Blackhawks: Sam Rinzel Has His First Career NHL Goal

Not long after Cole Caufield had a Montreal Canadiens goal stand after being reviewed for a high stick, the Blackhawks tied the game thanks to a goal scored by Sam Rinzel. 

In his 12th NHL game, Rinzel's goal is the first of his National Hockey League career. It couldn't have been a better-looking snipe for his first. 

Chicago Blackhawks (@NHLBlackhawks) on XChicago Blackhawks (@NHLBlackhawks) on Xlet's hear it for Sam Rinzel!🗣️

Frank Nazar won the faceoff back to Teuvo Teravainen, who slid it to Rinzel before he ripped it home. The goal tied the game for the Blackhawks at the time. 

The Blackhawks are hoping that this is the first of many for Rinzel, who now has six points over his first 12 career games. That kind of pace would make him the clear-cut number one defenseman on the team, especially if he keeps up his very good defensive play. 

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Flyers take early punch to gut as OT goal is overturned in loss

Flyers take early punch to gut as OT goal is overturned in loss originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

Just when it looked like the Flyers had win No. 1 of the Rick Tocchet era Saturday night, it was taken away from them.

Bobby Brink had a goal in overtime wiped off the board by video review, which deemed that Travis Sanheim interfered with Hurricanes goalie Frederik Andersen (more on this below). Carolina scored just 37 seconds after the Flyers celebrated what they thought was a victory instead turn into a 4-3 loss at Lenovo Center.

Seth Jarvis buried the Hurricanes’ OT winner with 17 seconds left.

Brink, Sanheim and Owen Tippett provided the Flyers’ goals.

Noah Cates’ line with Brink and Tyson Foerster was very good again. The trio had a great shift that led to Sanheim’s game-tying goal with four minutes remaining in regulation.

The Flyers are 0-1-1 under Tocchet. The last time the Flyers dropped their first two games of a season was 2015-16, when that team also started 0-1-1.

Tocchet’s club has had a stiff schedule. The Flyers visited the two-time defending champion Panthers on opening night and then faced a Carolina team that has made the playoffs in seven straight seasons.

The Flyers have lost 14 of their last 16 games against the Hurricanes (2-9-5). Saturday night was their first of four matchups this season with Carolina, which is off to a 2-0-0 start.

• Sanheim was making a play to the net when he clipped Andersen on Brink’s overturned goal.

Andersen was in his crease but did appear to create some of the contact. It didn’t matter, though.

Here was the NHL’s explanation of the review, which was initiated by the league’s situation room:

“Video review determined Philadelphia’s Travis Sanheim impaired Frederik Andersen’s ability to play his position in the crease prior to Bobby Brink’s goal. The decision was made in accordance with Rule 69.1 which states, in part, ‘Goals should be disallowed only if: (1) an attacking player, either by his positioning or by contact, impairs the goalkeeper’s ability to move freely within his crease or defend his goal.'”

• Matvei Michkov didn’t see the ice in overtime, which was an interesting call considering the 20-year-old scored three OT winners last season as a rookie.

But Michkov definitely didn’t have his best game in regulation, while the Flyers had some other forwards playing well. You can bet that Michkov will get his looks in overtime this season.

• Samuel Ersson was between the pipes after Dan Vladar got the call in the 2-1 season-opening loss Thursday night.

Ersson made some tough and timely saves, stopping 35 of 39 shots.

The Hurricanes took advantage of transition opportunities and scored all three of their regulation goals in the second period.

Carolina grabbed its first lead of the game at 3-2 when it forechecked the Flyers’ top line and third defensive pair. Jordan Staal finished the sequence as Noah Juulsen and Adam Ginning couldn’t break up the play.

Ersson was excellent in the first period, making 15 saves and giving the Flyers an opportunity to take a 1-0 lead on Tippett’s goal with 22 seconds left before intermission.

Andersen denied 20 of the Flyers’ 23 shots.

• Nikita Grebenkin made his Flyers debut and picked up his first career NHL point with an assist.

The 22-year-old winger showed what he can do when he’s in the lineup. He popped offensively and really hunted the puck. That’s what’s pretty intriguing about him is that he can play down in the lineup because of his competitiveness.

He didn’t look out of place at all in a fourth-line role. And he has the ability to climb into the top six.

Grebenkin and Jett Luchanko entered the lineup for Nicolas Deslauriers and Rodrigo Abols. Luchanko was on the fourth line with Grebenkin and Garnet Hathaway.

On the Hurricanes’ game-tying 2-2 goal, Luchanko had an offensive-zone turnover that sprung Carolina the other way. Taylor Hall scored on the rush.

• Tippett didn’t have a power play goal all of last season. He already has one two games into this season.

The 26-year-old is a player the Flyers believe Tocchet can unleash.

“He has played, he has seen the game from all angles, he has been around the league coaching for a while,” Tippett said last month about his new head coach. “I’m excited to continue to work with him and see what he challenges me with.”

• Cam York missed the season-opening two-game road trip because of a lower-body injury.

• The Flyers return to Philadelphia for their home opener Monday against the Panthers (7 p.m. ET/NBCSP).

The organization will honor the late Bernie Parent before the game.

Panthers pay tribute to former forward Nick Cousins during Senators visit to Sunrise

The Florida Panthers paid tribute to one of their former Stanley Cup Champions.

On Saturday, Florida welcomed the Ottawa Senators to Sunrise.

Current Senators forward Nick Cousins spent two seasons with the Panthers, from 2022 to 2024.

Both years, the Panthers reached the Stanley Cup Final, claiming victory during their second trip.

Cousins played a total of 33 games during those two playoff runs, contributing two goals and eight points while racking up 36 penalty minutes.

His biggest postseason moment with the Cats came during the second round in 2023, when Cousins scored the overtime winner in Game 5 against the Toronto Maple Leafs that sent the Panthers to the Eastern Conference Final.

During his time with the Panthers, Cousins value to the team went well beyong his on-ice contributions.

Over the past several seasons, Florida has cultivated one of the best, tightknit locker rooms in the NHL, and Cousins was a big part of growing that camaraderie.

Cousins, along with former Panthers Ryan Lomberg and Brandon Montour, were some of the most vocal guys in that room and helped create the vibe that remains incredibly strong in South Florida.

During the first TV timeout on Saturday, the Panthers played a tribute video for Cousins on the scoreboard above the ice.

Cousins stood up and saluted the crowd as they gave him a loud ovation, then turned toward the Panthers bench and gave his former teammates a nod.

You can check out the tribute video, and Cousins' reaction, in the X post below:

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Mike Sullivan's Time In Pittsburgh Deserves To Be Celebrated

If folks have been keeping tabs on the Pittsburgh Penguins for the last year and a half, they very well know that the organization is going through a plethora of change.

The roster is going younger. There has been a shift from laying everything on the line for playoff contention to rebuilding. 

But perhaps the most prominent shift was the coaching change made this summer.

Dan Muse was in, and former head coach Mike Sullivan was out. The irony of it all was that Sullivan faced his former team on opening night, as he is now at the helm for the New York Rangers. Muse did, too, as he was formerly an assistant with the Rangers. 

And now, just four days later, Sullivan is already back in Pittsburgh for the first time since switching sides, as the Rangers and Penguins square off again Saturday night. 

Many among the Penguins' faithful believed Sullivan was past his shelf life in Pittsburgh by the time he and the team mutually agreed to part ways at the end of April. And, maybe that's true. But none of that diminishes what Sullivan accomplished during his 10 years in Pittsburgh. 

Sullivan was first called upon in Pittsburgh on Dec. 12, 2015, when then-Penguins' coach Mike Johnston was fired and Sullivan was the head coach of the Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Penguins (AHL). He helped turn the tide for a struggling Penguins' team and led them to the franchise's fourth Stanley Cup championship in 2016, and he coached them right back to another Cup in 2017. 

There was so much success so immediately - and Sullivan's Penguins were such a breath of fresh air in comparison to the Johnston-era Penguins - that there was a sense of inevitability when it came to Sullivan and the Penguins being synonymous for a long time. 

Rangers At Penguins Preview: Mike Sullivan Returns To PittsburghRangers At Penguins Preview: Mike Sullivan Returns To PittsburghThe Pittsburgh Penguins will try to improve to 3-0-0 on the season when they host Mike Sullivan and the New York Rangers on Saturday night. 

But the COVID-19 pandemic, first-round playoff exits, and - eventually - missed playoff appearances altogether served as reminders that the team and its coach were still human and that nothing is permanent. Fans grew tired of the same old same, and, too, of Sullivan himself.

There are a lot of narratives still swirling about Sullivan and his supposed failure to ice young players, even if the young talent - for the most part - simply wasn't in the pipeline for most of his tenure. There are narratives about him losing the room, which is something we may never truly know. 

However, tonight, none of that matters. All that matters is what Sullivan accomplished as head coach of the Pittsburgh Penguins, which includes two Stanley Cup championships and his 409 regular season wins, which is the most by any coach in Penguins' history.

Saturday, he deserves to be celebrated for that. Not for his shortcomings.

Penguins' Bryan Rust Activated From Injured Reserve, Top Prospect Sent To AHLPenguins' Bryan Rust Activated From Injured Reserve, Top Prospect Sent To AHLThe Pittsburgh Penguins will get one of their top forwards back for Saturday's game against the New York Rangers.

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Avalanche's Brent Burns Is A Prime Example Of Longevity As He Skates In Game 1500

It’s quite something to be an NHLer who has played 1,500 games. It’s even more impressive to do it while riding a games-played ironman streak of 927 games – the fourth-longest ironman streak in league history – while also being an important part of a legitimate Stanley Cup frontrunner in the Colorado Avalanche.

But that’s exactly what’s being done right now by 40-year-old defenseman Brent Burns. A 22-year NHL veteran who becomes only the eighth defenseman in league history to reach the 1,500-game plateau.

The others to reach that level – Zdeno Chara (1,680 games), Chris Chelios (1,651), Scott Stevens (1,635), Larry Murphy (1,615), Ray Bourque (1,612), Nicklas Lidstrom (1,564), and Ryan Suter (1,526) – are all legends in one way or another, so Burns is in rare air when it comes to NHL longevity. 

What makes Burns’ 1,500-game achievement – that will happen Saturday night when the Avalanche take on the Dallas Stars – all the more impressive is the fact that Burns has played an intense, physical game his entire career. This is not a delicate flower of an athlete we’re talking about. Staying healthy and in the lineup night in and night out, year after year, in the grind of the industry for nearly a dozen seasons as a physical force is a major feat. Most of all, Burns has been a star player who made his opponents’ lives much tougher, and he’s been an impact player at both ends of the ice. 

While you don’t have to lean completely on individual numbers when you’re discussing someone’s effectiveness as an elite player, it’s still a fact that Burns has generated 649 assists and 910 points in 1,499 games. That should tell you all you need to know about the all-around impact he’s had on the four teams he’s played for – the Minnesota Wild, San Jose Sharks, Carolina Hurricanes and Avalanche.

In his first two games with the Avs this year, Burns is averaging nearly 21 minutes a night (20:49, to be exact). But Father Time remains undefeated, so it’s undeniable that Burns might not be in the NHL much longer. This opportunity to win a Stanley Cup could be Burns’ last, best opportunity to win it all and cap off what is a Hockey Hall of Fame career.

Burns has already won a Norris Trophy as the league’s top blueliner. He’s also won a gold medal at the IIHF World Championship and at the 2016 World Cup of Hockey. To think – this is a player who was converted from a forward to a defenseman in his first NHL season. Think of how difficult that transition had to be for Burns. Think of how your mindset has to change, and how you have to play even more responsibly when you’re a D-man. That’s what Burns went through and came out the other side with flying colors. 

Brent Burns (Jayne Kamin-Oncea-Imagn Images)

Thus, we believe that Burns is a Hockey Hall of Famer. He’s an excellent example of NHL longevity, excellent offensively, posting back-to-back seasons of 27 and 29 goals with the Sharks, as well as a 67-assist season for San Jose. He’s been stellar as a punishing player who'll make you pay a physical price for daring to keep the puck away from him.

Burns’ all-around impact is what’s made him so valuable for so many years, and he’s now got a golden opportunity with the Avs to finish up his playing days by hoisting a Cup next spring.

Burns wouldn’t be the first Hall of Famer who failed to run the competitive NHL gamut and retire as a Cup-winner, and if that’s how his career pans out, he wouldn’t be the last, either. But for more than 11 years, he’s answered the bell and skated out onto the ice to play an elite game each and every night in hockey’s best league.

Avalanche fans are going to celebrate his 1,500-game achievement Saturday, but the real party could be happening in Denver in this season’s post-season. And Burns could contribute offensively and defensively to give Colorado the extra push they need to win a Cup.

And if the Avs do win a championship, Burns will be thrilled to bookend his career with the championship he’s chased for more than two decades. Burns has been a high-impact player throughout his career, and that’s likely to be true of him again this season.

Winning a Cup would be a storybook finish to an unlikely success story, but Burns’s challenge is to do precisely that.

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GAME PREVIEW: A Regular Season Rematch at Ball Arena Between the Dallas Stars and the Colorado Avalanche

Denver, Colo. - The first night of two this regular season have arrived. The Dallas Stars are in town for the first time since handing the Colorado Avalanche a first-round exit from the 2025 Stanley Cup Playoffs.

With the return of the Stars comes the return of Mikko Rantanen, who played a big role - if not the biggest - in that playoff exit with a natural hat trick in Game 7.

Fear not, though, as there are many more storylines heading into tonight's game.

Roster Updates

Head Coach Jared Bednar began his press conference this morning by telling the media that Ilya Solovyov will be making his debut in burgundy and blue.

With his debut comes bad news: Sam Girard will be out week-to-week with an upper-body injury.

Other than that change on defense, none of the forward lines will change for the Avalanche, meaning Zakhar Bardakov will be a healthy scratch once again, Parker Kelly will center the fourth line, and Gavin Brindley will get yet another look in the NHL.

With that said, Scott Wedgewood will occupy the crease again tonight for Colorado after an almost shutdown performance against the Utah Mammoth on Thursday night.

Jake Oettinger will start in net for the Stars on the other side of the ice.

1,500 Games Played, What a Milestone

Only seven defensemen have ever gotten to the 1,500-game milestone in their careers. Tonight, Brent Burns will become the eighth.

"It's impressive to hit 1,000. Every game after that, it's a bonus, I'm sure. Now, he's at 1,500, it's hard to do, especially when you - they're not easy minutes that he plays. He's an older guy now... The streak he has of games he's played in a row. It's part of the reason he's been able to hit 1,500, to be able to play the way he does, as physically as he does, and to be able to stay healthy for as long as he has, it's amazing."
- Coach Bednar on Burns hitting 1,500 NHL games played

Burns was drafted by the Minnesota Wild back in 2003 (20th overall). Since then, he's played with the Wild, the San Jose Sharks, the Carolina Hurricanes, and now, the Colorado Avalanche.

In that span of time, Burns has tallied 910 points (261g/649a), taken a total of 4,057 shots, and collected 857 PIMs.

When/Where/How to Watch the Game:

Puck Drop: 7:08 pm Mountain Time

Avalanche T.V. Broadcast: Altitude Sports Network

Avalanche Radio Broadcast: Altitude Sports Radio, 92.5 FM

Dallas T.V. Broadcast: Victory+

Dallas Radio Broadcast: The Ticket 96.7-FM, 1310-AM


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Penguins' Bryan Rust Activated From Injured Reserve, Top Prospect Sent To AHL

The Pittsburgh Penguins will get one of their top forwards back for Saturday's game against the New York Rangers.

Bryan Rust, who missed the first two games of this season due to a lower-body injury he suffered during training camp, is set to play on Saturday after he was activated off injured reserve. He rejoined the team at practice this week and was at Saturday's morning skate with some of his teammates. 

Fellow forward Ville Koivunen was assigned to the AHL's Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Penguins in a corresponding move.

Koivunen struggled on Sidney Crosby's line in the first two games of the season against the Rangers and Islanders, but showed some chemistry with top prospect Benjamin Kindel during the Islanders game when head coach Dan Muse moved him to the third line. Koivunen probably won't be down in WBS for long. 

Rust is coming off a career season last year, finishing with a career-high 31 goals and 65 points in 71 games. 

Puck drop for Saturday's game will be at 7 p.m. ET.


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Scheifele Scores Twice as Jets Take Down Kings 3-2

The Winnipeg Jets are back in the win column. 

For the first time since last May the Jets left the ice of Canada Life Centre to the sound of their goal horn and Frank Sinatra's 'Come Fly With Me'. 

Photo by Scott Stroh 

Mark Scheifele scored twice, including the third period game-winner in the 3-2 victory, while Connor Hellebuyck made 29 saves for the now 1-1-0 Jets on Saturday afternoon. 

Alex Iafallo got things going for Winnipeg on an early first period power play. With Kyle Connor and Gabe Vilardi drawing the assists on the passing play, Iafallo found his first from the slot just 4:48 into the frame. 

The 12:30 PM central start was more like a 10:30 AM start for the Kings, which came out of the gate a little sluggish. Three-straight penalties led to Winnipeg's opening goal, and quite a few more opportunities as the period wore on. The Jets finished the frame up 1-0 and leading 14-9 on the shot chart. 

The second period, however, was a disaster.

A sloppy start led to an early marker from the visitors. A Mikey Anderson point shot found its way through Connor Hellebuyck from the point, knotting the game at ones just 50 seconds in.

Nine minutes later, Adrian Kempe and Anze Kopitar combined for a dazzler, with Kempe finishing off the passing play, giving the visitors a 2-1 lead at the game's midway point. 

Winnipeg found itself in penalty trouble at times throughout the frame, leading to an onslaught of Kings chances. But with time winding down and the Kings having knotted up the shot tally, Mark Scheifele took matters into his own hands. 

With Morgan Barron winning a defensive zone puck battle, he got the disc to Scheifele, who raced up ice, fending off a few checkers and tucked the puck past Darcy Kuemper and into the net, tying the game at twos with just 1:03 to go in the middle stanza. 

“Bear was in a good spot, kind of forcing that guy in the middle to be in a tough spot," Scheifele said of the play. "Obviously, we kind of got a lucky bounce. Good play by Bear there. I was the lucky one to get lucky.”

Defenceman Haydn Fleury blocked a shot late in the second period on a Jets penalty kill and did not return to the game. He attempted to skate around after the second period but did not come out with the team for the their period. Thus, Winnipeg was down to five defencemen for the final frame, and Fleury's injury may a point of concern going forward. 

With 8:13 to go in the frame, Scheifele potted his second of the game, giving Winnipeg its second lead, as he redirected a floater from the point off a Josh Morrissey writer. The goal gave the Jets a 3-2 lead.

“It was a good o-zone shift, I think, the defence included," Scheifele said of the game-winner. "We all supported the puck well, guys in the right spot. Obviously, JMo made a good shot. Just a good o-zone shift.”

Winnipeg killed off a late Neal Pionk penalty, then fended off a very late 6-on-4 man advantage with Tanner Pearson in the box for the final 17 seconds, handing the Kings their second loss in three games this season, and picking up their first victory in the process. 

Hellebuyck turned aside 29 of the Kings' 31 shots on goal, while Kuemper made 24 stops on the 27 pucks fired his way by Winnipeg.

Next up for the Jets is a quick two-game road trip through the Eastern Conference. Winnipeg will face off against the New York Islanders on Tuesday at noon before heading to Philadelphia for a 6:00 PM central test against the Flyers. 

"It Means A Lot": Michael Brandsegg-NygĂĽrd Grateful For Hearty Reception From Red Wings Fans

As the Detroit Red Wings began their centennial season on Thursday evening, there was an aura of anticipation among the sellout crowd at Little Ceasars Arena - not just for the new campaign, but for the injection of youth into the lineup. 

Rookies Michael Brandsegg-NygĂĽrd, Axel Sandin-Pellikka, and Emmitt Finnie, all of whom sufficiently impressed Detroit's management and coaching staff in Training Camp and pre-season play to earn a roster spot, appeared in their first NHL contest.

Michael Brandsegg-NygĂĽrd, who tallied seven total points in pre-season play, was held off the scoresheet against the Montreal Canadiens but did register two shots on goal while skating on a line with J.T. Compher and Andrew Copp.

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He also received a notable cheer from the fans during the special pre-game introductions, which he appreciated, though he said his focus remained on the upcoming task at hand.

"I mean, It means a lot," he said of the hearty reception from the sellout crowd. "But at that moment I couldn't really hear it because I was so focused on the game, and a little nervous." 

"I appreciated it a lot." 

While making his NHL debut could have felt like a daunting challenge, Brandsegg-Nygård said he wasn’t fazed by it. He felt like he belonged, but admitted it was a disappointing performance by the team as a whole in their frustrating 5-1 loss.

"I felt pretty good, it feels like I belong here almost. It wasn't too hard to play, but at the same time, the whole team could have done a better job. We lost 5-1, and even though we had a couple good chances, we gave up more." 

Alex DeBrincat Reflects on Missed Chances in Red Wings' Loss to CanadiensAlex DeBrincat Reflects on Missed Chances in Red Wings' Loss to CanadiensThe ultimate fate of an NHL team during any given contest can sometimes come down to a series of bounces and what some fans would simply refer to as good or bad luck. 

Brandsegg-NygĂĽrd has developed a reputation throughout his young playing career as being a physical presence on the ice, something he plans on continuing on Saturday night against the Toronto Maple Leafs. 

"It's always my mindset to play as hard as I can," he said. "Every time I start a game, everything else comes with that - the chances always come when you play harder. I'm just trying to play hard." 

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Nothing Ventured; JJ Peterka Is Ready Help The Mammoth Earn A Spot In The Playoffs

By Jared Clinton, Features writer 

There aren't many who will extol the virtues of the National Enquirer. That is, of course, because one would be hard pressed to associate the tabloid with virtuousness in the first place. But there is something to be said for the Enquirer’s cockroach-esque ability to maintain its place as a fixture of grocery-store checkouts. Trust, too, that its longevity has little to do with any reputation as a great bastion of journalistic integrity. Rather, it has survived by trading on one of humanity’s great truths: we all love a little bit of gossip.

Bristle at the suggestion if you wish. Deny it if you must. But the cold reality is no one is immune to a bit of idle talk, and most certainly not those within the hockeysphere. Rumors have become part of the daily news cycle. There are whole accounts all across social media dedicated to aggregating and disseminating the latest tidbits.

And our collective love of digging up the newest dirt even bleeds into television broadcasts, where entire intermission segments center around dissecting the latest chatter regarding this player’s trade availability or that player’s contract negotiations.

But much like understanding that the yarns spun in the Enquirer aren’t worth the paper on which they are printed, an essential part of living in the age of off-ice gossip is learning to distinguish fact from fiction. For John Q. Public, that’s not always an easy thing. Doing so requires a smidgen of media literacy and a working cow-excrement detector. For the media types, it’s about leaning on well-placed sources. When you’re an NHL GM, though? You set out to hear these things straight from the horse’s mouth. And that is what brings us to Utah Mammoth GM Bill Armstrong.

Not unlike most rumor hounds, Armstrong couldn’t help but raise an eyebrow when word trickled out that JJ Peterka was on the market. In three big-league seasons in Buffalo, Peterka had established himself as a legitimate top-six talent. He finished the 2024-25 campaign tied for second in scoring for the Sabres, and with Buffalo desperate to right the ship, Peterka seemed a no-brainer to remain a fixture of the team’s lineup for years to come.

One can understand, then, why Armstrong was skeptical of the trade talk.

“It’s one of those things you ask those GMs when you’re talking to them,” Armstrong told reporters. “ ‘Is this true? Is there any life to this story?’ Most times, there’s none. But this particular one had some legs.”

That’s not to say mapping out a swap for Peterka was as simple as a single phone call. As Armstrong put it, acquiring the 23-year-old right winger “took some time to mature and get across the finish line.” When all was said and done, the Mammoth sent 23-year-old right winger Josh Doan and 25-year-old defenseman Michael Kesselring the Sabres’ way in exchange for Peterka. The cherry on top? Peterka’s almost-immediate commitment to the project in Utah.

It just shows how committed I am to Utah, how excited I am and how much I believe in that group- JJ Peterka on signing a five-year deal.
-

An RFA at the time he was traded, Peterka signed a five-year, $38.5-million contract in the aftermath of his move to Utah. His $7.7-million cap hit makes him the franchise’s highest-paid forward.

“Sometimes, you talk to guys when they’re traded to you and they’re in shock,” Armstrong said. “(JJ) was expecting it and excited about coming to Utah.”

For Peterka, putting pen to paper was an easy choice, and that wasn’t only because of the dollars-and-cents of it all. When the Mammoth (nee Hockey Club) touched down in Utah last summer, a move made on the back of the Arizona Coyotes’ protracted relocation saga, Peterka took note of the reception they received. He was also blown away by the atmosphere when he visited with Buffalo last season. And this is to say nothing of the talent in the lineup. That the mountains of Salt Lake City had a way of making the Munich native feel at home didn’t hurt either. Put it all together, and a long-term deal was a no-brainer.

“It just shows how committed I am to Utah, how excited I am and how much I believe in that group – what they’ve got going and what they’re building there,” Peterka said.

What the Mammoth are constructing – and have been dating back to their final days as the Coyotes – is a roster brimming with budding young stars. The squad appears poised to contend not just in the cutthroat Central Division but for a consistent spot in the Western Conference playoff picture.

Logan Cooley, Daniil But, JJ Peterka (Isaiah J. Downing-Imagn Images)

But, as is evident by the fact Utah spent the 2024-25 season flitting in and out of wild-card contention before ultimately finishing on the outside looking in, the up-and-coming outfit is not without its flaws.

“You always have to be aware of where you are in the build and where you’re going,” Armstrong said. “Where we’re going is we needed somebody in the top two lines that could put the puck in the net and could have that ability to have impact.”

That need was painfully apparent at times last season. At all strengths, Utah’s ability to generate shots and scoring chances added up to the NHL’s 10th-most expected goals (258.2). Even with Clayton Keller, Logan Cooley and Dylan Guenther in the lineup, though, Utah struggled to turn opportunities into actual offensive output. By season’s end, the club’s 240 goals tied for 20th in the NHL. And that’s where Peterka comes in.

Though he has flown somewhat under the radar, Peterka has proven to be one of the league’s most-lethal shooters over the past two seasons. Look no further than the rate at which he has outperformed his expected offensive numbers. Among the 500-plus skaters to play at least 1,500 minutes at all strengths since the start of 2023-24, Peterka ranks an impressive – though not necessarily awe-inspiring – 113th in the NHL, producing 41.5 expected goals. He’s exceeded expectations, however, by netting 55 goals over that span.

And it’s by that measure, the difference between expected and actual results, that Peterka has proven himself to be an exceptionally gifted finisher. Among that cohort of 500-plus skaters, only 27 have outstripped their expected total by as much or more than Peterka’s 13.5 goals above expected.

The same ability to deliver is apparent when measuring per hour of ice time, too.

Though he’s not in the same stratosphere as compatriot Leon Draisaitl or former Sabres teammate Tage Thompson – who rank first and second with .60-plus goals more than expected per 60 minutes over the past two campaigns – Peterka has exceeded his expected per-hour goal production by .29 at all strengths.

That tied him for 25th in the NHL over the past two campaigns. To put that into context, Peterka ranks ahead of Nathan MacKinnon, Jack Eichel and Filip Forsberg. It also puts Peterka level with or clear of the top players available this summer, which included Mitch Marner, Nikolaj Ehlers and Brock Boeser.

That alone would make Peterka a fit on any team in the league, of course. But what gives the Mammoth even greater confidence that Peterka will be especially suited to the organization is that his style fits the way coach Andre Tourigny wants his team to play: north-south and up-tempo.

“The one thing I’ve learned about him from watching him over the years is he’s got a unique ability to create a ton of speed down the wings,” Armstrong said.

JJ Peterka and Sean Durzi (Rob Gray-Imagn Images)

That’s an asset Peterka has honed over the years. In fact, it dates back to the days when playing in the NHL was nothing but a distant dream. Peterka grew up a multi-sport athlete, and he sounds like he’s rattling off a list of Olympic events when naming his hobbies. His interest in multiple sporting disciplines led him to spend his winters balancing hockey with short-track speed skating. And while he eventually ditched the spandex bodysuit, the technique he learned on the oval remains to this day.

“I was always one of the fastest guys, probably because of that,” Peterka said. “Translating that to hockey wasn’t too hard. Obviously, not as many turns, but for straight-line skating and that stuff, it really helps.”

It’s one of those things you ask those GMs about. ‘Is there any life to this story?’ This particular one had some legs- Utah GM Bill Armstrong on rumors of Peterka's availability.
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Despite Peterka’s skill set and promising on-ice results, no one is expecting him to arrive and act as an immediate panacea for Utah’s scoring woes, nor is he being heralded as the missing piece who will singlehandedly push the club into Stanley Cup contention. That’s not the kind of pressure Armstrong wants to put on the youngster, either. This is all new for Peterka, who said getting traded was a “weird feeling.” He’ll have to put down new roots in a new city and without the benefit of any familiar faces – his lone personal connections are to Utah prospects and fellow German national-team players Maksymilian Szuber and Julian Lutz.

Once that bedding-in period is complete, though, and Peterka has become familiar with his new Mammoth teammates, the hope is he will be one of the driving forces who help Utah turn promise and potential into post-season hockey and perhaps even a championship run.

That could happen in short order. It could be in due time. But Peterka is confident that, sooner or later, on-ice success is in the cards for the club.

“When you look at the roster and how many young players are there and already so good,” Peterka said, “I think just timeline-wise, for me, it’s going to be a perfect fit.”


This article appeared in our 2025 Meet the New Guys issue. The cover story for this issue features the newest Vegas Golden Knight, Mitch Marner, as he looks to shine in the desert. We also include features on new Jets forward Jonathan Toews, Canadiens D-man Noah Dobson and more. In addition, we take a look at the top 'new guys' from each NHL division.

You can get it in print for free when you subscribe to The Hockey News at THN.com/Free today. All subscriptions include complete access to more than 76 years of articles at The Hockey News Archive.

Paul Maurice On Last Year's Senators: They Accepted That 'This Isn't Just A Skill Show'

For years, the Ottawa Senators have been the NHL’s cautionary tale about the difficulty of rebuilding. They tried to do it the usual way – they tore down, stockpiled picks and prospects, and hoped to limit their mistakes. Under the old ownership and management, there was good and bad, but it was a long process that felt endless to a banged-up fan base desperate for something, anything, good to happen.

But after breaking through last season and ending an eight-year playoff drought, the Senators finally appear to be standing on the edge of something special. And if you’re looking for validation of that idea, it came Saturday morning from one of the league’s most respected voices.

Florida Panthers head coach Paul Maurice, whose club hosts the Senators tonight, spoke about how he sees parallels between the Senators and Panthers. When Maurice arrived in Florida three years ago, the Panthers were a coming-of-age team, and he guided them on a run of three Cup Final appearances and the past two Cup wins.

Asked what he notices about young teams like the Senators who make the playoffs and then come back the following year, Maurice didn’t hesitate.

“I think to get to the playoffs, you have to have a style of play," Maurice told the media. "Everybody says 'identity,' that everybody understands – we're going to play this way. So I don't think you luck into the playoffs. I think you have to have played a certain way for a certain number of games to give yourself a chance. It's very hard to get into the playoffs.

"So then (teams like the Sens) keep that identity. They get to keep that first bit of feel-good. I think Ottawa's done a great job with it.”

Maurice pointed to last season’s matchups between the two teams — the Sens won the season series 2-1. The games were competitive, physical, and fast-paced.

“We had great games with them," Maurice said. "We played game two last year. It was in Ottawa, we got beat 3-1, I think, maybe on an empty netter. It was a heck of a game. I mean, they had changed drastically in that kind of acceptance of this isn't just a skill show. They played hard and played well. And I felt all our games — I think we play very similar styles of hockey. And I think our games have been really good. They're hard. They're heavy. But they're fast. They're skilled."

Maurice went on to credit Ottawa’s head coach Travis Green, who enters his second season behind the Senators’ bench, for bringing structure and purpose to a group that once relied too heavily on raw talent.

“Travis, I think, is a fantastic coach. And I think he gets players to play with some passion and enjoy what they're doing. So this will be a good one tonight.”

The Senators finished just one point behind the Panthers in last season’s standings — a razor-thin margin Maurice was quick to put in perspective.

“Yeah, we beat them by a point. Is that accurate? OK, well, that's a point over 82 games. That's a rounding error. So we had the same regular season that they did last year. Theirs was legit.”

Coming from a coach that's three seasons away from passing Scotty Bowman for most career games coached in the NHL (he's number two right now), that kind of endorsement carries weight. Maurice knows how small the margin can be between “almost there” and “arrived.”

“You get into the playoffs, you can lose in the first round, you can win the Stanley Cup, and almost play the exact same hockey. When we look back, we attach this brilliance to the team that won. Well, they won, and they get to do that. But then those other teams are right there. They're just all right there.

"So there's no easy first round. You can lose in the first round and be a really, really good team.”

As an aside, not many NHL coaches run a more thoughtful, interesting, and often entertaining media availability than Paul Maurice.

The Senators may now be entering the phase the Panthers once did, but capitalizing on their potential in the dramatic way Florida has is, quite frankly, an almost impossible task. The league just has so many great teams, and so many things would need to go their way.

But Sens fans can dream, hope springs eternal, and stranger things have happened.

Meanwhile, as we look ahead to Saturday night's matchup, it will serve as a fantastic measuring stick for the Senators – a team on the rise, staring across at what it hopes to become.

More Sens Headlines From The Hockey News Ottawa:
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Travis Green Says Senators Are 'Headed In the Right Direction'
Senators Send Yakemchuk To The Minors, Place Batherson And Kleven On IR
Sens Land A True NHL Heavyweight In A Deal With The Devils
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Capitals Head Coach Spencer Carbery On Islanders: 'This Is A Much More Dynamic Team”

Washington Capitals head coach Spencer Carbery views the New York Islanders as a much different team than they have been in years past. 

“This is a much more dynamic team," Carbery said following Capitals morning skate. "Going way back when Barry [Trotz] was here and Matt Martin, those teams were just...they had a real identity. I think that identity’s shifting a little bit to where they’re much more dynamic offensively. Tons of plays from each line off entires, getting middle ice, finding slot-line passes. Like you watch some of the goals that they scored the other night. Those are some high-end plays, and so were some of the opportunities, scoring chances that they created against Pittsburgh.

"So that’s what we sort of look at, and then you start to sort of get a feel for what a team does well, and I think that’s what’s been sticking out lately about the Islanders.”

When it comes to No. 1 overall pick Matthew Schaefer, his wheels are what stands out.

"Elite, elite, elite skater is what jumps off the page," Carbery said. "And to start with that as a foundation as a defenseman...had a pretty good start. That was apparent in the Pittsburgh game. There were a couple of instances where he could really showcase his agility, quickness, lateral mobility, and strength, all of which will come with maturity and as he develops in the NHL. But you can see he's an elite, elite skater."

Puck drop between these two teams is coming your way at 7 PM ET. 

Rangers At Penguins Preview: Mike Sullivan Returns To Pittsburgh

The Pittsburgh Penguins will try to improve to 3-0-0 on the season when they host Mike Sullivan and the New York Rangers on Saturday night. 

Sullivan will return to PPG Paints Arena for the first time since becoming the head coach of the Rangers during the offseason. He's arguably the best coach in Penguins' history and helped them win back-to-back Stanley Cups in 2016 and 2017.

He was the perfect coach at the perfect time for the Penguins and will likely get a standing ovation from Penguins fans when he's honored during the game. 

Arturs Silovs will start in goal for the Penguins after shutting the Rangers out on Tuesday, 3-0. He made the saves he needed to make and was a calm presence in net throughout the game. This will be his second start of the season after Tristan Jarry started against the New York Islanders on Thursday. 

Justin Brazeau scored two goals in Tuesday's game, including the game-winner, before Blake Lizotte added one at the end of the third period. 

Saturday morning's skate was optional, so the lines were a little bit jumbled. There's also a chance that Bryan Rust makes his season debut after missing the first two games with a lower-body injury. He was on the ice for the skate and has been practicing with the team this week. 

Igor Shesterkin will start in goal for the Rangers, but they'll be without forward Vincent Trocheck, who suffered a lower-body injury against the Buffalo Sabres on Thursday. He's week-to-week with that injury. 

Puck drop is set for 7 p.m. ET and fans can watch the game on SportsNet Pittsburgh.


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Norris Out Long-Term After Being Injured In Opener

One of the things that the Buffalo Sabres needed to make a legitimate run at the Stanley Cup Playoffs was a healthy Josh Norris playing on the top line as a #1 center, setting up sniper Tage Thompson.That hope lasted just one game, as Sabres head coach Lindy Ruff announced on Saturday that Norris will be out a “significant period of time” after being injured in the club’s  4-0 loss to the New York Rangers on Thursday.    

Norris left the game late in the third period after taking a faceoff. He fell to the ice, struggled to get back to the bench and did not return to the game. After practice on Friday before the club departed for Boston, Ruff said that Norris was upset about the injury after putting in a lot of work during the summer to get ready for the first full season with Buffalo. After the club’s morning skate at TD Garden on Saturday, the Sabres head coach provided an update. 

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“(Norris is) going to miss a significant amount of time, I don’t know what that amount is for sure. He is still being evaluated,” Ruff said. “It’s an upper-body (injury), it’s not related to anything he has had in the past.”

 The 26-year-old center was acquired by the Sabres in a deal that sent Dylan Cozens last March. Injuries have been a constant presence for Norris in his six-year NHL career. The former San Jose first rounder played the full 56-game COVID-shortened season in 2020-21, but since has missed 148 games with an assortment of injuries, including a serious shoulder injury. After the trade, Norris played just three games for Buffalo and was out the rest of  the season.. 

Ruff indicated that Jiri Kulich will take Norris’s place on the top line with Tage Thompson. The Sabres have recalled center Josh Dunne from AHL Rochester to fill Norris’s roster spot. Jason Zucker will play alongside Kulich and Thompson, since Zach Benson is not making the trip to Boston after having to be admitted to hospital after a puck hit his left cheek in practice on Wednesday. 

 

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