Buffalo Sabres Call Up Defenseman From AHL

Zac Jones (© Danny Wild-Imagn Images)

The Buffalo Sabres have announced that they have recalled defenseman Zac Jones from their American Hockey League (AHL) affiliate, the Rochester Americans. 

Jones has been off to a strong start this season with Rochester, as he has recorded 13 assists in 11 games. Now, he will be looking to make an impact with the Sabres after landing this call-up.

Jones signed a one-year contract with the Sabres in free agency this summer. This was after the left-shot blueliner did not receive a qualifying offer from the New York Rangers, which made him an unrestricted free agent (UFA). 

Jones played in 46 games this past season with the Rangers, where he scored one goal and set new career highs with 10 assists, 11 points, 28 hits, and 46 blocks. He also scored one goal in two games with the Rangers' AHL affiliate, the Hartford Wolf Pack, during the 2024-25 season. 

In 115 career NHL games over five seasons, Jones has posted four goals, 24 assists, 28 points, 67 hits, and 106 blocks. 

The Do-Or-Die Stretch For The Kings on the Road — And Why L.A. Fans Aren’t Buying The Comeback Narrative

© Jayne Kamin-Oncea-Imagn Images

When the Kings begin their six-game road trip Sunday in Pittsburgh against the Penguins, their fans won’t just be paying attention to the scoreboard; they’ll pray the Kings show a pulse. 

Right now, Los Angeles Kings fans are leaving the arena early, and the area is starting to quiet down. The season might already be hanging by a thread if the Kings don’t get their act together. 

It’s not just another loss for the Kings; it’s the fact that they're losing at home time after time, now falling to a 1-4-2 record on home ice, leading to boos echoing through Crypto.com Arena. 

The Kings' Defense No Longer Holds at HomeThe Kings' Defense No Longer Holds at HomeIt’s becoming very tough to watch the Kings play hockey right now. Every question mark that Kings fans had coming into this season for this team has not only come true, but it’s become a big disaster. 

Season on the Brink

Following the King's recent defeat to the two-time defending champion Florida Panthers, Los Angeles has now lost five of their last eight games, including four straight home losses. 

A team that was considered a playoff contender coming into the season now sits near the bottom at fifth place in their division. The offense has dried up, the defense looks dried up, with no effort being played out there, and even the goaltending, once the team's biggest strength, has shown cracks. 

The effort on their home ice tells the tale, where boos are now common, like the sound of goal horns. It’s even more embarrassing that the Kings are way better away from their home, sitting at 5-1-2

But the recent play the Kings have put forth at home doesn’t give confidence that they can come out of this six-game road trip playing five of the six teams above .500. If the Kings can’t at least go 4-2 or even 3-3 on this road trip, this stretch can define what their season looks like going forward.

 

King's Home Woes ContinueKing's Home Woes ContinueThe Los Angeles Kings (5-4-4) couldn’t overcome a slow start offensively and fell 4-1 to the New Jersey Devils (9-3-0) on Saturday night at <a href="http://crytpo.com">Crypto.com</a> Arena. Despite scoring their lone goal in the third period, the Kings' search for their first home win of the season continues.&nbsp;

Home Versus Road Numbers

By the numbers, the Kings' struggles at home are puzzling. Los Angeles has allowed 3.4 goals per game at home compared to 2.7 on the road, which suggests that when they play in front of their home crowd, they get too comfortable and fade, and don’t feel the need to play big like they would in a tough environment on the road. 

Offensively, the Kings have actually scored more goals on the road than at home, by a significant margin. Los Angeles has scored a total of 28 goals away and averages 3.2 goals per game away from Crypto, while at home, 15 goals, averaging two goals per game

An Important Road Trip

The Kings’ upcoming road trip is tough:

@Pittsburgh Pirates

@Montreal Canadiens 

@Toronto Maple Leafs

@Ottawa Senators

@Washington Capitals

@San Jose Sharks

Los Angeles will need to step up in their upcoming road trip if they have any hopes of making the postseason in a tough Western Conference. This trip should show us what the Kings are really made of and if they can rediscover their identity, reignite the defense, and prove they can compete every night.  

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Three takeaways: Panthers get back to basics, receive big efforts from pair of veterans

Thursday night in Los Angeles, the Florida Panthers got back to looking like the hard-working, defensive squad that they expect to be.

Coming off a frustrating 7-3 loss in Anaheim on Tuesday, Florida snapped back into focus and seemed to get better as the game went on, defeating the Los Angeles Kings 5-2 at Crypto.com Arena.

Panthers Head Coach Paul Maurice walked the team through a ‘back to basics’ kind of practice on Wednesday, and while it may have taken a little while during the game in LA, the Cats showed that they can get back to playing their brand of hockey despite missing several key players.

Now we’ll have to wait and see if they can keep the good vibes rolling as their four-game western U.S. road trip continues.

Let’s get to Thursday’s takeaways:

BIG GAME FOR BOB

Panthers goaltender Sergei Bobrovsky was called upon early and often during Thursday’s win, and he answered the ball time and again.

Bob finished the game with 24 saves on 26 shots on goal, and he stopped nine of the 10 high danger shots sent his way by the Kings.

It felt like most of more difficult shots he had to stop came at critical moments of the game, allowing Florida the opportunity to pull away during the third period.

“Our goaltender was really good when he had to be,” Maurice said. “The timeliness of those saves was really important.”

BIRTHDAY BOY TICKLES TWINE

Sam Reinahrt has been asked to do a little bit of everything so far this season.

Not to say that’s any different than his usual workload, but with the absence several forwards who play a variety of roles, Reinhart has done what he can to lighten the load on multiple facets of the game.

On Thursday, Reinhart scored his seventh goal of the season on what was his 30th birthday. 

He’s logged goals in five of Florida’s past six games, and two of those goals – including Thursday’s in Los Angeles – were game-winners.

“He's been so good.” Maurice said. “He plays with everybody for the most part, penalty kill, power play, one of the most impactful players in our in our room. And then as a leader, he's got that great balance. He can talk to the coaches about the X's and O's because he sees things on the ice so very well, but he also will do hard things that kind of keep him connected to the players.”

STILL SEARCHING FOR CONSISTENCY

We all knew that this season was going to be a challenge for the Panthers.

Losing Sasha Barkov, Matthew Tkachuk, Tomas Nosek and Dmitry Kulikov for big chunks of the season left the team with an unexpected mountain to climb before the playoffs, and they’re still figuring out how to navigate the bumpy terrain.

After a bit of a wake-up call in Anaheim, Maurice and his staff figured out which elements of the team’s systems needed to be emphasized and focused on, and they were able to quickly put those wheels into motion.

The challenge for Florida will be keeping that momentum moving in their favor.

“I didn't feel that was who we are in Anaheim, and I thought today we were closer to (our game),” Maurice said. “It's not going to be perfect right now, we got some challenges, obviously, with our lineup, but once you get used to that and embrace the fact that it doesn't have to be perfect, that you got to fight for some things, and grind, I thought that was our game tonight.”

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Photo caption: Nov 6, 2025; Los Angeles, California, USA; Florida Panthers goaltender Sergei Bobrovsky (72) defends the net as Los Angeles Kings left wing Kevin Fiala (22) handles the puck during the second period at Crypto.com Arena. (Jayne Kamin-Oncea-Imagn Images)

De'Aaron Fox to make season debut for Spurs Saturday night vs. Pelicans

After winning its first five games (for the first time in franchise history), San Antonio has dropped two straight — not so coincidentally just as Victor Wembanyama had two rather pedestrian games. The Suns and Lakers started being physical with him, denying him positions in the paint, and doubling him at times to get the ball out of his hands on the perimeter.

Watch those games and one couldn't help but think, "this team could use De'Aaron Fox." That wait is now over. Fox is set to return on Saturday when San Antonio takes on New Orleans in the second night of a back-to-back.

Fox had been out since before the start of training camp due to a right hamstring strain. San Antonio traded for him at the deadline last February, and in 17 games with his new team, he averaged 19.7 points and 6.8 assists a game, although expect those numbers to go up a little once paired with Wembanyama. The former All-Star was brought in to be the veteran, star guard paired with Wemby, with the hope that they would bring out the best in each other. However, the duo only got five games together last season due to Wembanyama's shoulder blood clots. The two still have a lot of familiarizing to do.

Fox joins a promising backcourt with reigning Rookie of the Year Stephon Castle (averaging 19.4 points, six rebounds and 5.7 assists a game this season) and No. 2 pick last June Dylan Harper (averaging 14 points a night off the bench, but currently out with a calf strain). The Spurs have started the season looking like a team ready to make a leap up the Western Conference standings this season, but they ultimately were going to need Fox back to do that.

Starting Saturday, they have got him.

Revitalised England ready to reveal new attacking dimension against Fiji

With Marcus Smith at full-back and a highly mobile back five in the pack, Steve Borthwick could play with the handbrake fully off

Much has happened in the 27 months since Fiji were last at Twickenham and beat England. You would certainly have had decent odds back then on the home side’s reserve prop Joe Marler becoming a national TV treasure, a fever dream roughly on a par with Claudia Winkleman shaving off her hair and packing down at loosehead. Who knew?

But here we are in an increasingly parallel universe. Big Joe now has Alan Carr and Sir Stephen Fry on speed dial while England, since the 30-22 defeat in August 2023, have also undergone their own extreme makeover. Having been a team who, by the admission of their own coach early in his tenure, “weren’t good at anything” they are now hoping to extend an eight-match winning run after defeating Australia comfortably last week.

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F1’s three-way title fight echoes the glorious battles of yesteryear

Lando Norris, Oscar Piastri and Max Verstappen battle for the title, just as Juan Manuel Fangio, Nino Farina and Luigi Fagioli did 75 years ago

With no little pleasing symmetry, 75 years on from a three-way fight for the inaugural Formula One title, the championship is entering its decisive phase once more with three protagonists in the running and the promise of an enthralling denouement of the kind that has graced some of the sport’s greatest seasons.

Heading into this weekend’s São Paulo Grand Prix, McLaren’s Lando Norris and Oscar Piastri and Red Bull’s Max Verstappen all remain in the hunt. Norris leads Piastri by one point, with the defending champion, Verstappen, 36 points back, after a late-season resurgence.

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Israel-Premier Tech’s main sponsor withdraws backing citing ‘untenable’ position

  • Premier Tech pulls out despite rebranding pledge

  • Team’s participation in Vuelta was dogged by protests

The main sponsor of the Israel-Premier Tech (IPT) team of the four-time Tour de France winner Chris Froome has pulled out of funding the team, despite a pledge to rebrand and distance itself from its Israeli identity. The Canadian company Premier Tech, in a statement issued on Friday, said that it had decided to “step down as co-title sponsor of the team, taking effect immediately”.

“Although we took notice of the team’s decision to change its name for the 2026 season,” the statement said, “the core reason for Premier Tech to sponsor the team has been overshadowed to a point where it has become untenable for us to continue as a sponsor.”

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Blackhawks Vs Flames: Projected Lineup, How To Watch, & More Ahead Of Game 15

On Wednesday night, the Chicago Blackhawks found a way to win a hockey game that they didn't play particularly well in. After being dominated for 40 minutes, Tyler Bertuzzi's hat trick sparked the big win after Spencer Knight gave them a chance. 

Now, they are back in Alberta to take on the Calgary Flames. After taking three out of a possible eight points to start the six-game road trip, there is still time to salvage more. 

Although the road trip hasn't been exactly perfect, this is still a great start to the season for Chicago. At 6-5-3, they are right in the mix and one of only six teams in the Western Conference with a positive goal differential. 

Blackhawks Are 1 of 6 Teams in West With Positive Goal DifferentialBlackhawks Are 1 of 6 Teams in West With Positive Goal DifferentialThe Eastern Conference seems easier at the moment than the Western Conference, which gives the <a href="https://thehockeynews.com/nhl/chicago-blackhawks">Chicago Blackhawks</a>, who have taken a nice step forward, some hope early in the season.

Scouting Calgary

The Calgary Flames are the worst team in the NHL when it comes to the standings. After a surprisingly good season in 2024-25, they have fallen way back. At 4-9-2 for 10 points, they are the only team in the NHL with a points percentage below .400 entering play on Friday.

 Zary - Kadri - Farabee

Huberdeau - Frost - Coronato

Honzek - Backlund - Coleman

Lomberg - Sharangovich - Klapka

Hanley - Weegar

Bahl - Andersson

Pachal - Parekh

Wolf 

With Nazem Kadri, Morgan Frost, Mikael Backlund, and Yegor Sharangovich, they aren't all that bad down the middle of the ice. It is the lack of depth everywhere else that has them in last place. 

Dustin Wolf, who was the Calder Trophy runner-up in 2024-25, has not been playing nearly as well this year. That is also a big reason why the Flames are where they are in the standings. 

Kevin Bahl took a maintenance day during the morning skate and Yan Kuznetsov went in his place on the second pair, but Bahl is expected to play. 

Projected Blackhawks Lines, Defense Pairs, and Starting Goalie

The Blackhawks, for every game but two, have run a lineup that consists of 11 forwards and 7 defensemen. That is likely to continue in this one. 

Greene - Bedard - Burakovsky

Teravainen - Nazar - Bertuzzi

Moore - Donato - Mikheyev

Dach - Foligno

Vlasic - Rinzel

Kaiser - Levshunov

Grzelcyk - Murphy

Crevier

Knight

If the Blackhawks do go with 11/7 again, Sam Lafferty is likely to be the healthy scratch. With Oliver Moore looking good as a part of the everyday roster, the path to consistent playing time gets harder and harder for Lafferty. 

Connor Bedard and Tyler Bertuzzi are both coming off big games which helped them beat the Canucks. For Bertuzzi, it was a hat trick. For Bedard, it was another multi-point performance which extended his point streak to six games. 

Of the seven defensemen dressed, all but two (Connor Murphy and Matt Grzelcyk) are very young. Head coach Jeff Blashill believes that this strategy helps all of them, including the veterans.  

Spencer Knight was in the starters crease during the morning skate, so he is the projected starting goalie for Chicago. Knight's year is going very well. If he keeps this up, Team USA might come knocking on his door for an Olympic spot. 

How To Watch

Viewers in the Chicagoland area can find the game on CHSN. It can also be heard on the radio via AM 720 WGN. National viewers can find it on ESPN+ in the United States and Sportsnet West in Canada. The puck will drop shortly after 8 PM CT. 

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Sidney Crosby, rejuvenated Pittsburgh Penguins one of NHL’s biggest early surprises

PITTSBURGH — Sidney Crosby has been doing this for longer than Ben Kindel has been alive. Alex Ovechkin has, too, for that matter.

So yeah, it was maybe a little surreal for the Pittsburgh Penguins rookie forward, all of 18, to be on the ice Thursday night alongside the two players who have defined their franchises and in many ways the NHL for two decades and counting.

The calendar says it’s 2025. Yet watching the 39-year-old Crosby score two goals to boost his season total to an NHL-leading 11 and have the 40-year-old Ovechkin collect two assists to fuel a second-period Washington rally in what eventually became a 5-3 Penguins victory, it was hard to tell.

“Kind of like the old Sid and Ovi rivalry there,” Kindel said after picking up the first two assists of his still very young career. “It was great to see and unreal to watch.”

That Crosby and Ovechkin found a way to summon a little something special during their 99th all-time meeting (playoffs included) is hardly surprising. The two future Hall of Famers have long had a habit of bringing out the best in each other.

What is surprising, however, is that for the first time in what seems like a long time — by the Penguins’ standards at least — the game felt like it carried actual stakes.

New faces, new energy

The team considered a long shot to reach the playoffs when the season began — only woeful Chicago and San Jose faced slimmer odds of hoisting the Stanley Cup than Pittsburgh — finds itself tied with New Jersey for the top spot in the Metropolitan Division a month in.

Yes, it’s not even Thanksgiving yet. And yes, the injuries are starting to pile up, from veteran forward Rickard Rakell to 6-foot-6 “power” forward Justin Brazeau, from goaltender Tristan Jarry to center Filip Hallander, who the team announced Friday is out at least three months because of a blood clot in his leg.

Still, the Penguins have been one of the NHL’s most pleasant early surprises.

A massive influx of fresh faces and fresh blood has brought an energy that was lacking as the team’s run of three championships in nine years became an increasingly distant memory.

The arrival of first-year coach Dan Muse and his high-energy approach has provided a jolt. So has the emergence of teenagers Kindel and 19-year-old defenseman Harrison Brunicke, who has shown promise during an extended look before he likely returns to his junior team for a little more seasoning.

“They always give us juice,” said Penguins forward Bryan Rust, who at 33 is the fourth-longest tenured player on the team behind Crosby, Evgeni Malkin and Kris Letang. “Obviously, they’re so excited to come in the rink and they’re having fun. They always got a smile on their face and they are also really, really good players. So I think that combination can really help a few of us older guys that have a little bit more fun, too.”

The organizational overhaul general manager Kyle Dubas began in earnest when he traded away popular two-time Stanley Cup winner Jake Guentzel at the deadline in the spring of 2024 is starting to bear fruit.

Pittsburgh’s prospect pool is far deeper than when Dubas arrived in 2023, and one of them seems to have bypassed the “pool” entirely.

Kindel, taken with the 11th overall pick in this year’s draft, made the club coming out of training camp and has five goals and two assists in 13 games. On Thursday night, he found himself on the first line with Rust and Crosby and earned a promotion to the top power play unit, where he held his own in a group featuring a a handful of players bound for the Hall of Fame.

“You can see he’s comfortable out there,” Muse said.

There’s a lot of that going around. The Penguins have the league’s second-ranked power play unit and have been buoyed by Jarry’s apparent return to form after the two-time All-Star was demoted to the minors. While Jarry is out for at least three weeks with a lower-body injury, his absence will give the club a chance to see how close 21-year-old phenom Sergei Murashov is to being NHL-ready on a full-time basis.

While Kyle has pathologically avoided putting any sort of timetable on when the rebuild (a term he has never used) is complete, he did say at the start of training camp in September that he believes the Penguins can return to contender status while Crosby remains on the roster.

A good team?

There’s a chance it might happen with Malkin, 39 and in the final year of his current contract with no sign of an extension on the horizon, still around, too.

The Russian star is tied for third in the NHL in points with 20, including 17 assists. His pretty cross-ice feed to Rust that Rust converted into the go-ahead goal midway through the third period against Washington helped Pittsburgh avoid a second straight late collapse.

On Monday night in Toronto, the Penguins dominated play for 40 minutes only to crumble in the final period as the Maple Leafs ripped off four straight goals to pull out a 4-3 win.

When Washington’s Tom Wilson beat Arturs Silovs from his knees to tie it at 3 late in the second period on Thursday, it seemed the feel-good vibes the Penguins have been generating throughout the past month were on the verge of disappearing.

“It would have been really easy for this group to cave,” Muse said. “It would have been really easy for this group to play back on their heels, play worried.”

They didn’t. They fended off a couple of Washington power plays, then pounced when Rust redirected Malkin’s tape-to-tape pass and didn’t let up the rest of the way.

Sure, it’s still just early November. Yet for a team that looked lifeless for long stretches over the last couple of years of former head coach Mike Sullivan’s otherwise highly successful tenure as the roster churned and the play of its stars (Crosby aside) sagged, it’s a start.

“We’re finding ways to win games in a lot of different ways,” Rust said, later adding, “I think being able to win in all sorts of ways, I think, is a sign of a good team.”

Or at the very least, an interesting one.

Power-hitting infielder Munetaka Murakami enters MLB posting system, can be signed until Dec. 22

NEW YORK — Power-hitting Japanese corner infielder Munetaka Murakami is entering Major League Baseball’s posting system and will be available to teams to sign as a free agent from Saturday through Dec. 22.

Murakami, who turns 26 on Feb. 2, was the Central League’s MVP in 2021 and ’22 with the Yakult Swallows and is a four-time All-Star.

He batted .273 with 22 homers and 47 RBIs this season, limited to 56 games by an oblique injury. He struck out 64 times.

Murakami hit 56 homers in 2022 to break Sadaharu Oh’s record for a Japanese-born player in Nippon Professional Baseball while becoming the youngest player to earn Japan’s Triple Crown. He topped 30 homers in four straight years before an injury-interrupted season in 2023.

He has a .270 career average with 246 homers, 647 RBIs and 977 strikeouts in 892 games over eight Central League seasons, all with the Swallows.

After playing primarily at first base in 2019 and 2020, he has spent most of his time since at third.

At the 2023 World Baseball Classic, Murakami hit a ninth-inning walk-off double off Giovanny Gallegos that scored Shohei Ohtani and Masataka Yoshida to give Japan a 6-5 semifinal win over Mexico. The following day in the championship game, Murakami hit a tying home run off Merrill Kelly in the second inning and Japan went on to beat the United States 3-2.

Under the agreement between MLB and NPB, the posting fee will be 20% of the first $25 million of a major league contract, including earned bonuses and options. The percentage drops to 17.5% of the next $25 million and 15% of any amount over $50 million. There would be a supplemental fee of 15% of any earned bonuses, salary escalators and exercised options.

NHL Waivers: Maple Leafs Place Cayden Primeau On The Wire

The Toronto Maple Leafs placed goaltender Cayden Primeau on NHL waivers, according to The Athletic's Chris Johnston.

The Maple Leafs claimed Primeau off waivers from the Carolina Hurricanes ahead of the 2025-26 season. Now, the Hurricanes are in a position to bring him back to their organization if they wish.

If Primeau goes through waivers unclaimed, the Maple Leafs would then be able to assign him to their AHL affiliate, the Toronto Marlies. 

Primeau has appeared in three games this season with the Maple Leafs, where he has recorded a 2-1-0 record, 4.30 goals-against average and .838 save percentage. His last start for the Maple Leafs was on Oct. 29 against the Columbus Blue Jackets, when he allowed six goals on 24 shots in a loss.

Primeau being placed on waivers comes with Maple Leafs goaltender Joseph Woll being close to returning to the NHL club following his leave of absence. While speaking to reporters, including TSN's Mark Masters, Woll confirmed that he will start a conditioning stint with the Marlies this weekend.

In 58 career NHL games over seven seasons split between the Montreal Canadiens and Maple Leafs, Primeau has posted a 15-25-7 record, a .882 save percentage and a 3.73 goals-against average. 


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Upcoming Road Trip Holds Buffalo Sabres Season In The Balance

All you have to do is look at the Buffalo Sabres upcoming schedule and their place in the standings and recognize that their season hangs in the balance. The Sabres 3-0 loss to the St. Louis Blues on Thursday is their first regulation loss in eight games, but the club’s 5-5-4 record has them tied for last spot in the Eastern Conference with Columbus, the New York Rangers, and the New York Islanders. 

The realities of the schedule that are undeniable are that the Sabres, in spite of earning points in seven straight prior to Thursday, have lost five of their last six games and given back most of the progress they recouped since bouncing back from an 0-3 start by winning four of their next five games. The loss to the Blues, who were playing the second of back-to-back games, having scratched one of their top forwards in Jordan Kyrou, and playing backup goalie Joel Hofer, was especially egregious. 

Other Sabres Stories

Six Former Sabres Who Signed Elsewhere

Norris Out Eight Weeks At Least

Buffalo in a condensed schedule in October and early November have played 10 games at KeyBank Center, nearly one-quarter of their home schedule for the season and have gone 5-3-2, that coupled with going winless on the road (0-2-2) has them only four points away from the bottom of the NHL standings. 

The club is without centers Jiri Kulich and Josh Norris, winger Justin Danforth, Jason Zucker, and Zach Benson, and on Friday, head coach Lindy Ruff indicated that team captain Rasmus Dahlin will be taking a leave of absence temporarily to return to Sweden on a personal matter. The Sabres road swing includes stops in Carolina, Utah, Colorado, and Detroit, where they will have to have some success to stay within range of a playoff spot in the East.   

 

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The Hockey News Big Show: Which Breakout NHL Teams Will Stay Near The Top?

The Hockey News Big Show is here to discuss more big topics in the NHL and beyond.

Which Breakout NHL Teams Will Stay Near The Top? by The Big ShowWhich Breakout NHL Teams Will Stay Near The Top? by The Big Show

Here’s what Katie Gaus, Ryan Kennedy and Michael Traikos discussed in this episode:

0:36: Only six points separate first place and last place in the Eastern Conference. In the West, there are six different teams within three points of the second wild-card position. Is this the tightest NHL standings you've seen at this stage of the season in years?

4:05: Of the breakout teams appearing near the top of the standings, which one do you "believe in" the most to be there (in the playoffs) at the end of the season?

8:16: One month into the season, which coach or GM is on the hot seat?

12:50: What did you see out of the Calgary Flames last year when they almost made the playoffs?

14:45: The Utah Mammoth reportedly were interested in trading Nick Schmaltz in the summer, but with the hot start he's having, should they make signing the pending UFA sooner than later a top priority?

19:39: Joe Thornton, Duncan Keith and Alex Mogilny are among the people being inducted into the Hockey Hall of Fame this weekend. What are some of the best stories about one of the inductees?

24:14: Gary Pearson joins us for the BetMGM playbook. If the Penguins' goaltending duo of Tristan Jarry and Arturs Silovs can sustain their elite play, could that improve their playoff odds? 

26:39: The Ottawa Senators sit at -120 odds to make it into the playoffs. Will they be able to put themselves in a good-enough spot until Brady Tkachuk returns from injury? 

28:50: The New York Rangers are at +150 to make it into the playoffs, yet they sit tied for last in the Eastern Conference. What has to change for those odds to make more sense? 

30:44: Can the return of Patrick Kane help the Red Wings reinforce their +150 odds to make the playoffs?

34:48: Now that Mogilny is finally being inducted, who is the next "player that is long overdue" to get into the Hockey Hall of Fame?

37:59: Who is the biggest bargain off-season signing so far?

39:50: Could this be the last season we see the Crosby-versus-Ovechkin rivalry?

43:51: Blues goaltender Jordan Binnington (who infamously stuffed Ovechkin’s 900th-goal puck in his pants and got caught) said he had the full intention to give it back to him. Do we believe him?

45:13: Following meetings at the NHL offices in NYC between the CHL, Hockey Canada, the USHL and USA Hockey, it's rumored the USHL could possibly be making the move to join the CHL umbrella. Ryan - what have you heard? 

Watch the full episode here

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