *^this close^* to breaking through and being a force out there. Maybe that eludes him to fully reach his potential but it’s a worthy project to take on and see what could happen. (Can’t hurt the cause that a similarly-sized and skilled prototype in Brazeau had his major breakout this season). Threw this note in any case and stray Detroit people were checking this out of curiosity to see how Soderblom is fitting in. Slightly more impressed than anticipated.
  • More surprising occurrence to happen for a second night in a row: chasing the opponent’s goalie or seeing actual, legit hockey fights? Sign of the times that it’s a reasonable question. Really raises the entertainment factor on a game, if you’re cheering for the Penguins, anyways, fights and making the opponent put in their backup goalie are always good fun.
  • This game might have been more interesting had Alex Debrincat’s aim been true on two shots that both nailed the crossbar. The Penguins put it in coast for a good bit of this game. Luckily they survived without having to try and turn the competitiveness all the way back on.
  • Two more points is huge for the playoff picture, the out of town scores mostly look helpful, though all are incomplete and potentially subject to change. Columbus is tied with Carolina at press time. The Flyers longshot hopes are even on further life support courtesy of losing an unfinished game as of now to Washington. The Islanders are trailing the Sabres. The beauty of winning for the Pens is the out of town scores don’t matter as much, at this part of the year is the biggest factor is one more precious game ticks away for all parties. The runway getting shorter is one of the most important parts of them all.

Line ‘em up and knock ‘em down for the Pens right now. These last two games were long pegged as some of the most crucial and the response for two convincing wins is very encouraging. The race to the finish line isn’t quite over yet and the Pens still do have three games in a four day stretch that begins anew on Thursday night on the road in Tampa.

Utah Mammoth’s ‘Next Gen’ Game Highlights Future Amid Playoff Race

The Utah Mammoth are bringing back their “Next Gen” game for a second time this season, presented by America First Credit Union, on April 11. When the Mammoth host the Carolina Hurricanes that afternoon, Delta Center will transform into a kid-powered experience, with young fans stepping into game-day roles throughout the arena, broadcast, and in-game entertainment.

Designed to celebrate and inspire the next wave of hockey enthusiasts, the event gives participants ages 8–14 a unique, behind-the-scenes opportunity to help shape the game-day atmosphere.

Don’t miss your chance to be part of it—secure your tickets now and join in supporting the growth of hockey’s future in Utah.

Playoff Hopes

If the Mammoth hold onto their wild card spot secure a postseason berth, their most probable first-round opponent appears to be the Anaheim Ducks.

There is no such thing as an easy series in the Stanley Cup Playoffs. The league’s parity has all but eliminated true underdogs from qualifying, but certain opponents present a less daunting challenge than others.

Earlier this month, Connor McDavid described the Pacific Division as a “pillow fight,” highlighting the relative lack of dominant contenders in that race. If Utah claims the first wild card position, it would remain within the Pacific bracket for at least the opening two rounds, avoiding Central Division powers such as the Colorado Avalanche, Dallas Stars, and Minnesota Wild.

Anaheim and Utah find themselves in similar phases of their respective rebuilds. The Ducks have not qualified for the playoffs since 2018, but their recent high draft selections are beginning to emerge as key contributors at the NHL level.

Head-to-head, the teams have split their six all-time meetings evenly. Their most recent contest saw Anaheim pull away late with two empty-net goals in a 4–1 victory, while Utah previously delivered a decisive 7–0 win—though three of those goals came against a goaltender making his NHL debut.

One potential differentiator in a playoff series could be experience behind the bench. Anaheim is led by Joel Quenneville, a four-time Stanley Cup champion with 121 career playoff victories—third-most in league history. Utah’s André Tourigny, meanwhile, has coached more than 400 regular-season NHL games but has limited postseason experience, with his only appearance coming as an assistant in 2014. While Tourigny has enjoyed success internationally and in junior hockey, he has yet to capture a league championship at the professional level.

That said, coaching pedigree alone will not determine the outcome. Utah enters the matchup with advantages in team save percentage and goal differential, outpacing Anaheim by a margin of 30 goals. As is always the case in the playoffs, a variety of factors will ultimately shape the result—and only the games themselves will provide definitive answers.

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Blackhawks Third-Overall Pick Anton Frondell Scored His First Career NHL Goal

The Chicago Blackhawks had Jonathan Toews and the Winnipeg Jets in town on Tuesday night. This was Chicago's first game at home after a long four-game road trip.

This was also Anton Frondell's first game at the United Center as a member of the Blackhawks. On his second shift of the game, Frondell scored his first career NHL goal. 

Frondell's goal came at the end of a shift in which he was all over the puck. There were a handful of other times that the puck could have ended up in the back of the cage, but he finally got it past Connor Hellebuyck for the first of his career. 

On the goal, Louis Crevier got it towards the net, Ilya Mikheyev put it on the stick of Frondell, and he didn't miss this chance. 

Not only did he score his first career goal, but it came against a future Hall of Fame goalie in Hellebuyck. That is certainly a memorable way to score the first of many. 

Frondell's first goal is the fifth point (the first four were all primary assists) of his NHL career in his fifth game. That's exactly the type of start that the Blackhawks were hoping for from the 3rd overall pick in the 2025 NHL Draft. 

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