Van de Ven brushes off Frank snub and reflects on his Spurs wonder goal

  • Incident with manager after Chelsea loss ‘nothing big’

  • He felt ‘I need to score’ after storming Copenhagen run

Micky van de Ven has downplayed the furore over his standoff with Thomas Frank after Tottenham’s Premier League defeat by Chelsea on Saturday, insisting it was misinterpreted and blown out of proportion. The centre-half preferred to focus on how the team had bounced back to thrash FC Copenhagen in the Champions League on Tuesday – a game in which he scored a thrilling individual goal.

Van de Ven was all smiles after the Copenhagen victory, his surge and finish from one box to the other drawing comparisons to Son Heung-min’s Puskas Award-winning effort for Spurs against Burnley in 2019. It was a vivid contrast to the post-Chelsea scenes when Spurs were booed off by their home crowd, having also been jeered by them during the game.

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Fantasy Basketball Trade Tips: Early Season Buy Low, Sell High Guide

Early-season fantasy basketball trades separate contenders from pretenders. Shooting percentages haven't normalized, roles remain fluid, and league-mates overreact to hot starts or cold streaks. Smart managers target buy-low candidates with strong underlying metrics, cash in on unsustainable efficiency, and hold established players through shooting slumps. Understanding usage rates and minute trends reveals which performances are real versus noise. Act fast before the market catches up.

Buy

Cooper Flagg, Dallas Mavericks

As the top pick in the draft and one of the more highly regarded prospects in recent history, Flagg entered the league with significant fantasy expectations. He was going in the third or fourth round in many leagues, which means he's someone that fantasy managers intended to build their team around. The early returns have not been great, with him averaging 13.6 points, 6.3 rebounds, 2.9 assists and 1.1 three-pointers. His biggest issue has been shooting only 38.8% from the field.

Since Kyrie Irving (knee) is out, the Mavericks have been deploying Flagg at point guard for stretches. That's a difficult assignment for any rookie, let alone one who is more suited to be a forward at 6'9". Despite the early growing pains, Flagg has massive upside. Once Irving comes back, Flagg can all settle back into a more suitable role playing the wing. Fantasy managers who drafted him early might be frustrated with their initial returns, so there is a possible buy-low window here.

Matas Buzelis, Chicago Bulls

Buzelis was widely regarded as one of the top breakout candidates this season. He didn't play much to begin his rookie season with the Bulls, but once they moved him into the starting lineup, his fantasy upside began to show. With a secure spot in the starting lineup entering this season, it looked like full-steam ahead for Buzelis when he recorded 21 points, six rebounds and three blocks in his season opener versus the Pistons. However, he has averaged a more modest 13.8 points, 4.2 rebounds, and 0.7 blocks since.

Buzelis hasn't contributed a ton outside of points and three-pointers. It is encouraging to see him shooting 46.9% from the field and 42.4% from behind the arc. It's also good to see him logging 29 minutes per game. If not for a rough game against a very good Magic defensive team in which he fouled out in six minutes, his overall numbers for the season would look better. Big things could still be on the horizon.

Sell

RJ Barrett, Toronto Raptors

The addition of Brandon Ingram figured to cut into Barrett's scoring opportunities. However, Barrett is still averaging 20.8 points per game, which is nearly in line with his average of 21.1 points last season. However, it's important to point out that Barrett is shooting 55.4% from the field. He has shot 44.3% for his career, so some significant regression could be coming. His usage rate has indeed dipped significantly, falling from 28.7% last season to 23.3% through eight games.

Barrett averaged 6.3 rebounds and 5.4 assists last season, but is down to 4.9 rebounds and 3.5 assists per game this season. If not for his significant increase in efficiency, his overall numbers would have taken a big step backward from last season. Trade him now before his shooting percentage begins to normalize.

Quentin Grimes, Philadelphia 76ers

Grimes helped many fantasy managers down the stretch last season. Over his final 25 games, he averaged 23.0 points, 5.2 rebounds, 4.6 assists, 1.6 steals and 3.1 three-pointers. With the 76ers dealing with so many injuries, he logged 34 minutes per game during that span and was often their top scoring option. Despite Tyrese Maxey and Joel Embiid being back in the fold this season, Grimes has averaged 17.0 points, 4.4 rebounds, 5.0 assists and 2.7 three-pointers over their first seven games.

Helping Grimes has been him playing 32 minutes per game. That type of workload might not be sustainable now that Jared McCain is back. Grimes played 30 minutes in McCain's first game of the season Tuesday against the Bulls, finishing with 10 points, three rebounds and four assists. Paul George (knee) should also return at some point down the road. It's possible that Grimes could be in the 25-to-28-minute range moving forward, so his fantasy value might have already peaked. 

Hold

Derrick White, Boston Celtics

White looked primed for an expanded role entering the season. Jayson Tatum (Achilles) is out, and the Celtics traded away Kristaps Porzingis and Jrue Holiday. Other than Anfernee Simons, the Celtics didn't make any noteworthy additions. That left White with the potential to set a new career high in points after he put up 16.4 points per game last season.

As many expected, the added shots have been there for White. His usage rate is 23.6%, which is up from 19.8% last season. The issue is, him shooting 31.0% from the field and 26.3% from behind the arc has limited him to 14.4 points per game. Entering this season, White had shot at least 38.1% from behind the arc in each of his first three full campaigns with the Celtics. As his three-point percentage improves, so should his scoring contributions. Don't panic about his slow start and trade him at a discount.

Desmond Bane, Orlando Magic

The Magic had a clear need in the offseason and it was to improve their three-point shooting. That made the acquisition of Bane seem like a perfect fit. He has averaged at least 2.4 three-pointers in each of the last four seasons, and he has shot 40.8% from behind the arc for his career. The surprise for the Magic and fantasy managers alike is that Bane is shooting 28.6% from deep across his first eight games. That has left him to average just 13.9 points per game.

If there is a bright side to Bane's slow start, it's that his usage rate is 22.7%. That's not too far off from his mark of 23.3% with the Grizzlies last season. It will be difficult for him to average at least 5.0 assists for the third straight season playing alongside good passers in Paolo Banchero and Franz Wagner, but much better shooting production should be in the cards for Bane.

Takeaways from the Ducks 7-3 Win over the Panthers

The Anaheim Ducks wrapped up a three-game homestand by hosting the defending Stanley Cup champion Florida Panthers on Tuesday, with hopes of extending their three-game winning streak to four. This was the second time the two teams faced each other in a week; the last result was a 3-2 shootout win by Anaheim.

Florida was coming off a 4-3 shootout win over the Dallas Stars on Saturday, arriving in Anaheim on two full days’ rest and hoping to kick off their west coast road trip on a high note.

The Anaheim coaching staff went with the same lineup that earned them their last win against the New Jersey Devils on Sunday.

Anaheim Ducks on the Tip of National Media Tongues

Game #12: Ducks vs. Panthers Gameday Preview (11/04/25)

Lukas Dostal got the start in net for the Ducks and saved 18 of the 21 shots he faced. Dostal stood in the opposite crease as Sergei Bobrovsky, who stopped just 25 of 32.

The Ducks lost Leo Carlsson at the start of the third period when he received an interference major and game misconduct when his shoulder made contact with Evan Rodrigues’ head while the Ducks were on the power play. Nikita Nesterenko filled in admirably in his place for the remainder of the game.

Here are my notes:

The Ducks came out of the gate a bit out of sync, struggling to build plays from their own end against one of the NHL’s top forechecking teams. The game opened up soon after, but favored the Panthers early.

The Ducks made some adjustments, behind some opportunistic goals from Cutter Gauthier, and dialed in a bit of their freewheeling, ultimately dictating pace with a relentless forecheck, clever rush sequences, and elongated time on the cycle.

They rode the emotions of extracurricular skirmishes and capitalized on the open ice created from non-5v5 play.

Cutter Gauthier-This game was all about Gauthier. In less than 15 minutes of TOI, three of his six shots on goal found the back of the net, and he added a primary assist to boot. Two of his goals came on the power play off of right-flank one-timers, a spot he’d played in for his entire pre-NHL career, and he’s now translating those efforts to the NHL, finding and manipulating those open lanes to make himself a passing option, and burying pucks with confidence at will.

“It’s a pretty special night,” Gauthier said after the game. “(They’re) the defending Cup champ, so the most important thing was that we got the job done. So it was super fun.”

Gauthier became the first NHL player 21 or younger to score 10 goals in the first 12 games of a season since Auston Matthews in 2018-19 and now co-leads the NHL in goals. He was drafted to be a goal scorer, acquired by Anaheim to be a goal scorer, and is now scratching the surface of that potential, scoring in a variety of ways, utilizing several of his above-average attributes, and rounding out his “B” game in the process.

Breakouts and Regroups-This was the area where the Ducks struggled most early. It seemed as if they were anticipating the Panthers to deploy an ultra-aggressive forecheck and were taken aback when Florida’s focus was more on eliminating outlets rather than pressuring the puck.

The Ducks adjusted by having forwards support lower and shortening the distance for outlets, leading to cleaner exits and possession through neutral ice.

Rush Defense-Florida exploited the Ducks’ weak side defender in the neutral zone, who was either too stationary or displayed a poor gap, by sending the weak side forward cutting to the middle of the ice on counterattacks for stretch passes, leading to breakaways or semi-breakaways.

This was another area the Ducks cleaned up nicely as the game went on, taking away that option and forcing the puck carrier to make safer reads, after which the Ducks' backcheck or strong defenders sealed on the wall and killed the rush.

Nikita Nesterenko-Nesterenko notched a goal and an assist in this game and is becoming noticeably more comfortable with and without the puck as each game goes on, now 41 games into his NHL career. He’s evolved into a plus forechecker and is taking his time, making NHL reads, and keeping his feet moving with the puck on his stick to optimize rush and cycle chances. He can play all 12 forward positions, and may very well at this rate if head coach Joel Quenneville continues to have lineup spots in need of filling.

“You get more comfortable with every game,” Nesterenko said after the game. “The more puck touches you get, you assess different situations throughout the game. If you’re not throwing it away as much, you’re trying to possess it, that’s the name of the game.”

The Ducks will hit the road for two games against perennial cup contenders: the Dallas Stars on Thursday and the Vegas Golden Knights on Saturday, looking to extend their now-four-game winning streak.

Takeaways from the Ducks 4-1 Victory over the Devils

10 Stats from the First 10 Games of the 2025-26 Season for the Anaheim Ducks

Akira Schmid Registers First Shutout With Vegas As Golden Knights Defeat Red Wings, 1-0

LAS VEGAS -- The Golden Knights moved into a first place tie with the Anaheim Ducks in the Pacific Division after Tuesday's 1-0 win over the visiting Detroit Red Wings.

Vegas opened the night in fourth place with 15 points, but along with Anaheim, leapfrogged Edmonton and Seattle to regain the top spot in the Pacific. The Ducks visit Vegas on Saturday.

Ivan Barbashev scored for the Knights while Akira Schmid made 24 saves to earn his second career shutout, his first as a Golden Knight and first since 2023.

Schmid is now 8-1-1 all-time wearing a Vegas sweater.

Though Detroit's John Gibson stopped 33 of the 34 shots he faced, Vegas improved to 24-6 against him since it entered the league.

"It wasn't as pretty offensively," Vegas coach Bruce Cassidy said. "Both goaltenders I thought played well. Coaches are generally happy when you pitch a shutout. You have to find a way to win when you don't get very many goals."

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KEY MOMENT: With the game dragging through the first period and a half, Barbashev ignited the near-sellout crowd when he knocked down Brandon Saad's spinning backhand at the doorstep and slammed the puck past John Gibson to give Vegas 1-0 and all the momentum it would need.

KEY STAT: The Knights' struggles with a man advantage continued, as they finished 0 for 1 on the power play. They're now 2 of 20 on the power play since Oct. 20, and since Mark Stone has been out with a wrist injury.

WHAT A KNIGHT: While Barbashev was credited with the game-winner, Schmid was easily the star of the night, particularly with a highlight-reel save in the third period. Detroit's Alex DeBrincat raced down the left side and sent a stinger far side that hit Schmid's glove. Before the puck hit the ice, DeBrincat followed up by tapping the puck right back toward the net, but Schmid's windmill save stymied the effort.

"I just kind of threw my hand in the air, hoping to hit it," Schmid said. "Thank God I did."

UP NEXT: Vegas hosts the Tampa Bay Lightning on Thursday, in the second and final meeting of the season. The Lightning beat the Knights in overtime, 2-1, in Tampa on Oct. 26.

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.

Avalanche stave off rally to defeat Lightning 3-2

DENVER — One streak ended, another rolled on.

The Colorado Avalanche halted the Tampa Bay Lightning’s five-game surge with a gritty 3–2 victory at Ball Arena, powered by Victor Olofsson’s two goals and a solid defensive game. 

The Avs bounced back from a 3-2 loss to the San Jose Sharks on Saturday with another 3-2 game, except this one had a W at the end of it. 

Colorado survived a shaky start before building a lead and ultimately holding onto it. Ross Colton also scored and Nathan MacKinnon extended his point streak to seven games, one shy of the team season-high.

Nikita Kucherov and Brayden Point scored for Tampa Bay. Andrei Vasilevskiy stopped 30 shots in defeat.

First Period

The Avalanche opened the game with their third line on the ice, and within the opening moments, Gabe Landeskog unleashed a wrist shot from the left circle that was turned aside by Vasilevskiy. 

Just 1:38 into the contest, the Lightning struck first. Cale Makar mishandled the puck behind his own net, and Kucherov pounced on the miscue, wrapping it around and tucking it past Scott Wedgewood to give Tampa Bay an early 1–0 advantage. 

Roughly six minutes later, tensions boiled over as Landeskog dropped the gloves with defenseman Charles-Édouard D’Astous. The bout was one-sided—Landeskog landed a flurry of short, punishing right hands before finishing D’Astous with a decisive shot that sent him tumbling to the ice. 

Moments after the fight, Pontus Holmberg was sent to the penalty box for interference following a collision with Brock Nelson. Despite Holmberg’s protests, the call stood, handing Colorado their first power play of the evening. However, the Avalanche failed to capitalize, as Vasilevskiy and the Lightning’s penalty killers held firm. 

Tampa Bay’s discipline wavered again with just under six minutes remaining in the frame, as they were assessed a too many men on the ice penalty. This time, Colorado made them pay. MacKinnon fired a cross-crease pass that deflected off Vasilevskiy’s glove, and Olofsson, stationed in the slot, buried the rebound to knot the score at 1–1. 

Olofsson’s night turned more complicated late in the period when he was called for tripping Kucherov with 2:26 left. That set up a high-stakes clash between one of the league’s most lethal power plays and one of its most disciplined penalty-killing units. Colorado’s PK unit rose to the occasion, stifling Tampa’s attack and even generating some shorthanded pressure. 

There was a tense moment late in the Lightning power play when Devon Toews inadvertently redirected a point shot toward his own goaltender, but Wedgewood reacted brilliantly to smother the puck. The first period came to a close with the score deadlocked at 1–1, both teams trading momentum in a fast-paced, technical opening 20 minutes. 

Second Period 

Just 4:08 into the second period, Olofsson struck again, netting his second goal of the night to put Colorado ahead 2–1. The sequence began with Landeskog, who slipped a pass from the left circle to Jack Drury in the slot. Drury’s one-timer attempt was mishit, the puck glancing awkwardly off his stick—but the miscue worked in Colorado’s favor. The loose puck rolled perfectly to Olofsson, who ripped a one-timer past Vasilevskiy, leaving the goaltender with no chance. 

Barely a minute later, the Avalanche extended their lead. Sam Malinski spotted Colton streaking down the left wing and threaded a perfect stretch pass through the neutral zone. Colton drove hard to the net and finished with a slick backhander over Vasilevskiy’s glove, marking his second goal of the season and giving Colorado a 3–1 cushion. 

With just over three minutes remaining in the frame, the Avalanche earned another power play opportunity when Victor Hedman was called for tripping Martin Nečas. The infraction sent Nečas crashing into the net, and Hedman was assessed a two-minute minor. Colorado’s man advantage went to work once again, looking to further widen the gap before intermission. 

 Third Period 

While the Avalanche entered this game tied with the Montreal Canadiens for the best record in the NHL, the Avs have had a tendency to allow teams back in games while they were dictating the pace and controlling, nearly quoted verbatim from Devon Toews’ comments last week, but how did the Avs look entering the third with a 3-1 lead?

The final period kicked off with a penalty when Brock Nelson was busted for high-sticking Erik Cernak. Nelson was also lucky not to get penalized for holding moments before, so either way you slice it, the Avs were probably deserving of going on the penalty kill. 

Colorado killed the penalty, but the Lightning found a way to score anyway when Brayden Point drove the puck into the Avs’ zone and fired a backhander by Wedgewood to make it a one-goal game. 

Tampa's momentum fell just short in a thrilling finish. Despite mounting pressure in the final minutes, the Avalanche managed to stave off the Lightning’s attempts, securing a narrow 3-2 victory. The contest was razor-close down the stretch, but the Avalanche’s defensive resilience ultimately allowed them to break Tampa's five-game winning streak and claim the hard-fought win.

Next Game 

The Avalanche (8-1-5) don’t play again until Saturday when they take on Connor McDavid and the Edmonton Oilers at Rogers Place. Coverage begins at 8 p.m. local time.

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Jon Scheyer challenged top recruit Cameron Boozer at half. The Duke freshman responded in a big way

Duke coach Jon Scheyer offered a challenge to star recruit Cameron Boozer at halftime of the Blue Devils' season opener Tuesday night against Texas, bluntly telling the 6-foot-9 freshman forward phenom that he was “playing soft.” Boozer got the message — and then proceeded to take over the game. After failing to score in the first half, Boozer rallied to finish with 15 points and 13 rebounds — 10 of those after halftime — as the sixth-ranked Blue Devils overcame a 33-32 halftime deficit to beat Texas 75-60 in the Dick Vitale Invitational at the Spectrum Center in Charlotte.

Panthers kick off road trip with frustrating 7-3 loss in Anaheim

The Florida Panthers kicked off a four-game western swing on Tuesday night in Anaheim.

Much like their previous road trip, this one did not start well for Florida, as they fell behind early and ended up losing big, 7-3 to the Ducks.

It was the Ducks who got on the board first, and it was a rare breakaway against Florida that got the job done.

Leo Carlsson fed a streaking Cutter Gauthier who came in all alone on Sergei Bobrovsky and beat him with a quick wrist shot to give Anaheim a 1-0 lead just 3:09 into the game.

Florida tied things up midway through the period thanks to their veteran superstar Brad Marchand.

After serving a penalty for playing the puck with a broken stick, Marchand popped out of the box and almost immediately was found by Jeff Petry for his own breakaway opportunity.

Marchand corralled the puck, skated into the Ducks’ zone and fired the puck over the glove of Lukas Dostal to even the score midway through the period.

Gauthier scored again late in the frame, this time with Anaheim on the power play, to send the home team into the intermission with the lead.

Another breakaway goal, this time off the stick of Evan Rodrigues, knotted the game at two 5:21 into the second period.

Rodrigues went bar-down over Dostal’s glove after taking a great pass from Mackie Samoskevich to go in alone on the Ducks’ tendy.

The Cats took their first lead of the game about five minutes later, with Florida on the power play after Brad Marchand drew a holding penalty on Alex Killorn.

After Sam Bennett wrapped the puck around the boards behind the Ducks’ net, Rodrigues carried the puck out of the corner and toward the slot, threading a needle with a great feed to Eetu Luostarinen who beat a down and out Dostal to give Florida a 3-2 lead.

Unfortunately for the Panthers, it was a lead that was short lived.

With Anton Lundell in the penalty box for a retaliatory slash after taking an Olen Zellweger elbow to the face, Gauthier one-timed his way to his first career hat trick.

The Ducks scored again less than two minutes later when Nikita Nesterenko popped home a rebound off a Ryan Poehling shot that came off a rebound of a Killorn shot, sending Florida into the third period trailing 4-3.

Rodrigues left the game for a stretch after taking a Leo Carlsson shoulder to the head that resulted in a five-minute major and game misconduct, but Florida was unable to capitalize on the ensuing power play.

Instead, it was Jacob Trouba slamming home a Gauthier rebound to give Anaheim a 5-3 lead with 8:17 to go and then Chris Kreider deflecting a Nesterenko shot to make it 6-3 less than two minutes later that acted as the final nails in the coffin, though a seventh goal less than 90 seconds after that off the stick of Jensen Harkins certainly didn’t help improve the vibes.

On to Los Angeles.

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Photo caption: Oct 28, 2025; Sunrise, Florida, USA; Florida Panthers center Sam Bennett (9) and Anaheim Ducks defenseman Olen Zellweger (51) battle for position in front of goaltender Lukas Dostal (1) during overtime at Amerant Bank Arena. (Jim Rassol-Imagn Images)

Aced: Red Wings Blanked 1-0 By Vegas Golden Knights

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Scoring goals hasn't been an issue for the Detroit Red Wings for the most part this season, but they came up short when they needed to on Tuesday evening in Las Vegas.

They suffered their first shutout loss of the season, a 1-0 final score against the Vegas Golden Knights at T-Mobile Arena. 

With the setback, the Red Wings concluded their five-game road trip with a 3-2 record and are now 9-5 through the first 14 games of the centennial campaign. 

The second period goal from Golden Knights forward Ivan Barbashev was the only puck that found the back of the net for the entire game, while goaltender Akira Schmid picked up just the second shutout of his career by denying all 24 shots the Red Wings fired his way. 

Goaltender John Gibson did all that he could for the Red Wings, stopping all but one of the 33 shots he faced. 

Bookmark The Hockey News Detroit Red Wings team site to stay connected to the latest newsgame-day coverage, and player features

The Red Wings killed off the only penalty they took, but were unsuccessful on both of their own power-play opportunities, including a key chance inside of ten minutes remaining in the game's final frame. 

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The Red Wings also had an opportunity to knot the score late in regulation after a would-be second goal by the Golden Knights was called back because the intial play was ruled to be offsides. 

Red Wings' Todd McLellan Delivers Key Update on Patrick Kane’s Potential Return TimelineRed Wings' Todd McLellan Delivers Key Update on Patrick Kane’s Potential Return TimelineDetroit Red Wings forward Patrick Kane has been unavailable since Oct. 17 when he was injured against the Tampa Bay Lightning, having now missed eight straight games.

It was also their ninth straight game without forward Patrick Kane, who hasn't played since Oct. 17 against the Tampa Bay Lightning. 

Detroit will return home for a Friday night tilt against the New York Rangers at Little Caesars Arena. 

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Australia keep options open with Ashes squad selection containing few surprises | Geoff Lemon

The line-up for the Perth Test appears to be locked in after a question at the top of the order was answered and the dominoes tumbled further down

In the end, there were few surprises. Even the most forgone conclusion of an Ashes squad will still create weeks of speculation one way or another, but answering one question at the top of the order has knocked over the other unresolved ones, tipping like dominoes as we make our way down the list.

Barring injury, the only new player in the eventual XI will be Jake Weatherald, the 31-year-old Northern Territorian who in cricketing terms became a South Australian and then a Tasmanian, earning his place over severals seasons of unflashy consistency and a willingness to counterattack. Weatherald would not have made the squad if he were not going to open the batting, which means that Marnus Labuschagne, who was always going to make the team one way or another after getting his run-scoring groove back, will bat three rather than moonlighting at the top.

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Penguins' Third Line – Led By Rookie Ben Kindel – Thriving In Key Analytics Category

Well, it appears that word travels fast across hockey circles, and the rest of hockey is quickly learning that Pittsburgh Penguins' rookie center Ben Kindel is the real deal. 

His five goals in 12 games are tied for the most by a rookie in the NHL this season, which is impressive enough on its own. His hockey IQ and NHL-readiness is on full display, and it doesn't look like he's missed a beat at the highest level of hockey so far.

But there are some other numbers that are, perhaps, even more impressive than the raw stats. And they are surfacing in the analytics.

Kindel, 18, has been centering the Penguins' third line between Tommy Novak and Ville Koivunen. And they are putting up some very impressive numbers.

In Monday's heartbreaking 4-3 loss to the Toronto Maple Leafs, the Penguins utterly dominated the first 40 minutes of play - and Kindel's line was a huge part of that. In fact, they were a gargantuan part of that. 

According to Moneypuck, Kindel's line controlled 95.5 percent of the expected goals share. This followed a performance against the Minnesota Wild Thursday in which they controlled 91 percent of the expected goals share. 

 

Simply put, Kindel and his line are controlling large portions of play five-on-five. And this is happening with an 18-year-old rookie center who is playing well above his age. 

It will be interesting to see how this line continues to fare during the upcoming schedule. But, for now, the Penguins would be wise not to mess with a single thing they're doing. 

Penguins Call Up 3 Players & Announce Several Roster MovesPenguins Call Up 3 Players & Announce Several Roster MovesThe Pittsburgh Penguins have made a series of roster moves.

Bookmark THN - Pittsburgh Penguins on your Google News tab  to follow the latest Penguins news, roster moves, player features, and more!     

Loyer scores career-high 30 as No. 1 Purdue routs Evansville

Fletcher Loyer opened his final college season by scoring a career high 30 points and preseason All-American Braden Smith added 11 assists as Purdue protected its first preseason No. 1 ranking with a rousing 82-51 season-opening rout over Evansville on Tuesday night. Smith scored just six points but passed former Illinois star Bruce Douglas for third on the Big Ten’s career assists list. Smith increased his total to 769, four more than Douglas.

Takeaways: Despite Outplaying Wild, Nashville Predators Fall In Overtime On Technicality

Monday night, the Nashville Predators lost in the final second of overtime to the Vancouver Canucks.

Just 24 hours later, they found a bit of late-game magic of their own in regulation against the Minnesota Wild at Grand Casino arena in St. Paul.

Steven Stamkos, who hadn't scored a point in 10 games, came up with his biggest point of the season thus far to send the game into overtime. It looked as if Lady Luck was about to smile on the Preds for a change.

Alas, overtime dealt another frustrating blow to the Predators. Marcus Johansson was credited with a goal at 3:38 of bonus time, even though the puck never actually went in the net.

Preds goalie Justus Annunen knocked the net off its moorings, and the officials determined that it was intentional, therefore awarding the goal to Johansson in a 3-2 victory for the Wild.

Preds head coach Andrew Brunette was unhappy at the ruling.

"The explanation was, in (the referee's opinion), it was a goal," Brunette told reporters. "I disagree with his opinion, but that's the way it is."

Kirill Kaprizov notched a power play goal to get the Wild on the scoreboard first at 10:44 of the opening period. Matthew Wood tied things up at 5:16 of the second period with his third goal in four games.

Zeev Buium put the Wild back ahead 2-1 at 16:01 of the middle frame on another power-play tally, after a feed from Brock Faber. Then came Stamkos's missile just as the clock ran out in regulation.

The Predators have yet to win a game in the overtime period. They've gotten two points in two nights, but it's tough to count the small victories when the bigger ones are just out of reach.

Here are three takeaways from the loss.

The Preds Set The Pace

Maybe it was the home gold sweaters the Preds wore to St. Paul. Maybe it was the frustration of letting Monday's game slip out of their grasp.

Whatever the reason, the Preds brought a lot of energy despite having played less than 24 hours earlier, then hopping a plane to St. Paul.

Three different Preds hit or grazed the post in the first period with nothing to show for it. Ozzy Wiesblatt just missed getting his first career NHL goal in his 17th game when he clanged one on a penalty kill. Steven Stamkos and Fedor Svechkov, still looking for his first goal of the season, also had shots ring off the post.

Even when Kaprizov put the Wild ahead 1-0, the Preds kept up the high energy into the middle frame. At one point, they held possession for over two minutes, firing shot after shot against Minnesota goalie Filip Gustavsson. Then, Wood worked his magic to tie things up 1-1.

As the Preds know all too painfully well, it only takes one shot to score a goal. Buium's tally put Minnesota ahead 2-1. It looked as if the Preds would see another regulation loss despite outplaying their opponent until Stamkos broke his dry spell and caused a temporary celebration for the Preds.

Annunen, who stopped 22 of 24 shots, had knocked the net off earlier in the game. In overtime, it cost him and the Preds a win.

Matthew Wood Is Finding His Groove

Nov 1, 2025; Nashville, Tennessee, USA; Nashville Predators right wing Matthew Wood (71) and Calgary Flames center Nazem Kadri (91) chase after the puck during the third period at Bridgestone Arena. Alan Poizner-Imagn Images

If there was one player one might have guessed would inject some life into the Predators once he returned to the lineup, it would be Matthew Wood.

The 20-year-old winger found the net again Tuesday, his third goal in four games. He also had a couple other chances in the game.

It had to feel good for Wood to score in the state where he played his collegiate hockey. The Preds’ first-round draft choice in 2023 played his final college season at the University of Minnesota, totaling career highs in goals (17) and points (39) in 39 games for the Golden Gophers.

Wood looks confident in his own skin, buzzing around the puck and being aggressive. On Tuesday, he took four shots on goal in 12:07 of ice time with a +1 rating.

How long he can keep this pace up is anybody’s guess. The NHL is full of ebbs and flows, and he will have down periods. Right now, though, he’s feeling it. He needs to bottle up some of that net magic and pass it around to some of his teammates.

The Penalty Kill Has Come Back To Earth

As important as offense and defense are in any game, it's often the third phase that makes the difference.

Special teams played a crucial part in Tuesday's Preds loss, particularly the penalty kill, which had been humming along nicely all season.

Coming into the Minnesota game, the Predators’ penalty kill ranked sixth in the NHL at 84.8 percent and had killed off 29 of the past 35 power plays they have faced.

It was bound to come back down to earth at some point. Over the last two games, the PK has given up multiple goals in each.

Kaprizov scored the Wild’s first goal on a power play after Annunen was screened on the play. Buim’s goal also was on a Wild power play at 16:01 of the second.

For the night, the PK went 1-for-3. To be fair, the Wild power play was no slouch. It ranked fifth in the NHL at 29.4% (15-for-51).

The Preds’ power play, which had two goals for the first time all season Monday, had several great looks against the Wild, but could not convert on its two opportunities.

The penalty kill has been the most consistent phase of the Preds’ game all season. It’s unrealistic to think it will be perfect every night, but it needs to stay hot for the team to have a chance over the course of the season, especially in close games.

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