NEWARK, N.J. (AP) — Bo Horvat broke a tie late in the third period and the New York Islanders went into the Olympic break with a 3-1 win over the New Jersey Devils on Thursday night.
Horvat went to his backhand off the draw, slipping the puck past goalie Jake Allen, with only 3:27 left to play. Casey Cizikas scored in the second period for the Islanders and Mathew Barzal scored an empty-net goal to seal the win for New York.
Cizikas put the Islanders up 1-0 at 6:30 in the second period, cleaning up a rebound in front of the net. From behind the net, Allen sent the puck around the boards right to Marc Gatcomb while the Devils were in a line change. Gatcomb fired the puck to the slot, where Kyle MacLean got a stick on it, tipping it to Cizikas. Allen made the save on the first tip by Cizikas, but couldn’t control the rebound.
Allen stopped 11 shots.
Two nights after coach Sheldon Keefe lamented his team’s lack of mental toughness, the Devils showed some fight, but the Islanders showed more of it.
Star New Jersey center Jack Hughes remained out for the third straight game with a lower-body injury. Still, New Jersey pummeled New York goalie Ilya Sorokin, outshooting the Islanders 24-14.
Late in the second period, Allen sent an outlet pass up to Jesper Bratt in the neutral zone. Once in the offensive zone, Bratt slid a cross-ice feed to Nico Hischier at the edge of the right circle and his wrist shot beat Sorokin high on his glove side.
BUFFALO, N.Y. (AP) — Avery Hayes scored twice in his NHL debut, Arturs Silovs made 26 saves and the Pittsburgh Penguins beat the Buffalo Sabres 5-2 on Thursday night in the final game for both teams before the Olympic break.
Called up from Wilkes-Barre/Scranton of the American Hockey League with the Penguins hit by a series of injuries, Hayes tied at 1 at 9:18 of the period on his first shot on goal. He raced to beat defenseman Jacob Bryson to the puck and put a wrister past goalie Alex Lyon.
Hayes made it 2-1 with 1:13 left in the period, taking Anthony Mantha’s short, backward pass and knocking it in. He's the third Penguins player to score twice in his NHL debut, joining Rob Brown (two goals on Oct. 21, 1987) and Jake Guentzel (two goals on Nov. 21, 2016).
Hayes has 13 goals and 10 assists in 31 games this season in the AHL. He made his NHL debut with Blake Lizotte out for the birth of his first child, Rickard Rakell nursing a lower-body injury and Noel Acciari sidelined by an illness.
Fellow rookie Ben Kindel gave Pittsburgh a 3-1 lead at 7:44 of the second, Tommy Novak made it 4-2 with 4:29 to go in the third, and Kindel had a short-handed empty-netter with 14 seconds to go for his 14th of the season. The Penguins rebounded from a 5-4 overtime loss at the New York Islanders on Tuesday night.
Tage Thompson scored his 30th goal of the season for Buffalo. Jason Zucker also scored, and Lyon stopped 27 shots. The Sabres have lost two in a row.
Zucker opened the scoring for Buffalo at 1:46 of the first period. Thompson scored on a power play to cut it to 3-2 at 1:55 of the third.
NEW YORK (AP) — Rookie Brandon Bussi made 16 saves for his second shutout, Andrei Svechnikov gave Carolina an early lead in the first period and the Hurricanes topped the New York Rangers 2-0 on Thursday night to extend their points streak to 10 games.
Jordan Staal scored into an empty net with 54 seconds left to seal it for the Hurricanes in the final game for both teams before the Olympic break.
The Eastern Conference-leading Hurricanes are 8-0-2 since Jan. 16 and 12-1-3 since Jan. 4.
Jonathan Quick made a season-high 41 saves for the Rangers, who were shut out for the ninth time this season and the seventh at home. New York has lost four in a row.
Svechnikov made it 1-0 game 6:26 into the first period on a wrist shot off an assist from Mark Jankowski. And Bussi, who has won his last seven starts, made that goal hold up.
Bussi’s first career shutout came on Nov. 30, 2025, when he stopped 15 shots against Calgary.
BUFFALO, NEW YORK - FEBRUARY 5: Avery Hayes #85 of the Pittsburgh Penguins celebrates with teammates after scoring his first career goal during the first period of an NHL against the Buffalo Sabres game at KeyBank Center on February 5, 2026 in Buffalo, New York. (Photo by Joe Hrycych/Getty Images) | Getty Images
Pregame
A trio of forward changes to the lineup tonight, Blake Lizotte is unavailable for tonight due to an impending birth which opens the door for Kevin Hayes to play for the first time since January 11th. Noel Acciari is too sick to play and Rickard Rakell has picked up an injury, opening the door for Avery Hayes to make his NHL debut.
Buffalo gets on the board early, the Penguins turn the puck over in the middle of the ice and the Sabres jump on it. Jason Zucker shoots from outside, Arturs Silovs lunges for it with his glove and he comes up empty. The shot hits the inside edge of the post and goes into the net. 1-0 Buffalo 1:46 into the game.
Hayes has his welcome to the NHL moment, using a burst of speed to sneak past defender Jacob Bryson and create a mini-breakaway out of no where. Hayes finishes is strong on Alex Lyon for his first NHL goal on his first shot (but not first shift). What a moment, 1-1 game.
Evgeni Malkin takes a two-minute high-sticking penalty, the Pens kill it off. Then Hayes goes to set the career goal-to-period ratio. This time it’s a great bump pass from Anthony Mantha and a quick shot from Hayes nets his second of the night. 2-1 Pens.
Ryan Shea takes a penalty 12 seconds later, best timing ever, who would ever notice or remember that?
First 20 minutes is up, Avery Hayes and his family in the stands are on Cloud 9. A dream two-goal first ever period in the NHL has the Penguins up 2-1 on Buffalo.
Second period
Pittsburgh kills off the carryover time from the penalty and continues on.
Bryson’s bad night continues when he blows a tire and goes down, sending Ben Kindel on a 2-on-1. The replay is impressive, Kindel looks hard to his right for the pass the whole way, then suddenly snipes Lyon to the short-side with a perfect shot. 3-1 Pens, thanks to their rookies.
Sidney Crosby is the next in line for a penalty, the Sabres get some looks but can’t score.
The Penguins finally get their first power play of the night when Alex Tuch trips Silovs behind the net. Zone time doesn’t lead to a goal.
Pittsburgh extends their lead and is up by two with 20 to go.
Third period
Evgeni Malkin takes an offensive zone tripping penalty and Buffalo gets their first power play goal on their fourth time. Tage Thompson isn’t pressured down low, he’s got enough time to see that Silovs has left some room at the top of the net. A goal-scorer like Thompson easily finds it, notching his 30th of the season to bring the score to 3-2.
Later a couple of close calls, Egor Chinakhov nearly scores in front of the net, play goes the other way. Thompson bulls through Ilya Solovyov but Silovs makes his best stop of the night to throw out the leg and stop the puck.
Then some mayhem. Peyton Krebs crashes into Silovs, Connor Clifton doesn’t take kindly to that and drops the gloves with Krebs. Clifton gets the better of his former teammate by feeding him a bunch of knuckle sandwiches.
Pittsburgh still gets the power play out of it for Krebs completely barreling into the goalie. No goal, it does drain two more minutes off the clock.
The Pens get some insurance with 4:27 to go. Tommy Novak negates an icing call, the puck finds its way to Chinakhov near the blueline thanks to Malkin getting a piece of the attempted outlet. Chinakhov’s deep shot is stopped, rebound pops to Novak who calmly dekes to the backhand and deposits the trash into the net. 4-2 game.
Buffalo pulls the goalie with over two minutes to go. Mantha goes to the penalty box for hooking with 1:29 to go, the Sabres utilize their timeout to get their plan together. Doesn’t work, Kindel scores the shorthanded empty net goal to make it 5-2.
Some thoughts
Great first goal for Hayes. It’s so fitting that the goal came on a play looked like nothing at the beginning, then only turned into something due completely to the effort that Hayes put into it. Not to get poetic (well, too late for that I suppose) but that’s practically the story of his career in a nutshell as an undersized, undrafted player that could only muster an AHL contract upon turning pro. He proved himself in Wilkes-Barre, got an NHL deal for this season. Impressed in camp and prospect tournaments along the way, still took a while to get his first game in the show now at age 23 and fairly deep into this season. It didn’t take very long for Hayes to show what’s been his “long-term overnight success story” due to the skating burst, extra desire and find the ability to finish and standout, making a real name for himself.
The only thing that could make it even better is a second goal. It was more of a right place at the right time, courtesy of the sweet setup by Mantha, but hey, there’s something to be said about showing up at the right place at the right time.
Along those lines for timing and circumstance working out, you gotta think and remember that had Acciari not been sick OR Rakell been able to play OR Lizotte not need to leave the team for an impending birth, A. Hayes wouldn’t have been called up and played tonight. A lot of stars had to align to get his NHL debut to happen on this night. Wild how it all worked out, which always makes a great story that much more special and fun when so many factors come together in just the perfect way.
Hayes told Hailey Hunter during the first intermission interview on TV that he was changing into his suit while the car service was driving him to Buffalo, having only learned he would be needed and playing late this morning. I mean you just can’t make this stuff up, guy wakes up in Wilkes this morning having scored a goal against the Hershey Bears last night, the next thing he knows he’s scrambling to get to Buffalo in time to make his NHL debut.
Bob Grove Stat of the night: Hayes joins Jake Guentzel and Robbie Brown. Not bad company there.
Per HockeyFights, this was the seventh Penguin fight of the season, coming in Game No. 56. Doesn’t even seem that weird any more with its absence. Probably the most entertaining one of the year too, Clifton hit Krebs with lefts and rights with some pretty good shots.
Silovs didn’t have to be remarkable but his stop on Thompson in the third period when it was a 3-2 game was a complete difference-maker in how this game played out. Pittsburgh was up 3-1, and as you might have heard, have had some struggles with keeping leads late into games this season. (And, as noted in the preview, Buffalo is extremely strong with scoring in the third period). If the game goes to 3-3 on that play – and it well could have – it very well was trending towards being another tough night for the Pens. Get a key stop at a key time and a lot of good things can happen. The Pens got that tonight.
Rust didn’t get on the scoreboard but he did a great job on the PK blocking all kinds of shots, passes, marking up on Josh Doan when he drove to the net for backside plays.
With the Panarin saga finally reaching a conclusion with his trade to the Kings, the Rangers played their final game before the NHL break for the Winter Olympics — and the corresponding league-wide roster freeze — with the knowledge that their devolving season eventually will resume with more work to do for general manager Chris Drury to retool the roster for 2026-27 and beyond.
That pre-Olympic finale Thursday night only represented more of the same for the crashing Blueshirts, however, as they fell for the fourth straight game without Panarin with a sleepy 2-0 loss to the Hurricanes at the Garden.
It marked the ninth time they have been shut out this season — and inexplicably, the seventh time on home ice — and head coach Mike Sullivan wasn’t pleased with the effort.
Jonathan Quick makes a save during the Rangers’ Feb. 5 loss to the Hurricanes. Robert Sabo for the NY Post
“I thought they outplayed us. … The first two periods weren’t nearly good enough,” Sullivan said afterward. “My message to the group was, I will acknowledge that we’re in a little bit of a difficult circumstance and none of us really want to be in this position. … But the reality is we are where we are.
“I thought tonight that we lacked a certain competitive spirit. It’s simply unacceptable on our part.”
Panarin, who inked a two-year contract extension worth $22 million with Los Angeles to bypass unrestricted free agency this summer, was dealt for junior forward prospect Liam Greentree and at least one conditional third-round draft pick, depending on Los Angeles’ postseason success.
The last-place Rangers previously had played without Panarin while their leading scorer was held out of the lineup in two defeats to the Islanders last week and another against the Penguins before Wednesday’s trade.
Before the game, Sullivan had said he wished the 34-year-old winger “the very best” in a conversation after the trade was announced.
The Hurricanes celebrate a goal during the Rangers’ Feb. 5 loss. Robert Sabo for the NY Post
He added that he “already had addressed the circumstances” of potential additional trades with his squad, which is now mired in a 3-13-2 tailspin to sink to the bottom of the Eastern Conference standings at 22-29-6.
“From the drop of the puck, we got outplayed all night,” said captain J.T. Miller, who will join Sullivan as part of Team USA in Italy. “It wasn’t good enough. We wanted to go into the break feeling good about ourselves, and it’s quite the opposite right now. So it sucks.”
With the 20-year-old Greentree slated to finish out his current season with OHL Windsor, the Rangers will continue to plug the gaping hole left by Panarin from within.
Will Cuylle mostly has skated in his spot the past several games alongside center Vincent Trocheck.
“You know that we’re not going to plug a player in, and he’s going to replace what Artemi does for this team,” Sullivan said. “I think what we’re trying to do is build a team game where we can replace it by committee, so to speak. I think we can do a better job at being harder to play against, giving up less opportunities on the defensive side, which should allow us an opportunity to create some offense off of that. But we’re not plugging anybody in and saying, ‘Hey, you’re gonna go replace what Artemi’s brought to this group.’ That would be unfair.”
Carolina’s Andrei Svechnikov gathered in a failed clearance attempt by Vladislav Gavrikov and opened the scoring with a wrister from the slot past Quick for a 1-0 lead 6:26 into the game.
Mika Zibanejad had a strong chance on the power play later in the period, but he rang the puck off the crossbar and the Rangers generated little else against Carolina goalie Brandon Bussi (16 saves).
Quick made 41 stops to keep the Rangers within one despite a lopsided shot disparity before Jordan Staal added an empty-netter in the final minute.
“[Quick played] extremely well,” Sullivan said. “I think he did his very best to drag us into the fight. But we needed more guys to do that for us.”
The Ottawa Senators have entered the Olympic break on a winning note, defeating the Philadelphia Flyers 2–1 in overtime on Thursday night in a fine defensive road performance. Tim Stutzle scored the OT winner for the Senators on a gorgeous deke past Flyers goalie Dan Vladar.
As if playing on the eve of a three-week holiday weren’t enough of a distraction, the Sens’ scheduled starting goalie, Linus Ullmark, fell ill during the day and couldn’t play. He's played two games, winning both, since returning from a month-long leave of absence. That called James Reimer into late action as the starter, with Hunter Shepard recalled from Belleville.
After a scoreless first period, Nick Cousins broke the deadlock midway through the second, cramming home a rebound off a Shane Pinto shot, and that looked for a long time like it might stand up as the game-winner.
Pinto showed some excellent patience at the side of the Flyers' net before ripping a wrist shot off Vladar's pads, and looked like it was probably designed to create the rebound.
Reimer’s save of the night came midway through the third. With the Sens still clinging to a 1–0 lead, Sean Couturier broke hard to the front of the net. Reimer made a strong pad save and may have gotten a piece of the rebound as well.
But the Flyers pressed late and the Sens got caught with tired defenders out there. Jamie Drysdale's wrist shot got through a sea of players and found its way under Reimer's blocker.
That assured the rival Flyers at least a point and forced overtime where it was defense be damned.
Both Brady Tkachuk and Stutzle got caught up ice, leading to a 2 on 1 for the Flyers. Stutzle hustled back to try and help, but Tkachuk was out of gas. Former 67 Travis Konecny missed the right post with his shot, and the puck rimmed all the way out to Tkachuk who was still slowly coming back at centre ice.
The captain left the puck for Stutzle, who blew past him, past Travis Sanheim and then past Vladar for the game winner.
The Senators outshot the Flyers on the night, 27-16, and they also got a little luck from the out of town scoreboard. The Buffalo Sabres, who hold one of the wild cards in the East, lost 5-2 to the Pittsburgh Penguins. However, the Washington Capitals, the best of the conference's non-playoff teams, won 4-2 over Nashville to stay two points up on Ottawa.
With 25 games to play, the Senators are now seven points back of Buffalo (WC1) and six behind idle Boston (WC2).
Ottawa now enters the break with five wins in their last six games. Their next game won't be until Feb. 26 when they host the Detroit Red Wings.
In his introductory news conference with the Los Angeles Kings on Thursday after getting traded from the Rangers on Wednesday, Artemi Panarin spoke about his time in New York, which spanned nearly seven seasons before ultimately coming to an unfortunate ending as the Blueshirts look to shake things up in the midst of a disappointing season.
To his credit, Panarin spoke well about his former organization despite the rocky breakup.
"It’s a lot of good memories," he said. "Obviously, a couple of conference finals, always had a great group of guys there too. It’s a pretty good atmosphere and obviously, when you’re winning, it’s pretty helpful and you’re in a good mood every day."
Signed to a seven-year, $81.5 million deal in 2019 after some excellent stints with the Chicago Blackhawks and Columbus Blue Jackets in his first four seasons in the NHL, Panarin had an illustrious career for the Rangers. The left winger compiled 205 goals and 402 assists in 482 games played and helped New York get into the playoffs four times, including a span of three straight postseason appearances from 2022-2024.
During that three-year stint, the Rangers made it to the Eastern Conference Finals twice but were unable to break through to the Stanley Cup either time and are still looking for their first championship since the 1993-94 season.
"Obviously, that’s a great organization," Panarin said. "The New York Rangers, an original six team, huge history. I was pretty proud for playing for those guys."
The veteran also made sure to thank the fans and pledged to make a video for everyone after things settled down for him and his family, who are clearly still trying to process the entire situation after such a long tenure in New York. Panarin even said that he doesn't like switching back and forth with teams and that he didn't want to go anywhere just as a rental.
Ultimately, the 34-year-old signed a two-year contract extension with Los Angeles following the trade, which almost certainly helped him with his decision as other playoff contenders were vying for him as well.
Panarin also discussed contract extension talks that he and the Rangers had (and didn't have), saying they talked about an extension before the season and that was basically it. Nevertheless, he also acknowledged GM Chris Drury's hands being tied with how bad the season started for the team and at some point realized his future with the team was in jeopardy.
"I feel like maybe 15 games ago when we started losing everything [I realized] it was possible [to get traded]," Panarin said. "And then when we lost to Boston like 10-1 or something like that, I would say that I already understood that even if Chris wanted to give me a deal, he probably can’t now because we’re kind of struggling here the whole team and we probably need some changes."
Now with the Kings, Panarin is ready for a new chapter in his career and is eager to get going in Los Angeles, even if he doesn't know what his role will be yet or where he will play. With the NHL Olympic break running from Feb. 6 to Feb. 24, Panarin will have to wait quite a while before he suits up for his new team, but he sees the pause as a good thing.
"It’s probably perfect timing because the Olympic break is pretty long this year and it gives me some time to get used to my new team," he said.
And regardless of where he's at now or how things ended in New York, Panarin will always have a connection with the Rangers and what they accomplished together.
"I feel like when you play for one team a long time, it will always be in your heart," he said.
Artemi Panarin is pictured during the Rangers' Jan. 26 game against the Bruins.
Artemi Panarin admits he had his sights set on Hollywood, insisting Thursday that he “didn’t want to go anywhere else” after it was clear he would not be re-signed by the Rangers.
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One day after agreeing to waive his no-movement clause with the Blueshirts to facilitate a trade to Los Angeles, Panarin said he “tried to find a team for myself that was where I wanted to be.”
That new team is the Kings, who signed the potential free agent to a two-year contract extension worth $22 million after sending forward prospect Liam Greentree and a conditional draft pick to the Rangers.
“Six-and-a-half seasons is a pretty long time [to be in New York]. … A lot of good memories, a couple [Eastern] Conference finals. It was a great group of guys,” Panarin told reporters Thursday on a Zoom call. “I was pretty proud to wear [the Rangers’] jersey. And thank you to the fans. I have to make a video, actually.”
Artemi Panarin is pictured during the Rangers’ Jan. 26 game against the Bruins. Charles Wenzelberg
The 34-year-old Panarin stressed that due to his wife and two children, he “didn’t want to be rented for a couple months, then go somewhere else” in free agency.
“I don’t know if I should say [this], but I feel like the [Rangers’] contract offer said, like, ‘We’re not sure if we want you or not,’ ” Panarin said.
Panarin, the Rangers’ leading scorer in each of his seven seasons with the team, said he sought and received an endorsement of the Kings from Rangers defenseman Vladislav Gavrikov, who played in Los Angeles for parts of the previous three seasons.
Jarvis had played for Canada in the 4 Nations Face-Off but wasn't part of the initial roster for the Olympic team.
Point, injured on Jan. 12, is the second Lightning player to be unable to go to Milan. Anthony Cirelli was hurt in the Stadium Series game and was replaced on Team Canada by Florida Panthers playoff MVP Sam Bennett, who also played in the 4 Nations.
The Lightning had a league-leading 10 Olympians but are now down to eight, falling behind the Panthers' nine. The Panthers got injured Brad Marchand (Canada) and Anton Lundell (Finland) back in their last game.
The Colorado Avalanche and Minnesota Wild are tied with the Lightning with eight representatives.
Injury status on other NHL Olympians
Injured New Jersey Devils forward Jack Hughes isn't playing on Thursday, but The Athletic reported he's good to go for Team USA.
The Washington Capitals activated goalie Logan Thompson (Canada) from the injured list, and he started on Thursday night against the Nashville Predators. Thompson stopped 27 of the 29 shots he faced as the Capitals won 4-2.
While the Detroit Red Wings were reportedly interested in acquiring skilled winger Artemi Panarin from the New York Rangers, it was former Red Wings general manager Ken Holland who ultimately landed one of the biggest prizes on the open trade market.
Holland, who is in his first season as general manager of the Los Angeles Kings, acquired Panarin from the New York Rangers on Wednesday afternoon, and sent forward prospect Liam Greentree and a conditional third-round pick in the 2026 NHL Draft to the Rangers in return.
What's more, Panarin won't just be a rental for the Kings. Holland acted quickly, signing their new prize forward to a two-year, $22 million extension.
“Obviously, we made the deal today to make our team better," Holland said. "We signed him to a two-year extension. We weren’t going to do it as a rental. He didn’t want to go anywhere as a rental. He wanted to find a home, so we’re thrilled that he wanted to waive the no-trade (clause) to come to LA. We’re happy that we were able to get him to a two-year extension, and after two years, I’m hoping that we’re working on another extension, but (I’ll) worry about that down the road." Bookmark The Hockey News Detroit Red Wings team site to stay connected to the latest news, game-day coverage, and player features.
Holland is no stranger to pulling off major blockbuster acquisitions via free agency or trade, dating back to his time with the Red Wings, when he brought in players such as Dominik Hasek, Brett Hull, Luc Robitaille, Marian Hossa, and Brian Rafalski.
"I think it was just a matter of these types of players with this resume are very, very difficult to find, and we had an opportunity to add one today," Holland said of Panarin.
The Kings, who have not won a postseason series since their 2014 Stanley Cup win, just bolstered their lineup with one of the top forwards in the game without having to give up much to acquire him.
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The NHL roster freeze is underway, meaning the St. Louis Blues won’t trade anyone until it ends on Feb. 22.
That doesn’t mean there isn’t any trade speculation, or that general managers aren’t discussing moves they could make before the March 6 trade deadline.
A new report from Ansar Khan of MLive suggests that Blues defenseman Justin Faulk could be the defenseman the Detroit Red Wings need to solidify their blueline.
The Red Wings have no shortage of stout right-handed defenders. Moritz Seider is enjoying a phenomenal season and is considered by many to be a Norris Trophy finalist when the season ends. The 24-year-old has scored seven goals and 38 points this season while averaging 25:40 of ice time. He’s a two-way defender who brings a physical element.
The other young right-handed defender on the Red Wings roster is Axel Sandin-Pellikka. The 20-year-old has notched six goals and 18 points, showing signs that he can be a good offensive defenseman in the NHL. But he has struggled defensively and requires more sheltered minutes, and that’s where Faulk comes into play.
Faulk would slide nicely on the Red Wings’ second pair alongside either Simon Edvinsson or Ben Chiarot. Faulk’s defensive capabilities, and his ability to add offense from the blueline are the exact skillset the Red Wings are looking for.
Faulk wouldn’t be required to play big minutes, as Seider and Edvinsson are their minute-munchers. But Faulk would allow Sandin-Pellikka to play sheltered minutes in more offensive situations, which would benefit his game.
Justin Faulk has scored 11 goals and 30 points in 57 games while averaging 22:29 of ice time. (Jeff Curry-Imagn Images)
The Red Wings have a boatload of prospects and draft picks that they could use to acquire Faulk. They also have plenty of cap space to acquire Faulk’s full $6.5 million cap hit.
The Red Wings are in the midst of a spirited battle in the Atlantic Division, as they are just four points back of the division lead, but are also just three points ahead of the second wild card spot.
Detroit needs as many experienced players as they can get their hands on, and Faulk would provide them with a much-needed upgrade.
For action-packed issues, access to the entire magazine archive and a free issue, subscribe to The Hockey News at THN.com/free. Get the latest news and trending stories by subscribing to our newsletter here. And share your thoughts by commenting below the article on THN.com or creating your own post in our community forum.
The Flyers were quiet offensively Thursday night, giving Dan Vladar little support in a 2-1 overtime loss to the Senators.
Jamie Drysdale scored with just 1:14 minutes left in regulation to force OT.
Tim Stutzle scored the winner for Ottawa just 47 seconds into the bonus session. Eight seconds before that, Travis Konecny was denied on a 2-on-1 rush with Christian Dvorak.
The Flyers fell to 2-8 in overtime (they’re 5-3 in the shootout). They also dropped to 8-4-11 in games decided by one goal.
The Flyers (25-20-11) head into the Olympic break having lost 12 of their last 15 games (3-8-4). They’ve been outscored 62-38 in that stretch.
Rick Tocchet’s club failed to build off its 4-2 win Tuesday night over the Capitals. The Flyers haven’t won consecutive games in a month. The last time they did was Jan. 3-6.
“Earlier in the season, when we were fighting for one of the top positions in the division, we realized that was probably a little ahead of schedule, probably getting better results that were warranted at the time,” general manager Danny Briere said Tuesday night. “What has happened now, the way we’ve been playing lately and what’s happening, I also know that it’s not as bad as the way we’ve been playing. So we’re somewhere in between all of that.”
The Flyers went 0-1-2 against the Senators (28-22-7) in their regular-season series.
• Vladar once again performed like the Flyers’ best player.
The 28-year-old carried his team with 25 saves on 27 shots.
Ottawa cracked him midway through the game when Nick Cousins scored on a rebound.
Senators netminder James Reimer stopped 15 of the Flyers’ 16 shots.
“It was a tight match out there — both sides, I didn’t think there was much going on,” Sean Couturier said. “I think as the year goes on, these are the type of games that we’re going to have to get used to playing. I thought we did a good job just sticking in there, getting a big goal at the end.
“It’s obviously tough losing, not getting the extra point, but I think this could be a huge point here down the road.”
But the Flyers are now in sixth place. They’re eight points back of the third-place Islanders in a crowded Metropolitan Division. They’ve played two fewer games than New York.
“We’ll need to get red-hot,” Drysdale said. “I think we’re capable of it. Everyone take this break, reset. … We’ve got to come out swinging right away.”
• The Flyers had just eight shots at second intermission.
They had little going offensively. They finally started to generate some looks after Ottawa took its lead, but they couldn’t scratch one across.
Drysdale saved them late in the third period with a great shot to earn the Flyers a point.
• Couturier nearly snapped his goal-scoring drought with a drive to the net in the third period. But the Flyers’ captain was denied and his rebound attempt went wide. He has gone 29 straight games without a goal.
• The Flyers at least prevented Claude Giroux from hurting them.
The team’s former captain has 13 points (three goals, 10 assists) in 12 career games against the Flyers after going scoreless Thursday night.
• Emil Andrae was a healthy scratch for a fifth straight game.
Tocchet and assistant coach Todd Reirden wanted to keep Noah Juulsen in the lineup because of the penalty kill’s recent run of success. But Juulsen ended up not playing at shorthanded (the Flyers committed just one penalty).
The Flyers need to find a way to get Andrae back in the lineup after the break.
• The Flyers now go 19 days without a game because of the NHL’s participation in the Olympics.
While the Olympics are in action, the Flyers are scheduled to resume practice Feb. 17. Their first game back from the break is Feb. 25 when they visit the Capitals (7 p.m. ET/NBCSP).
Flyers recognize their Olympians Dan Vladar, Travis Sanheim and Rasmus Ristolainen. pic.twitter.com/EdfUZtBeJo
The Flyers were quiet offensively Thursday night, giving Dan Vladar little support in a 2-1 overtime loss to the Senators.
Jamie Drysdale scored with just 1:14 minutes left in regulation to force OT.
Tim Stutzle scored the winner for Ottawa just 47 seconds into the bonus session.
The Flyers fell to 2-8 in overtime (they’re 5-3 in the shootout).
The Flyers (25-20-11) head into the Olympic break having lost 12 of their last 15 games (3-8-4). They’ve been outscored 62-38 in that stretch.
Rick Tocchet’s club failed to build off its 4-2 win Tuesday night over the Capitals. The Flyers haven’t won consecutive games in a month. The last time they did was Jan. 3-6.
“Earlier in the season, when we were fighting for one of the top positions in the division, we realized that was probably a little ahead of schedule, probably getting better results that were warranted at the time,” general manager Danny Briere said Tuesday night. “What has happened now, the way we’ve been playing lately and what’s happening, I also know that it’s not as bad as the way we’ve been playing. So we’re somewhere in between all of that.”
The Flyers went 0-1-2 against the Senators (28-22-7) in their regular-season series.
• Vladar once again performed like the Flyers’ best player.
The 28-year-old carried his team with 25 saves on 27 shots.
Ottawa cracked him midway through the game when Nick Cousins scored on a rebound.
Senators netminder James Reimer stopped 14 of the Flyers’ 15 shots.
But the Flyers are now in sixth place. They entered Tuesday seven points back of the third-place Islanders in a crowded Metropolitan Division.
• The Flyers had just eight shots at second intermission.
They had little going offensively. They finally started to generate some looks after Ottawa took its lead, but they couldn’t scratch one across.
Drysdale saved them late in the third period with a great shot to earn the Flyers a point.
• Sean Couturier nearly snapped his goal-scoring drought with a drive to the net in the third period. But the Flyers’ captain was denied and his rebound attempt went wide. He has gone 29 straight games without a goal.
• The Flyers at least prevented Claude Giroux from hurting them.
The team’s former captain has 13 points (three goals, 10 assists) in 12 career games against the Flyers.
• Emil Andrae was a healthy scratch for a fifth straight game.
Tocchet and assistant coach Todd Reirden wanted to keep Noah Juulsen in the lineup because of the penalty kill’s recent run of success. But Juulsen ended up not playing at shorthanded (the Flyers committed just one penalty).
The Flyers need to find a way to get Andrae back in the lineup after the break.
• The Flyers now go 19 days without a game because of the NHL’s participation in the Olympics.
While the Olympics are in action, the Flyers are scheduled to resume practice Feb. 17. Their first game back from the break is Feb. 25 when they visit the Capitals (7 p.m. ET/NBCSP).
Flyers recognize their Olympians Dan Vladar, Travis Sanheim and Rasmus Ristolainen. pic.twitter.com/EdfUZtBeJo
When Samuel Montembeault took to the ice with the Montreal Canadiens on Wednesday night, fans noticed something different about the Bécancour native: he was sporting a brand new mask. For once, the netminder went away from the classic look of a Canadiens’ bucket, which more often than not simply focuses on the logo.
His new mask was designed by Jordon Bourgeault, the artist behind Carey Price’s cyborg mask. On his Instagram page, Bourgeault explained that the concept was to make the entire mask a giant twisting knot of snakes. Even the Habs logo on the mask is made of snake scales. On the front of the mask, right above the cage, there are snake eyes, as if Montembeault himself were a snake.
The mask was made in partnership with Apple as part of the Made on iPad project and is available on the new EA Sports NHL game. That’s an interesting development, as fans of the gaming franchise had long wished the goaltenders in the game could wear their authentic masks, making the experience more realistic.
The design is an interesting change of pace for a Canadiens’ netminder, as more often than not, the Habs masked men err on the side of caution and stick to a more traditional concept. The backplate is painted to resemble bones, which complements the snake skeletons on the mask, and it features a large "M" for his family name and an image of his French Bulldog, Gucci. Overall, this really is a fantastic mask.
Given how the season started for the netminder, one might wonder whether he intended to shake off his old skin, much like a snake does multiple times a year. It worked well for him, though, as he had a fantastic game, only conceding one goal to the Jets on the power play and finishing the game with a .973 save percentage. A performance that will no doubt allow him to have a much better Olympic break and that will have reassured the Habs’ brass, especially if he can build on it after the break. Chances are, he’ll still be wearing this mask when he returns from the break; you don’t change a winning formula.
WASHINGTON (AP) — The Washington Capitals activated forward Pierre-Luc Dubois and goalie Logan Thompson from the injured list prior to Thursday night's matchup with Nashville, their final game before the Olympic break.
Dubois hasn't played since Oct. 31 because of surgery for injuries to his abdominal and adductor muscles. Thompson, who is part of Canada's roster for the Olympics, hasn't played since Jan. 27.
The Capitals are four points behind the New York Islanders for the last playoff spot in the Metropolitan Division.
The 27-year-old Dubois went without a point in the six games he's played this season. He had 20 goals and 46 assists last season, his first with Washington.
Thompson is 18-16-4 with a 2.46 goals-against average and a save percentage of .912 in 2025-26.