NHL Rumor Roundup: Canucks' Kiefer Sherwood Draws Interest, Plus Islanders Buzz

The Vancouver Canucks' willingness to entertain trade offers for their UFA-eligible players has made Kiefer Sherwood one of the most notable names in the rumor mill.

Before this season, the 30-year-old Sherwood was a little-known checking-line forward. After spending his first six NHL seasons with the Anaheim Ducks, Colorado Avalanche and Nashville Predators, he enjoyed a career-best 19 goals and 21 assists for 40 points last season with the Canucks.

Sherwood currently leads the Canucks with 12 goals, putting him on pace to reach 36 goals this season. He's in the final season of a two-year contract with an affordable $1.5-million cap hit.

Given the limited number of sellers thus far, the NHL trade market is thin on quality talent. That's made Sherwood an enticing trade target for playoff contenders. While his production has cooled lately, his feisty style of play is tailor-made for the physical grind of post-season hockey.

TSN's Pierre LeBrun reported Tuesday the Minnesota Wild, Montreal Canadiens and Dallas Stars were among a long list of teams to inquire about Sherwood. Sportsnet's Ryan Dixon looked at the impact Sherwood could have with the Philadelphia Flyers, New York Islanders, Boston Bruins and Tampa Bay Lightning.

Aaron Portzline of The Athletic reported the Columbus Blue Jackets had contacted the Canucks about Sherwood. Meanwhile, NHL.com's Dan Rosen suggested the Pittsburgh Penguins might be a good fit. The Buffalo SabresAvalanche and Detroit Red Wings have also surfaced as potential destinations for Sherwood.

LeBrun indicated that the Canucks aren't in any rush to move Sherwood, preferring to take their time to explore the trade market. He also wondered if any of those interested clubs would want to sign the veteran winger to a contract extension, as that would raise his trade value for the Canucks.

It's understandable why the Canucks would prefer to remain patient, as it could drive up the return for Sherwood. However, that stance also carries the risk of injury or a decline in his production.

Three Potential Trade Fits For Canucks' Kiefer SherwoodThree Potential Trade Fits For Canucks' Kiefer SherwoodKiefer Sherwood is among the Canucks' top trade candidates, and these three teams should consider trying to acquire the hard-hitting forward.

Turning to the Islanders, they could use someone like Sherwood to offset the loss of right winger Kyle Palmieri to a season-ending knee injury. That would explain why they were mentioned among the clubs linked to the Canucks right winger.

The Hockey News' Russell Macias says the Islanders have a depth-scoring crisis. And Ethan Sears of the New York Postbelieves they could use another scoring forward and some physicality among their checking lines.

Those traits would make Sherwood an enticing option for the Isles.

Sears also felt that they must improve their defense corps, pointing out the loss of left-shot blueliner Alexander Romanov, plus they never fully replaced Noah Dobson on the right side after trading him to Montreal last summer.

However, Sears cautioned that Isles management should avoid hasty decisions that would sacrifice their future first-round picks or top prospects for a short-term replacement for Palmieri.


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'There's No Way': NHL Draft Prospect Records Goalie Goal And Shutout In WHL

The WHL witnessed NHL draft prospect Xavier Wendt score the league's first goalie goal since 2023 on Wednesday night.

With the Tri-City Americans leading the Swift Current Broncos 3-0, Wendt scored from behind his net after picking up the puck from a soft dump-in.

After cradling the puck, he fired it down the center of the ice, going through all the Broncos who were trying to swat at it. Eventually, the puck made its way to the center of the cage on the opposite side of the ice.

Wendt, 17, became the 11th goalie in WHL history to score a goal and the first since Spokane Chiefs netminder Dawson Cowan on Nov. 26, 2023. Other netminders who scored in the WHL include Olaf Kolzig, Chris Osgood, Chris Dreidger and current Edmonton Oilers starter Stuart Skinner.

Wendt's tally gave the Americans a 4-0 lead with a minute remaining.

"There's no way, a goalie goal at the Toyota Center," play-by-play announcer Craig Beauchemin said emphatically on the broadcast.

Aside from this remarkable goalie goal, Wendt was already having a great performance.

He stopped all 23 shots he faced in the game, recording his first career shutout in the WHL. This is also his first season in the WHL.

Wendt has played 15 WHL games, averaging a 2.39 goals-against average and a .928 save percentage.

Among WHL goaltenders who have played at least 40 percent of their team's total minutes, the rookie leads the league in save percentage and is tied for second in goals-against average.

The Plymouth, Minn., native has spent his minor hockey career at Shattuck St. Mary's prep school, which has alumni such as Sidney Crosby, Jonathan Toews and Zach Parise.

As a member of Shattuck's U-18 team last season, in 29 appearances in the USHS-Prep division, he dominated with a 24-0-1 record, 1.55 GAA and .932 SP.

NHL Central Scouting gave Wendt a 'W' rating for its preliminary players to watch list ahead of the 2026 NHL draft next June. That means it projects him to be drafted in the sixth or seventh round.

With that goalie goal and shutout, Wendt is certainly making a positive impression.


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Fans Calling For Oilers To Give Red-Hot Prospect An NHL Look

"I’ve seen enough time to get the call to The Show," said one fan after watching a video of Quinn Hutson scoring another beauty goal for the Bakersfield Condors of the AHL this week. The red-hot Oilers prospect -- and older brother of Montreal Canadiens' superstar Lane Hutson -- is on a tear and making a case that he might be ready for some NHL action. 

Does that mean the Edmonton Oilers should give Hutson a closer look?

Hutson now sits atop the AHL rookie leaderboard with his 12 goals season. Hutson has 10-8-18/+11 in the last nine games played. He is playing really well and showing Edmonton that they have a lot to look forward to. 

It's unlikely that he keeps up his pace, but amazingly, he's on a 144-point pace, and a plus-minus +96. 

The Arguments For and Against Calling Up Hutson

For the Oilers, it might be tempting to give Hutson a look. At the same time, the last thing Edmonton wants to do is rush a solid prospect and ruin his momentum. Ideally, letting him continue to dominate the AHL is a solid strategy. He'll have all the confidence in the world when he ultimately makes his regular season debut. It's called over-ripening, and it's a plan many NHL clubs use.

Quinn Hutson Edmonton Oilers prospect © Perry Nelson Imagn Images

On the other hand, Edmonton is in need for additional scoring. Without Jack Roslovic and Kasperi Kapanen, they are short on the wings and shuffling pieces around trying to find the right mix. The Oilers lost 1-0 to the Minnesota Wild in a game where, clearly, the Oilers only needed one goal and couldn't get it. They are lacking for offense this season, in the middle of the NHL standings in terms of goals for. 

Edmonton could use the depth scoring. 

There isn't arguably room to move Hutson up without moving someone else down or out. Hutson's game is best utilized in a top-six role and that means demoting someone like Matt Savoie. Some fans would say that's fine, given that Savoie is struggling offensively, but the need to get him going might be as imperative as anything. 

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Takeaways: Flyers Collect High-Event, High-Emotion Win Over Sabres

If the Philadelphia Flyers needed a game to reset their rhythm after a flat showing against Pittsburgh, they delivered the loudest possible answer.

Their 5–2 win over the Buffalo Sabres wasn’t always clean, calm, or particularly orderly — but it was effective, explosive in all the right moments, and full of the kind of layered performances that show how this team generates offense by committee.

It was also emotional, bordering on volatile at times. A combined 12 penalties, a Dahlin boarding call that ejected Buffalo’s No. 1 defenseman, and a concerning exit for Cam York all shaped the energy of the night. But beneath the commotion, the Flyers put together exactly the kind of performance they needed to get back to winning ways.


1. The Flyers’ Three-Goal Avalanche.

The Flyers scored three goals in 59 seconds, the second-fastest three-goal burst by any NHL team this season — and they also hold first place on that list.

The burst wasn’t random. It reflected the Flyers’ best strengths when they’re playing connected hockey: They attacked off clean exits instead of forcing plays through the neutral zone, layered bodies in transition, allowing the forwards to hit the offensive blue line with speed, and turned puck recoveries into instant second chances instead of resetting passively.

The Flyers are now 13–0–1 when scoring at least three goals, which isn't just about goal quantity — it’s about the way they attack in waves when they’re on their game. When they combine quick-support puck movement with early off-puck motion, their forward depth overwhelms.

This was one of those nights. Buffalo never quite refound their footing after that 59-second avalanche, and the Flyers didn’t give them a chance to breathe.


2. Sam Ersson Did Exactly What He Needed to Do.

There were parts of this game where things got weird. Wild scrambles, broken coverage, flashes of open ice, and even a play where Sam Ersson found himself stickless in the crease.

And yet, he was excellent.

Ersson stopped 26 of 28 shots, but the quality matters more than the quantity—multiple pad saves through traffic, crucial stops after defensive-zone breakdowns, controlled rebounds on Buffalo’s rush looks, and poise during the mid-scrum scrambles that could have easily tilted momentum.

"He was fantastic," Travis Konecny said of Ersson's performance. "I didn't realize one of the big pad saves he made—I saw it on the Jumbotron; it was unbelievable. I've been saying it all year—we love both our [goalies] and he just proved us right again that we can trust these guys, play hard for them and...have these good starts and let these guys get into the game and shut the door for us."

The best version of the Flyers includes stable, composed goaltending from both halves of their tandem. This was a meaningful step for Ersson, particularly after some uneven performances earlier in the season.

He didn’t just hold down the fort. He allowed the Flyers to lean into the high-event nature of the game without getting punished for it.

Sam Ersson (33). (Megan DeRuchie-The Hockey News)

3. You Get a Goal, You Get a Goal...Everybody Gets a Goal!

The consistent through-line was that this team’s scoring is coming from everywhere. Top line, middle six, depth wingers, defensemen. That’s how you survive injuries. That’s how you handle high-event games. And that’s how you stay competitive on nights when things get messy.

Travis Konecny

A goal and an assist, now with 26 points in 29 career games vs. Buffalo. He’s looked sharper over the last week — quicker decisions, tighter puck protection, more assertive shot selection.

Trevor Zegras

His 10th goal of the season, tying Tyson Foerster for the team lead, and extending a four-game point streak (3g, 2a). He’s evolving into a steady producer rather than a high-risk, high-reward playmaker, which is exactly what this team needs from him.

How Trevor Zegras Is Rebuilding His Game—and His Reputation—with Flyers How Trevor Zegras Is Rebuilding His Game—and His Reputation—with Flyers There's a moment from the <a href="https://thehockeynews.com/nhl/philadelphia-flyers">Philadelphia Flyers</a>' shootout win over the Pittsburgh Penguins on Tuesday that sums up everything you need to know about <a href="https://thehockeynews.com/nhl/philadelphia-flyers/latest-news/what-every-flyer-needs-this-season-in-one-sentence">Trevor Zegras</a> right now.

Owen Tippett

Another goal — his ninth of the season, and now four points in his last three games.

Travis Sanheim

Two assists, another multi-point night, and continued evidence that his puck-moving impact is essential to the Flyers’ transition game.

Bobby Brink

A goal and an assist, giving him four multi-point games this season and another against Buffalo (he now has nine points in nine career games vs. the Sabres). Brink’s reads in tight spaces and his ability to extend possessions continue to be extremely effective against teams with looser defensive gaps.

Noah Cates

A goal and an assist, bringing him to 15 points on the season and 12 points in 11 career matchups with Buffalo. Cates looked fully in control of his two-way game — winning small-area battles, organizing line structure, and driving play with a level of confidence he didn’t have earlier in the year.

Matvei Michkov

Two primary assists and now six points (3g, 3a) in his last five games. What stands out isn’t just production — it’s how he’s producing. He’s reading pressure better, manipulating defenders with pace changes, and generating controlled entries that tilt the ice in the Flyers’ favor.

"It's fun," Trevor Zegras said of having so many hot hands on offense. "We all love each other in there, so it's cool that everyone's finding the net."


4. The Physical Temperature Rose — and the Flyers Leaned Into It.

This game got messy, and quickly.

It started with heavy forecheck pressure on both sides, then turned sharper when Rasmus Dahlin boarded Trevor Zegras, earning a five-minute major and a game misconduct. The ensuing scrum pulled in multiple Flyers skaters — including Cam York, who took the worst of it and did not return to the game in the third period.

There’s no official update yet, but Rick Tocchet acknowledged postgame that he “thinks” it could be an upper-body issue.

The response from the bench was telling. The Flyers didn’t collapse defensively after losing one of their top back end pieces and channeled the emotional spike into structured pressure.

Nikita Grebenkin, in particular, made his presence felt — five hits, the most of his young career, and all of them with purpose. This wasn’t a game where he floated on the outside. He skated, he pressured, and he supported plays down low.

In a chippy environment, the Flyers weren't short on penalties, but they were able to also channel that emotion and electric energy and turned it into goals.

Sean Couturier (14). (Megan DeRuchie-The Hockey News)

Final Thoughts

This wasn’t the Flyers’ most controlled performance, but it was also exactly the kind of game they needed to get back in the win column, and back into that take-no-prisoners mindset. They won a chaotic game by exploding offensively in organized waves, getting stabilizing, composed goaltending, relying on real scoring depth, matching the physical temperature without leaning into reckless decisions, and staying connected after losing a major defensive piece in Cam York.

There’s concern around York, and rightly so. But the Flyers showed that the underlying structure they’ve built can withstand absences and disorder. A high-event game doesn’t always show maturity, but the way the Flyers managed this one absolutely did.

Columbus Blue Jackets (29 pts) vs. Detroit Red Wings (30 pts) Game Preview

The Columbus Blue Jackets are at home take on the Detroit Red Wings at Nationwide Arena.     

Detroit comes into Columbus having gone 4-4-2 in their last 10 games and are losers of 4 of their last 5. They did win their last game against the Bruins on Tuesday, however. 

The Red Wings beat the Jackets back on November 22nd when Columbus blew a 3-1 third-period lead. They then lost the game 1:50 into the overtime period. 

The Blue Jackets last game was a win on Monday night in New Jersey. It was a spirited game that saw four fights and 74 combined penalty minutes. The Jackets went down 2-0 in the first three minutes of the game but battled back by scoring three times in the third period to upend the Devils. It was a game that everybody wanted to see - A game that saw them battle back and keep a third period lead for the win. 

The Jackets currently sit 8th in the Metro, 13th in the East, and 19th in the NHL. 

Blue Jackets Stats

  • Power Play - 16.4% - 23rd in the NHL
  • Penalty Kill - 74.2% - 28th in the NHL
  • Goals For - 75 - 24th in the NHL
  • Goals Against - 84 - 20th in the NHL

Red Wings Stats

  • Power Play - 21.6% - 11th in the NHL
  • Penalty Kill - 79.5% - 23rd in the NHL
  • Goals For - 80 - 14th in the NHL
  • Goals Against - 92 - 28th in the NHL

Series History vs. The Red Wings

  • Columbus is 48-52-1-15 all-time, and 27-24-1-7 at home vs. Detroit.
  • The CBJ are 2-1-2 in the last 5 against the Red Wings.
  • The Jackets are 29-13-5 in the last 47 games.

Who To Watch For The Red Wings

  • Patrick Kane has 88 points in 65 career games against Columbus.
  • Dylan Larkin leads the Red Wings with 14 goals and 30 points.
  • Lucas Raymond leads the team with 20 assists.
  • Goalie Cam Talbot is 9-4-1 with a .888 SV%. His last start was on November 29th.
  • John Gibson is 5-7-1 with a SV % of .868. His last start was on December 2nd against the Boston Bruins.

CBJ Player Notes vs. Red Wings

  • Zach Werenski has 22 points in 26 career games against Detroit.
  • Charlie Coyle has 14 points in 31 games.
  • Sean Monahan has 17 points in 22 games vs. the Red Wings.

Injuries 

  • Erik Gudbranson - Upper Body - Missed 18 Games - IR - No timeline for a return
  • Boone Jenner - Upper Body - Missed 10 Games - IR - Could return this week
  • Mathieu Olivier - Upper Body - Missed 3 Games - IR- No timeline for a return
  • Kirill Marchenko - Lower Body - Missed 4 Games - Day to day

TOTAL MAN GAMES LOST: 47

How to Watch & Listen: Tonight's game will be on ESPN+ & HULU. John Buccigross will be on the play-by-play. The radio broadcast will be on 97.1 The Fan, with Bob McElligott behind the mic doing the play-by-play. 

Stay updated with the most interesting Blue Jackets stories, analysis, breaking news, and more!

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Canadiens: Dobes Shines In Big Win

After a disappointing loss against the Ottawa Senators on Tuesday night, Martin St-Louis decided to go back to the drawing board for the second game of the back-to-back, and it was with different lines that his Montreal Canadiens took on the Winnipeg Jets. Before puck drop, the organization took the time to honour former blueliner Andrei Markov, a man who bled red, white and blue, but we’ll discuss this in a separate article.

Unimpressed by his team’s defensive play against Ottawa, the coach felt it was time to make some adjustments to maximize his chances of having effective five-man units on the ice at all times. Juraj Slafkovsky was back with Cole Caufield and Nick Suzuki, while Zachary Bolduc went from the top line to the fourth one. As for Brendan Gallagher, he was back with Jake Evans and Josh Anderson, while Alexandre Texier got a first top-six look. As for Florian Xhekaj, he made way for Jared Davidson, who completed a line with Joe Veleno and the aforementioned Bolduc.

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Confidence Starts In The Net

Jakub Dobes was back in the net on Wednesday night, and the way he handles himself between the pipes is quite different from that of Samuel Montembeault. He’s clearly more confident and moving much better. Even if it’s not always elegant, his desperation dive to one side after colliding with Jonathan Toews was spectacular. While he arrived before the shot, he still managed to recover and freeze the puck when it fell in the crease.

His glove hand is sharp, and he doesn’t have the same issue as the Becancour native when it comes to long-range shots. His puck tracking was also excellent, and he doesn’t end up on the wrong side of wraparounds.

In the first frame, he stopped nine of the 10 shots he faced, and the one that went in came from yet another defensive breakdown. Mark Scheifele walked right into the slot with nobody even attempting to cover him. He had all the time in the world to pick his spot to beat the Czech goalie.

Throughout the game, he made multiple saves, including some key ones late in the third and in overtime, before not allowing a single goal in the shootout. He did everything he could tonight, and he’s a massive part of the reason why the Canadiens skated away with the two points. It's also worth mentioning that he communicates with his player very well, whenever a defenseman was pinching and no one was going back to cover for him, you could hear Dobes smacking the ice with his stick until the situation was corrected.

A Winning Second Frame

For the first time in what felt like forever, the Canadiens actually finished the second frame with a positive differential, scoring two goals and only allowing one. That’s not to say it was a perfect frame, though. The young Habs are still prone to panic when things go awry, for instance, when they had to defend with one less stick, the Jets knew precisely how to take advantage, passing the puck around until they were dizzy to take a temporary 2-1 lead.

But, still, there were more good than bad plays in the middle frame; the power play only needed less than 30 seconds to score the Habs’ first goal of the game, thanks to a perfect tic-tac-toe passing play completed by Slafkovsky.

As for the second goal, it was achieved thanks to Demidov’s combativeness. He chased the puck that was sent in deep by his linemate, battled hard with Josh Morrissey, outmuscled him and sent a perfect pass to Kapanen, who sent in a one-timer. It wasn’t the first fantastic set-up done by Demidov, but he finally converted on that one. With his eighth goal of the season, the Finnish forward rejoins Matthew Schaefer as the joint leader in goals scored amongst rookies. Meanwhile, the pass allows Demidov to join Beckett Senecke in the rookie scoring race and to reclaim sole lead in assists.

That build-up didn’t go unnoticed by the coach, who said:

When he’s involved physically, winning a battle, that’s a situation where you need to use your body, and he’s good at using his edges when there’s not a lot of space and to use a bit of physicality. If you want to produce in this league, you’ve got to be involved physically; you can’t be afraid of robust play.
- St-Louis on Demidov

Tonight, the young Russian spent 19:29 on the ice, by far the most ice time he has ever had, and he thrived with the added time. You can’t rush a young player’s development, but at the same time, it’s apparent that he’s so much further along than Slafkovsky was in his first season; it’s impressive to see.

A Big Fight For Xhekaj

After being criticized by some outlets for not fighting Kurtis MacDermid in Tuesday’s game against the Ottawa Senators, Arber Xhekaj dropped the gloves on Wednesday and took on Jets’ captain Adam Lowry. If the gritty defenseman has had trouble with winning his fights lately, it wasn’t the case tonight as he easily won the decision and skated away while pumping up the crowd.

He was still the blueliner St-Louis used the least, playing 13:41, but he had a solid game:

He played a good game, just like he did in the last game. That’s what we want, for him to give us quality minutes. When he does that, it forces us to give him more minutes. I’m happy with his game, and the fights and that, that’s his job, and it’s not an easy one, but he did it very well.
- St-Louis on Arber Xhekaj

This 3-2 shootout win will be great for the Canadiens’ collective confidence, but also for Dobes, who really stood out. With another back-to-back on the horizon this weekend, it will be interesting to see which goaltender gets to play the Maple Leafs in Toronto and who will take on the St. Louis Blues at the Bell Centre on Sunday.


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Panthers set to host Nashville looking to break out of recent funk

The longest homestand of the season is not going particularly well for the Florida Panthers.

Over the past week, Florida has dropped each of the first three matchups on their season-long six game homestand, one that continues on Thursday night against the Nashville Predators.

When adding the Cats’ 6-3 loss to Edmonton that occurred a couple weeks ago to the mix, the Panthers home losing streak is stretched out each of their past four games.

It’s a less-than-ideal situation considering Florida is already navigating the season without a plethora of key players, including captain Sasha Barkov, emotional leader Matthew Tkachuk, defenseman Dmitry Kulikov and forwards Eetu Luostarinen, Tomas Nosek, Jonah Gadjovich and Cole Schwindt.

Entering play on Thursday, the Panthers are in the unfamiliar spot of dead last in the Eastern Conference.

Florida holds a 12-12-1 record through 25 games, sitting five points back of third place in the Atlantic Division and six points behind the second Wild Card spot.

The longer it takes for the Cats to snap back into gear, the more difficult it will be for them to leapfrog half the conference to climb back into a postseason position.

One positive for the Panthers is that they should have Carter Verhaeghe back in the lineup after he missed Tuesday’s loss to Toronto to be with his wife for the birth of their first child.

Another plus is that Florida will be playing Nashville, one of the three Western Conference clubs with less points than the Panthers.

This will be the second and final meeting between the Cats and Preds this season following Florida’s 8-3 dismantling of Nashville last Monday.

We’ll see if Florida can recapture some of the moxie they showed that night when the two teams lock horns Thursday in Sunrise.

Here are the Panthers projected lines and pairings for Thursday’s party with the Predators:

Mackie Samoskevich – Anton Lundell – Brad Marchand

Jesper Boqvist – Evan Rodrigues – Sam Reinhart

Carter Verhaeghe – Sam Bennett – A.J. Greer

Noah Gregor – Jack Stucnicka – Luke Kunin

Gus Forsling – Aaron Ekblad

Niko Mikkola – Seth Jones

Uvis Balinskis – Jeff Petry

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Photo caption: Nov 24, 2025; Nashville, Tennessee, USA; Florida Panthers defenseman Donovan Sebrango (6) skates with the puck against the Nashville Predators during the second period at Bridgestone Arena. (Steve Roberts-Imagn Images)

Bruins must fix this glaring issue ASAP to remain in playoff race

Bruins must fix this glaring issue ASAP to remain in playoff race originally appeared on NBC Sports Boston

The Boston Bruins have exceeded expectations to this point in the 2025-26 NHL season. Many experts and analytics models predicted the B’s would miss the playoffs for the second year in a row and possibly even finish among the bottom 10 teams again.

While that scenario could still play out, making the playoffs is actually a realistic goal for this group.

The Bruins are one of three teams tied for third place in the Atlantic Division. The early-season struggles of the Toronto Maple Leafs and two-time defending champion Florida Panthers have made the division race pretty competitive. First place and sixth place are separated by just seven points as of Thursday morning.

If the Bruins are going to remain in the playoff race until the end, there are a couple things that must improve ASAP, and one of them is overall team defense.

The Bruins are making their goaltenders’ jobs much tougher than it needs to be with the way they’re defending.

For example, the Bruins have allowed the most shot attempts (1474) of any team at even strength. They’ve also given up the fifth-most shots on net (667), the fourth-most high-danger chances (300) and the second-most scoring chances (696) at even strength, per Natural Stat Trick.

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Tuesday’s 5-4 loss to the Red Wings in Detroit was a good example of Boston’s lackluster defense.

The B’s allowed 31 scoring chances at even strength, their fifth-highest in any game this season. They also allowed 13 high-danger chances during even strength play, and the Red Wings scored on three of them. It was a particularly tough game for veteran defenseman Andrew Peeke.

So if the Bruins are defending so poorly, how are they still in the playoff race?

Well, their special teams have been strong. They have the sixth-best power play and the eighth-best penalty kill.

Jeremy Swayman also has improved a lot after his disappointing 2024-25 campaign. The star goaltender went 8-2-0 with a .935 save percentage in November.

He also ranks No. 2 among all goalies with 17.1 goals saved above expected, per MoneyPuck. He has given up 50 goals with an expected goals against of 67.1 through 18 appearances. This means he’s bailing out a lot of the defensive mistakes that the Bruins are making in front of him.

Swayman didn’t play well Tuesday against the Red Wings, but overall, he’s been one of Boston’s top players.

The loss of Charlie McAvoy is a tough setback for the Bruins’ defense. He’s an elite top-pairing defenseman who plays in all situations. Henri Jokiharju also missed Tuesday’s game, and Mike Callahan left in the first period with a lower body injury. But even with these injuries, the Bruins should not be this bad defensively.

The Bruins have been better offensively than expected and currently rank 11th in even-strength goals, in addition to their top-six power play. They are also getting a bounce-back season from Swayman. Many of the ingredients for a playoff push are present, but the defense must improve or the losses could start to pile up.

Is Tristan Jarry's Early Season Success Sustainable?

When Pittsburgh Penguins goaltender Tristan Jarry was placed on waivers last January, it felt like his Penguins' tenure was over. 

He was really struggling, fresh off back-to-back performances with an .824 save percentage. Overall, he had an 8-8-4 record with an .886 save percentage and a 3.31 goals-against average. The Penguins reached their breaking point and waived him before he was sent down to Wilkes-Barre/Scranton, as no team claimed him on waivers. 

Jarry was down in WBS for almost two full months before he was recalled in early March due to Joel Blomqvist struggling in the NHL. This was Jarry's second stint in WBS after he was sent down on a conditioning loan last October. 

After Jarry got called back up, he played better in March, finishing the month with a .907 save percentage. He played in nine games and finished with at least a .903 save percentage in six of those games. He even won his first four starts to open the month before earning a shutout against the Ottawa Senators in his final start of March. 

Jarry appeared in five games in April, finishing with an .898 save percentage for the month. He won three of his five starts that month and had at least a .903 save percentage in three starts. Jarry looked more confident, was more aggressive in challenging shooters, and was much calmer and composed in the crease. The stakes were low since the Penguins were well out of the playoff race by the end of the season, but he at least played well. 

Fast forward to the first two months of the 2025-26 season, and he has been the best goaltender on the team. He is 8-2-0 with a 2.57 goals-against average and a .911 save percentage. Jarry has also saved 8.2 goals above expected, which is 17th among all goaltenders in the NHL. 

He made his first start of this season against the New York Islanders, and despite a shaky moment or two, he was lights out, especially in the third period when the Islanders were pushing for the tying goal. He made a lot of saves in tight situations towards the end of the game. He carried that momentum for the rest of the month, winning four of his next five starts. 

Nov 28, 2025; Columbus, Ohio, USA; Pittsburgh Penguins goaltender Tristan Jarry (35) celebrates on the ice after his team’s win against the Columbus Blue Jackets in the overtime period at Nationwide Arena. Mandatory Credit: Aaron Doster-Imagn Images

Jarry got hurt during the Nov. 3 game against the Toronto Maple Leafs when the Penguins melted down in the third period and coughed up a 3-0 lead. He missed the next three weeks before returning last Wednesday against the Buffalo Sabres and hasn't missed a beat, winning three of his last four starts. 

Penguins head coach Dan Muse has started to move slightly away from the goalie rotation he had in place due to Jarry's strong play. It also has something to do with Arturs Silovs not playing well in his last couple of starts. Still, Jarry has made many timely saves for the Penguins this season and continues to ooze confidence. He's also still at the top of the crease, playing aggressive and challenging shooters. 

Penguins' GM Kyle Dubas Provides Injury Updates On Key PlayersPenguins' GM Kyle Dubas Provides Injury Updates On Key PlayersFor the first time in a while, there is now some clarity on the <a href="https://thehockeynews.com/nhl/pittsburgh-penguins">Pittsburgh Penguins</a>' injury situation.&nbsp;

The biggest question will be whether he can keep this up for a full season. If you look at Jarry's career splits, he has posted save percentages between .911 and .920 from October to December. Still, once the calendar flips to January and continues through the rest of the season, his save percentage has been between .897 and .905.

If Jarry can stay consistent, he'll help keep the Penguins in the playoff race, something that almost nobody thought they'd be in this season. He'd also continue to boost his value since the Penguins have a surplus of goaltenders. Kevin Weekes tweeted last week that Jarry is among the goaltenders drawing trade interest as an option for the Edmonton Oilers, who have gotten rotten goaltending from Stuart Skinner and Cal Pickard to start the season. It's a significant reason why they're not in a playoff spot right now, just one season after losing in the Stanley Cup Final again.

Let's see what the rest of the season brings for the former 2013 second-round pick.


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Former Ottawa Senator Now Tearing It Up In Switzerland

Whether it’s fair or not, Erik Brännström will always be remembered in Ottawa as the guy the Senators got for Mark Stone. It was 2019, and in a deal that former owner Eugene Melnyk said had been planned for some time, Stone was traded to the Vegas Golden Knights. Brännström was Ottawa's crown jewel in that deal, and GM Pierre Dorion was so excited to acquire the diminutive Swede, he initially called it his proudest day as GM.

History now shows that not only was Brännström not ready to be the impact NHL player Stone was, but he ultimately became a fringe NHL defenceman. He had back-to-back seasons of over 70 games played in Ottawa, but the Senators let him walk last year, and he began bouncing all over the league last season. 

In 2024-25, he got into 28 games with the Vancouver Canucks, and also spent time in the organizations of the Colorado Avalanche, New York Rangers and Buffalo Sabres. At that stage, the writing was on the wall, so Brännström packed up and signed a three-year deal with Lausanne HC in Switzerland’s top league.

Six years after being seen as the guy who'd soon make Ottawa forget about losing Mark Stone, Brännström’s NHL career appeared over.

But in his first season over there, he's now writing a nice silver linings playbook. With Lausanne, Brännström is tearing it up the way Dorion once thought he might in Ottawa. In 30 games, he has 13 goals and 25 points, leading all defencemen in both categories. He’s 10th overall in league scoring, right behind a couple of former Senators draft picks.

No, neither of them is named Alex Formenton. The December 1st deadline came and went, and Formenton remains an NHL RFA, so he won’t get an opportunity to play in the NHL this season. The RFA has battled some injuries and has just nine points in 20 Swiss games, which is unlikely to impress anyone on this side of the ocean.

Brady Tkachuk Gives Montreal Grinch Exactly What He Deserves - Community PostBrady Tkachuk Gives Montreal Grinch Exactly What He Deserves - Community PostSenators captain Brady Tkachuk had some fun with a Montreal Canadiens fan in warmups on Tuesday night. Given the fan's costume, the totally insane rendering of Tkachuk, and the absolutely terrible chirp (Tkachuk sounds like Ketchup), the fan got exactly what he deserved.

We speak of Marcus Sorensen, who has 27 points, and Andre Petersson, who has 25.

Between those two players sits a guy many Sens fans wanted over Brady Tkachuk at the 2018 NHL Draft: Filip Zadina, who has 14 goals and 26 points. Brännström is also two points ahead of another former Senator, Dominik KubalĂ­k, who has 13 goals and 23 points. 

Even though the Senators do have some depth issues on the left side of their blue line, GM Steve Staios had clearly seen enough when he let Brannstrom walk into unrestricted free agency in 2024. That was also right around the time Ottawa drafted a bigger defenceman in Carter Yakemchuk in Round 1 and then an angry 6-foot-7 blueliner in Gabriel Elliason.

The Senators have a type, and Brännström, generously listed at 5-foot-10, simply wasn’t it. 

It may be his plan B, but it’s still nice to see the 26-year-old getting a fresh start and having success.

By Steve Warne
The Hockey News - Ottawa

This article was originally published at The Hockey News Ottawa. Read more:

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Comrie Shines But Jets Fall 3–2 in Shootout To Habs

The Winnipeg Jets wrapped up their six-game road trip with a heartbreaking 3–2 shootout loss to the Montreal Canadiens on Wednesday night. It was a contest defined by highlight-reel goaltending, and big plays from both teams’ emerging stars.

Winnipeg netminder Eric Comrie delivered his best performance of the season, turning aside a barrage of high-danger chances from the opening puck drop through overtime and shootout. Comrie made multiple spectacular, goal-saving stops, including one off his mask followed by a diving save in the first period, then another dramatic sequence minutes later after a Montreal interception forced him into yet another desperation stop. His heroics continued throughout the night with five saves in overtime and only one goal allowed on three shootout attempts.

The Jets leaned heavily on their top line once again, with Mark Scheifele and Kyle Connor supplying all of Winnipeg’s scoring. Their combined effort broke the ice late in the first period when Connor corralled a loose puck, weaved between two defenders, and fed Scheifele with a backhand pass, who ripped a shot past Montreal goaltender Jakub Dobeš for a 1–0 lead.

Midway through the second, the Canadiens capitalized on a power-play opportunity after Tanner Pearson was called for slashing rookie defenseman Lane Hutson. Montreal cycled quickly before Juraj SlafkovskĂ˝ hammered a one-timer from the low slot to tie the game.

Winnipeg briefly regained the lead on a fortunate bounce. A deflected puck off a broken stick landed behind the Montreal net, where Gabe Vilardi retrieved it and fed Connor at the faceoff circle. Connor snapped home his shot before Dobeš could react, making it 2–1 Jets.

But Montreal’s young core answered again. Ivan Demidov, a Calder Trophy candidate, out-battled Josh Morrissey along the boards, pulled the puck free, and found Oliver Kapanen wide open in front. Kapanen buried the pass to even the score at 2–2 heading into the third.

Which Jets Could Be Bound For The 2026 Olympic Games?Which Jets Could Be Bound For The 2026 Olympic Games?Discover which Jets are Olympic-bound amidst uncertainty as Hellebuyck, Scheifele, and Connor could represent their nations.

Comrie continued to anchor the Jets late, stopping seven shots in the final frame and five more in a tense overtime period. But Winnipeg’s depth scoring remained absent and their opportunities went unconverted. In the shootout, Montreal’s Cole Caufield scored the lone goal, securing the extra point for the Canadiens and handing Winnipeg a frustrating but hard-fought defeat.

The Jets now return home after their demanding road swing and will host the Buffalo Sabres on Friday at Canada Life Centre.

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Devils shut out by Stars, 3-0, extending losing streak to three games

NEWARK, N.J. (AP) — Jason Robertson scored his 17th goal of the season, Jake Oettinger stopped all 31 shots he faced and the Dallas Stars shut out the New Jersey Devils 3-0 on Wednesday night.

While Robertson kept building his case to make the U.S. Olympic team scoring on a give-and-go with Esa Lindell, a trio of other Finns were responsible for the Stars’ other offensive production. Roope Hintz fed Miro Heiskanen for the Stars’ first goal, while Mikko Rantanen scored on a rebound to get their third.

Oettinger, also likely Milan-bound as one of three American goaltenders, was at his best at the other end of the ice to pick up his first career victory against the Devils — the last of the NHL’s other 31 teams he hadn’t beaten. Oettinger made back-to-back pad saves on Luke Glendening and Juho Lammikko late in the first period and denied Dawson Mercer (twice) and Connor Brown on some high-quality chances in the second.

Lindell and captain Jamie Benn each had two assists. The Stars have killed off 19 consecutive penalties over the past six games and improved to 12-0-0 when leading at the second intermission.

Dallas was playing its first game without its second-longest-tenured player, Tyler Seguin, who tore the ACL in his right knee Tuesday night at the New York Rangers. Coach Glen Gulutzan said Seguin will probably miss the rest of the season.

Jacob Markstrom allowed three goals on 27 shots for New Jersey, which lost a third game in a row and for the sixth time in its past nine. Top player Jack Hughes has been out this entire stretch and is expected to miss at least another month after undergoing surgery to repair a non-hockey finger injury.

Up next

Stars: Return home to face San Jose on Friday night.

Devils: Host Vegas on Friday night.

Penguins' GM Kyle Dubas Provides Injury Updates On Key Players

For the first time in a while, there is now some clarity on the Pittsburgh Penguins' injury situation. 

On Wednesday's GM Show, Penguins' general manager and president of hockey operations Kyle Dubas provided some clarity on the statuses of forwards Justin Brazeau, Noel Acciari, and Rickard Rakell. Brazeau and Acciari made the trip to Tampa Bay with the Penguins, as they play the Lightning Thursday then head to Dallas to take on the Stars Sunday

However, that doesn't mean they'll hit the ice in the next two games. Dubas told Josh Getzoff on the GM Show that Brazeau and Acciari should be out roughly another seven to 10 days, while Rakell will still be out another three to four weeks. 

Brazeau, 27, and Acciari, 34, both missed all of November with upper-body injuries. Brazeau had six goals and 12 points in 12 games prior to his injury, while Acciari had led Penguins' forwards in hits and blocked shots at the time of his injury. 

Rakell, 32, was injured in an Oct. 25 loss to the Columbus Blue Jackets when a shot block hit his left hand, which required surgery to repair the break. He had three goals and eight points in nine games at the time, and he was playing on the top line with Sidney Crosby and Bryan Rust. 

Two Penguins Forwards Returned To Practice On Wednesday Two Penguins Forwards Returned To Practice On Wednesday Two Pittsburgh Penguins forwards returned to practice on Wednesday.

Since all three players went down, the Penguins had a 4-5-3 in the month of November after getting off to an 8-2-2 start. However, they have won three out of their last four games and have gotten some reinforcements in Rutger McGroarty and Boko Imama, both of whom were recalled from Wilkes-Barre/Scranton (AHL) prior to Monday's win against the Philadelphia Flyers

After Dallas on Sunday, the Penguins return home to face the Anaheim Ducks on Tuesday and begin a five-game homestand. 

Takeaways: Penguins Put Forth Dominant Effort In 5-1 Win Over FlyersTakeaways: Penguins Put Forth Dominant Effort In 5-1 Win Over FlyersFor the first time in weeks, it felt like a winning result for the <a href="https://thehockeynews.com/nhl/pittsburgh-penguins/">Pittsburgh Penguins</a> was never really in doubt throughout the game.&nbsp;

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Dallas Stars forward Tyler Seguin expected to miss rest of NHL season with a torn ACL

NHL: Dallas Stars at New York Rangers

Dec 2, 2025; New York, New York, USA; Dallas Stars center Tyler Seguin (91) helped off the ice by Dallas Stars center Roope Hintz (24) and Dallas Stars defenseman Ilya Lyubushkin (46) in the game against the New York Rangers during the first period at Madison Square Garden. Mandatory Credit: Dennis Schneidler-Imagn Images

Dennis Schneidler-Imagn Images

NEW YORK — Tyler Seguin is expected to miss the rest of the NHL season with a torn ACL in his right knee, another major injury blow to the already-shorthanded Dallas Stars.

Coach Glen Gulutzan said Wednesday that Seguin would be out a significant amount of time. The 33-year-old forward was injured Tuesday night at the New York Rangers.

“It’s not just us, it’s the league, and it’s very unfortunate,” Gulutzan said. “It’s a tough day for us today with the news. Other guys now have to step in and play.”

Seguin got tangled up with Rangers defenseman Vladislav Gavirkov in the first period. Seguin went down in pain, could not skate and needed help from multiple teammates and an athletic trainer to get off the ice and more assistance to get down the tunnel to the visiting locker room area at Madison Square Garden.

Gulutzan said the team did not get positive news about Seguin’s knee after it was looked at more closely.

“There’s lots of injuries piling up and lots of games, so we just got to keep moving forward,” Gulutzan said. “There’s lots of guys that their opportunity is born from some of this misfortune. We just have to take that away: It’s next guy up, next guy’s opportunity and run with it. That’s what good teams do is they just keep pushing forward with the players that they have.”

Seguin missed the vast majority of last season after undergoing hip surgery. He returned for the finale and the Stars' playoff run to the Western Conference final. He has been with Dallas since joining in a trade from Boston in 2013.

“I didn’t live it with him last year, but I did talk to our leadership group here and what I did know is just how hard he (worked) and the effort that he put in to come back last year and how diligent he was,” Gulutzan said. “He’s a great leader for us, and he’s a great pro and he’s been a guy, quite frankly, that I’ve been maybe the most impressed with - just his leadership ability when I’ve come in here.”

Nathan Bastian was expected to take Seguin's spot in the lineup Tuesday night at the New Jersey Devils. Long term, the team hopes center Matt Duchene is able to help fill the void once he returns from his injury.

That could come “sooner than later” if Duchene's current progress continues, according to Gulutzan.

“You’re going to have to have other guys step up,” Gulutzan said. “If Duchy comes back, he’s going to have to take some of that. (Mavrik Bourque is) going to get more opportunity. There’s going to be more opportunity for more guys, and then you’re going to see who takes it. So, you’re not really pigeonholing anybody. You’re just seeing who grabs it.”

Blues Recall Another Forward From Springfield

The St. Louis Blues have recalled forward Matt Luff from their Springfield of the American Hockey League on Wednesday.

The 28-year-old is the latest recall with the Blues (9-11-7), who take on the Boston Bruins (15-13-0) on Thursday, hit by a rash of injuries to their forward group, including Jimmy Snuggerud (wrist), Alexey Toropchenko (leg burns) and Nathan Walker (upper body).

Luff, who signed a one-year, two-way contract for $775,000 NHL/$400,000 AHL, last played in the NHL in 2022-23 with the Detroit Red Wings when he had two goals and two assists in 19 games; Luff has also played for the Los Angeles Kings and Nashville Predators.

Luff has played in 17 games for the Thunderbirds this season and leads them in goals (seven) and points 14. This is his second season in Springfield after appearing in 50 games last season (18 goals, 27 assists).

Luff has appeared in 106 career NHL regular-season games and has 27 points (15 goals, 12 assists). He joins Aleksanteri Kaskimaki, who will make his NHL debut with the Blues on Thursday, but Luff adds an extra layer at forward with the Blues also playing games Saturday against the Ottawa Senators and Sunday against the Montreal Canadiens.

Jordan Binnington Addresses Heated Exchange With Jim Montgomery After Being Pulled -- "Honestly, I’m not even thinking about it. It is what it is"Jordan Binnington Addresses Heated Exchange With Jim Montgomery After Being Pulled -- "Honestly, I’m not even thinking about it. It is what it is"Blues goalie reaffirms not being happy with getting pulled from 4-1 loss to Ducks on Monday, has moved on from incident and says he respects coach making decisionsInjury List Grows For Blues, Walker Joins List Of Walking WoundedInjury List Grows For Blues, Walker Joins List Of Walking WoundedNathan Walker sidelined eight weeks with upper-body injury, joining Jimmy Snuggerud, Alexey Toropchenko long-term, Pius Suter on day to day basisBlues Make Minor Trade, Acquire Forward From KingsBlues Make Minor Trade, Acquire Forward From KingsClub sends Nikita Alexandrov to Los Angeles in exchange for Akil Thomas in 1-for-1 dealImage

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