Pryce Sandfort scored 19 points and No. 13 Nebraska shook off a second straight slow start to beat New Hampshire 86-55 on Tuesday night and go undefeated in nonconference play for the first time since 1928-29. The Cornhuskers (13-0) extended the best start in program history but not before the Wildcats (4-9) of America East, like North Dakota of the Summit League nine days earlier, caused some anxious moments. The Huskers led by just three at halftime but were much sharper on both ends after that and will ride momentum into Friday night's Big Ten home game against ninth-ranked Michigan State.
Islanders Recover, Beat Blackhawks 3-2 In Shootout To Close Out 2025
After blowing a 2-0 lead, the New York Islanders recovered to beat the Chicago Blackhawks 3-2 in a shootout. David Rittich, in his fifth straight start, denied all three shots he faced in the shootout, with Bo Horvat scoring the shootout winner:
Winner, winner, đdinner. ##isles win. Horvat SO winnerđ¨ pic.twitter.com/mDcaisRWc8
â The Elmonters (@TheElmonters) December 31, 2025
Here's how the game happened:Â
After serving as a healthy scratch on Sunday, Calum Ritchie got off to a hot start. He scored the fifth goal of the season at 2:56 of the first period after a strong feed from Simon Holmstrom:
Cal Ritchie. 1-0 #Islespic.twitter.com/6G5SVz9cVX
â The Elmonters (@TheElmonters) December 31, 2025
Holmstrom has eight points (four goals, four assists) over his last nine games.Â
Horvat doubled the Islanders' lead at 12:08 of the second, on the power play, after he rifled a Mathew Barzal feed from the bumper spot for his 21st of the season:
Horvat. 2-0 #Islespic.twitter.com/y1MJEv4P4i
â The Elmonters (@TheElmonters) December 31, 2025
On the goal, Islanders No. 1 overall pick Matthew Schaefer recorded the secondary assist, becoming the youngest defensman in NHL history to reach that milestone at 18 years and 116 days:
But, then the Blackhawks came back to tie it.Â
First, it was Teuvo Teravainen who beat Rittich short side off an offensive zone face-off win at 15:31 of the second:
NHL Nick Lardis is đ¤đĽđ¤Šđ pic.twitter.com/DPwwqktbVX
â Chicago Blackhawks (@NHLBlackhawks) December 31, 2025
Then, with three seconds to play in the second, Nick Lardis scores while the Islanders were trying to kill off a double-minor high-sticking penalty to Bo Horvat:
when you realize you have 3 seconds left on the clockâąď¸ pic.twitter.com/MgAtaZFsqx
â Chicago Blackhawks (@NHLBlackhawks) December 31, 2025
UP NEXT: The Islanders host the Utah Mammoth on New Year's Day at 3 PM ET.Â
This Big Canadiens Trade Just Keeps Getting Better
The Montreal Canadiens picked up a big 3-2 overtime win against the Florida Panthers on Dec. 30. With it, the Canadiens now have a 21-12-6 record and are three points ahead of the Panthers in the Atlantic Division standings.Â
Noah Dobson certainly played a role in the Canadiens' win over the Panthers, as he had a strong night. The 25-year-old blueliner picked up two assists in the contest, with one coming from Nick Suzuki's overtime goal.Â
This is just the latest strong game from Dobson, as he has been on fire as of late. Over his last four games, the right-shot defenseman has recorded two goals and eight points. With this, there is no question that he has been playing some great hockey for the Canadiens.Â
Due to his hot stretch of play, Dobson now has seven goals, 20 assists, and 27 points in 39 games so far this season with the Canadiens. With this, it is very clear that the 2018 first-round pick has been making a major impact for the Habs this season. Furthermore, the Canadiens' decision to acquire Dobson is only continuing to look better because of how well he is playing.
The Canadiens needed a highly impactful right-shot defenseman, and Dobson has been just that for them. It will be fascinating to see how he builds on his strong season from here, but the Canadiens clearly made the right call acquiring him from the New York Islanders this summer.Â
Ex-Oilers Stuart Skinner Has Big Game For Penguins
Former Edmonton Oilers goaltender Stuart Skinner had a tough start to his Pittsburgh Penguins tenure. The 27-year-old netminder lost each of his first three games with the Penguins and had a below .870 save percentage in each of them.Â
While Skinner did not have the hottest of starts with the Penguins, it is fair to say that the former Oilers goalie has officially broken the ice with Pittsburgh.
During the Penguins' Dec. 30 contest against the Carolina Hurricanes, Skinner stepped up in a major way. The Edmonton, Alberta native stopped 27 out of 28 shots he faced against the Hurricanes, which equates to a .964 save percentage. With this strong performance, Skinner also picked up his first win as a member of the Penguins.Â
Due to his excellent play between the pipes against the Hurricanes, Skinner was named the First Star of the Game. It is understandable, as he undoubtedly played a major role in the Penguins picking up two points against a very good Hurricanes club.Â
With his strong game against the Hurricanes, Skinner now has a 1-3-0 record, a .869 save percentage, and a 3.36 goals-against average in four games with the Penguins since being traded by the Oilers.Â
In 197 games over six seasons with the Oilers, Skinner posted a 109-62-18 record, a .904 save percentage, and a 2.74 goals-against average.Â
Canadiens rally late in regulation, spoil Marchandâs night with 3-2 overtime win over Panthers
Dec 30, 2025; Sunrise, Florida, USA; Montreal Canadiens center Nick Suzuki (14) scores against Florida Panthers goaltender Daniil Tarasov (40) during overtime at Amerant Bank Arena. Mandatory Credit: Sam Navarro-Imagn Images
Sam Navarro/Sam Navarro-Imagn Images
Nick Suzuki got a power-play goal 3:24 into overtime, and the Montreal Canadiens rallied from a two-goal deficit in the final five minutes of regulation to stun the Florida Panthers 3-2 on Tuesday night.
Suzuki also scored late in regulation to tie the game for the Canadiens, who improved to 6-1-3 in their last 10 games. Cole Caufield also scored for Montreal.
Brad Marchand and Sam Reinhart scored for Florida, but Marchand was called for roughing 1:27 into overtime â giving Montreal a 4-on-3 advantage.
The Panthers paid tribute to Marchandâs 1,000th career point in a pregame ceremony. Marchand got the milestone point in mid-November, but chose this game â against Montreal, one of his longtime rivals when he was with Boston and a team coached by one of his idols, Martin St. Louis â for the formal celebration.
The game was scoreless after two periods, just the 11th such game in the NHL this season and the first for both the Panthers and the Canadiens. And it was the first time a Florida-Montreal matchup saw no goals in the first 40 minutes of action since Feb. 14, 2013 â a contest that ended up as a 1-0 road win for the Canadiens.
But the final 10 minutes were wild.
Marchand opened the scoring at 10:18 and Reinhart connected with 4:59 left to put Florida up 2-0. Back came Montreal, with Caufield scoring 32 seconds after Reinhartâs goal and then Suzuki tying it up with 1:22 remaining.
It was the final game of 2025 for both teams. Montrealâs 21 wins going into New Yearâs Day are its most since having 21 wins at this point during the 2018-19 season. And Florida â which has played in each of the last three Stanley Cup Finals, winning the last two titles â played its 106th game of the year, the third straight year in which the Panthers have topped 100 games.
Up next
Canadiens: Visit Carolina on Thursday.
Panthers: Host the New York Rangers in the Winter Classic at Miami on Friday.
Gillespie scores 21 to lead No. 19 Tennessee’s rout of South Carolina State 105-54
Ja'Kobi Gillespie had 21 points and eight assists to lead No. 19 Tennessee to a 105-54 win over South Carolina State on Tuesday night. Nate Ament scored 16 points and Amari Evans added 14 for the Volunteers (10-3). Jaylen Carter had 13 points and 10 rebounds and J.P. Estrella finished with 12 points and 10 rebounds.
Blues Already Have Player On Roster That Can Replace Injured Pius Suter's Versatility: Otto Stenberg
ST. LOUIS â When Otto Stenberg was recalled by the St. Louis Blues from Springfield of the American Hockey League on Dec. 15, there was no guarantee how much, or how little, the first-round pick in the 2023 NHL Draft would play.
Or stay in St. Louis for his first NHL stint.
But there was a good scouting report by Blues coaches for the work that the 20-year-old had put in during training camp, that they were quite comfortable in utilizing the forward as much as possible, and in most situations.
He came up due to a rash of injuries among the forward group, and now that three of them (Alexey Toropchenko, Jordan Kyrou and Jimmy Snuggerud) have returned to the lineup, one had to wonder if Stenbergâs stint would be a short one.
But now that Pius Suter (high ankle sprain) is sidelined and will be reevaluated in four weeks, Stenbergâs tenure is likely to last at least that long. And the only reason we bring him up as a candidate to return to the AHL when numbers get crowded is due to his waiver-exempt status.
But Suterâs versatility of playing in a plethora of situations will be a challenge. However, Stenberg, who picked up an assist on Monday against the Buffalo Sabres setting up Brayden Schennâs goal in the first period and now has four assists in his first six games of his NHL career, has made quite the favorable impression that coach Jim Montgomery has a trustworthy option to use in a lot of Suterâs spots.
âHe continues on his path that heâs trending on, yeah, heâs going to get the opportunity because his stick is in the right position, he stops in the right spots, he doesnât get below pucks,â Montgomery said of Stenberg. âHeâs someone thatâs developing that skill and that the coaches are seeing.â
Itâs quite remarkable to see that Stenberg looks quite comfortable in his own skin at this level. He doesnât look overwhelmed, he reads the game well, itâs not too fast for him, heâs not intimidated, and teammates are putting him in positions to succeed, and most importantly, vice versa.
Itâs been mentioned enough that Stenberg doesnât cheat the game, and his stick work may be some of the finest the Blues have on this current roster already.
âI think it's been when I got a bit older and started talking about those details with sticks and everything,â Stenberg said. âI would say the year after I got drafted, I talked a lot to âSteenerâ in Sweden when he was the development guy there. He talked a lot about sticks and stuff. Maybe a little bit from there, I just think about it more. I would say like before that, I donât think I ever think about how I should position my stick. Yeah, maybe start thinking about it more and more there and just try to read what the guy with the puck is going to do and then you can put your stick on your reads.â
Suter is one of the top penalty killers for the Blues, and when one talks of players with good stick positioning on the ice, on the penalty kill is essential, and Stenberg has already seen his ice time there increase.
âYeah of course (itâs paid off),â Stenberg said. â(Steen) was a good player when he played. He had a lot of good things to tell me and even like last year and this year, we talked to all the development guys and coaches, they helped me with that and everything. It's good.â
Stenberg made his NHL debut Dec. 17 against the Winnipeg Jets and the Stenungsund, Sweden native, who started that game on the fourth line, has moved up and down and utilized wherever needed. His trust has not gone unnoticed, and thatâs why heâs playing more up the lineup; he was on a line with fellow 2023 first-round pick Dalibor Dvorsky and 2022 first-round pick Snuggerud on Tuesday ahead of a game against the Colorado Avalanche on Wednesday.
âIn the offensive zone, youâre not going to get caught on the wrong side of pucks,â Montgomery said of Stenberg. âLike if two guys are low, heâs not diving in as the third guy. I think thereâs a lot more offensive upside to Stenberg as he continues to get comfortable at this level, but going back, I think he has a lot more similar details, penalty kill and in the D-zone as Suter does.â
Thatâs why he feels he can replace all those elements while Suter is out.
âYeah, I think so,â Stenberg said. âJust continue to play my game and play the way I've played the last five games and try to play good in D-zone and start making more plays and doing more and more with the puck. Start in the right end and just play my game. I hope so.â
A great example of why his offense can come around the more repetitions he gets is after that nice touch pass to Schenn on his goal Monday, look where Stenberg immediately goes: right to the net waiting for that rebound:
For the second straight game, Brayden Schenn has the Blues' first goal. #stlbluespic.twitter.com/arjUrJzbyC
â St. Louis Blues (@StLouisBlues) December 30, 2025
"In the beginning, you want to play good defense and show the coach that he can trust you,â Stenberg said. âAfter that, I think you can start to make more and more plays, but still be smart and make good plays. I can try more and more, some more offense, yeah.â
There was a play in the third period Monday when the Blues were down 3-2, and Stenberg and Robert Thomas nearly hooked up for what would have been a really nice tying goal that Stenberg just missed when Thomas tried to slide a pass to him on the left post.
"I would like him to be a little further wide," Montgomery said after the game. "When you drive back post, it means you're outside back post. It gives you more to shoot at, but I just like the fact that he jumped on a shorthanded situation. Thomas actually said, 'Hey, we're going to go for it here,' before they went out. And 'Tommer' made a great play, but if he's a little more backdoor, I think he has time to see it come through and then he's outside the goalie's pad, and that's something we'll continue to work on with everyone.
Including Stenberg, who once he develops those offensive instincts, he can ask himself if he can be a top six player.
âI hope so. That's the goal,â Stenberg said. âI think I've said it before, I think I can play a lot of different roles on a team. That's a good thing for me. I will play where the coach wants me and I think I can do well on every line.â
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.
Illinois beats Tennessee in the Music City Bowl to keep Big Ten undefeated this bowl season
Louisiana Tech scores 17 in 4th quarter, beats Coastal Carolina 23-14 to win Independence Bowl
Wilson’s double-double helps No. 12 North Carolina beat Florida State 79-66 in ACC opener
Caleb Wilson had 22 points, 16 rebounds and six assists to help No. North Carolina beat Florida State 79-66 on Tuesday night to open Atlantic Coast Conference play. The 6-foot-10 freshman set a season high on the boards and matched his high in assists as clearly the best player on the floor, from his energy in chasing down rebounds to high-flying athleticism that showed in throwing down four dunks.
Luke Altmyer trucks ref, powers Illinois to Music City Bowl win over Tennessee and first back-to-back 9-plus-win seasons in program history
Flyers pick up win No. 20 to give Tocchet victorious trip back to Vancouver
Flyers pick up win No. 20 to give Tocchet victorious trip back to Vancouver originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia
In Rick Tocchetâs return to Vancouver, British Columbia, the Flyers made him a winner as they beat the Canucks, 6-3, Tuesday night at Rogers Arena.
Noah Cates, Carl Grundstrom, Travis Konecny, Bobby Brink, Owen Tippett and Christian Dvorak all found the back of the net for the Flyers. The goals from Tippett and Dvorak were empty-netters.
Cates (one goal, one assist), Konecny (one goal, one assist), Brink (one goal, one assist), Matvei Michkov (two assists) and Trevor Zegras (two assists) had multi-point efforts.
The Flyers (20-11-7) picked up their 20th win in Game 38 of the season. Itâs the quickest theyâve gotten to 20 wins since 2019-20, when they did it in 36 games. That season was the last time the team made the playoffs.
Tocchetâs club rebounded from a 4-1 loss Sunday night to the Kraken. The Flyers have dropped consecutive games in regulation only once under his guidance (Nov. 1-2).
Tocchet left Vancouver in the offseason before becoming the Flyersâ new head coach. He had spent parts of the last three seasons there, winning the Jack Adams Award in 2023-24.
The Flyers beat the Canucks (16-20-3) for the second time in a little over a week. They took care of Vancouver, 5-2, at Xfinity Mobile Arena in their final home game before the holiday break.
⢠Dan Vladar matched his career high with win No. 14.
The free-agent signing made 32 saves on 35 shots.
The Canucksâ third goal came with just 1:44 minutes left in the action while the Flyers had a commanding lead.
Vancouver netminder Thatcher Demko stopped 27 of the Flyersâ 31 shots.
On Brinkâs goal early in the third period, Michkov skillfully executed a 2-on-1. It was a huge play because the Canucks had just trimmed the Flyersâ lead to 3-2.
⢠After a poor start in which they were thoroughly outplayed, the Flyers were able to tie things up at 1-1 thanks to Catesâ goal.
With around eight minutes left in the first period, Michkov made a nice play to set up a shot from Cates. Konecny had a good hit at the defensive blue line 15 seconds before the goal to help spring the Flyers.
The Flyersâ alternate captain really played like a leader. His hit seemed to stem the tide and he then buried his goal on a great second effort around the net to cushion the Flyersâ lead to 3-1 in the middle stanza.
⢠When Tyson Foerster went down at the start of this month with a season-ending injury, the big storyline was who would step up in his absence? Well, how about the guy that was called up for him?
That ended up being Grundstrom, who has played like he doesnât want to go back down. The veteran winger has scored a goal in four straight games and has seven over 11 games since his call-up.
Grundstrom has really opened eyes in just 12 games with the Flyers. He had three goals in 56 games all of last season with the Sharks. The 28-year-old was placed on waivers and sent to AHL affiliate Lehigh Valley after being acquired in the Ryan Ellis trade just four days before the season.
⢠The Flyers are right back at it Wednesday when they visit the Flames for a New Yearâs Eve matchup (9:30 p.m. ET/NBCSP).
NCAA tries to clarify NBA stance after Baylorâs addition of 2023 draft pick prompts criticism
Red Wings Reassign John Leonard to AHL Grand Rapids Despite Hot NHL Start
The Detroit Red Wings have reassigned forward John Leonard to their AHL affiliate, the Grand Rapids Griffins, on Tuesday. The move was widely anticipated, as Patrick Kane is set to return from injury, leaving limited roster spots available.
Leonard did everything he could to secure his place with the Red Wings, tallying four points in seven games, including a three-game point streak during his stint in Detroit. This marked Leonardâs first NHL action since the 2023-24 season with the Arizona Coyotes. Over parts of five NHL seasons, the 27-year-old has recorded 21 points (eight goals, 13 assists) in 77 games.
Before being called up, Leonard was one of the most dangerous forwards in the AHL, racking up 19 goals and ten assists for 29 points in just 20 games with the Griffins this season. He is currently tied for eighth in league scoring, ranks second in goals, and leads the league in game-winning goals.
Bookmark The Hockey News Detroit Red Wings team site to stay connected to the latest news, game-day coverage, and player features.
1:05 in, Leonard has his first as a Red Wing! đ pic.twitter.com/dcMD3pSKMb
â Detroit Red Wings (@DetroitRedWings) December 20, 2025
Leonardâs stellar play earned him the AHL Player of the Month award for November, when he recorded 16 points in only ten games. A sixth-year professional, Leonard also made a significant impact in the postseason last year, helping the Charlotte Checkers reach the Calder Cup Finals with 14 points in 18 playoff games.
With Kaneâs return, Leonard will now rejoin the Griffins, where he has continued to be a key offensive force and a player to watch for future NHL opportunities.
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Nique Clifford, Maxime Raynaud facing ârite of passage' amid Kings' struggles
Nique Clifford, Maxime Raynaud facing ârite of passage' amid Kings' struggles originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area
INGLEWOOD, Calif. â At least the rookies look good.
Doug Christie once again was unhappy with the Kingsâ effort after a disheartening 131-90 loss to the Los Angeles Clippers on Tuesday night at Intuit Dome. Still, Sacramentoâs coach was proud of how guard Nique Clifford and center Maxime Raynaud continued to grow.
Clifford finished with a team-best 18 points on 7-of-12 shooting and three triples, while Raynaud poured in 12 points and grabbed 12 rebounds.
âThese players are good, man,â Christie said of the rookies. âTheyâre trying to do the right things. Weâre here for them; weâre going to support them; weâre going to show them film; weâre going to develop; we keep working with them.â
It was the first time the Kings and Clippers met during the 2025-26 NBA season.
That also means that Tuesday nightâs 41-point loss was the first time Clifford and Raynaud faced Los Angeles stars Kawhi Leonard and James Harden, who combined for 54 points, 10 assists and eight rebounds, seemingly without breaking a sweat.
Christie discussed his rookiesâ growing pains against the Clippers duo, emphasizing that Clifford and Raynaud only will improve as they stack professional experiences.
âYou have to go through the league first,â Christie said of Clifford and Raynaud. âYou know, that was the first time they have seen Kawhi, thatâs the first time they have seen James Harden. Nique got some fouls against [Harden] that heâs like, âWhat did I do?â And Iâm just like, âListen, man, you got to put yourself in the right position ⌠You canât wait for him to hit you; you have to hit him first.â There are little things that [Clifford] has to learn; the same with Max.Â
âWe have to live with some of those mistakes from Max and Nique. But I will tell you that theyâre not coming from a bad place. Those kids are just trying, theyâre figuring it out, and thatâs everything that we can ask for from them. And they continue to improve. The bumps and bruises theyâre going to along the way [are] part of what you have to go through in this league to figure it out â and they will; I mean, Iâm not worried about that.â
Clifford, whom Sacramento selected No. 24 overall in the 2025 NBA Draft, now is up to six games of double-digit scoring. And Raynaud, who was drafted by Sacramento at No. 42, continues to settle into the starting center spot in place of the injured Domantas Sabonis and is up to six double-doubles.
The Kings arenât where they want to be as a team, now with an 8-25 record entering the new year.
But Clifford and Raynaud are taking advantage of their respective opportunities, particularly the âbumps and bruises,â as Christie emphasized.
âIt really is a rite of passage, man,â Christie said. âLike, you got to go through it. Because a lot of times, what you see in this league is, even with a team, theyâll have success for a year, and then they come back, and youâre like, âWhat happened?â Because this league figures you out.
âIf you donât take advantage of this time, if you donât go through and have all of those bumps and bruises, you know, that rookie year kind of drags on into next year. And before you know it, you kind of get labeled, and those are things that we donât want for our players. Player development is big; they got to take this stuff seriously.â
Christie added that he advises his youngsters to journal their experiences after every game so that they have a âvast amount of knowledgeâ to reflect on in future matchups.
It seems that Clifford and Raynaud, despite their teamâs struggles, have nowhere to go but up.
âThe biggest part of all of that is that they are good kids, and they want to be good,â Christie said. âSo they stay in the gym, they listen, they do the right things âŚâ