Penguins/Blackhawks Recap: Pens score six straight goals, easily beat Chicago

PITTSBURGH, PA - JANUARY 29: Ryan Shea #5 of the Pittsburgh Penguins celebrates his second period goal against the Chicago Blackhawks at PPG PAINTS Arena on January 29, 2026 in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. (Photo by Joe Sargent/NHLI via Getty Images) | NHLI via Getty Images

Pregame

New lineup for the Penguins, Ilya Solovyov makes his Pittsburgh debut, Rutger McGroarty is back from the AHL to get back in the absence of Bryan Rust (suspension). Arturs Silovs gets the call in the net.

First period

Chicago starts the game with their third line, so Dan Muse elects to put his fourth line out to match for a curious opening faceoff. No Sidney Crosby and Connor Bedard squaring up right off the bat.

Sloppy and slow start for the Penguins. Ben Kindel takes a penalty six minutes in, the Blackhawks get a lot going on the power play but don’t score (Bedard dents the crossbar with a shot to come close). It keeps building, Ryan Greene pulls up and hits Connor Murphy with a pass. The defender takes a shot, Kris Letang backs all the way into Silovs, which couldn’t have helped matters. 1-0 Chicago.

Pittsburgh gets a spark from their sparkplug fourth line. Blake Lizotte might have got away with a trip (surely the only thing a Penguin player got away with in the first period, considering they ended up in the penalty box four times in the first 20 minutes) and that opening is all they need. Noel Acciari shoots, Connor Dewar eventually finds the rebound, wheels out into a shooting area and fires the puck in for his 12th goal of the year. 1-1 game.

The refs make it up to Chicago by giving them their second power play of the game on the next shift. This one isn’t as good. Two coincidental minors later the period comes to an end. Not a pretty sight for the Pens still looking to get their legs back under them from the long road trip, but they get out of the first period even at 1-1.

Second period

The Pens get to work, McGroarty causes mayhem in the crease, Chicago can’t clear a little later and Anthony Mantha feeds Ben Kindel in the middle of the ice. Kindel hesitates on the shot and gets goalie Arvid Soderblom to think high glove side. That leaves a lot open five hole. 2-1 Pens.

History strikes – kinda. For the first time in the last six periods, the Penguins are awarded a power play. They look out of practice and don’t get much going.

The Pens get a pretty goal on the rush. Parker Wotherspoon stands up Tyler Bertuzzi, blocking his attempt as the hit gets delivered. The puck rolls to Evgeni Malkin who is off to the races. Malkin pulls up with a spinning backhand centering pass to Egor Chinakhov. Chinakhov blows by Artom Levshunov and lifts the puck past Soderblom. 3-1.

31 seconds later, Pittsburgh strikes again. Kindel puts a great pass for a streaking Mantha for a breakaway. In a move that would make Mario proud, Mantha feints a forehand shot, Soderblom bites and it’s an easy finish to the backhand. 4-1 game just like that.

There’s blood in the water, Pittsburgh gets another before intermission. McGroarty was causing more mayhem in the crease, Mantha found the loose puck and sent it back to the point for Solovyov. Solovyov quickly bumped it over for Ryan Shea to hammer. It finds its mark. 5-1 game.

It took 20 minutes for Pittsburgh to get their legs back, they found them in the second and exposed Soderblom as the backup goalie he is, while throwing 23 (count ’em, 23!) shots on goal in the second period alone. Four goals in the middle frame opens up a sizeable 5-1 lead.

Third period

The Blackhawks look like they are ready to get out of town, only one shot on goal in the first 14 minutes of the period. The Pens keep going, eventually the fourth line crashes the net, going crazy to smack another one home. Dewar gets there to do it for his second goal of the night. 6-1.

That wakes Bedard up, at least. He comes down on the rush and lets Brett Kulak slide himself completely out of position. Bedard has all day to pick a spot and snipe Silovs high to the glove. 6-2 game.

Silovs actually has to make one more save on a good chance from in close, then things settle down and the teams ease onto the final whistle.

Some thoughts

  • One of the trickle down effects of Bryan Rust’s suspension is that Egor Chinakhov is now on the top power play. Has shades of Jared McCann 2021 with that left handed option on the left side ready to fire that shot short-side.
  • The biggest impact of no Rust was Justin Brazeau moving up to the top line. He looked mostly in the way, isn’t easy to play with Crosby and the lack of familiarity was on display. Will be interesting to see if they give that more time to find more, Crosby rotated in with Malkin a couple times in the third period, Brazeau still only played 12:45 at even strength despite the label of being a first line player.
  • Keeping Mantha with Kindel proved to be worth whatever lead time the top line might need. They have something special going on. McGroarty didn’t register a point but was more visible in this game than he had been in several of his recent NHL showings too. Lots of chaos on that line, augmented by the skilled plays and finishes that Kindel and Mantha put on display.
  • The second period was a feast like nobody’s business; Mantha scored three points while only taking six shifts that period. That’s like ‘your best night happening against a bad team’ in beer league type of production there.
  • Speaks to just how dangerous and balanced the Penguins are when they score six goals on the night and their normal first power play (Crosby, Rust, Rakell, Malkin, Karlsson) have all of one assist on the night (Malkin’s pass to Chinakhov). Rust, of course, had a good reason for not producing any points since he wasn’t allowed to play, the rest of the most skilled and players relied on for offense weren’t required of much on this night. The third and fourth lines were more than Chicago could handle, combining for five goals between themselves.
  • Solovyov first impressions: good night and opening game. Has some good size, did pin Bedard to the wall once in the first. By design it was a quiet introduction to ease him in, with the blowout allowing him to get more ice time in each period. Earned a primary assist with a basic play but good idea. Stats were 16:51, 3 shot attempts (neither on net, two blocked, one missed), 1 hit, 2 giveaways, 1 blocked shot. (The giveaways stand out a little, but were nothing egregious. The NHL did change the standard and frequency of how they record giveaways before last season, increasing it dramatically). Too early to say much, Solovyov was deferring to his partner Shea to do almost all the heavy lifting moving the puck, but hey, to be expected on the first night with a new team.
  • It’s also too early to be watching the out of town scores for anything besides mostly fun, though it’s too much fun not to take a gander – especially when the Pens won their game without much despair. However, there was almost no help across the board so it’s not that much fun of an update besides holding serve. Carolina just scored three goals in the last two minutes to turn a regulation loss against Utah into a 5-4 win, the Pens remain six points out of first place as a result (with a game in hand). The Islanders defeated a hapless Ranger team to stay tied with the Pens (Pittsburgh does have two games in hand on NYI). The Devils earned an OT win, though they are seven points back of Pittsburgh. The Flyers lost again, which is always good, but losing relevance since they are way in the rearview mirror now (eight points back of Pittsburgh, who has one game in hand). Washington is currently tied.

Not the toughest of competition but the Pens can only play the team in front of them and handled business convincingly to keep their winning streak rolling. Next up is a visit from the Rangers on Saturday afternoon.

Blackhawks Routed By Penguins, Lose 6-2 In Pittsburgh

The Chicago Blackhawks played the second game of their two-game road trip on Thursday night. In the first one, they blew a 3-0 lead and lost to the Minnesota Wild 4-3 in a shootout. 

In this game against the Penguins, things started well for them as they took a 1-0 lead on a goal scored by Connor Murphy. A great defensive play by Frank Nazar led to a great rush where he and Ryan Greene made a play to find Murphy, who didn't miss with his snipe. 

Murphy, who is likely to be traded by Chicago ahead of the deadline, has been playing exceptionally well in recent weeks. Contending teams are going to take a look. 

After going up 1-0, however, the Penguins took over in a big way. They scored six unanswered goals to make it 5-1. Four of those goals came in the second period, which was a truly awful period for the Hawks. They will watch the tape and see that it was one of the worst periods of their entire season. 

Connor Bedard had a wonderful snipe late in the game to make it 6-2 at 14:31 of the third period, but the game was well out of reach at that point. That stood as the final score. 

Although nobody would ever say that Arvid Soderblom played well, but he was asked to face 44 shots. 23 of them came in that brutal middle period. He stayed in the game to eat the loss, with Spencer Knight projected to go on Friday. Soderblom gave up six, but most goalies in the league are not winning when they face 44 shots. 

The Penguins put up six against the Blackhawks, and Sidney Crosby didn't have a single point. Usually, that's a sign that a team played horrible hockey, which was the case for Chicago on Thursday night. 

This is the type of game you scrap if you're a young Blackhawks team. They have had a few of these stinkers in 2025-26, but they don't have much time to think about this one. Another game awaits one night later. 

Watch Every Chicago Goal

What’s Next For The Blackhawks?

The Blackhawks are back in action on Friday night. The Columbus Blue Jackets will be at the United Center for a tilt to kick off the weekend. Puck drop is shortly after 7:30 PM CT. 

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Sharks trade rumors: Is San Jose positioned to acquire Artemi Panarin?

The San Jose Sharks look to take advantage of the market to enhance their team as they gear up for a hopeful playoff run.

According to San Jose Hockey Now, the Sharks have shown interest in winger Artemi Panarin, who will be an unrestricted free agent after this season.

Apparently the feeling is mutual. Sheng Peng of San Jose Hockey Now reported that Panarin would be interested in signing a contract extension with the Sharks.

Panarin is being held out of the lineup by the New York Rangers as they explore a trade and is not expected to play before the Olympic break. The retooling Rangers said they wouldn't be offering him an extension. Panarin, who has a no-movement clause, is reportedly exploring an extension as part of a trade.

TSN Hockey Insider Pierre LeBrun said some teams view Panarin as a "rental but aren't ready to get into a big extension" while other teams believe the opposite.

"Have the Sharks talked to them? Yes," LeBrun said. "My understanding is the Sharks had a discussion with the Rangers. We know (Sharks general manager) Mike Grier and (Rangers general manager and president) Chris Drury have the history, (they) worked together in New York."

However, a skeptical LeBrun shut down rumors of a potential Sharks play for Panarin, due to their recent signings including re-signing 31-year-old forward Alexander Wennberg to a three-year contract worth $18 million on Jan. 4.

"But beyond that conversation, I'm not sure how serious San Jose wants to be here," LeBrun said. "You know, they just traded for (Kiefer) Sherwood. They just signed Wennberg. So I wouldn't have San Jose as a front-runner right now. We'll see."

The 34-year-old has accounted for 19 goals and 57 points in 52 games played.

Panarin, a two-time NHL First-Team All-Star, has played 11 seasons in the NHL for the Chicago Blackhawks, Columbus Blue Jackets and Rangers. He tallied 321 goals and 927 points in 804 career games.

The Sharks recently sent waves throughout the league when they completed a trade for Sherwood, sending Cole Clayton and two second-round picks to the Vancouver Canucks.

San Jose holds the final wild card spot in the Western Conference after finishing last overall the past two seasons.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Artemi Panarin trade rumors: Will San Jose Sharks bite?

Patrick Kane Breaks Mike Modano's Record For Most NHL Points Scored By An American Born

It happened. Patrick Kane already had a case to be considered the greatest player in USA Hockey history, but now he is the leading scorer of every NHL player to ever come from the United States of America. 

On Thursday night at Little Caesars Arena, playing for the Detroit Red Wings, Kane collected an assist on a goal scored by Ben Chiarot that tied the game at one. This was point 1375 for Kane, which passed Mike Modano for the American scoring record. 

Earlier in the game, Kane had an assist wiped off the board as the goal that was scored was waived off for offside after a challenge. The celebration had to wait for a period, but nobody doubted that Kane would find a way to get it done in this match. 

When he scored it, the entire Red Wings bench spilled over the boards to congratulate their legendary teammate. A video from Mike Modano himself played on the Jumbotron to congratulate Kane and speak of his impact on the game for young Americans.  

Patrick Kane's 1375 points that broke the record are comprised of 500 goals and 875 assists. 446 of those goals and 779 of those assists came while wearing a Chicago Blackhawks sweater. 

This record, three Stanley Cups, a Conn Smythe Trophy, and many other individual awards will be marks on his resume that make Kane a first-ballot Hall of Famer when he's done playing. 

Next up for Kane is leading this Red Wings team back into the playoffs, which will end the second-longest drought in the league. It's been a couple of years since he last suited up for the postseason himself, so hockey fans will be treated to "Showtime" on the biggest stage once again. 

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Patrick Kane becomes top US-born scorer, breaking Mike Modano's record

Detroit Red Wings star Patrick Kane passed Hockey Hall of Famer Mike Modano to become the top U.S.-born scorer in NHL history.

Kane, 37, had an assist in the second period on Thursday, Jan. 29 against the Washington Capitals to give him 1,375 points, one more than Modano, the former Minnesota North Stars/Dallas Stars standout who finished his career in Detroit.

It was the second milestone that Kane reached this month. He scored his 500th goal on Jan. 8, becoming the fifth U.S.-born player and 50th overall to hit that mark.

He drew the second assist on a goal by Ben Chiarot to break the points record Thursday. Teammates poured onto the ice to congratulate him.

Kane, who was born in Buffalo, New York, has 500 goals and 875 assists with the Chicago Blackhawks, New York Rangers and Red Wings.

Kane needs two attempts to break record

Kane looked like he might have the record early in the first period when he set up an Alex DeBrincat power play goal, but the play was ruled offsides after a Capitals challenge.

It was the second time in three games in which he lost a point. He was originally awarded an assist on a goal against the Winnipeg Jets on Jan. 24, but it was later taken away. He had an assist late in that game to move within one point of Modano and then tied the record on Jan. 27 with an assist against the Los Angeles Kings.

Patrick Kane vs. Mike Modano

Modano, who was born in Michigan, played 1,499 games. Kane has played 1,343. Modano had been the U.S. leader for 18-plus years, passing Phil Housley in November 2007 shortly after Kane's NHL debut.

Modano (1988) and Kane (2007) are former No. 1 overall picks. Modano won a Stanley Cup with the Stars in 1999 and Kane won with the Blackhawks in 2010, 2013 and 2015. He won a scoring title with 106 points in 2015-16, the only American to do so, and also took home the Hart Trophy that season, ending a 91-year drought for U.S.-born players. His career best was 110 points in 2018-19.

Kane had a brief stint with the Rangers after a 2023 trade, then had hip surgery in the offseason. He signed with the Red Wings in November 2023 after recovering and has been in Detroit since.

Modano was not in the building but the Red Wings played a video message in which he praised Kane's skill level and the influence he has had on young American players.

"They all wanted to be Patrick Kane growing up," Modano said.

Modano's U.S. record of 561 goals (Brett Hull, who played internationally for the USA, was born in Canada) might hold up as the standard for a while. Kane is the next-closest active player at 500. Between him and Modano are Joe Mullen (502), Jeremy Roenick (513) and Keith Tkachuk (538).

Toronto Maple Leafs center Auston Matthew is the next active U.S.-born player at 427 goals and 772 points. He's averaging 1.14 points per game to Kane's 1.03.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Patrick Kane breaks Mike Modano record, becomes top US-born scorer

Patrick Kane Becomes Highest-Scoring U.S.-Born Player In NHL History

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Detroit Red Wings forward Patrick Kane continues to set records in his illustrious career, and now, he's officially the highest-scoring U.S.-born player of all time.

With an assist on Ben Chiarot's second-period goal on Thursday evening against the Washington Capitals, Kane picked up the 1,375th point of his career, passing Mike Modano for the major milestone.

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Islanders Rookie Matthew Schaefer Passes Bobby Orr For Second-Most Goals By An 18-Year-Old Defenseman In NHL History After Scoring vs. Rangers

NEW YORK, NY -- New York Islanders defenseman Matthew Schaefer found himself back in the record book on Thursday night against the New York Rangers

At 18:53 of the second period, Schaefer wired a wrister over the right pad of a screened Jonathan Quick to give the Islanders a 2-0:

With that goal, Schaefer passed hockey legend Bobby Orr for the second-most goals by an 18-year-old defenseman in franchise history. 

He is now three goals shy of tying Phil Housley's record of 17 for the most ever by an 18-year-old defenseman. 

Schaefer now has 36 points (14 goals, 22 assists) in 54 games played this season. 

Penguins Recall Forward Prospect From AHL

Ahead of Thursday's matchup against the Chicago Blackhawks, the Pittsburgh Penguins needed to make a few roster moves. 

With forward Bryan Rust set to begin serving his three-game suspension for a hit to the head of Brock Boeser Sunday against the Vancouver Canucks and defenseman Jack St. Ivany heading to injured reserve, the Penguins recalled forward prospect Rutger McGroarty from Wilkes-Barre/Scranton (WBS), Pittsburgh's AHL affiliate.

McGroarty, 21, had five assists in his four AHL games since being re-assigned to WBS from the Penguins on Jan. 18. Prior to his re-assignment, McGroarty had two goals and three points in 16 NHL games this season.

A 2022 first-round pick (14th overall) by the Winnipeg Jets, McGroarty has struggled to establish himself at the NHL level this season, and one of the central reasons has been injury. He had an upper-body ailment that caused him to miss all of training camp and the first month and a half of the regular season, and a concussion kept him out for a few games in January prior to his AHL re-assignment. 

However, he has excelled at the AHL level this season, putting up four goals and nine points in 12 AHL games. There is a good chance that McGroarty will remain with the NHL club through the end of Rust's suspension, as he is eligible to return to the lineup on Feb. 2 against the Ottawa Senators.

McGroarty has three goals and six points in 24 career NHL games. 

Penguins' Rust Suspended Three Games For Hit Against CanucksPenguins' Rust Suspended Three Games For Hit Against CanucksIt looks like the <a href="https://thehockeynews.com/nhl/pittsburgh-penguins">Pittsburgh Penguins</a> will be without one of their top forwards for an upcoming crucial stretch of games.&nbsp;

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The balancing act for Artemi Panarin as he weighs his trade destination

An image collage containing 1 images, Image 1 shows New York Rangers left wing Artemi Panarin (10) moves the puck behind the net in the third period at Madison Square Garden, Saturday, Dec. 20, 2025, in New York, NY
panarin rangers

The clock is winding down on Artemi Panarin’s time with the Rangers, reaching an hour-by-hour countdown after the decision was made Wednesday to hold him out of the lineup until the Olympic break. 

Panarin, who will finish his Blueshirts tenure as one of the greatest free agent signings of all time, appears to be using the leverage he has.

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With final say on his destination due to his full no-move clause, there is belief that Panarin would prefer a trade that includes an extension with the club he lands with. 

What that extension could look like would presumably vary depending on the organization signing it. 

Most of the top contending teams aren’t in a position to extend him now, which could force Panarin to weigh future security with his desire to go to a team that can help him hoist his first-ever Stanley Cup. 

At 34, the star Russian wing is naturally looking for a deal with term. He is said to believe he can play for several more years. 

Amid minimal signs of Panarin slowing down, however, there appear to be multiple interested parties. 

Artemi Panarin moves the puck behind the net during the Rangers’ win over the Flyers on Dec. 20, 2025. Corey Sipkin for the NY POST

Panarin has been linked to at least six teams at one point or another this season, including all three California clubs. Considering he is the top impending free agent available, the widespread inquiries from contenders and bubble teams alike don’t come as a shock. 

The friendship between Panarin and Panthers goalie Sergei Bobrovsky is well documented, which likely puts Florida at the top of his list. A lot would have to happen on the Panthers’ end to make that work. 

Even if the Rangers retained up to 50 percent of Panarin’s $11.64 million cap hit, salary would have to be moved or a third team would have to be brought in to make the numbers fit. 

Running with the California theory, San Jose and Los Angeles are probably the most appealing options to both Panarin and the Rangers. The Sharks turned a corner this season behind a young and exciting core, and they are projected to have plenty of cap space next season to handle an addition like Panarin. 

Both the Sharks and the Kings have their 2026 first-round pick to offer. The two teams are also neck-and-neck in the Western Conference wild-card race. 

San Jose has some enticing prospects and young players who the Rangers could pursue, especially at center. 

The Rangers are going to be even thinner down the middle than they were at the start of the season if president and general manager Chris Drury decides to move Vincent Trocheck



Targeting centermen should be a priority. The Sharks’ deep pool of options, such as Filip Bystedt (27th overall in 2022), Cole McKinney (53rd overall in 2025) and Braden Svoboda (71st overall in 2023), make them an enticing trade partner. Michael Misa (second overall in 2025) would be a top choice, but he is considered part of the core and is unlikely to be made available. 

Left wing Igor Chernyshov, who the Sharks selected 33rd overall in 2024, is another notable option. 

The Rangers are expected to follow the trade template that most high-scoring wingers have demanded as of late. Expecting a return that’s some combination of NHL-ready players, prospects and picks, Drury will also have to navigate which teams he’d have to retain salary on Panarin for. 

Among teams that could fit his entire cap hit with minimal — or any — retention include the Ducks, the Hurricanes and the Red Wings. 

Panarin could always go to a team as a rental and be the No. 1 available option on July 1. That might help the dynamic forward maximize his next deal. 

Either way, Panarin’s days in Manhattan are numbered. 

Teams looking to acquire Panarin presumably would want him to be on the ice, get settled and be ready to hit the ground running after the Olympic break

All it comes down to is the right deal. 

Canucks’ Rogers Arena Ranks 29th In The NHL In Fan Survey

Love it or hate it, fans’ opinions of Rogers Arena — the Vancouver Canucks’ home rink — have made themselves known. In a recent survey conducted by The Athletic, NHL fans ranked the Canucks’ home arena 29th out of 32 in the league with consideration towards the following criteria; location, amenities, atmosphere, and affordability. Rogers Arena ended up tied with the Toronto Maple Leafs’ rink, Scotiabank Arena, with a score of 5.8 out of 10. 

“Rogers will never rank high simply because of its physical size. Being squeezed between two viaducts means tight concourses, which feels like you are constantly being pushed through a toothpaste tube. Visiting other arenas like Climate Pledge you notice that difference immediately,” one person writes in The Athletic’s piece

They’re not wrong. Despite undergoing various renovations throughout recent years, such as the new scoreboard that caused a concert to be postponed a few years back as well as new seats that have still not been fully installed, Rogers Arena still feels slightly dated compared to some of the shinier new arenas around the NHL — namely the Seattle Kraken’s Climate Pledge Arena, which finished eighth in the poll. 

Overall, Vancouver’s scores in the four presented categories don’t quite tell a friendly story. Like the Canucks compared to the rest of the NHL in on-ice performance so far, Vancouver placed within the bottom-two in the league in two of the categories — atmosphere and affordability. Their saving grace was the location itself, right at the edge of downtown Vancouver, which ranks it 12th out of 32nd in the NHL. 

Oct 9, 2025; Vancouver, British Columbia, CAN; An overall arena veiw during Canucks player introductions prior to the start of a game between the Vancouver Canucks and the Calgary Flames at Rogers Arena. Mandatory Credit: Bob Frid-Imagn Images
Oct 9, 2025; Vancouver, British Columbia, CAN; An overall arena veiw during Canucks player introductions prior to the start of a game between the Vancouver Canucks and the Calgary Flames at Rogers Arena. Mandatory Credit: Bob Frid-Imagn Images

Surprisingly enough, Vancouver ranked below arenas like the Scotiabank Saddledome in Calgary (25th), which is expected to be torn down soon as part of the city’s quest for a new entertainment district. Crypto.com Arena (Los Angeles Kings), KeyBank Center (Buffalo Sabres), and Canadian Tire Centre (Ottawa Senators) were the only three venues to rank lower than Rogers Arena. Bell Centre (Montréal Canadiens), T-Mobile Arena (Vegas Golden Knights), Benchmark International Arena (Tampa Bay Lightning), Bridgestone Arena (Nashville Predators), and Little Caesars Arena (Detroit Red Wings) rounded out the NHL’s top-five. 

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

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Rumor: Ducks &quot;Out&quot; on Panarin, Uninterested in Extension

New York Rangers winger Artemi Panarin is currently the biggest name on the trade market. He’s been informed by the Rangers’ front office that they have no intention of re-signing him, and have given permission to him and his agent to seek out a team or teams they are comfortable with trading him to in order to facilitate a deal from there.

Panarin is 34 years old; his seven-year, $11.6 million contract carries a full no-move clause and will expire on July 1. He’s scored 57 points (19-38=57) in 52 games in 2025-26, and he’s on pace to tally his ninth consecutive season of scoring north of a point-per-game, indicating he has several productive seasons left in the tank.

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The Rangers have announced that they will scratch Panarin until at least the Feb. 4 Olympic roster freeze, alleviating the risk of injury. He’s only missed nine games in the last four seasons.

The Anaheim Ducks are reported to have “looked around” at the possibility of acquiring Panarin. On Thursday, multiple NHL insiders reported that Panarin and his agent, Paul Theofanous, are seeking out at least a four-year extension at a $10-12 million AAV with his new team as part of the potential trade, and they’ve reached out to Anaheim as a desired destination.

TSN and The Athletic’s Pierre LeBrun reported on TSN’s “Early Trading” that Panarin’s representation has reached out to all three California teams, showing interest, but the Ducks are “out.”

“The Panarin camp has reached out to all three California teams (Anaheim Ducks, Los Angeles Kings, San Jose Sharks),” LeBrun said. “With the Ducks, there’s the Joel Quenneville connection from their time together in Chicago. But, I’m told the Ducks are out right now, and I’m told the reason is the extension doesn’t make sense for them.

“They’ve got a lot of young core guys to sign here in the next year or two, and spending four years and $10-11 million, whatever you think the extension will end up at, doesn’t really make sense for Anaheim. So, I have Anaheim out.”

Sportsnet’s Elliotte Friedman spoke on Panarin and the Ducks on Sportsnet’s “The Fan Hockey Show,” stating the Ducks would have rather traded for him without an extension in place.

“Panarin would like to have an extension as part of this. They’ve (Panarin and his agent) reached out to the Ducks. I think he was pretty interested. But I’ve heard Anaheim is not likely because the Ducks’ preference is not to do an extension right away,” Friedman said. “That they would like to see how the fit goes, potentially. That means it’s likely not going to happen there. That’s what I’ve heard as of last night (Jan. 28). And just a reminder, all of these things can kind of change.”

LeBrun reiterated his own report and echoed Friedman on TSN’s “Insider Trading” as well. As it stands, the Ducks are reported to be unwilling to extend Panarin, given the core talent they’ll have to resign in the summer of 2026 and beyond.

“(The trade) most likely involves teams that aren’t scared to sign a 34-year-old player to a four-year extension to perhaps a double-digit AAV,” LeBrun said on where the most likely landing spot is for Panarin. “That’s what we think the extension will be if this gets done. I’m told if the extension is paramount, the Ducks are out right now. They don’t want to sign that money to a veteran player when they’ve got young pieces to sign.”

The Ducks have over $27.2 million in current cap space and are projected to have over $39.2 million in cap space come July 1. Jacob Trouba, Ross Johnston, Radko Gudas, Ryan Poehling, Jansen Harkins, Petr Mrazek, and Jeffrey Viel will all become unrestricted free agents if they’re unsigned by July 1.

The most significant items on the agenda will be the next contracts of pending restricted free agents Leo Carlsson and Cutter Gauthier, along with Ian Moore, Pavel Mintyukov, and Olen Zellweger, who will be restricted free agents along the blueline. Those contracts could eat up a sizable chunk of that projected cap space, reportedly enough to detract Ducks’ general manager Pat Verbeek from acquiring Panarin.

Among the most-mentioned teams involved in the Panarin trade rumors at the moment are the Washington Capitals, Los Angeles Kings, San Jose Sharks, and Carolina Hurricanes.

Verbeek has reportedly struggled to acquire a star or marquee talent on the free agent or trade markets during his time as Ducks GM. He was reportedly interested in Alex DeBrincat before he was traded to the Detroit Red Wings in the summer of 2023. On July 1, 2024, he reportedly offered then free agents Steven Stamkos and Jonathan Marchessault each more term and AAV than the contracts they eventually signed with the Nashville Predators.

It’s worth noting that an available star player (Panarin) now reportedly would prefer to play for Anaheim for the next four-plus seasons, and the Ducks are reportedly the ones uninterested. The New York Rangers are reportedly asking for a similar return that the New York Islanders received for center Brock Nelson at the 2025 trade deadline. Nelson was traded to the Colorado Avalanche for Calum Ritchie (an A-/B+ prospect) and a first-round pick. 

Takeaways from the Ducks 7-4 Loss to the Oilers

Lukas Dostal Named NHL Third Star of the Week

Rumor: Ducks among Teams "Looking Around" at Artemi Panarin Trade

&quot;I Feel Stuck Here&quot;: Once-Promising Jets Prospects Upset With Lack Of Opportunities

The Winnipeg Jets have faced criticism in recent years for struggling to create opportunities for their young prospects, and that issue has resurfaced with one former first-round pick now openly expressing frustration with the organization.

Selected 20th overall in the 2019 NHL Draft, Finnish defenseman Ville Heinola was once considered one of the Jets’ most promising prospects. However, as he approaches his 25th birthday in March, Heinola has yet to establish himself at the NHL level. He has appeared in just 53 NHL games, recording one goal and 11 assists for 12 points.

This season, Heinola has spent the majority of his time with the Manitoba Moose of the AHL, where he has posted 18 points in 38 games. Despite several injury-related openings on the Jets’ blue line at different points during the season, Heinola has not received an NHL call-up.

Heinola recently spoke candidly about his situation in an interview with Finnish outlet Ilta-Sanomat, voicing frustration over what he believes has been a lack of opportunity.

“What annoys me the most is that I don't think I've ever had a decent chance in the NHL after my first year,” Heinola said. “I feel like I'm stuck here.”

The defenseman made it clear that remaining in the AHL is not his long-term goal, even though he believes his relationship with the organization remains professional.

“There's no other way to do this than to play so well that they have no choice but to promote me to the NHL,” Heinola explained. “I think I've been on good terms with everyone. I haven't heard anyone say anything bad about me.”

Heinola added that both he and his agent have consistently tried to work cooperatively with the Jets, but the situation has grown more frustrating as other players receive opportunities ahead of him.

“My game has been going well lately, but there are guys from next door who are making it to the NHL,” Heinola said. “So far, however, I haven't been ready to give up on the NHL dream. I feel and know that I can play there.”

Heinola’s name has surfaced in trade discussions in the past, though no deal has materialized. Earlier this season, the Jets placed him on waivers, a move that did not result in another team claiming him.

“Still, it was a big disappointment that no club picked me up,” Heinola said. “And if that opportunity hasn't come here, why couldn't the club have let me go somewhere else, where I might have had a chance?”

The repeated setbacks have taken a mental toll on the young defenseman, who acknowledged that recent months have been especially challenging.

“This has been by far the most mentally difficult period of my career,” Heinola said.

As the season continues, it remains unclear what the future holds for Heinola. Whether he remains with the Jets, is moved via trade, or eventually finds a fresh start elsewhere is still to be determined. What is clear, however, is that Jets management now finds itself dealing with a once-promising prospect who is growing increasingly frustrated and disgruntled. 

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Red Wings Announce Multiple Call-Ups From Griffins

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The Detroit Red Wings are dealing with an injury to their second-best defenseman, Simon Edvinsson, who was hurt earlier this month during Detroit's 2-1 overtime victory over the Toronto Maple Leafs. 

The Red Wings have since announced that not only is he not going to play until at least after the Olympic breaks in late February, but that he's now been placed on Injured Reserve. 

Additionally, head coach Todd McLellan said the flu is making its way through the dressing room.

In Edvinsson's absence, the Red Wings have sought reinforcements from the Grand Rapids Griffins. 

Earlier on Thursday, the club announced that defenseman Justin Holl and forward Sheldon Dries have been summoned from Grand Rapids.

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Holl, who is skating in the final season of his three-year deal, has yet to appear in an NHL game with the Red Wings this season. He has tallied two goals and eight assists in 31 games with the Griffins thus far.

Dries, a Macomb, Mich., native and former Western Michigan University Bronco, has also yet to skate with Detroit this season. He has recorded 14 goals and 14 assists in 32 games with the Griffins.

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Flyers' spiral continues to grow in concern with 10th loss over last 12 games

Flyers' spiral continues to grow in concern with 10th loss over last 12 games originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

What more can the Flyers say?

They seem to have very few answers for this troubling — perhaps defining — stretch of their 2025-26 season. They stumbled to the Bruins, 6-3, Thursday night at TD Garden.

Travis Konecny, Nikita Grebenkin and Matvei Michkov provided the team’s goals. The Flyers were down 3-0 when Konecny scored, 5-1 when Grebenkin got on the board and 6-2 when Michkov put one home on the power play.

After upending the juggernaut Avalanche, 7-3, last Friday night, the Flyers (24-20-9) have lost three straight by a combined score of 15-6. They’ve dropped 10 of their last 12 games (2-8-2) and have allowed 4.58 goals per game over that span.

Rick Tocchet’s club has given up four or more goals nine times this month.

The Bruins (32-20-3) are trending in a totally different direction, having won 10 of their last 12 games (10-1-1). This was the first of three meetings this season between the Flyers and Boston.

• The Flyers are in a real precarious spot.

This maybe wasn’t a playoff-or-bust season, but the Flyers wanted to get better. And part of getting better should be avoiding these lengthy stretches of head-scratching play, these lopsided, uncompetitive games.

The Flyers made it clear before the season that they did not want to be in selling mode unless they had to be. They showed that with a five-year commitment to Christian Dvorak earlier this month.

While the Flyers weren’t going to be a major buyer at the March 6 trade deadline, you have to wonder what their motives will be if they can’t stop this slide.

The Flyers entered Thursday with a 21.1 percent chance to make the playoffs, according to Hockey-Reference.com’s probabilities report. They’re in seventh place of a tight Metropolitan Division.

• Samuel Ersson registered 15 saves on 20 shots through two periods of work.

He didn’t return to the game for the third period because of a lower-body injury. The 26-year-old was making his eighth appearance in the last nine games.

Dan Vladar turned away the six shots he faced in relief. The Bruins’ final goal was an empty-netter.

Boston netminder Jeremy Swayman stopped 33 of the Flyers’ 36 shots.

The Flyers were dealt a blow when Dvorak had a first-period goal wiped away because of goaltender interference on Grebenkin. It was a tough call on Grebenkin, who was making a play toward the net and created a rebound opportunity for Dvorak.

The goal would have cut the Flyers’ deficit to 2-1. Instead, the Flyers trailed by two at intermission.

The Bruins struck just 2:27 minutes into the second period on a Fraser Minten shot that Ersson could have denied. At that point, the Flyers, already fighting their confidence, were behind 3-0, which felt insurmountable.

• The struggling Sean Couturier centered Nicolas Deslauriers and Garnet Hathaway on the fourth line.

The Flyers’ captain has gone 26 straight games without a goal. He has nine assists and a minus-9 mark over that time. Couturier had four shots in 13:57 minutes Thursday night.

Tocchet clearly had to try some adjustments up front, especially with Couturier not producing offensively. Trevor Zegras was moved to the middle as Lane Pederson came out of the lineup.

Zegras, though, had no shots and went 1 for 12 in the faceoff circle.

• The Flyers got good news before the start of the game as Rasmus Ristolainen was able to play. The 31-year-old defenseman had to exit Wednesday night with a lower-body injury after just 1:01 minutes of ice time.

Against Boston, Ristolainen finished with 21:53 minutes.

Emil Andrae was healthy scratched for a second straight game.

• The Flyers are back in action Saturday when they host the Kings (12:30 p.m. ET/NBCSP).