Avalanche beat Stars 2-0 to extend their edge in the Central Division race

DALLAS (AP) — Martin Necas broke a scoreless tie midway through the third period, Nathan MacKinnon added an empty-netter and the NHL-leading Colorado Avalanche took a big step toward home-ice advantage throughout the playoffs with a 2-0 victory over the Dallas Stars on Saturday.

Scott Wedgewood made 17 saves against his former team for his third shutout of the season in the first meeting of these Central Division rivals not to go to a shootout. Dallas won two of those three.

The regulation win gave the Avalanche an eight-point edge over the Stars, who have five games remaining. Colorado has seven games to go.

The Stars won each of the postseason meetings with the Avs the past two seasons, and a second-round showdown could be looming this spring.

Dallas is headed toward an opening-round match with third-place Minnesota, which pulled within four points of the Stars with a 4-1 victory over Ottawa and has an extra game remaining.

While Wedgewood has a good chance to start in net for the Avalanche, the Stars went with Casey DeSmith, the backup to Jake Oettinger, in the final regular-season meeting. DeSmith made 20 stops.

Colorado was without star defenseman Cale Makar for a second straight game due to an upper-body injury, while fellow blueliner Brent Burns became the second player in NHL history to play in 1,000 consecutive games.

RANGERS 4, RED WINGS 1

NEW YORK (AP) — Failing to score until there were 32 seconds left and allowing a hat trick to Gabriel Perreault, Detroit lost an important game in its pursuit of a playoff spot in a defeat to New York.

With six games left, the Red Wings remain on the outside looking in as part of a competitive Eastern Conference race down the stretch. They are among a handful of teams fighting for the East’s second and final wild-card spot.

Detroit’s loss clinched a berth for the Buffalo Sabres, who ended the NHL’s longest postseason drought at 14 seasons. Though his teammates came up empty on scoring, goaltender John Gibson made some big saves among his 17, playing well in his 14th consecutive start.

Gibson allowed a deflection goal to Jaroslav Chmelar 13 minutes in, then one each to Perreault in the second and third periods. The first came from close range after a perfect pass from Mika Zibanejad and the second off the rush.

Perreault finished off his first career hat trick with an empty-netter with 1:44 left.

WILD 4, SENATORS 1

OTTAWA, Ontario (AP) — Ryan Hartman scored twice to lead Minnesota to a win over Ottawa.

Jonas Brodin and Jake Middleton also scored for the Wild (43-21-12), and Jesper Wallstedt made 33 saves.

Linus Ullmark stopped 19 shots for the Senators (39-27-10). Drake Batherson scored for Ottawa.

Minnesota built a 3-0 lead through the first two periods and extended its advantage midway through the third on a great effort by Quinn Hughes. Hughes kept the puck in at the line, spun and found Middleton on the opposite side. Middleton fired through traffic for his second goal of the season.

Batherson spoiled Wallstedt’s shutout attempt with just over three minutes remaining in the game. Batherson then left the game, but returned after a brief absence.

The Wild capitalized on a Senators turnover late in the first that led to Hartman’s first goal of the game. Hartman scored his second of the game and 22nd of the season when Mats Zuccharello found him at the top of the slot and he beat Ullmark on the glove side at 15:31 of the second.

LIGHTNING 3, BRUINS 1

TAMPA, Fla. (AP) — Darren Raddysh broke a tie with 5:31 left and Tampa Bay beat Boston, hours after the Lightning secured a playoff spot.

The Atlantic Division-leading Lightning wrapped up the Eastern Conference postseason position with Detroit’s 4-1 loss at the New York Rangers in the afternoon. Boston holds the first wild-card spot in the East.

After assisting on defenseman Charle-Edouard D’Astous’ tying goal at 2:13 of the third, Raddysh put the Lightning ahead with a sharp-angle shot past goalie Jeremy Swayman from the right side on a break.

Nikita Kucherov added his 42nd goal of the season into an empty net, and Andrei Vasilevskiy made 21 saves to help the Lightning finish a seven-game homestand 5-1-1.

Casey Mittelstadt scored for Boston in the second. Swayman stopped 20 shots as the Bruins lost their second straight on a four-game trip. They lost 2-1 at Florida on Thursday night.

PENGUINS 9, PANTHERS 4

PITTSBURGH (AP) — Evgeni Malkin had his 14th career hat trick and added an assist to become the 23rd player in NHL history to reach 1,400 career points, and Pittsburgh routed Florida to eliminate the two-time defending Stanley Cup champions from playoff contention.

The Panthers began the season hoping to become the first team since the New York Islanders of the early 1980s to win three straight championships. It never came close to happening as injuries and shaky play in net sent them tumbling to the bottom of the standings early in the season, a hole from which they never fully recovered.

While Florida will miss the playoffs for the first time in four years, Pittsburgh is inching toward a return to the postseason after three straight absences.

The Penguins strengthened their hold on second in the Metropolitan Division by blitzing the Panthers during the first half of the second period, pouring in four goals in less than 10 minutes.

Anthony Mantha broke a 2-2 tie with his 31st goal of the season just 1:51 into the second. Malkin then beat Sergei Bobrovsky twice in less than three minutes to create more than enough breathing room.

Erik Karlsson had a goal and three assists for Pittsburgh. Noel Acciari and Elmer Soderblom added a goal and an assist. Penguins captain Sidney Crosby picked up a pair of assists to move past Hall of Famer and childhood idol Steve Yzerman and into seventh place on the NHL’s career scoring list (1,756).

JETS 2, BLUE JACKETS 1

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — Kyle Connor scored twice and Winnipeg overcame an early deficit to beat Columbus, keeping its playoff hopes alive and sending the Blue Jackets to their sixth straight loss.

Winnipeg moved to 78 points, a point out of the final wild-card spot in the crowded Western Conference.

Connor tied it with 1:46 left in the second period, and scored the winner with 9:02 left in the third. He has 36 goals this season. Mark Scheifele had his 59th and 60th assists, and Connor Hellebuyck made 15 saves.

Ivan Provorov scored for Columbus, which has lost four straight at home and remains outside the Eastern Conference wild-card picture. Jet Greaves stopped 23 shots.

Provorov scored on Columbus’ first shot 1:17 into the game. It was the Blue Jackets’ 57th goal by a defenseman this season, a franchise record.

Columbus then went more than 25 minutes without another shot as Winnipeg took control.

CAPITALS 6, SABRES 2

WASHINGTON (AP) — Aliaksei Protas had a goal and assist in his return from injury and Washington beat Buffalo.

Jakob Chychrun and Connor McMichael also had a goal and assist, and Dylan Strome, Ryan Leonard and Tom Wilson also scored for the Capitals, who have won four of their last five and moved within one point of the second wild-card spot in the Eastern Conference.

Rasmus Dahlin had a goal and assist, and Beck Malenstyn also scored for the Sabres, who clinched a playoff berth for the first time in an NHL-record 14 seasons but have dropped two in a row.

Washington had Buffalo on its heels early, scoring three goals in the first six minutes for a 3-0 lead.

Chychrun opened the scoring with a rebound off a shot from Alex Ovechkin in front, and 20 seconds later, Strome finished off a tic-tac-toe passing play to extend the lead. Just over two minutes later, McMichael picked up a rim from Chychrun off the boards and snuck it past Alex Lyon, ending Lyon’s night as Colten Ellis took over in net.

HURRICANES 4, ISLANDERS 3

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) — Seth Jarvis had two goals and an assist and Carolina beat New York for its fourth victory in five games.

Sebastian Aho broke a tie with a short-handed goal in the second period, Jackson Blake also scored and K’Andre Miller had two assists, and rookie Brandon Bussi made 13 saves to boost his season record to 29-6-1.

Marc Gatcomb, Max Shabanov and Anders Lee scored for the Islanders, They have a four-game losing streak for the first time this season. Ilya Sorokin made 36 saves in his 11th straight start.

Lee’ goal with 1:37 to play with the Islanders — third in the Metropolitan Division — going with an extra skater gave them a chance but they couldn’t break through again.

The Islanders had one-goal leads after Gatcomb scored in the first and Shabanov in the second. Shabanov was in his third game since the Olympic break and his first since March 13. He had been out with a lower-body injury and then missed games as a healthy scratch.

Aho’s go-ahead goal with 3:43 left in the second period gave the Hurricanes their sixth short-handed goal in nine games.

CANADIENS 4, DEVILS 3, SO

NEWARK, N.J. (AP) — Oliver Kapanen’s decisive goal in the shootout gave Montreal a win over New Jersey for its eighth straight win.

Kapanen scored on a wrist shot past Devils goalie Jake Allen in the fifth round of the shootout.

The win gave Montreal 100 points for the first time since the 2016-17 season when it accumulated 103 points.

Ivan Demidov, Lane Hutson and Jayden Struble scored for Montreal, and Jakub Dobes had 35 saves.

Timo Meier, Jack Hughes and Dawson Mercer scored for New Jersey and Allen stopped 26 shots.

Cole Caufield picked up two assists, but failed to notch his 50th goal for Montreal. Caufield will get another shot Sunday when these two teams face off again in Montreal. He is sitting at 49 goals.

Caufield is looking to be the first Montreal Canadiens player to score 50 goals in a season in more than three decades.

KINGS 7, MAPLE LEAFS 6, OT

LOS ANGELES (AP) — Quinton Byfield scored 2:33 into overtime, Adrian Kempe had two goals and two assists, and Los Angeles beat Toronto.

Byfield finished off Artemi Panarin’s pass for his second goal of the game, securing a crucial win for the Kings, who set an NHL single-season record by playing their 31st game past regulation.

William Nylander missed his shot on a breakaway, leading to a three-on-two rush the other way where Byfield netted his 20th goal of the season.

With the win, Los Angeles moved into the second wild-card playoff spot in the Western Conference.

Panarin, Samuel Helenius and Alex Laferriere also scored for the Kings, and Darcy Kuemper made 14 saves.

Matthew Knies had two goals, and John Tavares, Easton Cowan, Steven Lorentz and Nicholas Robertson also scored for the Maple Leafs. Joseph Woll made 33 saves.

MAMMOTH 7, CANUCKS 4

VANCOUVER, British Columbia (AP) — Clayton Keller had the third hat trick of his career and Utah Mammoth extended its winning streak to three games with a victory over Vancouver.

Keller’s first three-goal game of the season came on a disputed power-play score and two empty-net goal. His man-advantage goal at 7:04 of the second period came on the deflection of a point shot by Dylan Guenther that gave Utah a 3-2 lead. The goal was originally waived off due to his stick touching the puck above the cross bar. After a video review, the referee ruled the stick was at or below the cross bar.

Dylan Guenther and Lawson Crowse each had a goal and an assist for Utah, which continued to push for a Western Conference playoff spot. Kailer Yamamoto and Liam O’Brien, who was in the lineup after 18 games as a healthy scratch, also scored for the Mammoth, who won their fourth straight road game. Logan Cooley added two assists. Karel Vejmelka made 19 saves for Utah.

Linus Karlsson, playing in his 100th NHL game, scored twice for Vancouver. Marco Rossi and Jake DeBrusk added power-play goals and Filip Hronek had two assists. Nikita Tolopilo stopped 17 shots for the Canucks, who have one win in their last nine games.

Buffalo Sabres Need To Bounce Back Big Time

The Buffalo Sabres had a tough game against the Washington Capitals on Saturday, as they lost by a 6-2 final score. This is after the Sabres fell to the Ottawa Senators by a 4-1 final score on Thursday. 

While the Sabres have officially earned their playoff spot and ended their postseason drought, this final stretch of the season is still very important for them. This is because they are currently fighting with both the Tampa Bay Lightning and the Canadiens for the top spot in the Atlantic Division standings. 

The Lightning are currently at the top of the Atlantic Division standings with 102 points, while the Sabres and Canadiens both have 100 points. However, the Canadiens now hold the second spot in the Atlantic, as they have a game in hand. The Habs also have won each of their last eight games, so they are getting red-hot at the right time. 

With all of this, there is no question that the Sabres need to bounce back immediately. This is especially so when noting that the Sabres' next contest is against the Lightning. It will be interesting to see if the Sabres can turn things back around and pick up a win against the Bolts on Monday from here. 

Matthew Schaefer Breaks 43-Year Old Record

The New York Islanders knew last June they'd be drafting a special player with the first overall pick.

Matthew Schaefer has destroyed any and all expectations set for him in his rookie year.

Schaefer has broken countless records, team and league-wide.

It's no surprise that he broke a 43-year-old record on Saturday night in Carolina. The rookie phenom broke Phil Housley's 43-year-old record for the most points by an 18-year-old defenseman.

It's a wildly impressive feat for Schaefer, one that further cements just how special this season has been for him.

It's easy to lose track of how special these records and achievements are, especially when it feels like a new one gets met every single game.

It shouldn't be lost on any Islanders fan that Housley originally set this record back in the 1982-83 season, the same year the Islanders last hoisted the Stanley Cup.

That's how long it's been since there's been a game-destroying rookie of this talent, and that was the NHL saw its highest-scoring ever.

At this point, there are no more historical comparables. Schaefer's truly in a league of his own, blistering a new trail ahead.

The unfortunate side is that the record-breaking point came in a fourth-straight defeat for the Islanders. 

Schaefer is the silver lining in that frustration. 

Schaefer and the Islanders have four long days off before their next game. They'll host the Toronto Maple Leafs in UBS Arena next.

Karlsson Scores Twice In Canucks’ 7–4 Loss To The Utah Mammoth

The Vancouver Canucks celebrated two NHL game milestones tonight in their 7–4 loss to the Utah Mammoth. Prior to puck-drop, they honoured Evander Kane for his 1000th NHL game played on March 30 against the Vegas Golden Knights. On the ice, Linus Karlsson scored twice in his 100th NHL game, while Jake DeBrusk and Marco Rossi also found the back of the net. Nikita Tolopilo started in net, stopping 17 of 23 shots faced. 

The biggest piece of news occurred prior to puck drop. While Tolopilo was named the starting goaltender ahead of tonight’s game and ultimately ended up playing, Jiří Patera was called up only a few minutes prior to Vancouver’s warm-up. When both teams took to the ice for warm-ups, only Tolopilo came out. Canucks Head Coach Adam Foote later clarified why Kevin Lankinen was absent so close to puck-drop. 

“He woke up and didn’t feel right, didn’t feel good. So we had to make that call this morning,” he said post-game, also clarifying that there is no current timeline on Lankinen’s absence. 

The 100-game man made the biggest impression of his teammates in tonight’s matchup. Karlsson found the back of the net early in the first, collecting the puck along the boards and bringing it into the slot to score his 14th of the season. In the second period, it was Karlsson again who scored to even the score up at two, deflecting a shot from Victor Mancini past Mammoth goaltender Karel Vejmelka. 

“It’s something you dream of, to play in the NHL, and hopefully I have a couple more in me,” Karlsson said of his 100th game tonight. “You want to be a full-time NHLer and a hundred is a good start.” 

Vancouver’s power play has been hot as of late, continuing their streak of success by scoring twice tonight in what is now their fifth consecutive game. With the two tallies tonight, the Canucks are now up to 11 goals in their past 10 games. Adding to that is the fact that DeBrusk currently has five of these goals down this particular stretch. 

“I think the main thing is Hronek getting more comfortable up there. Two is where Boeser and DeBrusk are playing off each other in the right spot, whether one’s low, depending where the puck is, they’re a good tandem. They’re working well together with tips and rebounds. And I think Marco is pretty patient on that half wall. He doesn’t just throw pucks away, usually. He’s pretty consistent at making the right play,” Foote said about the power play’s recent string of success.  

Having said that, their first opportunity lacked the same inspiration that it has shown recently. The Canucks gave up more high-end chances than produced their own during this man-advantage, allowing two breakaway sequences and ultimately giving Utah the space to score their fourth goal of the game. 

“We were struggling early in this game. They were pressuring us up high. We weren’t getting down low quick enough. Then I thought our breakouts gave them a little bit of momentum. In the second period, we had two bad breakouts and gave them momentum. And then they got one right after that, 5-on-5. But then we got a couple quick ones.”  

While tonight’s score ultimately didn’t paint the best picture, Vancouver still managed to get some goals on a night that celebrated two players’ career milestones. 

Apr 4, 2026; Vancouver, British Columbia, CAN; Vancouver Canucks center Linus Karlsson (94) skates with puck against Utah Mammoth center Nick Schmaltz (8) during the second period at Rogers Arena. Mandatory Credit: Simon Fearn-Imagn Images
Apr 4, 2026; Vancouver, British Columbia, CAN; Vancouver Canucks center Linus Karlsson (94) skates with puck against Utah Mammoth center Nick Schmaltz (8) during the second period at Rogers Arena. Mandatory Credit: Simon Fearn-Imagn Images

Stats and Facts: 

  • Brock Boeser tallies his 477th point, tying Pavel Bure for eighth all-time in Canucks history 
  • Canucks extend their current power play goal streak to five consecutive games 
  • Vancouver remains winless against the Mammoth 

Scoring Summary: 

1st Period: 

2:28 - VAN: Linus Karlsson (14) from Pierre-Olivier Joseph and Liam Öhgren 

13:34 - UTA: Kailer Yamamoto (11) from Logan Cooley 

18:30 - UTA: Clayton Keller (23) from Lawson Crouse and Nick DeSimone 

2nd Period: 

2:05 - VAN: Linus Karlsson (15) from Victor Mancini and Teddy Blueger 

7:04 - UTA: Clayton Keller (24) from Dylan Guenther and Mikhail Sergachev (PPG) 

11:55 - UTA: Dylan Guenther (38) from John Marino and Logan Cooley 

3rd Period: 

0:20 - VAN: Jake DeBrusk (19) from Filip Hronek (PPG) 

1:32 - UTA: Lawson Crouse (21) from Clayton Keller 

4:40 - VAN: Marco Rossi (10) from Filip Hronek and Brock Boeser (PPG) 

11:45 - UTA: Liam O’Brien (3) from Brandon Tanev and Nate Schmidt 

19:07 - UTA: Clayton Keller (25) from Nick Schmaltz and Ian Cole (ENG) 

Up Next: 

The Canucks will play in their second-last game at home when they take on the Golden Knights on Tuesday. Vancouver has dropped both of their first two games against Vegas this season, losing 5–2 on February 4 and 4–2 on March 30. Tuesday will be the first and only time Vegas comes to Vancouver, with puck drop slated for 7:00 pm PT. 

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

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Quinton Byfield Calls Game In OT, Propels Kings Over Maple Leafs

Artemi Panarin continues his great play with the Kings, this time with a great find to Quinton Byfield on the rush in overtime to score the game-winning goal and lift the Los Angeles Kings (31-26-19) over the Toronto Maple Leafs, 7-6. 

In a tie game in overtime, we've seen this before from the Kings, and it's never good. But this time, Los Angeles capitalizes in the clutch to win a huge game in a must-win situation to stay alive in the playoff race. 

This win makes up for that heartbreaking loss the Kings suffered on Thursday against the Nashville Predators. 

The game opened up as it has in the last four games. Once again, the Kings went down by two goals to start the first period; it's the third time in their last four games that they have started off this poorly in the opening frame. 

The recent defeats the Kings have been suffering stem from terrible early starts and fighting their way back into the game, which ends in the same pattern: losing in overtime.  

Los Angeles went six minutes in the first period, not even recording one shot on goal, which tells you everything about why Toronto held a 2-0 lead to end the first period. 

The early sluggish turnovers by Los Angeles led to the two-goal hole that the Maple Leafs poured on the Kings.

Despite the offensive struggles early on by the Kings, they still outshot Toronto 11-8 after 20 minutes. 

The second period began immediately with Los Angeles playing with more urgency and tenacity, scoring two goals in two minutes.  At the 18:49 minute mark, the Kings played a beautiful rush on transition with Jared Wright leading the play to find Quinton Byfield for the tap-in goal. 

Another goal was capitalized on by the Kings after a Maple Leaf turnover. Mikey Anderson led the 2-on-1 rush out of the box and fed a trailing Adrian Kempe on the rush to bury his 31st goal of the season, tying the game up 2-2. 

Toronto had two consecutive goals that were called off, which helped the Kings dodge a bullet. One goal was called off for offside, and the second for too many players on the ice, which would've had the Maple Leafs up 4-2, leaving the score tied.  

Despite the two overturned goals, the Kings didn't capitalize on those calls and ended up giving up another goal, which counted. 

The Maple Leafs converted on their first of two power plays, scoring on the loose puck, to give Toronto back the lead. 

But, over five minutes later, the Kings once again tied things up after a beautiful pass from Brandt Clarke, finding Artemi Panarin for the tip-in goal in tight, tying the scoreboard 3-3. 

With just under 11 seconds to go in the second period, the Maple Leafs would once again score on their second power play of the night after great passing. Easton Cowan beat Darcy Kuemper to give Toronto the lead again. 

Despite trailing 4-3, Los Angeles was much better in the second. Recognizing that the playoffs are on the line, they were more aggressive on both sides of the ice and outshot the visiting team 17-6. 

Now, this is where all the chaos began for Los Angeles. Entering the third period down by one, the Kings scored three consecutive goals to take a two-goal lead. Here's how it all started. 

Panarin led with terrific patience on the puck, skating around the neck, redirecting traffic passing the puck to Adrian Kempe, who scored his second goal of the night through traffic to once again tie the game up. 

Big Sammy Helenius put Los Angeles back in front for the first time just 28 seconds later after tying it up. Helenius got help with a nice moving screen by Jeff Malott to fire the puck through the Maple Leafs' goaltender and give the Kings their first lead.

Over a minute later, Los Angeles continued its great passing and movement, getting a lot of open looks. This time, it was Alex Laferriere joining the party after a great setup by Trevor Moore on the left side of the ice to finish the play and let Laferriere score. 

Despite holding on to a two-goal lead, the Maple Leafs didn't go away that easily. The Kings started playing like how they did early on, careless turnovers and errors, letting Toronto capitalize and score two consecutive goals, tying the game 6-6 just like that.

 

Both teams failed to score in the final five minutes of regulation after Toronto tied it up, forcing another overtime for the Kings, who now have the most overtime games played in NHL history with their 31st today.

After a breakaway chance for the Maple Leafs to score and win the game, Darcy Kuemper got a huge stop to set up the 3-on-2 led by Artemi Panarin, who found Quinton Byfield on the rush to score the game-winning goal, lifting the Kings over the Maple Leafs.  

Key Stats

Adrian Kempe finished with two goals, two assists, and four points. Artemi Panarin had a great night as well, scoring a goal, assisting on the game-winning goal, and finishing with three points. Quinton Byfield pitched in two goals and two points, while Trevor Moore had a nice showing with two assists and two points. 

The Kings are now back in the playoff picture with tonight's win, at 81 points and holding a two-point lead over the Sharks and Predators, who will face off tonight. The winner of that game will tie the Kings for the final playoff spot. 

The Kings' next matchup is Monday against the Nashville Predators at 7:30 PM PT, in what will be the biggest game of the season for the Kings to continue to stay in the playoff hunt. 

Image

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Devils fall short in shootout loss to Canadiens

NEWARK, N.J. (AP) — Oliver Kapanen’s decisive goal in the shootout gave the Montreal Canadiens a 4-3 win over the New Jersey Devils for their eighth straight win on Saturday.

Kapanen scored on a wrist shot past Devils goalie Jake Allen in the fifth round of the shootout.

The win gave Montreal 100 points for the first time since the 2016-17 season when it accumulated 103 points.

Ivan Demidov, Lane Hutson and Jayden Struble scored for Montreal, and Jakub Dobes had 35 saves.

Timo Meier, Jack Hughes and Dawson Mercer scored for New Jersey and Allen stopped 26 shots.

Cole Caufield picked up two assists, but failed to notch his 50th goal for Montreal. Caufield will get another shot Sunday when these two teams face off again in Montreal. He is sitting at 49 goals.

Caufield is looking to be the first Montreal Canadiens player to score 50 goals in a season in more than three decades.

Mercer scored from Meier and Nico Hischier at 13:08 of the second period to cut the Montreal lead to 3-1.

Hutson’s unassisted goal came just 1:16 after Demidov scored on the power play at 8:12.

Struble’s second goal of the season and just the sixth of his career provided Montreal with a 1-0 lead late in the first period.

Up next

New Jersey is at Montreal on Sunday.

Clayton Keller's 3rd career hat trick helps Mammoth to a 7-4 win over the Canucks

VANCOVUER, British Columbia (AP) — Clayton Keller had the third hat trick of his career and the Utah Mammoth extended their winning streak to three games with a 7-4 victory over the Vancouver Canucks on Saturday night.

Keller's first three-goal game of the season came on a disputed power-play score and two empty-net goal. His man-advantage goal at 7:04 of the second period came on the deflection of a point shot by Dylan Guenther that gave Utah a 3-2 lead. The goal was originally waived off due to his stick touching the puck above the cross bar. After a video review, the referee ruled the stick was at or below the cross bar.

Dylan Guenther and Lawson Crowse each had a goal and an assist for Utah (40-30-6), which continued to push for a Western Conference playoff spot. Kailer Yamamoto and Liam O’Brien, who was in the lineup after 18 games as a healthy scratch, also scored for the Mammoth, who won their fourth straight road game. Logan Cooley added two assists. Karel Vejmelka made 19 saves for Utah.

Linus Karlsson, playing in his 100th NHL game, scored twice for Vancouver (22-46-8). Marco Rossi and Jake DeBrusk added power-play goals and Filip Hronek had two assists. Nikita Tolopilo stopped 17 shots for the Canucks, who have one win in their last nine games.

The Canucks called up goaltender Jiri Patera from Abbotsford of the AHL as the backup to replace Kevin Lankinen, who was a late scratch.

Before the opening faceoff there was a tribute to Vancouver native Evander Kane, who returned to the lineup to play his 1,001st game after missing the last two games with an undisclosed injury.

Up next

Mammoth: Host the Edmonton Oilers on Tuesday.

Canucks: Host the Vegas Golden Knights on Tuesday.

___

AP NHL: https://apnews.com/hub/nhl

Rookie Gabe Perreault adds latest high to promising Rangers season with hat trick in win

An image collage containing 2 images, Image 1 shows Gabe Perreault #94 of the New York Rangers scores a goal during the third period at Madison Square Garden, Saturday April 4th, 2026, in New York, NY. , Image 2 shows New York Rangers is greeted by center J.T. Miller #8 of the New York Rangers after he scores a goal during the third period at Madison Square Garden, Saturday April 4th, 2026, in New York, NY

Gabe Perreault grabbed the baton.

One of the Rangers’ most promising young players became the latest rookie to add optimism to the final leg of this lost season, recording his first career hat trick in Saturday’s 4-1 win over the Red Wings at Madison Square Garden and helping the team claim its fourth win in the past five games.

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tRY IT NOW

In the antepenultimate home game of a season that will end with one of the Rangers’ worst home records in the franchise’s 100-year history, the 20-year-old former first-round pick gave the packed crowd a rare memory worth carrying into next season.

Perreault became the fourth Rangers rookie in the past 30 years to record a hat trick, and one of five rookies in the league to do so this season.

His three multi-goal games this season are tied for second most among NHL rookies despite appearing in only 45 games. 

“The trust that he’s earning from his coaches and his teammates, he’s becoming a great player right in front of us,” captain J.T. Miller said. “It’s exciting to think he’s 20 years old. He’s only gonna get stronger and better and faster, and what he’s been able to do for us is really impressive. He’s just got a really good nose for the game and he’s super smart and has that skill when he gets a chance to make some plays.”

Gabe Perreault #94 of the New York Rangers scores a goal during the third period at Madison Square Garden, Saturday April 4th, 2026, in New York, NY. Jason Szenes for the New York Post

The game — which featured 31 saves from Jonathan Quick — started in surreal fashion for Perreault, lining up against Patrick Kane.

“He was my favorite player growing up,” Perreault said. “I looked up to him. On that first draw, I’m like, ‘Holy sh–t, I’m next to Patrick Kane.’ ”

Fellow Rangers rookie Jaroslav Chmelar opened the scoring by redirecting a blast from Vladislav Gavrikov with 6:41 left in the first period.

It was Chmelar’s fourth goal of the season and second in the past three games.

Fellow rookie Adam Sykora was credited with his first assist in his sixth career game.

Since March 2, Rangers rookies have recorded 17 goals and a total of 38 points.



Both marks lead the league in that span.

“We’re just trying to enjoy it and take this opportunity and run with it,” Perreault said of the team’s rookie class. “We’re trying to bring energy and have fun and enjoy every day together.”

Perreault, who had two points in the previous seven games, broke an 11-game goal drought (March 12) with 4:01 left in the second period, sending a shot over John Gibson’s glove, following a pass through traffic from Mika Zibanejad. 

New York Rangers is greeted by center J.T. Miller #8 of the New York Rangers after he scores a goal during the third period at Madison Square Garden, Saturday April 4th, 2026, in New York, NY. Jason Szenes for the New York Post

Perreault’s second goal was set up by a pretty feed from Jonny Brodzinski, which gave the Rangers (32-36-9) a 3-0 lead with 12:41 left in the third period.

“I think the game is slowing down in his mind and his hockey IQ is probably his greatest attribute,” head coach Mike Sullivan said. “He might not have the open-ice foot speed but he’s pretty elusive in traffic. With his vision and his brain and his stick skills, he’s finding ways to have success.”

As the clock sprinted down in the third period, Miller was able to get one more chance for Perreault, who scored his 10th goal of the season on an empty net with 1:44 to play.

First came the hats, falling to the ice.

Then came the hugs, enveloping the 5-foot-11 wing who found fans wherever he looked. 

“You can see the reaction on the bench, everyone was rooting for him,” Sullivan said. “He’s an easy guy to root for.”

Hurricanes 4, Islanders 3: Isles completely dominated in fourth straight loss

RALEIGH, NORTH CAROLINA - APRIL 04: Center Marc Gatcomb #16 of the New York Islanders looks on after being hit by left wing William Carrier #28 of the Carolina Hurricanes during the second period of the game against the New York Islanders at Lenovo Center on April 4, 2026 in Raleigh, North Carolina. (Photo by Josh Lavallee/NHLI via Getty Images) | NHLI via Getty Images

The Islanders took the lead twice in this game off early goals in the first and second period, but once again came up short. Marc Gatcomb scored his third of the season, Max Shabanov scored in his return to the lineup, Anders Lee picked up his third goal in four games, Mat Barzal got his 70th point of the season and, of course, we have a Matthew Schaefer Record Update.

Schaefer got an assist on Lee’s late goal, which was his 58th point of the season, the most by an 18 year old defenseman in NHL history.

Also worth noting, if you’re looking for positives in this late-season collapse, that Cal Ritchie picked up his 7th point in his last 7 games with an assist tonight, and all but one of his 4 assists were primary ones. It’s a good end to the season for the Isles’ other highly touted rookie who has had a solid season while Schaefer’s grabbed all the headlines.

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

First Period

Carolina got an early power play when Marc Gatcomb took a holding penalty just three minutes into the game, forcing Ilya Sorokin to make some big saves on Sebastian Aho. Scott Mayfield hit Jordan Martinook on the bench with the puck off a clearing attempt, and then right after the penalty expired, Gatcomb made it 1-0, assisted by Simon Holmström and Jean-Gabriel Pageau.

Ondrej Palat hit the post behind Brandon Bussi, just narrowly missing the opportunity to give the Islanders a 2-0 lead.

Then, Seth Jarvis made it 1-1 after beating Ryan Pulock one on one and snapping it past Sorokin. That play started after Mat Barzal’s shot was deflected to Sean Walker in the slot, who passed it up to a streaking Jarvis.

Second Period

Early in the second, Cal Ritchie set up Max Shabanov from behind the net, and Shabanov made it 2-1 in his first game back in the lineup in a while. It was his first goal since the end of December, too.

Adam Pelech was called for holding, and Sorokin once again needed to make some big saves. Mayfield pushed Sebastian Aho into the crossbar and both he and Jarvis ended up in the box after a scrum. No team was able to capitalize on that.

But Carolina absolutely dominated this period, and Jackson Blake eventually tied the game at 2, while the Islanders were held to just five shots in the game to that point.

The Hurricanes got another power play when Ryan Pulock was called for hooking, and the Isles killed that. Then the Islanders got a power play of their own, with Alexander Nikishin called for slashing Mayfield, but Sebastian Aho scored shorthanded to make it 3-2 Hurricanes.

Third Period

Jarvis scored less than a minute into the period to make it 4-2.

Barzal set up Pageau but Bussi made the save. Ritchie also took a shot saved by Bussi, and the Isles had a few good chances stopped in the second half of the period.

Sorokin went to the bench with 3 and a half minutes left, and Anders Lee deflects a Matthew Schaefer shot past Bussi to make it 4-3 with a minute and 30 seconds left, but couldn’t get the tying goal despite some good chances.

Up Next

Next, the Islanders head back to UBS Arena, where they’ll play out the rest of the season. On Thursday, they’ll host the playoff-eliminated Toronto Maple Leafs as they try to grab a much-needed two points and snap the longest losing streak of the season.

Islanders’ playoff hopes take another crushing blow with loss to Hurricanes as season-worst skid continues

Carolina Hurricanes players celebrate a goal against the New York Islanders, whose goalie is sprawled on the ice.
Sebastian Aho celebrates after scoring during the Islanders' April 4 game against the Hurricanes.

RALEIGH, N.C. — Forget collapse. This is what capitulation looks like.

In a game the Islanders absolutely needed to have, on a night when a response was necessary after getting dominated at home 24 hours prior, with two points nothing short of critical to their playoff hopes, they flatlined.

Outside of Ilya Sorokin, who single-handedly kept them in the game, the Islanders were barely competitive. All 20 skaters were passengers in this woeful performance that was bad enough to warrant firings and severe changes to the roster if indeed the Islanders fail to make the playoffs, as now seems likely.

They were played off the ice at the Lenovo Center in a 4-3 loss to the Hurricanes that handed the Isles a season-long four-game losing streak at the exact moment they could afford it least.

“We’ve been knocked down, there’s no doubt about it,” captain Anders Lee said. “But this thing’s not over. This race isn’t over. I believe in this group, the guys in this room believe in it. We’re hitting a tough patch at just a really bad time of the year.”

Nominally speaking, the Islanders still held a playoff spot at the close of business Saturday. In reality, they are like a prisoner waiting on a death sentence.

By the next time they play, Thursday at home against the Maple Leafs, the Blue Jackets, Flyers, Red Wings and Senators all will have had the chance to pass them in the standings, and it is a step too far to hope that none of the four do so.

The Isles are now 3-7-0 in their past 10, an astonishing stretch that seemed to come out of nowhere and which is now likely to keep them out of the playoffs a second straight season.

Sebastian Aho celebrates after scoring during the Islanders’ April 4 game against the Hurricanes. Imagn Images

There are four games left, all of which are at UBS and the Islanders may need to run the table or come close in order to save their season.

Just like 24 hours prior on Long Island, though, the Islanders performance did not even come close to meeting the moment. They had four shots in the first period, just two in the second and barely touched the puck until they were skating 6-on-5 late in the third.

The Hurricanes were faster, way more physical, less prone to error, generated more of a forecheck and, damningly, played with more urgency than the Islanders could muster. There was defensive breakdown after defensive breakdown — too many to count and too many responsible parties to try to dole out blame. It was one of their worst efforts of the season, in one of their biggest games of the season.

“I think the mind was right, the energy was right. They were suffocating us,” Ryan Pulock said. “I thought they controlled most of the game.”

Emil Heineman defends during the Islanders’ April 4 game against the Hurricanes. IMAGN IMAGES via Reuters Connect

It was only because of Sorokin, who for the umpteenth time was hung out to dry by his teammates, and because ’Canes netminder Brandon Bussi put in a rare shaky outing that the Islanders hung onto a 3-2 deficit entering the final 20 minutes.

Nothing about the way the game had gone, though, indicated that they could do anything with it.



Even when they finally seemed to get a break in the form of an offensive-zone slash by Alexander Nikishin late in the second with the game tied at 2, the Islanders immediately bled a 2-on-1 rush and a short-handed Sebastian Aho goal.

The ’Canes ended any hopes of a comeback just 24 seconds into the third as Andrei Svechnikov’s cross-ice feed to Seth Jarvis was buried off the crossbar and in to make it 4-2.

Ilya Sorokin makes a save during the Islanders’ April 4 loss. NHLI via Getty Images

Anders Lee’s 6-on-5 goal saved some face for the Islanders on the scoreboard, but did little to hide their performance for most of the night.

Mat Barzal turned over puck after puck, Matthew Schaefer looked like his ever-increasing workload was getting to him, Bo Horvat was hardly noticeable. There was no spark in the bottom six from which Kyle MacLean was bizarrely omitted as a healthy scratch, and the defense corps could not so much as execute a breakout.

In just a few weeks, the season has done a total 180. The Islanders played Saturday like they are already doomed to the consequences.

“100 percent,” Pulock said, asked whether coach Patrick Roy’s message is getting through. “He believes in us and we believe in him. It’s just up to us right now to bear down.”

Roy, who might be coaching for his job over the next 10 days, tried his best to put a happy face on things.

“We’re right there, isn’t it? We’re right there in the standings,” he said. “I know they [all] have a game in hand on us, but it’s not a time of year where you gotta feel sorry for yourself.”

Islanders' losing streak reaches four games after 4-3 defeat to Hurricanes

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) — Seth Jarvis had two goals and an assist and the Carolina Hurricanes beat the New York Islanders 4-3 on Saturday night for their fourth victory in five games.

Sebastian Aho broke a tie with a short-handed goal in the second period, Jackson Blake also scored and K’Andre Miller had two assists, and rookie Brandon Bussi made 13 saves to boost his season record to 29-6-1.

Marc Gatcomb, Max Shabanov and Anders Lee scored for the Islanders, They have a four-game losing streak for the first time this season. Ilya Sorokin made 36 saves in his 11th straight start.

Lee’s goal with 1:37 to play with the Islanders — third in the Metropolitan Division — going with an extra skater gave them a chance, but they couldn’t break through again.

The Islanders had one-goal leads after Gatcomb scored in the first and Shabanov in the second. Shabanov was in his third game since the Olympic break and his first since March 13. He had been out with a lower-body injury and then missed games as a healthy scratch.

Aho’s go-ahead goal with 3:43 left in the second period gave the Hurricanes their sixth short-handed goal in nine games.

The Metropolitan-leading Hurricanes were playing in their first game since clinching a playoff berth two nights earlier. It was Carolina’s second straight strong defensive effort after allowing only 10 shots on goal Thursday night vs. Columbus.

Carolina has defeated the Islanders in all three meetings and they’ll meet again in the regular-season finale.

Up next

Islanders: Host Toronto on Thursday night.

Hurricanes: At Ottawa on Sunday night.

Jarvis scores twice to help the Hurricanes beat the Islanders 4-3

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) — Seth Jarvis had two goals and an assist and the Carolina Hurricanes beat the New York Islanders 4-3 on Saturday night for their fourth victory in five games.

Sebastian Aho broke a tie with a short-handed goal in the second period, Jackson Blake also scored and K’Andre Miller had two assists, and rookie Brandon Bussi made 13 saves to boost his season record to 29-6-1.

Marc Gatcomb, Max Shabanov and Anders Lee scored for the Islanders, They have a four-game losing streak for the first time this season. Ilya Sorokin made 36 saves in his 11th straight start.

Lee’ goal with 1:37 to play with the Islanders — third in the Metropolitan Division — going with an extra skater gave them a chance but they couldn’t break through again.

The Islanders had one-goal leads after Gatcomb scored in the first and Shabanov in the second. Shabanov was in his third game since the Olympic break and his first since March 13. He had been out with a lower-body injury and then missed games as a healthy scratch.

Aho’s go-ahead goal with 3:43 left in the second period gave the Hurricanes their sixth short-handed goal in nine games.

The Metropolitan-leading Hurricanes were playing in their first game since clinching a playoff berth two nights earlier. It was Carolina’s second straight strong defensive effort after allowing only 10 shots on goal Thursday night vs. Columbus.

Carolina has defeated the Islanders in all three meetings and they’ll meet again in the regular-season finale.

Up next

Islanders: Host Toronto on Thursday night.

Hurricanes: At Ottawa on Sunday night.

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AP NHL: https://apnews.com/hub/nhl

Up next

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AP NHL: https://apnews.com/hub/nhl

Recap: Bruins let points slip away again, lose to Tampa

TAMPA, FL - APRIL 4: Darren Raddysh #43 of the Tampa Bay Lightning celebrates a goal against the Boston Bruins at Benchmark International Arena on April 4, 2026 in Tampa, Florida. (Photo by Mark LoMoglio/NHLI via Getty Images) | NHLI via Getty Images

Perhaps it’s time for us to just accept that the Bruins and Florida Men don’t pair well together.

After a solidly played first 40 minutes, the Bruins allowed three unanswered goals in the third period to drop their second Florida game in a row, losing to Tampa Bay, 3-1.

Casey Mittelstadt scored the Bruins’ only goal early in the second period, while Jeremy Swayman made 20 saves in the defeat.

Charle-Edouard D’Astous tied the game for Tampa two minutes into the third period, then Darren Raddysh gave the Lightning the lead with just over five minutes left in regulation.

Nikita Kucherov would add an empty-net goal, and that was that.

The Bruins’ goal came off of a beautiful pass from Viktor Arvidsson, with Mittelstadt cashing in to make it 1-0 Bruins.

D’Astous’s goal came on a good bit of second effort from him, helped by some calamitous defending from the Bruins, making it a 1-1 game early in the third.

Raddysh’s goal…yeah. That’s not a goal you can allow in the third period of a tie game. 2-1 Tampa.

Kucherov’s empty-netter was one of those that was just too easy, with Tampa making a couple of passes and sending Kucherov off to the races.

Bruins lose, 3-1 final.

Game notes

  • Yikes. You can look at the Florida game as one where the team got off to a slow start, got going, and got goalie’d a bit. Tonight was almost the opposite, with the B’s playing well early (they outshot Tampa 19-13 in the first two periods) before falling apart.
  • This isn’t to pin a loss on a single player, but that Raddysh goal can’t happen. Swayman cannot get beat from there, let alone in the last six minutes of the third period. The entire sequence looked like something you’d have happen to you when playing NHL23 (or pick your year) online: random defenseman gets the puck in the neutral zone, skates up the ice unbothered, shoots from a weird angle, scores, then some teenager starts swearing at you.
  • I’m not sure there’s much in this, but it’s worth noting that both of Tampa’s non-empty-net goals came off of plays that started in their own zone. I know that’s usually true of every goal if you rewind it far enough, but both goals seemed to come with the Bruins getting caught flat-footed when an offensive attempt petered out.
  • The Bruins went 0-for-4 on the power play, which certainly didn’t help matters. They had two chances in the first period, then had a big power play chance just two minutes after D’Astous’s goal, only to come up empty. NOT GREAT.
  • Also in the “NOT GREAT” file, the Bruins managed just three shots on goal in the third period. Yes, Tampa had as many goals as the Bruins had shots. I am not a paid analyst, but you’re not going to win that many games when that happens.
  • Mittelstadt’s goal was his 15th of the season, equaling his previous career high; that came back in 2023 with the Buffalo Sabres.
  • Depending on your mood at the moment, the Bruins either blew a big opportunity with this game or caught a big break tonight. They failed to pick up any points, but Detroit, Ottawa, Columbus, and the Islanders all lost Saturday as well, so the Bruins didn’t really lose any ground.
  • Montreal did end up winning on Saturday, putting that third spot in the Atlantic a bit further out of reach. They’re now six points ahead of the Bruins, with a game in hand as well.

Some minor housekeeping: with this recap up and a 3:30 PM game tomorrow, there won’t be a separate preview for that game.

We’ll put up a Public Skate a bit earlier than usual, so feel free to congregate there.

If you observe, Happy Easter. If you don’t, Happy Sunday?

Recap: Wedgewood with the shutout as Avs beat Dallas 2-0

Apr 4, 2026; Dallas, Texas, USA; Colorado Avalanche center Martin Necas (88) and center Nathan MacKinnon (29) celebrate after Necas scores the game winning goal against the Dallas Stars during the third period at the American Airlines Center. Mandatory Credit: Jerome Miron-Imagn Images | Jerome Miron-Imagn Images

The Colorado Avalanche and Dallas Stars squared off in a crucial matinee at American Airlines Center in Dallas, and it was Colorado who finally stole the first regulation win of the season series—pushing their quest for NHL and Central Division supremacy even further.

Brent Burns hit his 1,000th consecutive game, and the veteran forward-turned-defenseman logged a solid 18+ minutes on ice to help deliver the victory.

It was a low-scoring, gritty, playoff-style battle, but Martin Necas finally tucked away the game-winner midway through the third, and Nathan MacKinnon inevitably buried his career-high-tying 51st goal into the empty net. That sealed Colorado’s crisp 2-0 triumph over the Stars.

The Game

Most of the afternoon felt like a tight-checking chess match, with both Casey DeSmith and Scott Wedgewood making timely saves to keep it locked at 0-0 through two periods. Neither side was willing to blink.

In fact, this was one of the rare games all season with zero power plays goals for either team—a likely sneak preview of the grind we’ll see once the playoffs arrive.

The breakthrough finally came when Artturi Lehkonen found Martin Necas on a slick back-door play, putting the Avalanche up 1-0.

Necas cashing in on what might be the biggest regular-season goal of the year felt like the perfect cherry on top—right before MacKinnon’s empty-netter put the game to bed for good.

Takeaways

Coming off one of their ugliest performances of the season (probably the worst) against the Vancouver Canucks, it was huge to see the Avs respond with a complete, shut-down victory against their fiercest rival.

We called for a regulation win with a power-play goal on Friday’s Mile High Hockey Lab, but in hindsight, we should’ve just asked for the regulation W. Every other meeting between these two in 2025-26 had gone to OT or a shootout—so credit to Colorado for finally stealing the lone regulation victory of the regular season series.

Dallas rolling with DeSmith gave their fans a ready-made excuse, but when you get blanked, the finger has to point somewhere—and Scott Wedgewood was outstanding again. He now has three shutouts this season, all against divisional foes.

Big respect to Dallas for honoring Brent Burns and his 1,000th straight game the way they did. When you consider he started that insane streak after already playing 600 games, it’s truly remarkable. That’s something worth celebrating no matter which jersey he’s wearing.

Upcoming

It’s a quick turnaround for the Avalanche, who now welcome the St. Louis Blues tomorrow night at 7:30 p.m. MT.

Let us know what you thought of this contest in the comments!

Sidney Crosby Surpasses Steve Yzerman, Climbs NHL All-Time Scoring List

Another day, and it's yet another milestone evening for Pittsburgh Penguins' longtime captain Sidney Crosby.

And, with this one, he has managed to climb even further up the NHL's all-time scoring list.

With an assist on Evgeni Malkin's second-period power play goal - his 1,400th NHL point, making him the 23rd player to hit the mark - against the Florida Panthers on Saturday, Crosby surpassed Detroit Red Wings great Steve Yzerman to take sole possession of seventh place on the NHL's all-time scoring list at 1,756. He tied Yzerman with a primary assist on Erik Karlsson's first-period power play goal.

Crosby, 38, has 28 goals and 69 points in 65 games so far this season. 

Next up for Crosby is Marcel Dionne in sixth place, and he needs 15 points to tie him at 1,771. In addition, Crosby needs just one more point to clinch his 21st consecutive NHL season at point-per-game or higher to pad his own NHL record of 20. and he needs just two more points by the end of the 2025-26 regular season to clinch his NHL-record 21st consecutive point-per-game season.

Do The Penguins Have A Star Player In Egor Chinakhov?Do The Penguins Have A Star Player In Egor Chinakhov?The Pittsburgh Penguins may have landed a star winger in Egor Chinakhov, who they acquired from the Columbus Blue Jackets on Dec. 29.

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