Former Canucks Defenceman Makes It Back To The NHL With The Islanders

A former Vancouver Canucks defenceman is getting another shot in the NHL. On Saturday, Cole McWard is projected to make his New York debut against the Toronto Maple Leafs. McWard has spent the entire season in the AHL with the Bridgeport Islanders. 

McWard signed with the Canucks at the end of the 2023-24 season after a successful NCAA career. The 24-year-old played six games with Vancouver, recording one goal and five hits. Over the last two seasons, McWard has spent his time with the Abbotsford Canucks, where he played 124 games.

As for memorable moments, McWard was part of Abbotsford's Calder Cup championship. During the 2025 playoffs, he recorded a goal and an assist in 12 games. Once the season was over, McWard signed a one-year contract with the Islanders that carries an AAV of $775,000.

McWard has found success in his first season with Bridgeport. In 67 games, he has six goals and 26 points. The AHL Islanders have a 12-15-2-1 record and sit seventh in the Atlantic Division. 

Nov 28, 2023; Vancouver, British Columbia, CAN; Vancouver Canucks defenseman Cole McWard (48) skates against the Anaheim Ducks in the third period at Rogers Arena. Vancouver won 3-1. Mandatory Credit: Bob Frid-Imagn Images

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From Kopitar to Uncertainty: The Kings’ Center Crisis

Credit © Gary A. Vasquez-Imagn Images

LOS ANGELES, CA — For two decades, the Los Angeles Kings have had the luxury franchises spend years chasing: a true number one centerman in Anze Kopitar. Alongside Jonathan Quick and Drew Doughty, the Kings formed Hockey's Holy Trinity—three franchise-level pillars down the middle, on the back end, and in net. In their primes, all three ranked among the very best at their respective positions. That spine was the foundation of two Stanley Cups in three years, before the Mike Richards and Slava Voynov situations derailed the Lombardi administration.

Quick is now a backup in New York, and while Doughty still has some runway left, Kopitar is nearing the end of his career. He has already announced his retirement at the end of this season. The clock is no longer ticking—it has run out. The Kings' succession plan for one of the most critical roster positions is unraveling; much like the latter stages of the Lombardi era, the franchise has begun to fray at the seams.

The organization attempted to chart that future at the draft table. After a stinging fall from second overall in 2019 to fifth to draft Alex Turcotte, the Kings moved up in 2020 to grab Quinton Byfield at second overall. Those two picks were meant to anchor the franchise's next era down the middle, and their development has come to define the direction the Kings now appear to be heading.

Over the course of the Rob Blake era, the Kings cycled through a long list of centers—drafted, traded, waived, or moved on from, until the pipeline effectively narrowed to Byfield and Turcotte, with due respect to Samuel Helenius, who survived the purge. That list of departed centers includes Gabriel Vilardi (drafted at center), Rasmus Kupari, Jared Anderson-Dolan, and Akil Thomas. After years of investing premium draft capital at the position, the Kings are left with two internal options who have underwhelmed enough to raise legitimate questions about whether the franchise is drifting into the NHL's uncomfortable middle class.

Byfield was drafted to succeed Kopitar, a future Hall of Famer, and while those were always massive skates to fill, there was reason to believe Byfield's size, skill, and natural tools gave him legitimate 1C upside. Turcotte, meanwhile, faced an injury-littered development curve and repeated blockages on the NHL roster, leaving the realistic hope that he could at least lock down a dependable 3C role. Both players have fallen short of the expectations attached to their draft positions. At the time, the Kings clearly envisioned replacing their top-six center depth—once a strength with Kopitar and Jeff Carter—entirely from within.

Managing those expectations has required constant recalibration. Byfield flashed highlight ability during the 2024–25 season and was productive in 2023–24 while playing on the wing next to Kopitar and Adrian Kempe, yet he is now on pace to miss the career-high point total he set last season. Turcotte, elevated following the departure of Phillip Danault from the lineup picture (a player acquired in 2021–22 to stabilize the middle while Byfield developed), has been effective defensively due to sheer tenacity and his speed. Even so, Turcotte has not maximized his offensive opportunity, despite the contrast in Danault's own nonexistent scoring output.

What the Kings have, then, is a struggling Byfield who increasingly profiles as a mid-to-low ceiling 2C, and an evolving shutdown 3C in Turcotte who does not produce at a league-average rate for players in that role. It is a symbolic outcome for two players who now represent a team scoring at its worst rate in more than a decade, despite remaining elite defensively at even strength.

Compounding the problem is the environment those centers are being asked to produce in. The Kings remain built around elite-level checking, layered defensive structure, and rigid systematic play, a model that depends on volume and territory to compensate for limited offensive creativity. That margin has eroded, reflected in results that include one of the league's lowest totals of regulation wins. Paired with a season defined by one-goal margins, the Kings have consistently struggled to separate from opponents offensively.

The significant drop-off in puck-moving ability on the blue line, paired with an offense driven more by forecheck pressure than dynamic creation, has narrowed scoring lanes even further. In that context, centers are asked to defend first, extend shifts, and manufacture offense through attrition, an approach that demands elite talent to overcome, not develop within.

That said, I am not entirely sold on the idea that Byfield is a bust. Development curves are rarely linear, and recent history offers reminders of how context can alter perception. Sam Reinhart, once viewed as a stalled top pick in Buffalo, did not become a 90-point player until his environment changed in Florida. Before that, he was essentially a 50–60 point forward. The lesson is not that Byfield will follow the same path, but that stagnation does not always equal finality. Turcotte, on the other hand, is closer to the "frustrating outcome" end of the spectrum. It's certainly not a complete Thomas Hickey scenario, but undeniably disappointing given his draft pedigree and where his game has settled within the Kings' system.

Sam Reinhart closes in on Kopitar, a center who rose to stardom despite being a potential cornerstone piece in Buffalo, much like Jack Eichel, seen in the background. Credit © Kevin Hoffman-Imagn Images

The broader question, then, is whether the succession plan has failed. As things stand, it has. The Kings' leading center goalscorer is a 38-year-old tethered to their best winger, supported by a 2C/3C combination that is not producing to its intended level. Add in a fourth-line center playing minimal minutes, and the result is a roster construction puzzle with little margin for error. That is a dangerous place for a franchise that has already waived or traded away a staggering number of former prospects.

There is now an emerging view that the solution could come from within, with Alex Laferriere often cited as a potential answer. Laferriere deserves credit; he has been one of the rare bright spots to emerge from a prospect pipeline littered with organizational casualties. But the idea that he could simply just transition to center underscores the larger issue. It suggests a franchise drifting toward desperation rather than executing a coherent plan.

That transition would not be easy. Laferriere is a legitimate NHL player—a middle-six forward, a high-volume shooter unafraid of the hard areas of the ice. What he is not is a 1C or 2C solution. While it seems welcoming given the possibility of having a right-handed centerman in a lefty-heavy middle lineup, asking a player still carving out his NHL identity to solve a foundational roster problem speaks volumes.

With respect to both Byfield and Turcotte, they remain NHL-caliber centers. They are simply not the centers the Kings envisioned when they were drafted. There is still runway for both, and some players do take longer to reach their ceiling. But this is also an organization starved of postseason success, despite a Lombardi era that ended with exceptional seasons from Kopitar (Selke) and Doughty (Norris) in 2016, dispatched by the Sharks in five games. 

That, outside the exceptional 2017-18 season (92 points) from Kopitar, ended the notion of the Kings having cornerstone positional players—became situated as players holding down roles until the next phase started turnover. Neither Byfield nor Turcotte currently projects as an actual cornerstone piece, with Byfield emerging as the more glaring disappointment given his extraordinary natural gifts.

Given these issues, the organization still continues to operate under a mantra that frames itself as a contender. That posture hasn't been remotely convincing, even with the four postseason failures ruled out for argument's sake. Under the current structure, the Kings appear destined to scrape into playoff contention at best, as illustrated by their recent collapse against the Tampa Bay Lightning—a game they led late in the third period. Historically, the Kings closed those games. Realistically, this version of the team looks more like a stepping stone, fuel to get to the second round for a more complete opponent.

This is no longer just a 2C issue following Danault's departure from the lineup hierarchy—it is a looming 1C and 2C problem as Kopitar's career winds down. Solving that will require genuine creativity from Ken Holland and, perhaps more importantly, a willingness from the organization to confront its doubling down on glaring programmatic mistakes.

Complicating matters is the financial reality that arrives alongside Kopitar's departure. His salary coming off the books, paired with a rising league cap, will give the Kings the appearance of flexibility this offseason. But a surplus of cap space doesn't guarantee a solution to their center problem, and history suggests that this organization is more comfortable spending to stabilize than to fundamentally reshape. In a market flush with short-term fixes and aging stopgaps, the danger is not inactivity—it is mistaking financial relief for a solution.

The succession plan has already failed. What comes next will determine whether the Kings finally confront that reality or simply repackage it under a new cap structure. With Kopitar gone, this is no longer a problem that can be deferred or disguised by incremental moves. It demands clarity, restraint, and a willingness to admit that the middle ground has become the most dangerous place to be—and that continuing to live there risks making a middling team even harder to escape.

Former Ottawa Senator First-Rounder Makes History At NHL Winter Classic

The New Year is off to an excellent start for former Ottawa Senator Mika Zibanejad.

On Friday morning, Zibanejad was named to Sweden's Olympic team next month, joining the likes of Erik Karlsson and Filip Gustavsson, who also used to wear the Centurion crest.

Then on Friday night, Zibanejad became the first man to score a hat trick at an NHL Winter Classic, helping the New York Rangers pound the Florida Panthers 5-1 at loanDepot park in Miami. Zibanejad was in on all the scoring, registering a five-point night, which was also a WC first.

"I think it's hard to grasp the whole day like that, but yeah, it's been a great 12, 16 hours. It's been a fun day," Zibanejad told the media after the game.

With the game being played in Florida, six kilometres away from a beach, it certainly wasn't the chilliest of Winter Classics, but hot or cold, there's something the Rangers love above the great outdoors. While "Miami Mika" hasn't been around for all of them, the New Yorkers are now 6-0-0 in games outside.

Zibanejad now has 35 points in 42 games this season, and when a former Senator has a day like that, it's easy for Sens fans to wonder, 'How did we let that guy get away?'

Zibanejad was Ottawa's first-round pick, sixth overall in the 2011 NHL Draft, and while he was good in his early years in the capital, he was still young and developing. In his first two full seasons, he hovered near a 40-point pace. The next two improved to 46 and 51, and every season was becoming a little more productive than the last. 

In July 2016, in his second month as the Senators' new GM, Pierre Dorion traded Zibanejad and a second-round pick to the Rangers for centre Derick Brassard and a seventh-round pick. The young Swede was still only 23 and was due for a big raise in 2017, while Brassard's front-loaded deal meant that, in actual salary, he was only owed $3.4 million over the final two years of the deal.

Just as he was in Ottawa, Zibanejad's first two years on Broadway remained solid, but not yet elite. Those stats arrived in year three, touching off an excellent career where he's put up 624 in 691 games over a decade in New York.

When Zibanejad gets back from Italy, he'll also be hitting the 1000-game mark for his career, which would certainly be filed in Ottawa's bloated file folder marked "The Ones That Got Away."

Meanwhile, after a day to remember on Friday, Zibanejad sat in on the NHL on TNT broadcast as fake Miami snow gently fell on his head. As the game MVP, he was presented with a gaudy Winter Classic necklace with a massive pendant by his former teammate and countryman, Henrik Lundqvist.

By Steve Warne
The Hockey News Ottawa

Jan 2, 2026; Miami, Florida, USA; New York Rangers center Mika Zibanejad (93) receives a necklace from Henrik Lundqvist after being named MVP of the 2026 Winter Classic ice hockey game against the Florida Panthers at loanDepot Park. Mandatory Credit: Sam Navarro-Imagn Images

Read more Ottawa Senators news and features at The Hockey News:

Senators Announce That Linus Ullmark Is Taking Leave Of Absence
Top Ottawa Senators Prospect Suits Up Again At World Juniors
Josh Norris: 'I Really Felt Like (Ottawa Fans) Had My Back, Even When I Was Injured
'
NHL Player Fined For Cross-Checking Senators Star Tim Stutzle In The Face
Ottawa Senators Have A Soft Spot For Their Tough Guy
Senators Announce Their Latest Addition To Ring Of Honour

Canadiens: Kicking Off The Weekend With A Stop In St. Louis

After pulling off a spectacular comeback win against the Carolina Hurricanes on New Year’s Day, the Montreal Canadiens held an optional skate on Friday, and they’ll be back in action on Saturday afternoon against the St. Louis Blues. It will be the last duel between the two teams this season after Jim Montgomery’s men won the first match 4-3 in Montreal in early December. Saturday’s hosts have won six of the last 10 confrontations between the two sides, but they are having a tough season.

The Blues are currently sixth in the Central division with 40 points, 10 points behind the Canadiens, even though St. Louis has played two more games. Still, they’ve not been doing too badly of late with a 5-4-1 record in their last 10 games, and they won their previous game against the Vegas Golden Knights, 4-3, when Brayden Schenn scored the game-winning goal with less than two minutes to go in the game.

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Canadiens: Caufield and Hutson Snubbed By Team USA

Joel Hoffer was on duty against the Knights on Friday night, meaning Jordan Binnington is likely to draw in tonight against the Habs. The Team Canada goaltender has a 4-4-0 record against the Tricolore with a 3.41 goals-against average and a .880 save percentage. As for Hoffer, he’s won his only game against the Habs and has a 3.00 GAA and a .909 SV against them.

Meanwhile, Samuel Montembeault, who was convincing in his first start back in the NHL on Tuesday, has a 2-2-0 record against the Blues with a 3.64 GAA and a .887 SV. As for Jakub Dobes, he has a 0-1-0 record, a 4.48 GAA, and a .783 SV. He was in the net for the 4-3 loss against Montgomery’s men in December and could only muster 14 saves on the 18 shots faced then. Finally, Jacob Fowler has never faced tonight’s hosts, but he's still going to be in the net this afternoon.

Up front, the Canadiens will need to be wary of Brayden Schenn, the centerman, who has 31 points in 32 games against the Habs, including three points in the last duel. Defenseman Cam Fowler is the Blues’ second most productive player against Montreal with 18 points in 24 games, and Robert Thomas rounds up the top three. He may have only 14 points, but he earned them in just nine games.

As for the Blues, they’ll need to keep a close eye on captain Nick Suzuki, the newly minted Olympian, who has 12 points in 11 games against the Missouri outfit, while sniper Cole Caufield, who Team USA once more snubbed, has 10 points in nine games. Brendan Gallagher remains the Habs’ most productive forward against the Blues, though, with 15 points in 19 games.

The game is set for 4:00 PM at the Enterprise Center, and you can catch it on FDSNMW, TSN2, and RDS. The Canadiens will try to win a third game in a row for the first time since November 22 to 28, when they beat the Toronto Maple Leafs, the Utah Mammoth, and the Knights. After the game, the Canadiens will immediately head to Texas, where they’ll face the Dallas Stars at 2:00 PM on Sunday.


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Islanders Recall Defenseman Cole McWard From Bridgeport Ahead Of Game vs. Toronto Maple Leafs

The New York Islanders have recalled defenseman Cole McWard from Bridgeport of the American Hockey League ahead of their Saturday night showdown with the Toronto Maple Leafs.

McWard, 24, is a right-shot defenseman out of Fenton, Missouri, who has 16 points (five goals, 11 assists) in 29 games with Bridgeport this season. 

An undrafted free agent out of Ohio State University, McWard signed with the Vancouver Canucks following the 2022-23 season, playing in five games, scoring his one and only NHL goal. 

The following season, 2023-24, McWard got one NHL game, playing 57 for their AHL affiliate, the Abbotsford Canucks. He recorded 17 points (four goals, 13 assists) in 57 games before 26 points (six goals, 20 assists) in 67 games last season. 

This past summer, McWard signed a one-year, two-way deal that carries an NHL cap hit of $775,000. 

We will see if McWard makes his Islanders debut on Saturday. Head coach Patrick Roy said following Friday's practice that they hadn't decided if Adam Boqvist would play alongside Scott Mayfield.

That spot had been Marshall Warren's for the last six games. He was returned to Bridgeport on Friday. 

Puck drop comes your way at 7 PM ET from UBS Arena. 

Columbus Blue Jackets (40 pts) vs. Buffalo Sabres (46 pts) Game Preview

The Columbus Blue Jackets are back at home to take on the Buffalo Sabres today at 3 PM. 

Buffalo Sabres - 21-14-4 - 46 Points - 10-0-0 in the last 10 - 4th in the Atlantic

Columbus Blue Jackets - 17-16-6 - 40 Points - 4-6-0 in the last 10 - 8th in the Metro  

Blue Jackets Stats

  • Power Play - 18.6% - 19th in the NHL
  • Penalty Kill - 75.0% - 30th in the NHL
  • Goals For - 114 - 21st in the NHL
  • Goals Against - 130 - 22nd in the NHL

Sabres Stats

  • Power Play - 18.8% - 18th in the NHL
  • Penalty Kill - 85.0% - 2nd in the NHL
  • Goals For - 121 - 18th in the NHL
  • Goals Against - 121 - 17th in the NHL

Series History vs. The Sabres

  • Columbus is 28-16-1-3 all-time, and 13-8-1-0 at home vs. Buffalo.
  • The CBJ are 10-4-3 in the last 17 against the Sabres.
  • The Blue Jackets have killed off 11 straight Buffalo power plays.

Who To Watch For TheSabres

  • Tage Thompson leads the Sabres with 20 goals and 37 points.
  • Rasmus Dahlin leads the team with 24 assists.
  • Ukko-Pekka Luukkonen is 7-5-1 with a SV% of .903.

CBJ Player Notes vs.Sabres

  • Zach Werenski has 17 points in 20 career games vs. Buffalo.
  • Boone Jenner has 14 points in 25 games.
  • Kirill Marchenko has 4 goals and 8 points in 9 games against the Sabres. He also has one career hat trick.
  • Elvis Merzlikins has a career record of 2-2-0, with a SV% of .864 vs. Buffalo.

Injuries 

  • Erik Gudbranson - Upper Body - Missed 34 Games - IR - No timeline for a return
  • Isac Lundeström - Lower Body - Missed 2 Games - IR
  • Miles Wood - Lower Body - IR - Week-to-week
  • Brendan Smith - Lower Body - Missed 1 Game IR - Week to week

TOTAL MAN GAMES LOST: 85

How to Watch & Listen: Tonight's game will be on FANDUEL SPORTS NETWORK. Steve Mears 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. 

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Rangers beat Panthers 5-1 in first outdoor hockey game in Miami

NHL: Winter Classic-New York Rangers at Florida Panthers

Jan 2, 2026; Miami, Florida, USA; A general view inside the stadium as the Florida Panthers and New York Rangers warm up prior to the 2026 Winter Classic ice hockey game at loanDepot Park. Mandatory Credit: Rhona Wise-Imagn Images

Rhona Wise-Imagn Images

MIAMI (AP) — Have a day, Mika Zibanejad.

He made Sweden’s Olympic team, had a hat trick and put together the first five-point NHL outdoor game in history, all in the span of a few hours, to help the New York Rangers beat the Florida Panthers 5-1 on Friday night in the Winter Classic — the first outdoor game played in the Sunshine State.

Artemi Panarin scored twice, Alexis Lafrenière had three assists and Igor Shesterkin stopped 36 shots for the Rangers, who improved to 6-0-0 when playing outdoors.

“I think it’s hard to grasp the whole day,” Zibanejad said. “But yeah, a great 12, 16 hours. It’s been a fun day.”

Sam Reinhart scored for Florida, which was playing outdoors for the first time and lost for the fourth time in its last six contests overall. The Panthers gave up goals to Zibanejad and Panarin 64 seconds apart late in the first period, giving New York a 2-0 lead, and the Rangers kept control the rest of the way.

Panthers coach Paul Maurice said the NHL deserved enormous credit for pulling off an event he called “spectacular.”

“A Southern setting (and) the ice was fine,” Maurice said. “The spectacle was incredible. It was just brilliant, the entire kind of weekend. ... I would imagine the Rangers really loved it. But for the losing coach, it was an incredible memory.”

Florida outshot New York 37-20 and had 38 hits to New York’s 20, but watched the Rangers block of its 27 shot attempts.

The star of the night was Zibanejad, who reached five points in a game for the fourth time.

“He’s one of our core players,” Rangers coach Mike Sullivan said. “We rely on him in so many circumstances out there on both sides of the puck.”

Zibanejad’s third goal was an empty-netter with 1:28 left. Rangers fans tried throwing hats to no avail; the seats were too far from the ice for any of them to get even close to the playing surface.

“We have amazing support wherever we go,” Zibanejad said.

The roof was open, as were the huge window panels behind what typically is left field at loanDepot Park — home of Major League Baseball’s Miami Marlins. There was some snow falling from the edges of the stadium, there were blasts of fire and after years of planning, there was hockey on a baseball field.

“Awesome experience,” Panthers defenseman Aaron Ekblad said. “Really happy I was able to able to experience something like this. Would have loved to get the win, but at the end of the day, a true first-class experience.”

Did it work? Outdoor ice typically doesn’t hold up with temperatures in the 60s, and there were some player complaints that the surface wasn’t conducive to speedy play. But it worked well enough for the Rangers, who were 4-6-3 in their last 13 games coming into Friday.

“These events are a lot more fun and a lot more memorable when you win,” Zibanejad said.

The temperature of 63 degrees Fahrenheit (17 Celsius) at game time was the second-warmest of any of the NHL’s 44 outdoor games that have counted in the standings. It was 2 degrees cooler than on Feb. 27, 2016, when Detroit beat Colorado at Denver’s Coors Field, home of the Colorado Rockies.

The Rangers — with a snow effect around their walkway — were called to the ice at 8:13 p.m. The Panthers — as fire shot skyward along their path — came out about a minute later. And that’s about when snowflakes began falling from the top of the stadium, as the roof continued opening.

There was another celebration before faceoff, when Rangers and Panthers players who will be part of the U.S. Olympic hockey team at the Milan Cortina Games next month were introduced. Panthers defenseman Seth Jones made the team earlier Friday, as did injured Panthers forward Matthew Tkachuk.

Tkachuk placed an American flag over Jones’ shoulders and the crowd roared.

It was a spectacle, as expected. The Rangers showed up in all-white outfits, as if it was a beach day. The Panthers came with a “Miami Vice” theme, wearing white suits, pastel shirts and even showing up in Ferraris instead of a bus.

“If you would have asked me 25 years ago ... this might be the last place that I thought it would take place,” Sullivan said. “So, I just think it speaks volumes for technology and its advancements and the ability to put a sheet of ice down in this type of environment.”

Up next

Rangers: Host Utah on Monday.

Panthers: Host Colorado on Sunday.

Isaac Howard Discusses AHL Stint And Development

Isaac Howard is back with the Edmonton Oilers. Six weeks in Bakersfield, and now he's got another shot.

The 21-year-old won the Hobey Baker Award last season at Michigan State—26 goals and 26 assists in 37 games. Edmonton grabbed him from Tampa Bay in July, signed him to a three-year deal, and let him compete for a roster spot.

He got 17 NHL games to start the season. Two goals and an assist. Not bad for a rookie jumping from college hockey. But the Oilers needed more from their depth forwards, so down to Bakersfield he went in mid-November.

"I was just excited to get down there and start a different chapter in my pro career," Howard said. "And I think it was great. Everyone down in that locker room was awesome. The coaching staff made it pretty easy to mesh with that group quickly. And you know, it was awesome."

Nobody wants to get sent to the AHL. But Howard needed what Bakersfield could give him—ice time, power play minutes, and the space to figure out professional hockey without the pressure of Connor McDavid looking over his shoulder (if that was ever happening).

He put up 10 goals and 13 assists in 16 games. Two goals and four assists in his last four games alone. Those are the numbers that get you recalled.

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"It's a great development league," Howard said. "Obviously, I was getting a lot more ice time, a lot of looks on special teams, things like that which is what I wanted. And I think it's a great league. And spending like, five or six weeks there was a great experience."

More ice time meant actually playing instead of watching. More power play minutes meant working on his offensive instincts. Bakersfield gave him what he couldn't get in Edmonton—consistent minutes where he could make mistakes and learn from them.

"It feels like I'm more experienced now and maybe more calmness coming back up," Howard said.

More experienced. More calm. Six weeks will do that when you're dominating the AHL and figuring out what works.

Edmonton Oilers Year-In-ReviewEdmonton Oilers Year-In-ReviewIf you’re an <a href="https://thehockeynews.com/nhl/edmonton-oilers#google_vignette">Edmonton Oilers</a> fan, 2025 was exhausting. It started with their captain suspended, ended with a loss to Boston, and somewhere in between, they managed to lose another Stanley Cup Final. The kind of year where you’re not sure whether to book playoff tickets early or start drinking in February.

"I think a big thing was just getting in the flow of pro hockey down there and playing games consistently," Howard said. "Learning to hold on to the puck more, find more of my game, and making little plays, passing, shooting, (being) more calm with the puck, and maybe even more confident."

That's what the AHL is supposed to do. Howard went down, figured out he needed to be more patient with the puck, worked on it, and came back better. Development working exactly how it should.

Quinn Hutson came up with him—19 goals and 13 assists in 26 AHL games this season. Both players earned their recalls by producing.

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Now comes the tricky part. Howard won't play 18-20 minutes a night like he did in Bakersfield. He'll be a bottom-six forward getting 8-12 minutes, trying to make things happen in shorter bursts. That's a different skill.

"It's different," Howard said about NHL ice time. "That's where you got to stay engaged, because you don't get the regular flow of the game, but I think I'll be better tested for that this time around. And however it shakes up, I'll be ready."

He knows what to expect this time. First go-around, everything was new. Now he's been through it. He spent six weeks in Bakersfield figuring things out. 

Oilers Send Gritty Forward Down To AHLOilers Send Gritty Forward Down To AHLThe Edmonton Oilers have loaned this forward to the Bakersfield Condors.

The Oilers don't need Howard to be a star. They need him to be a useful depth forward. Play his minutes. Don't hurt the team. Chip in offensively when the opportunity comes. If he learned how to be smarter with the puck and stay calm under pressure, he'll get his chance to stick.

His first stint showed he belongs at this level—two goals in 17 games from a young guy that isn't first overall proves that. His time in Bakersfield showed he can dominate when given the opportunity—23 points in 16 games proves that. Now his second stint will show whether he's figured out how to bridge the gap between those two things.

Howard got recalled Friday because he earned it. He went to Bakersfield, worked on his game, put up numbers, and came back ready. That's how it's supposed to work. Whether it translates to NHL success is the next question, but he's done everything right so far.

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Canadiens Have Intriguing Trade Target In Penguins Forward

It is fair to say that the Montreal Canadiens had a strong first half of the 2025-26 season. The Habs currently sport a 22-12-6 record and are third in the Atlantic Division. The Canadiens are also just two points behind the first-place Detroit Red Wings in the Atlantic, so they are undoubtedly in a good place right now. 

With how well the Canadiens are playing this season, it would not be surprising in the slightest if they continue to look to add to their roster by the trade deadline. While adding another impactful center would be big for the Canadiens, they also should be open to acquiring a skilled winger. 

When looking at trade candidates around the NHL, Pittsburgh Penguins forward Anthony Mantha stands out as an intriguing potential option for the Habs.

With the Penguins retooling and Mantha being a pending unrestricted free agent (UFA), he has created chatter in the rumor mill. If the Penguins do officially make him available, the Canadiens should seriously consider making a push for the 6-foot-5 forward.

Mantha is currently in the middle of a strong season with the Penguins, as he has recorded 14 goals, 14 assists, 28 points, and a plus-8 rating. With numbers like these, Mantha would have the potential to be a very solid addition to the Canadiens' middle six and power play if acquired. 

Ultimately, if the Canadiens acquired Mantha, he would give them some solid secondary scoring and more size. Because of this, he would be a nice player for the Canadiens to add to their roster as they prepare for the post-season. 

Blues Defenseman Philip Broberg &quot;Extremely Honored&quot; To Be Selected To Sweden Olympic Hockey Squad

ST. LOUIS – Early prognosticators didn’t even have Philip Broberg having a sniff of making the Sweden Men’s Winter Olympic hockey roster for the 2026 Milano Cortina Winter Olympic games in Italy.

The St. Louis Blues defenseman, despite the odds against him, had other ideas.

On Friday, the 24-year-old did what many didn’t think he would do: be chosen to represent his country for the first time at the highest level when he was named to Sweden’s Olympic roster.

“Extremely honored,” Broberg said Friday after a 4-3 win against the Vegas Golden Knights. “It’s a dream-come-true. I’m very excited about it.

“Got a call from the coach (Sam Hallam) a few days ago. It’s a dream-come-true. I’m very excited.”

Broberg joined the likes of Victor Hedman (Tampa Bay Lightning), Rasmus Dahlin (Buffalo Sabres), Erik Karlsson (Pittsburgh Penguins), Jonas Brodin (Minnesota Wild), Rasmus Andersson (Calgary Flames), Oliver Ekman-Larsson (Toronto Maple Leafs) and Gustav Forsling (Florida Panthers).

Among those not on the initial list – of course there could be injuries that can change things – include Mattias Ekholm (Edmonton Oilers) and Hampus Lindholm (Boston Bruins) at the top of the list.

So for Broberg, who is having a fantastic season with the Blues, to get the consideration speaks volumes.

“It does because Sweden has developed great defensemen for decades now,” Blues coach Jim Montgomery said. ‘There’s a plethora in our league. It does speak volumes about what he was able to accomplish.”

Broberg is averaging 23:15 and has 13 points (two goals, 11 assists) in 42 games this season for the Blues and was likely chosen for the leaps and bounds he’s taken as a defensive player.

“It’s a well-deserved and earned reward for how much he’s continued to progress in his career, not only in St. Louis but from when he did when he got drafted,” Montgomery said. ‘More so than anything, in the game you see his physical tools, his ability to create off-man rushes offensively, his ability kill plays, his willingness to take away time and space and win battles 1-on-1 offensively and defensively, but the thing that has really improved with him is his mindset. His mindset has gone from being a good player in this league, and I’m just talking since I’ve been working with him now to trying to become an elite player, and because that mindset has been every day in practice and every game, even when he doesn’t have legs – that’s a hockey player’s term – you don’t feel like you can get up and go, he pushes himself right through that. I’ve seen first periods when he hasn’t been on, the second and third period he’s our best player. And that’s the will machine and the kind of guy you want to build around to get the culture to where you want, the culture to be. And that’s kudos to him and his mindset that he’s developed as a young man early in his career.”

Broberg, acquired via offer sheet from the Oilers along with forward Dylan Holloway on Aug. 20, 2024, was on a mission to at least be under consideration.

“Before the season we set goals and I think this was one of the goals for sure,” Broberg said. ‘I’m very excited about the opportunity I’m going to get. It’s going to be fun.

“I think we have a very good roster with a lot of very good players. I’m excited to meet all the guys and get a chance to play with them as well.”

How much Broberg gets to play is anyone’s guess, but with Sweden, which opens on Feb. 11 at 2:10 p.m. (CT) against Italy, if they need a shutdown player to be in a plethora of situations, Broberg should be under heavy consideration. He has played 23-plus minutes 22 times this season.

“I think defensively, I think that’s been a big focus for myself,” Broberg said. “Grow defensively and be hard to play against, have good sticks, be physical. I think that’s a big, big thing. I still want to create offense as well, but that’s just a plus.”

Being a lifelong Swede from Orebro, the hometown of Stanley Cup champion Carl Gunnarsson, Broberg now gets to make his own memories.

“I think the best memory I have is (Niklas) Lidstrom scored that game-winner and they won the gold obviously (in 2006 over Finland),” Broberg said. “I have that memory a lot and I’m excited to be a part of the team there.”

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Blackwood Placed on Injured Reserve as Avalanche Recall Miner and Makar

Injury issues have resurfaced for Mackenzie Blackwood.

Blackwood Injured Again

The Avalanche placed the goaltender on injured reserve Thursday with a lower-body injury, marking his second stint on IR this season after beginning the year sidelined. To fill the vacancy, Colorado recalled Trent Miner and Taylor Makar from the Colorado Eagles, the Avs’ AHL affiliate. The Avalanche already had an open roster spot, so no additional move was required. Blackwood will be reevaluated once the team returns from its three-game road trip.

The team did not provide additional details regarding the injury. Blackwood did not participate in practice ahead of the road trip, prompting the roster move.

Blackwood last appeared in Colorado’s 6–1 win over the Blues on New Year’s Eve, finishing the game in what was his second consecutive start. Despite the stop-and-start nature of his season and a resulting tandem split with Scott Wedgewood, the 29-year-old has been elite when available, posting a 13-1-1 record, .924 save percentage, and a league-leading 2.07 goals-against average in 16 appearances.

Blackwood missed training camp and the start of the regular season while rehabbing from offseason surgery on a lower-body injury. In his absence, Scott Wedgewood emerged as one of the NHL’s top goaltenders. With Blackwood sidelined again, Wedgewood is expected to shoulder the bulk of the workload once more.

Makar Called Up

Meanwhile, Makar has been called up to the NHL for the fourth time this season. 

The 24‑year‑old forward has appeared in 26 games this season with the Colorado Eagles, the Avalanche’s AHL affiliate, recording six goals and four assists for 10 points in 26 games.

Selected in the seventh round of the 2021 NHL Draft, Makar signed a one-year entry-level contract that runs through the 2025–26 season.

Before turning pro, he played three seasons at UMass Amherst, totaling 15 goals and seven assists in 85 games from 2021 to 2023. He then transferred to the University of Maine for the 2024–25 season, where he enjoyed a breakout year with 18 goals and 12 assists for 30 points in 38 games.

Meanwhile, Taylor’s older brother Cale Makar remains the driving force on Colorado’s back end in 2025–26, posting 12 goals and 33 assists for 45 points through 39 games to lead the Avalanche defense.

Miner Recalled

Miner has appeared in two NHL games this season, posting an 0‑0‑2 record while allowing four goals on 44 shots. In the AHL with the Colorado Eagles, he has a 7‑2‑0 record, a 2.40 goals-against average, and a .907 save percentage across 10 contests. Miner is expected to serve in a backup role for the Avalanche, with Scott Wedgewood likely stepping in as the starter during Blackwood’s absence.

Avalanche On the Road

The Avalanche (30‑2‑7) face the Carolina Hurricanes (24‑13‑3) on Saturday at Lenovo Center with coverage starting at 5 p.m. local time. Colorado will then head on an all-Florida road trip, taking on the reigning Stanley Cup champion Florida Panthers on January 4 before meeting the Tampa Bay Lightning on January 6.

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Red Wings Top Prospect Sets Historic Mark Last Achieved By Current Vezina Favorite

Detroit Red Wings top prospect Sebastian Cossa continues to dominate in the AHL, earning Goaltender of the Month honors for December, marking the second consecutive month he has received the award.

Cossa previously won the accolade for November, becoming the first netminder in Red Wings franchise history to win the award twice in a single season. He also becomes the first AHL goalie since Henderson’s Logan Thompson in 2021 to capture the honor in consecutive months.

Thompson, now with the Washington Capitals, has gone on to thrive at the NHL level. He was recently named to Team Canada’s Olympic roster and currently sits as a Vezina Trophy favorite, highlighting just how elite Cossa’s company is as he joins the list of goalies who have translated AHL dominance into NHL stardom.

The 23-year-old Hamilton, Ontario native was spectacular in December, posting a 7-0-1 record with two shutouts, a 1.76 goals-against average, and a .929 save percentage. This season, Cossa has been nearly untouchable, boasting a 15-1-1 record, a 1.65 GAA, and a .936 save percentage, leading all AHL goalies in every major statistical category.

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Cossa recently experienced a rare setback in an overtime loss to the Milwaukee Admirals, stopping 21 of 24 shots. Prior to that, he had allowed just four goals over his previous four starts, stopping 85 of 89 shots with two shutouts.

With aging NHL goaltenders Cam Talbot and John Gibson nearing the end of their tenures in Detroit, fans are eagerly anticipating Cossa’s NHL debut. The Red Wings, long plagued by goaltending instability since the days of Chris Osgood, appear to have found their next franchise netminder.

Selected 15th overall in the 2021 NHL Draft, Cossa has consistently shown why Detroit invested a top pick in him. His dominance in the AHL this season has many believing he is ready to kick down the door to the NHL and become the long-term solution between the pipes for the Red Wings, following in the footsteps of other elite goalies like Logan Thompson.

Non-NHL Red Wings Who Could Compete at the Winter OlympicsNon-NHL Red Wings Who Could Compete at the Winter OlympicsGrand Rapids Griffins forward Eduards Tralmaks is one of several players within the Red Wings organization who could see action at the 2026 Winter Olympics.

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Non-NHL Red Wings Who Could Compete at the Winter Olympics

The Winter Olympics are just weeks away from getting underway, and excitement is beginning to build across the hockey world as national teams begin to announce and finalize their rosters. While traditional powerhouses like Canada and the United States will once again command much of the spotlight, several other participating nations will be looking to make an impact in the ice hockey tournament.

Here are some players within the Detroit Red Wings organization who could potentially participate in the Winter Olympics. They may not be suiting up for the sport’s biggest superpowers, but each could play a meaningful role for their country and gain valuable experience competing against some of the best players in the world on the Olympic stage.

Eduards Tralmaks - Latvia 

Latvia has emerged as one of the fastest-rising nations in hockey. Once a frequent relegation team at tournaments such as the World Juniors and World Championships, the program has now established itself among the sport’s elite and is producing an increasing number of NHL players. Currently, Latvia boasts four skaters and two goaltenders in the NHL, with several other Olympic hopefuls playing in leagues around the world, including the AHL.

Tralmaks is one of six Latvian skaters competing in the AHL and is tied for second in scoring among them with Providence Bruins forward Dans Ločmelis, trailing only Sandis Vilmanis of the Charlotte Checkers by a single point. Latvia faces a challenging Olympic group, matched up against the United States along with rising hockey nations Germany and Denmark. For Tralmaks, the Olympics could provide a major opportunity to prove himself on an international stage and potentially raise his profile with a strong performance.

Michal Svrcek - Slovakia

Slovakia has remained competitive at the World Juniors, and Svrcek has put together a solid tournament, recording a goal and an assist through four games. He is set to face Canada in the quarterfinals, a matchup that could present opportunities against a Canadian squad that has surrendered its share of goals.

Looking ahead to the Olympics, Slovakia is expected to feature nine NHL players, including high-profile names such as Juraj Slafkovský and Šimon Nemec. Beyond those nine, depth becomes a concern, as Slovakia has only about ten additional skaters in the AHL. That limited pool may force management to look elsewhere for reinforcements, including other professional leagues or even junior talent. 

Svrcek fits that profile well as a recent fourth-round pick, he is enjoying an excellent season in Sweden’s U20 Nationell league with Brynäs IF, where he has totaled 14 points in nine games. Given his strong play and upward trajectory, he could be one of several prospects from Slovakia’s system considered for Olympic selection.

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Michal Pradel - Slovakia 

With no Slovak goaltenders currently in the NHL and only a limited presence in North America, Slovakia may be inclined to lean on whoever is performing best at the World Juniors. After taking over the starting role in the team’s second game of the tournament, Pradel elevated his play immediately, delivering a standout 31-save performance in a 4–1 victory over Germany.

That showing earned him the net for the next two starts, beginning with a challenging matchup against the United States. Facing one of the strongest junior lineups in the world, Pradel made several highlight-level saves and kept Slovakia competitive, stopping 35 shots in a narrow 6–5 loss despite allowing six goals. He was steady again overall, though his most recent start against Switzerland showed some vulnerability, as the Swiss capitalized early and held on for a 3–2 win, with Pradel stopping 15 of 18 shots.

At just 18 years old, Pradel remains very much a developing goaltender, and Slovakia’s management may ultimately prefer more experienced options. However, if they choose to reward recent form, bringing Pradel along in a depth role could make sense, allowing him to gain valuable experience and learn alongside veteran goaltenders.

Kevin Bicker - Germany

Germany has traditionally been known more as a soccer nation than a hockey powerhouse, but its hockey programs have steadily grown in recent years, fueled by the emergence of NHL stars such as Leon Draisaitl, Tim Stützle, and Moritz Seider. Despite that progress, Germany’s player pool in North America remains limited, with only six NHL players and four skaters in the AHL.

Because of that lack of depth, Germany may need to look toward its junior and domestic programs for additional options. One potential candidate is 20-year-old Kevin Bicker, a Red Wings prospect selected in the fifth round of the 2023 NHL Draft. As one of the rarer NHL draft picks to emerge from Germany, Bicker showed enough ability at the junior level to earn selection and now represents a viable option for the national team.

With few German players competing in North America, attention could shift back home, where Bicker currently plays in the Deutsche Eishockey Liga (DEL) with Löwen Frankfurt. A strong showing against elite international competition could help solidify his place on Team Germany and potentially influence Detroit’s decision to offer him an entry-level contract.

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Sabres Notes: Tuch Status Quo, Is Levi A Depreciating Asset?

Buffalo GM Jarmo Kekalainen indicated after taking control of the Sabres last month that resuming negotiations with winger Alex Tuch, and according to the Fourth Period’s David Pagnotta, he has already been in contact with agent Brian Bartlett and that contract discussions are expected to continue into January.

The issue that appears to be the sticking point is Tuch’s asking price, which has reportedly been in excess of $10 million per season on an eight-year max deal, close to what LA Kings forward Adrian Kempe signed for earlier in the season, but there is not any proof to this point whether the Sabres stance has loosened since October, when Tuch paused talks with the club. 

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The clock is ticking on the Sabres, as they have to make some progress and get the 29-year-old winger locked up before the March 6th trade deadline or trade him, which conceivably could bring back a considerable return. 

Another potential ticking clock that Kekalainen inherited was the Sabres goaltending situation. The veteran GM indicated that he was on board with the club claiming Colten Ellis off waivers from St. Louis and thus maintaining three goalies on the NHL roster, but that addition pretty much ruled out once-prized Sabres prospect Devon Levi playing in the NHL this season. 

Levi signed a two-year, $1.625 million deal with the Sabres this summer, and did not have any leverage since he did not qualify to be a restricted free agent with the ability to sign an offer sheet. The 24-year-old was waiver exempt and demoted after training camp after putting up two excellent seasons in the AHL with Rochester. This season his numbers have slipped slightly (11-5-4, 2.82 GAA, .906 save %). 

The dilemma Buffalo faces is that Levi, like Ellis this season, will not be waiver exempt next year. Kekalainen could use the young goalie as a trade commodity in a goalie-starved league to add help and improve the club’s playoff chances before the deadline, but if he waits until the summer to make a decision, he risks getting little in return. 

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'It's A Dream Come True For Me': Rakell, Karlsson Thrilled To Represent Sweden At Olympic Games

On Friday, a few Pittsburgh Penguins' players got some news that they've been waiting on for quite a while. 

And it looks like they'll be spending most of February in Milan, Italy.

It was announced that defenseman Erik Karlsson and forward Rickard Rakell made the cut for the final 2026 Swedish Olympic roster, which will mark the second time Karlsson has represented his country in the Olympics and the first time for Rakell.

Forward Bryan Rust - who was invited to Team USA's Olympic camp over the summer - did not make the final cut for Team USA.

For Karlsson, the chance to compete again at the highest-level international tournament in the world is something that he's been anticipating for a decade. And - for Rakell - it's a childhood aspiration finally realized.

"Super excited," Rakell said. "It's a dream come true for me to get the chance to play in the Olympics and represent my country. I couldn't be more excited."

As much as there was a degree of certainty for Karlsson making the final roster despite not being named as one of the First Six - he said he was a "lock" back in training camp - it was not the same situation with Rakell, especially given his longer-term injury this season and the breadth of competition for few spots on the forward front.

And there was also the fact that, for the 4 Nations Face-off last February, he was left off the initial roster despite being in the midst of a career season. He was eventually named as an injury replacement, he competed in the tournament, and he finished his NHL season with career-highs in goals (35) and points (70). 

So, for those reasons, he wasn't entirely sure that he would make the cut. But he's glad that he did. 

"Yeah, obviously, that's all you want," Rakell said. "You never know if it's the last chance you get to play in a tournament like that, and you're thinking about it pretty much all of last year, all of summer, and coming into this year, and you never know with the injuries and all that happens, what's going to happen to you.

"Ultimately, it's coaches' decision to make the team, so even though you don't want to think about it too much, you just try to focus on your game here and try to give your best every night. I was really excited to get the call."

Sweden Announces Men's 2026 Olympic Hockey Roster: Full ListSweden Announces Men's 2026 Olympic Hockey Roster: Full ListSweden named the 25 players representing the men's national hockey team at the 2026 Olympics, including both Minnesota Wild goaltenders.

Rakell is also excited to have the opportunity to share his first Olympic experience with his teammate in Karlsson, who Rakell has become close friends with since the blueliner's arrival in Pittsburgh during the summer of 2023.

"I'm very happy to go with him and just share that moment together," Rakell said. "Obviously, since the day he got here, we didn't really know each other before, but we've become really good friends, and I'm super excited to see him [there]. He's going to be a top player on our team there, and just watching him here every day and get to see him, get to learn from him... it's a lot of fun."

Karlsson also sees the value in having someone like Rakell on the roster because of his situational versatility and ability to perform on big stages. 

"I think he’s shown over the last couple of years that he’s a capable player in situations like that," Karlsson said. "I think he had a good 4 Nations. He’s a guy that can play up and down the lineup and a reliable guy. So, I’m happy that he got the recognition for it, and very well-deserved.”

USA Hockey Reveals Men's 2026 Olympic Roster: Full ListUSA Hockey Reveals Men's 2026 Olympic Roster: Full ListUSA Hockey named the 25 players representing the men's national team at the 2026 Olympics.

Karlsson competed in the 2014 Olympics in Sochi, when the Swedes lost to Sidney Crosby and Team Canada in the gold medal game. Although he joked about having "not very good memories" about losing to Crosby and company, he also recalled the experience as being one of the best of his playing career. 

And for the NHL to be back in the Olympics for the first time in 12 years - and for him to be a part of that - means a lot to him. 

“It’s weird," Karlsson said. "Obviously, I missed two of them in the time that [we] could have played, which is very frustrating at one point. But at the same time, there’s nothing you can do about it. So, I’m just happy that it’s back on, and hopefully, it stays this way for the younger generation and we don’t get to miss another one because it’s a very special thing to be a part of.”

He added: "Very happy that we get the chance to be back and experience it again. And, you know, hopefully, it’s not my last one.”

The Swedish Olympic roster will largely feature the same players that made the 4 Nations cut, even if there are a few alterations. Gustav Nyquist, William Karlsson, Viktor Arvidsson and Mattias Ekholm were players on the 4 Nations roster that were left off, while Gabriel Landeskog, Alexander Wennberg, Pontus Holmberg, Oliver Ekman-Larsson, and Philip Broberg.

During 4 Nations, Rakell spent some time playing with Mika Zibanejad, William Nylander, and Elias Pettersson - all of whom made the cut - while Karlsson was paired with Ekholm, meaning he will have a new defense partner for the Olympics. 

Regardless, both players feel good about the group that's headed to Milan.

"I feel really good about it," Rakell said. "As a group, we learned some things at the 4 Nations, and going to the Olympics, I think we have a better view of what we can improve and learn from our mistakes there to just try to give our best effort at the Olympics."

Finland Announces Men's 2026 Olympic Hockey Roster: Full ListFinland Announces Men's 2026 Olympic Hockey Roster: Full ListFinland named the 25 players representing the men's national hockey team at the 2026 Olympics. All but one of the players are in the NHL.

While the Olympics were, obviously, a heavy emphasis Friday, Rakell and Karlsson remain focused on what is right in front of them in Pittsburgh, where the team has won four of its last five games. The team plays a lot of games between now and the Olympics - 17, to be exact - and they are in the midst of a playoff race.

Not only are the NHL games in front of them important, but playing well going into the Olympics does help ensure that both players will be at the height of their game when the time comes to play in the highest level of best-on-best possible.

“Obviously, right now, I think we’re all very excited to go to Milan and compete for your nation," Karlsson said. "But at the same time, we're also very excited for the upcoming games in between with the Pittsburgh Penguins. I think that we have something good going on. We got off to a good start after the break, and that’s what we’re focusing on right now.

"So, whatever needs to be done here for this team to be successful, we’ve got to deal with. Then, when we get to Milan, we’re going to deal with what we have to do there to be successful.”

'You Can Never Be Satisfied In This League': McGroarty Taking Strides At NHL Level With Penguins'You Can Never Be Satisfied In This League': McGroarty Taking Strides At NHL Level With PenguinsPittsburgh Penguins' forward Rutger McGroarty is learning every day at the NHL level - and he only figures to get even better with more experience at the highest level of hockey.

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