Purdue set a trap for Texas Tech and had its most impressive surge of the season. Heck, maybe anyone’s most impressive surge of the season thus far.
The dating game: Why college sports recruiting is a ‘two-way street’
Ex-Flyers Coach Turning Devils Defenseman Into a Monster
The Philadelphia Flyers benefitted from some strong coaching from Brad Shaw in the past, but now, predictably, his departure is working directly against them.
Shaw, 61, deservedly earned a lot of credit for the development of multiple Flyers defensemen during his tenure in Philadelphia, headlined by the likes of Cam York, Jamie Drysdale, Rasmus Ristolainen, Nick Seeler, and even Travis Sanheim.
All of those players, at different points in their careers, either turned things completely around or took steps forward as NHLers.
Shaw, of course, was not retained by the Flyers after the firing of previous head coach John Tortorella, as Rick Tocchet was given the reins and Shaw opted for another opportunity instead of having to go through the interview process again for the same position he already had.
That opportunity, as we now know, came with the Metropolitan Division rival New Jersey Devils, who already have a high-powered defensive unit led by the likes of Luke Hughes and Dougie Hamilton.
Injuries have plagued the Devils, though, and Hughes has not been all that after a lengthy contract holdout and season-ending surgery impacted his offseason.
That meant that 2022 No. 2 overall pick Simon Nemec, who many Flyers fans were hoping would fall to them in the draft, had to step up with Hamilton, Brett Pesce, and Johnathan Kovacevic - all right-shots - on the shelf.
Well, with the added responsibilities, Nemec and Shaw have been cooking up something special in Newark.
Nemec, 21, has not been on the ice for a 5-on-5 goal against in six consecutive games, and the Slovakian defender has had a banner week overall.
After scoring a crucial game-tying goal against the New York Islanders on Nov. 10, Nemec scored a hat trick and overtime winner against the Chicago Blackhawks on Nov. 12, then added a shootout winner against the Washington Capitals on Nov. 15 for good measure.
For a player whose peaks and valleys were maddeningly extreme at times, Nemec, with the inadvertent help of the Flyers, now sits at four goals, eight assists, and 12 points in 20 games with a +5 rating.
Those 12 points rank 24th in the NHL in scoring amongst all defensemen, putting Nemec three behind rookie phenom Matthew Schaefer and five behind dynamos Evan Bouchard and Lane Hutson.
Now, the Flyers do have a winning record sitting at 10-6-3, but the Flyers again rank towards the bottom of the league in scoring by defensemen; they sit 29th in the NHL with just 33 points coming from blueliners.
With a fresh opportunity and more talent than he ever had with the Flyers, Shaw has taken a 21-year-old Nemec and seemingly got the youngster to finally achieve liftoff in his nascent NHL career.
As for the Flyers? Well, more young players have regressed this season than those who have improved.
Panthers set to host Oilers in Stanley Cup Final rematch as Cats search for third straight win
The first Stanley Cup Final rematch of the season will take place on Saturday night in Sunrise.
Despite both the Florida Panthers and Edmonton Oilers currently sitting outside of the playoff picture, there is certainly a different feel surrounding each of these potential powerhouse clubs.
For Florida, the team’s injury issues have been well known for a while now.
Entering the season without Sasha Barkov, Matthew Tkachuk and Tomas Nosek, then losing Dmitry Kulikov, Jonah Gadjovich, Cole Schwindt and Eetu Luostarien, all of whom remain out of the lineup, is one heck of a burden to shoulder.
Not that it’s stopped the Panthers from keeping their heads above water and chugging along while searching for consistency with a roster consisting of many players who have not spent a ton of time together.
As it stands, Florida holds an 11-8-1 record and picked up wins in four of their past five outings.
Edmonton, meanwhile, arrives in South Florida sitting at .500 with a record of 9-9-5.
The Oilers are wrapping up a monster 7-game road trip that started with an overtime win in Philadelphia and has seen Edmonton drop four of the five games since.
One thing that will be interesting to monitor is who the Oilers end up going with in goal against the Cats.
Starter Stuart Skinner allowed 15 goals over a three-game span before Calvin Pickard showed out well in their most recent outing, a 2-1 overtime loss in Tampa that saw Pickard come up with 33 saves.
Here are the Panthers projected lines and pairings for Saturday’s matchup with the Oilers:
Mackie Samoskevich – Anton Lundell – Brad Marchand
Jesper Boqvist – Evan Rodrigues – Sam Reinhart
Carter Verhaeghe – Sam Bennett – A.J. Greer
Noah Gregor – Luke Kunin – Jack Devine
Gus Forsling – Aaron Ekblad
Niko Mikkola – Seth Jones
Uvis Balinskis – Jeff Petry
LATEST STORIES FROM THE HOCKEY NEWS - FLORIDA
The Hockey Show: Winter Classic uniforms, endless injuries, Adnan Virk
Three takeaways: Devine shows confidence in NHL debut, Bobrovsky bounces back in big way
Bobrovsky, Panthers shut down Devils to earn gritty 1-0 victory
Panthers to host Devils looking to continue winning while embracing next man up mentality
Panthers injury updates on Eetu Luostarinen, Cole Schwindt, Matthew Tkachuk
Photo caption: Nov 20, 2025; Sunrise, Florida, USA; Florida Panthers goaltender Sergei Bobrovsky (72) celebrates with center Sam Bennett (9) after the game against the New Jersey Devils at Amerant Bank Arena. (Sam Navarro-Imagn Images)
LAFC coach Steve Cherundolo not concerned about his MLS legacy
Big Ten tiebreaker scenarios: How Ohio State, Indiana, Michigan can reach title game
Oregon, Texas on upset alert? College football bold predictions for Week 13
Can USC make CFP? Odds, scenarios for Trojans to crash College Football Playoff field
Justice Haynes injury update: How long is Michigan football star running back out for?
Beating Pumas could open pivotal chapter in England’s 2027 World Cup story
Defeat of Argentina in 2000 was important stepping stone for Clive Woodward’s side on way to winning ultimate prize
It is exactly 25 years since the most fraught pre-match buildup in the history of English international rugby union. In this same week in November 2000 a pay row led to the entire national side walking out on strike, prompting Clive Woodward to threaten that an alternative team of lower-league amateurs would be chosen if his players did not return to training by 11am the following morning.
After a tense standoff they duly did so, a grudging truce was agreed and the weekend game against Argentina went ahead with England winning 19-0. Three years later all but two of that matchday squad (the exceptions were David Flatman and Matt Perry) were lifting the Rugby World Cup in Australia. The moral of the “strike” story? The darkest hour can be the springboard to a spectacular golden dawn.
Continue reading...The Kings Lose Yet Again, And It’s Exactly The Same Story
Final from Los Angeles in Overtime. #GoKingsGopic.twitter.com/csOWU9989A
— LA Kings (@LAKings) November 22, 2025
Los Angeles Kings fans have been watching the same script since the start of the season. They have now played in 10 overtime games this season, tying the Edmonton Oilers for the most in the league, and tonight's loss to the Boston Bruins puts them 4-0-6 in extra periods, the most losses by any team in overtime.
Despite outshooting their opponent 32-26, for the second straight game, the Kings once again came up short in overtime, scoring just one goal with 32 shots tells the whole story.
The Los Angeles Kings can play well enough and come back from leads to force overtime; they can even dominate large stretches of games, but when the clock hits zero, something always happens.
Then, it’s deja vu in extra periods; everything turns to dust.
On Friday night, coming off another shootout loss to the Sharks last night, the Kings once again fell in back-to-back overtime losses, losing 2-1 to the Boston Bruins. It’s not a fluke when the same ending plays out repeatedly; it’s a pattern, and it’s frustrating to watch.
Kings Followed the Same Ending on a Different Night
If you’ve watched the Kings play all season, you’ve seen this movie before. They battle back, get the tying goal, generate more shots and chances than their opponent, and then, when it matters most, they break down in overtime.
Joel Armia scored the lone goal for LA midway through the third period, giving the Kings the push to stay in the game. Once OT began, the same script repeated: missed assignments, misreads, and the Bruins capitalizing immediately, and Morgan Geekie scored his second goal of the game to take the Kings' hearts.
Overtime Is A Liability
The Kings aren’t getting outworked or losing badly; they’re failing to finish games in one format that has repeatedly haunted them: 3-on-3 overtime.
LA just looks noticeably less confident once the game reaches sudden death. Back-to-back overtime losses expose an issue that the Kings haven’t solved, and opposing teams will use it against them when games matter.
Right now, the story isn’t that they're losing, it’s that they’re losing the same way, and everyone keeps seeing it. Until the Kings break the script, the momentum won’t swing in their favor, and the frustration will only keep growing.
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.
Gone in 49.3 seconds: Suns erase 8-point deficit with stunning last-minute comeback
The Minnesota Timberwolves had an eight-point lead with less than minute to go Friday night, talking a little smack to their opponents as a hard-fought, chippy game between Western Conference rivals came to a close. There was one problem: The Phoenix Suns weren't done. Backup guard Collin Gillespie hit the go-ahead jumper with 6.4 seconds left and the Suns rallied to stun the Timberwolves 114-113 for their seventh win in eight games.
Coach Carson Palmer heads to championship game as Santa Margarita dominates Orange Lutheran
Clark scores 22 as No. 19 UCLA beats Presbyterian 86-46
Skyy Clark scored a season-high 22 points and Donovan Dent added 14 plus five assists as No. 19 UCLA remained perfect on its home court with an 86-46 victory over Presbyterian on Friday night. Brandon Williams had 11 points and seven rebounds as the Bruins (5-1) dominated without leading scorer Tyler Bilodeau, who sprained his left knee in practice this week. UCLA shot 62.7% from the floor, its best mark in seven seasons under coach Mick Cronin.