Red-Hot Wild Face Avalanche After Beating Oilers

The Colorado Avalanche square off against a major Central Division rival tomorrow night—and it isn’t the Dallas Stars.

Instead, it’s the Minnesota Wild, the hottest team in the NHL, riding a seven-game winning streak. On Saturday night in front of a packed Grand Casino Arena, Minnesota continued its surge with a convincing 5–2 victory over Connor McDavid and the Edmonton Oilers.

How It Unfolded

Matt Boldy set the tone early, burying his 21st goal of the season less than four minutes into the game. Just over seven minutes later, he struck again, finishing a play set up by Quinn Hughes and Mats Zuccarello to give Minnesota an early jolt of energy.

Edmonton pushed back in an eventful first period, answering with two goals of its own. But the Wild had the final say before intermission, as Ryan Hartman tipped in a goal with just eight seconds remaining to restore Minnesota’s lead and send the teams to the locker room with the Wild up 3–2.

The second period came and went without a goal, but Minnesota regained control in the third. Vladimir Tarasenko extended the lead to 4–2, and Nico Sturm later sealed the outcome, converting on a setup from Tarasenko to cap the scoring.

Filip Gustavsson was steady in net, stopping 28 of 30 shots to earn his fifth consecutive win. He improved to 12-8-3 on the season as the Wild outshot the Oilers 37–30 in another well-rounded performance.

Now 22-9-5, the Wild are playing their best hockey of the season, but a significant challenge awaits Sunday night. Minnesota will be on the second leg of a back-to-back as it faces the league-leading Colorado Avalanche (25-2-7).

Avalanche Hold Off Jets

Last night at Ball Arena, the Avalanche (25-2-7) earned their 12th consecutive home victory with a 3–2 win over the Winnipeg Jets, extending their winning streak to four games.

Brent Burns scored the game-winning goal, his fifth of the season, making him just the fourth defenseman in NHL history to record at least five goals in a season at age 40 or older.

Martin Nečas and Parker Kelly also scored for Colorado, while Josh Manson added two assists and was named the first star of the game. The Avalanche improved to 14-0-2 at home and extended their point streak to seven games (6-0-1).

Scott Wedgewood made 20 saves to secure the win.

Avalanche-Wild Head-to-Head

The two teams last met on November 28 at the same venue, where the Wild earned a 3–2 shootout victory. Scott Wedgewood made 35 saves for Colorado, while Nathan MacKinnon recorded two points, including a goal. Gabe Landeskog scored a crucial late goal to force overtime.

Kirill Kaprizov scored both regulation goals for Minnesota before the game was decided in the shootout.

The Wild have won three of their last five matchups against the Avalanche—an impressive turnaround after dropping their previous five meetings. Over that span, MacKinnon has three goals and three assists against Minnesota, while Kaprizov has four goals and three assists in his last five games versus Colorado. Prior to the November 28 meeting, Kaprizov had missed three straight games against the Avalanche due to injury.

Start Time

Avalanche vs. Wild coverage begins at 4 p.m. local time on Sunday afternoon. It should be a classic. 

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Observations From Blues' 6-2 Win Vs. Panthers

What was this? An offensive explosion? Against the two-time defending Stanley Cup champs, of all people?

That’s why sports of all sorts can be interesting in different sort of ways, but the St. Louis Blues, who came into Saturday’s game against the Florida Panthers dead-last in scoring (2.44 goals per game) put up their largest offensive output of the season.

And it was a little bit of everyone, from Robert Thomas to Pavel Buchnevich to Jake Neighbours to Jonatan Berggren to Otto Stenberg, each with multi-point games.

Thomas (two goals, one assist) and Berggren (one goal, two assists) led the way, and Jake Neighbours (two goals) became the first Blue to reach double-digits in goals this season, and Stenberg had two assists for his first points in the NHL to lead the Blues to a 6-2 win against the Panthers at Amerant Bank Arena in Sunrise, Fla.

Joel Hofer made 27 saves in his fourth start the past five games and Justin Faulk also scored, a buzzer-beater (which we’ll get into below) at the end of the second period to give the Blues (14-15-8) a lead they would never relinquish in the third period.

Let’s go into Saturday’s game observations:

* Have the Blues found themselves a player? – Let’s pump the brakes a little bit and not get too excited about it (yet), but boy, this Berggren kid has fit in like a glove.

Berggren was moved up to the top line with Thomas and Buchnevich, who had two assists, after playing there in the third period on Thursday against the New York Rangers.

That line picked up where it left off and combined for eight points, and Berggren, who now has four points (two goals, two assists) in three games since being claimed off waivers last Tuesday from the Detroit Red Wings.

Not only was he inserted onto the top line, but Blues coach Jim Montgomery put him on the top power play unit and paid dividends immediately when his one-timer from the right circle was actually caught by Florida goalie Daniil Tarasov with a brilliant glove save but it was ruled a goal on the ice and after a look, referee Michael Markovic, who had a really good look live, was right and the puck was caught but across the goal line that gave the Blues a 2-0 lead at 1:55 of the second period:

But Berggren is making high-end plays, and he’s making himself more comfortable in this lineup. The fact he’s doing it this quickly is quite remarkable, to be honest. But again, he could be playing off a high of proving himself for the new team that took a chance on him. But if the Blues can continue to get this kind of production and effectiveness, they may have something here.

When it comes to waiver wire pickups that turned into gems, I look no further than the opponent tonight and Gustav Forsling, who was a waiver wire claim in 2021 by the Panthers from the Carolina Hurricanes, and he’s been a staple to their defense.

* Neighbours the catalyst for hard work – When the Blues work, particularly on the boards and forecheck in the offensive zone, they’re a tough out.

And who better to get the scoring started for the Blues on this night than Neighbours, who was stationed in the slot with a perfect redirect of Cam Fowler’s wrister at 9:59 of the opening period for a 1-0 lead:

The Blues won the opening O-zone face-off that came as a result of an intentional offside by the Panthers, and Stenberg picked up his first NHL point on the play, with Fowler getting his 400th NHL assist.

And it was a Neighbours goal at 12:02 of the third period that essentially sealed the game for the Blues and each member of the line had a solid contribution on it.

It started with a Brayden Schenn effective forecheck behind the net, and the captain wound up checking Seth Jones off the puck, center the puck to Stenberg, who had a nice touch pass to Neighbours and he finished upstairs for a 4-2 lead:

Neighbours made some nifty plays throughout the game, but his work ethic was infectious and rubbed off on others that also put on their work boots in this one.

* Blues overcome a couple questionable calls – Leading 2-0 in the second period, which hasn’t exactly been a stellar one for the Blues this season.

The first was on a goal scored by A.J. Greer to cut the Blues’ lead to 2-1 at 7:35 of the period, one in which Montgomery challenged for goalie interference, quite simply a rule nobody knows a darn thing about. Seriously.

It’s such a fickle rule, and we all know the effects of it when the Blues were on the bad judgment of a call in what ultimately turned into a 4-3 loss to the Seattle Kraken in November.

On this one, both Jones and Greer made their way into the crease, not forced in, and made contact with Hofer, but again, it was determined that neither affected Hofer’s ability to play his position.

Again, I disagree, and I have no qualms with the Blues challenging this. But this confusion goes around all over the league, and if it’s in the judgment of the officials on the ice, then why have any set rules for it in the first place? Just eliminate it and allow the officials to make those calls so teams don’t continually get confused by it.

The one that baffled me even more was Jon McIsaac’s holding penalty call on Colton Parayko in the neutral zone on Evan Rodrigues at 11:44 that ultimately led to Sam Reinhart’s power-play goal at 12:45 that tied the game 2-2.

This to me was a nothing call, two guys jostling for position, trying to play the puck, right in front of McIsaac. Swallow your whistle at this point and let them play, but if you’re going to take one there, then both should have been taken. Quite frankly, neither should have been taken, and in my judgment, it was a bad call of a good hockey play.

This is where the Blues could have buckled, despite the Panthers (19-14-2), who had won four straight, including a 4-3 shootout win against the Hurricanes rallying from a 3-0 third-period deficit in the final 10 minutes.

But they didn’t. Patience was a virtue.

* Faulk’s goal massive – The Blues have allowed them, but they had yet to get one themselves … until Saturday.

Not only did they get a goal in the final minute of a period or the first time, but Faulk just beat the horn with 0.8 seconds left at the end of the second to give them a much-needed 3-2 lead, another example of hard work, winning a puck behind the net, and it was Berggren again fighting through what looked like multiple holds and obstructions by Aaron Ekblad, winning the puck, sending it through the seam off the right boards, and Faulk steps into a clapper to beat Tarasov high on the short side:

At 2-2 with 20 minutes left, maybe there’s more juice in the Panthers’ tank to win a game, but chasing it, there’s a different emphasis, and the Blues can do some things different themselves.

* Blues kept the foot on the gas in the third – How many times have we seen this particular team sit back and either let the lead get away or hang on for dear life?

Not only did the Blues win, but they won handily. They were smart with pucks, patient with it, and the tone was set with Schenn, Neighbours and Stenberg opening the period, and playing their entire 45-second shift in the Florida zone.

When Neighbours finally gave them the two-goal cushion, Thomas put an exclamation point on the game whipping in his first of the night at 12:53, or 51 seconds after Neighbours made it 4-2, to make it 5-2 on more loose puck work behind the net by Berggren to find Buchnevich, who found Thomas with a slip pass and not much room to shoot:

And Thomas scored a shorthanded empty-netter to put icing on the cake at 16:28 for the 6-2 final.

But the Blues outshot Florida 16-8 in the third and were never overwhelmed by the Panthers’ effective forecheck. Hofer did his part intercepting rims throughout, and puck transition was pretty smooth throughout.

* Does Stenberg belong – Boy, the first-round pick in the 2023 NHL Draft (No. 25 overall) sure doesn’t look overwhelmed, does he?

Not only his first two NHL points came, but he was a plus-2 in 11:39 of ice time, but man, does this kid have an infectious work ethic and he just seems to be in the right areas of the ice.

He had three shot attempts in this game, so he’s trying to get more involved offensively, but when you have a line like Schenn and Neighbours, and complement it with another hard worker like Stenberg, teams are going to hate playing against them.

The Blues are going to have some tough decisions to make when some of these injured guys return. And I’d be foolish not to mention Robby Fabbri, who had three shots on goal and played 13:40 but had two Grade A scoring chances in the game early on, rebounding well after being a healthy scratch Thursday.

Can you imagine: Fabbri was signed to a one-year, two-way contract a week and a half ago; Berggren was claimed off waivers four days ago and Stenberg was recalled from Springfield of the American Hockey League four days ago and all are playing effectively for this team right now.

If anything, they’re going to make decisions difficult, and that’s OK.

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Öhgren, Lankinen & Karlsson Help Canucks Push Win Streak To Four Games After 5-4 Shootout Victory Over The Bruins

The Vancouver Canucks pushed their win streak to four games on Saturday after a 5-4 shootout victory over the Boston Bruins. Liam Öhgren was the hero in the shootout while also scoring and adding an assist in regulation. As for Vancouver's other goal scorers, Linus Karlsson scored twice, while Max Sasson scored the Canucks first goal of the game. 

While Vancouver had a few standouts, no player had a stronger game than Kevin Lankinen. The Canucks goaltender stopped 38 of the 42 shots he faced before going a perfect seven for seven in the shootout. Thanks to his performance, Lankinen picks up his fifth victory of the season and first since November 16. 

This was yet another example of Vancouver finding a way to win despite being outplayed by its opposition. The Canucks were outshot 42-22 in this game, yet somehow kept their win streak alive. Whether it was Lankinen coming up with big saves at crucial times or depth pieces scoring massive goals, the win streak continues heading into the final game before the holiday break. 

Shifting over to standouts from this game, Aatu Räty is one player who deserves a shoutout. After being a healthy scratch in each of the last three games, the 23-year-old had one of his most impressive performances in the NHL as he set a new career high with eight hits. Räty also went nine for 12 in the faceoff dot, which included going six for seven in the defensive zone. 

Vancouver's fourth line of Öhgren, Sasson and Karlsson also put forth impressive performances as the trio led the way offensively for Vancouver. They scored all four of the Canucks goals in regulation, with Öhgren scoring the shootout winner. With Vancouver's top players struggling to score recently, these three are showing they can step up when the team needs them the most. 

"We didn't like our start in the first," said Öhgren post-game. "But I think we came out much better in the second period and in the third as well. We really pushed it and happy to get the win."

After what was a frustrating start to the season, the positive vibes seem to be returning to the Canucks. They are finding ways to win, which is even more impressive considering that they are on the road and are still missing center Elias Pettersson. The question now is, can Vancouver keep the momentum not just on Monday, but when they return home after the holiday break? 

Dec 20, 2025; Boston, Massachusetts, USA; Vancouver Canucks goaltender Kevin Lankinen (32) deflects the puck in the corner past Boston Bruins center Marat Khusnutdinov (92) during the first period at TD Garden. Mandatory Credit: Bob DeChiara-Imagn Images

Stats and Facts:

- Liam Öhgren records his first assist with the Canucks

- Marco Rossi record his first point with the Canucks 

- Linus Karlsson records his first career three-point game 

- Kevin Lankinen's 38 saves are the most during his time with Vancouver

Scoring Summary:

1st Period: 

8:23- BOS: Morgan Geekie (25) from Charlie McAvoy and Elias Lindholm (PPG)
19:45- VAN: Max Sasson (7) from Liam Öhgren and Linus Karlsson

2nd Period:

4:22- VAN: Linus Karlsson (6) from Evander Kane and Filip Hronek (PPG)
9:41- BOS: Pavel Zacha (10) from Nikita Zadorov and Casey Mittelstadt
12:05- BOS: Tanner Jeannot (4) from Mark Kastelic and Fraser Minten

3rd Period:

3:53- VAN: Linus Karlsson (7) from Marco Rossi
7:34- VAN: Liam Öhgren (2) from Marcus Pettersson and Jake DeBrusk
16:16- BOS: Andrew Peeke (3) from Marat Khusnutdinov and Morgan Geekie

Overtime:

No Scoring

Shootout:

VAN: Liam Öhgren

Up Next: 

The Canucks will wrap up their five-game road trip on Monday against the Philadelphia Flyers. Monday will also be the final game before the NHL's holiday break. Puck drop is scheduled for 4:30 pm PT. 

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

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The Hockey News

Flyers Embrace Philosophy Change with Denver Barkey's NHL Debut, Breakout

Less than halfway through the 2025-26 season, the Philadelphia Flyers are already icing a much different team than the one they started the year with.

Once upon a time, Flyers GM Danny Briere cited the size of Zeev Buium, which was already comparable to the likes of Cam York, Emil Andrae, and Jamie Drysdale, as one of the primary drivers that led to the selection of Jett Luchanko instead.

Well, Andrae, 23, didn't even make the Flyers to start this season after an impressive 2024-25 season on the whole, and his 5-foot-9 size and ho-hum training camp didn't do him favors in comparison to taller teammates Adam Ginning and Egor Zamula.

Now, Andrae has emerged as one of Rick Tocchet's most important defenders and is already up to nine points in 24 games, smashing last year's total of seven points in 42 games.

As for Ginning and Zamula? Both had their opportunities to play for the Flyers and make a case to stick in the NHL, but, at least for now, both players are loitering in the AHL with the Lehigh Valley Phantoms.

Ex-Flyers Coach John Tortorella Shuts Down Talk of NHL Return... For NowEx-Flyers Coach John Tortorella Shuts Down Talk of NHL Return... For NowFormer <a href="https://thehockeynews.com/nhl/philadelphia-flyers">Philadelphia Flyers</a> head coach John Tortorella isn't close to throwing in the towel on his coaching career, but the veteran bench boss was well prepared to say any talk of an NHL return right now is premature.

Are the Flyers suddenly turning over a new leaf after experiencing first-hand the lack of success they had going with a bigger lineup for the sake of being bigger? Maybe, but the diminutive Denver Barkey having an impressive and productive NHL debut against the New York Rangers on Saturday afternoon isn't a coincidence.

Barkey, 20, is in the midst of his first season playing pro hockey and got the call-up from the AHL in the wake of an injury to Christian Dvorak, though the Flyers probably needed to add a forward to their roster regardless.

Well, two primary assists later, the 5-foot-9, 155-pound forward has already made a case to stay with the Flyers beyond this one-game cameo, excelling on a line with top forwards Sean Couturier and Owen Tippett.

In my eyes, Barkey, formerly the captain of the OHL London Knights, was one of the most impressive young guns in Flyers training camp alongside Nikita Grebenkin.

Flyers: How Ty Murchison Fared in Thrilling NHL DebutFlyers: How Ty Murchison Fared in Thrilling NHL DebutIf one game can be taken for anything concrete, the <a href="https://thehockeynews.com/nhl/philadelphia-flyers">Philadelphia Flyers</a> may have found themselves a useful new piece on defense with prospect Ty Murchison.

The 2023 third-round pick is one of those players that, despite their size, manages to get involved in every play at both ends of the ice, attack the game with poise and moxie, and carry themselves assuredly, whether right or wrong.

The Flyers have a use for more of those players, even though the logjam at forward doesn't necessarily help the cause.

Still, the Flyers now have two more players shorter than 5-foot-10 than they started with the season with, and it's working out well so far for them.

Another poor performance from Sam Ersson spoiled Barkey's debut, which ended in a 5-4 shootout loss, but as long as the Flyers continue to trust in their most talented players above singular traits, the results will eventually come.

Sabres Hire Kings Senior Advisor Marc Bergevin For Associate GM Role

Marc Bergevin is parting ways with the Los Angeles Kings to join the Buffalo Sabres' new staff. 

After spending four-and-a-half seasons with the Kings as a senior advisor to the GM, he's moving on to join the Sabres as an associate GM.

Bergevin will be a part of Buffalo's front office, working alongside the newly hired GM, Jarmo Kekalainen. Kekalainen was hired by Buffalo as a senior advisor, the same role as Bergevin with Los Angeles.

This hire by the Sabres comes on the same day as the team relieved associate GM and Rochester Americans GM Jason Karmanos from his duties. It seems that Kekalainen knew who he wanted working alongside him in efforts to steer the ship in Buffalo back on its tracks.

The 60-year-old Bergevin was the GM of the Montreal Canadiens for 10 seasons from 2012 to 2021. He was succeeded by Jeff Gorton, who is now Montreal's president of hockey operations.

Former Kings GM Rob Blake was the one who brought on Bergevin following his departure from the Canadiens. Now with Ken Holland at the wheel, Bergevin will be off to take on a new challenge.

Ken Holland's Latest Move May Force Him Into AnotherKen Holland's Latest Move May Force Him Into AnotherAfter Los Angeles Kings GM Ken Holland sent Phillip Danault back to the Montreal Canadiens, there will be a gaping hole down the middle when next season rolls around

The Sabres currently own the longest playoff drought in NHL history, and their addition of Bergevin will be a hope for them to build the team up from the ruins.

In addition to Bergevin's experience as an NHL GM and senior advisor, he'll be overseeing Team Canada at the upcoming Spengler Cup, which kicks off on Boxing Day.


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Blackhawks lose Frank Nazar to facial injury in fifth straight defeat

OTTAWA, Ontario — The Chicago Blackhawks lost another key player when Frank Nazar was hit in the face by a puck during Saturday’s 6-4 loss at Ottawa.

Nazar went straight to the locker room after he was struck by Senators defenseman Jordan Spence’s shot about five minutes into the game. Coach Jeff Blashill declined to offer any specifics about the injury, but he said Nazar will be sidelined for approximately four weeks.

“You saw the play,” Blashill said. “He got hit right in the face.”

Chicago was already without Connor Bedard, who has a team-high 19 goals and 25 assists. Bedard missed his fourth consecutive game with a right shoulder injury that is going to sideline the 20-year-old center at least until early January.

Captain Nick Foligno hasn’t played since Nov. 15 because of a hand injury, but he could return soon.

“One of the things that leads to consistency is depth, and so our depth is getting tested,” Blashill said. “So guys in those roles have to ultimately play at a higher level. As you play more minutes in more important roles, you’ve got to play that much better. And it’s a challenge. And it’s not easy.

“As a group, we need to get more out of more guys. We’ve talked about that, and we’ll continue to talk about that.”

Nazar, who turns 22 on Jan. 14, has six goals and 15 assists in 33 games. The center, a first-round pick in the 2022 draft, agreed to a seven-year contract extension in August.

Chicago and Ottawa were tied at 3 after two periods, but David Perron scored twice in the third for the Senators.

It was the Blackhawks’ fifth consecutive loss. They dropped to 3-11-2 in their last 16 games.

Kaufman-Renn scores 18 points and Smith has 14 assists as No. 6 Purdue routs No. 21 Auburn, 88-60

Trey Kaufman-Renn had 18 points and six rebounds, and Braden Smith added 11 points and a season-high 14 assists to help No. 6 Purdue blow out No. 21 Auburn 88-60 on Saturday. C.J. Cox scored 14 points, making four 3-pointers, as the Boilermakers (11-1) won their third straight game since getting routed at home by then-No. 10 Iowa State two weeks ago. Purdue improved to 3-1 in the annual Indy Classic by shooting 55.9% from the field.

Latest Panthers comeback attempt comes up short, Florida falls to Blues 6-2

The Florida Panthers hit the ice on Saturday evening in Sunrise searching for a fifth consecutive victory while playing a third game in four nights.

Florida battled back from an early deficit but ultimately ran out of gas against the spunky St. Louis Blues, falling 6-2 at Amerant Bank Arena.

St. Louis picked up the game’s first goal on a nifty deflection.

Directly off a faceoff in Florida’s zone, a point shot by Cam Fowler was tipped by Jake Neighbours to give the Blues a 1-0 lead 9:58 into the game.

The visitors doubled their lead early in the second period while on a power play on a shot that was nearly kept out of the net.

Panthers goaltender Daniil Tarasov made an amazing glove save while sliding to his left, but the shot by Jonatan Berggren was just hard enough to cause Tarasov’s glove to cross over the goal line, just past the post, as he stretched back to catch it.

Just like that it was 2-0 Blues with over 18 minutes left in the middle frame.

Florida finally got themselves on the scoreboard about five minutes later.

Seth Jones cut to the net and put a shot on Joel Hofer that was stopped, but the rebound went to Jesper Boqvist at the opposite side of the net and his shot went off A.J. Greer in front and past Hofer’s blocker.

The Panthers would tie the game a few minutes after that thanks to a familiar looking goal.

With Florida on the power play, Brad Marchand corralled the puck below the goal line and sent a perfect pass to Sam Reinhart in the slot, and Reinhart’s quick shot eluded Hofer to tie the score at two with 7:15 to go in the second period.

It looked like the game would go into the intermission with the game all tied up, but a shocking goal by Justin Faulk with 0.8 on the clock gave the Blues a 3-2 edge and some good vibes to take into the final frame.

St. Louis would regain their two-goal advantage when Luke Schenn stole the puck from Seth Jones behind Florida’s net and fed Neighbours in the slot.

The 23-year-old’s second of the game made it 4-2 Blues with 7:58 to go.

Less than a minute later, Robert Thomas one-timed a shot past Tarasov from the slot, putting Florida behind 5-2 with just over seven minutes on the clock.

Thomas added a shorthanded empty-net goal with 3:32 to go, cementing the Blues’ victory over the Cats.

On to Carolina.

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Photo caption: Dec 20, 2025; Sunrise, Florida, USA; St. Louis Blues defenseman Justin Faulk (72) celebrates with teammates after scoring against the Florida Panthers during the second period at Amerant Bank Arena. (Sam Navarro-Imagn Images)

Dallin Hall, Jacari White lead No. 23 Virginia to 80-72 win over former ACC rival Maryland

Dallin Hall scored a season-high 20 points, Jacari White had a spectacular dunk and scored 15, and No. 23 Virginia beat Maryland 80-72 on Saturday night in the first meeting since 2018 between the former Atlantic Coast Conference rivals. Hall went 8 of 8 from the field for the Cavaliers (10-1). Devin Tillis added 10 points on 4-of-4 shooting on a night when Virginia's leading scorer, Thijs De Ridder, went 1 of 8 from the field and scored five points.