Observations from Blues' 3-2 Overtime Loss Vs. Devils

Stop us if we’ve called this Groundhog Day before.

Once again, as repetitive as it sounds, the St. Louis Blues do lots of good things in a hockey game, only to have it decided in extra time, only to come away with half of the objective goal.

Simon Nemec scored at 2:58 of overtime for the New Jersey Devils, who never led in this game until then and they come away with a 3-2 win against the Blues at Prudential Center in Newark, N.J. on Wednesday.

The Blues (7-10-7) closed out a five-game road trip 1-1-3 – one win (not good) but yet somehow take half of the points at stake (five). That’s because they lost three games on this trip by identical 3-2 scores in OT.

Kind of hard to do, but it has to somewhat feel like a waste (again) getting good goaltending by Jordan Binnington (26 saves). Cam Fowler scored his first goal this season and had an assist, and Robert Thomas had a power-play goal.

Let’s get to the game observations:

* You want to know why you’re always on the wrong end in OT?  When you win the opening face-off, like Pius Suter did, to gain possession, it’s a huge advantage.

But the problem, like tonight, for the Blues in these 3-on-3 competitions is they don’t regularly go north-south with the puck and try and attack.

For the fourth time in seven games that have gone beyond regulation, the Blues failed to get a shot on goal. Now granted, they didn’t have the puck too long after Philip Broberg put Thomas in a tough spot with a pass along the left side wall and he got checked off it by Devils captain Nico Hischier, but it’s too many possessions and too many back outs of the zone.

And it seems once the opposition gains control and can look to win the game, the Blues don’t seem to get the puck back. That was the case on Wednesday when the Devils gained the zone, defenseman Dougie Hamilton twice shot pucks, and the Devils were able to get the puck retrievals.

Once the second one happened, Hischier makes a play with it behind the net, curls around left to right and finds Nemec alone at the left post and the defenseman slammed it past Binnington.

Now, who’s responsibility was Nemec? Fowler and Jordan Kyrou were both on the ice. Seemed like Fowler was caught in no man’s land, and it was too late to realize there was a man behind him after Kyrou was there with Nemec but decided to move up to the higher slot to try and pick up Dawson Mercer. It almost seems like communication – if there was none – needed to happen there on who had who. But regardless, it would up as a familiar result:

* Second period was actually really good – Yes, second periods haven’t been kind for the Blues this season, being a period-worst minus-14, and yes, they lost the second period Wednesday 1-0 thanks to a Hischier power-play goal at 8:49, but I liked the Blues’ second much better than I actually did in the first when they scored twice.

They sustained more O-zone time and weren’t under the kind of siege they were in the opening period when Binnington had to make 13 saves, and a number of them between the dots because the Blues didn’t look like they were skating toe to toe with the Devils, who took advantage of some sloppy puck play by the Blues early.

The Devils were able to gain the zone easier in the first, and the Blues took that away in the second period.

They had an extended shift with roughly five minutes left in the period that unfortunately for them yielded a number of blocked shots by the Devils.

But the Hischier goal, that ended a Blues penalty kill streak on the road at 14, came off a tripping call on Justin Faulk, one in which he was indecisive on making a line change and that hesitancy cost him the minor, came when Tyler Tucker was caught out of position trying to get to Timo Meier’s one-time shot that once it got through without it being blocked, Hischier was open for the rebound and he slammed it through Binnington at 8:49 to tie the game 2-2:

* Offense continues to be dry – For the fifth straight game on this trip and sixth straight game overall, the Blues can’t get past two goals in a game.

They started well again when Fowler’s one-time rip on a puck off the boards beat Jacob Markstrom at 2:16 of the first period to make it 1-0:

And after allowing Meier’s tying goal at 11:02, Thomas gave them the lead again at 2-1 when he found some room at the top of the left circle, changed his angle and wired a shot top corner on the short side of Markstrom at 14:37 to make it 2-1:

But there it is again: the Blues score first and don’t won. They are now 5-4-6 when scoring first. The Devils (15-7-1), meanwhile, came in 10-1-1 when scoring first. Good teams get the lead and build on it, then hold it. This is why the Blues are where they are and New Jersey is where it is.

There was Oskar Sundqvist on a rare breakaway with a chance to give the Blues a two-goal lead in the second but couldn’t beat Markstrom 6:11 in. Could have made it 3-1 there.

And in the third, Mathieu Joseph, who I thought had a nice game playing 13:29 with three hits and a shot on goal with a plus-1 rating, took a pass from Broberg and used his speed to get to Markstrom but couldn’t put the Blues up 3-2 with 6:46 remaining.

There were a couple others, but those are the chances that are the difference between a point and two points in a lot of these games.

Probably the biggest difference, and coach Jim Montgomery has harped on it often, is the lack of net front presence and playing between the dots, and when they do get there, it just doesn’t seem like it’s enough of a battle to win those loose pucks or fly by's.

* Four-minute power play wasted – For the second straight game, the Blues wasted a four-minute man advantage.

In a 2-2 game after Logan Mailloux, who got the second assist on the Fowler goal for his first point in 11 games with the Blues, was high-sticked by Ondrej Palat with 18:00 left in the game, it was a chance to grab the game and perhaps pull away. But despite five shots on goal and three Devils blocks, there just never really seemed like a threat of putting New Jersey’s PK under duress there.

Kyrou had the best chance on the second half of the PP when he took a Thomas pass in the slot and changed the angle of his shot but couldn’t beat Markstrom. There’s another chance for one of the Blues’ top players to be a difference maker in a game.

* Blues playing much better defensively, getting the goaltending – Remember earlier in the year when the Blues were scoring five or more but still on the losing end of things?

They only allowed more than two goals once (three to the New York Rangers on Monday) in regulation and despite allowing 14 first-period shots in which Binnington was razor sharp in, the forecheck became much better and didn’t allow the Devils to play their rush game, limiting New Jersey to 15 shots the rest of the way after the first period.

If the Blues can start potting some goals and playing defense/getting this kind of goaltending, maybe wins will follow.

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Blackhawks Defenseman Artyom Levshunov Has His First Career NHL Goal

It's been a long time coming, and there have been plenty of chances, but Artyom Levshunov has finally scored his first career NHL goal. 

Connor Bedard sent one cross-ice pass to Levshunov, who made a brilliant move for his first. Levshunov has created a ton of offense in his young NHL career, and he's hit a couple of posts along the way, but this long-anticipated goal is finally in the books. 

Colton Dach also earned an assist on the goal scored by Levshunov. It was a youthful goal all around, with every player involved being someone who could be around for a long time. 

It was a big goal at the time of the game as well. Levshunov made it 3-2 in favor of the Blackhawks, not long after the Wild evened it up after being down 0-2. 

This is a weight off the shoulders of Levshunov. Although he is a defenseman, he will need to provide some offense to reach his true potential. Now that this one is behind him, he can focus on playing hockey the right way, which will lead to plenty of goals. 

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Defensive Miscues Spell Doom For Red Wings Against Lowly Predators

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On paper, the Detroit Red Wings should have had no problem defeating the Nashville Predators, who came into Wednesday's game not only with the NHL's worst record but the NHL's worst goals-per-game average. 

But as the saying goes, that's why the games aren't played on paper.

The Predators struck twice inside of a minute on two separate occasions in the third period alone en route to a 6-3 victory at Little Caesars Arena, handing the Red Wings what was nothing short of a disappointing loss. 

The Red Wings took a 2-1 lead into the game's final frame after power-play goals from Alex DeBrincat and James van Riemsdyk in the second period after the Predators had struck first in the opening 20 minutes of play.

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Nashville knotted the score at 3-3 thanks to a partial breakaway goal from Nick Blankenburg, followed by a goal from Roman Josi just 15 seconds later. Detroit responded 44 seconds after that, as Ben Chiarot scored for the second time in three games. 

But once again, the Predators came up with the answer that Detroit wasn't able to match.

Ryan O'Reilly was left alone at the side of the net and tucked home a wraparound pass from Steven Stamkos at 14:14 of the third, while Erik Haula increased the lead to 5-3 after he was left all alone in front of the net just 38 seconds later.

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Stamkos added an empty net goal with 85 seconds left in regulation. 

Red Wings goaltender Cam Talbot lost for the second straight game and has now allowed nine goals in his last two outings combined; he made 23 saves.

Meanwhile, Predators goaltender Justus Annunen, who was 0-3-1 coming into Wednesday's game, picked up his first win of the season by making 28 saves. 

The Red Wings were also playing their third straight game without defenseman Simon Edvinsson, who was unavailable because of an illness. 

These are the kinds of games that the Red Wings simply cannot afford to lose, and it was another rough lesson for a team attempting to take the next step. 

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Simon Nemec's OT goal lifts Devils to 3-2 win over Blues

NEWARK, N.J. (AP) — Simon Nemec scored on a wrist shot at 2:58 of overtime to give the New Jersey Devils a 3-2 win over the St. Louis Blues on Wednesday night.

New Jersey (15-7-1) has won a franchise-record nine of its first 10 home games.

Nico Hischier assisted on Nemec’s winner and finished with a goal and two assists. Hischier has nine points (five goals, four assists) in his last five games. Timo Meier added a goal and an assist for New Jersey, extending his goal-scoring streak to three games.

Cam Fowler had a goal and an assist, and Robert Thomas scored on the power play for St. Louis (7-11-6).

Jacob Markstrom stopped 21 shots for the Devils. Jordan Binnington had 26 saves for the Blues.

With the game tied at 2, New Jersey killed a four-minute penalty early in the third period, limiting the Blues to just four shots on goal. Ondrej Palat was called for high sticking Logan Mailloux.

Hischier tied the score at 2-all with a power-play goal, with assists from Meier and Luke Hughes, in the second period.

Thomas scored on a power play, his 12th point in the last 15 games, to give the Blues a 2-1 lead at 14:37 of the second.

Fowler gave the Blues an early 1-0 lead with his first goal of the season at 2:16 of the first. Meier tied it, with an assist from Hischier, at 11:02.

The Devils are 4-1 in overtime games this season. St. Louis, which is 0-5 in overtime, finished its longest trip of the season by going 1-1-3.

Up next

Devils: At Buffalo on Friday.

Blues: Host Ottawa on Friday.

Late goals doom Panthers in 4-2 loss to Philadelphia

The Florida Panthers and Philadelphia Flyers wrapped up their three-game regular season series on Wednesday night in Sunrise.

In what was a tight game for much of the night, the Flyers came out on top thanks to a pair of last-minute goals, defeating the Panthers 4-2.

Florida scored the game’s opening goal 5:21 into the first period, and it came off the stick of Brad Marchand.

Moments after a flurry in which Flyers goalie Dan Vladar made several strong saves, and Carter Verhaeghe rang one off the post, Sam Bennett cut to the net and saucered a pass to Marchand in the slot, and he roofed the puck over Vladar’s glove.

It was about a period later that the Panthers doubled their lead.

A pretty passing play that started with A.J. Greer in the high slot saw the puck travel to Aaron Ekblad, then Sam Bennett at the side of the net. His cross-ice pass to Verhaeghe was so good, there was nothing but a wide-open net for Verhaeghe to guide the puck into.

At the 5:16 mark of the second period, the Cats had opened up a nice two-goal advantage.

Philadelphia was able to get on the scoreboard a few minutes later when a point shot from Emil Andrae got past a screened Sergei Bobrovsky, who was trying to regrip his stick after it fell from his hand due to a nice save on Jamie Drysdale a moment prior.

Another long Flyers shot got past Bobrovsky less than four minutes later, and once again it was off the stick of Andrae.

This time, the long wrist shot was deflected on its way to the goal by Matvei Michkov, tying the game at two with 8:49 go to in the second period.

That’s how the score would remain until the final minute of the game.

Tyson Foerster took a shot that was blocked by Aaron Ekblad, but the puck went right back to Foerster.

With Ekblad down and in pain, Foerster shot the puck again, and this time it got through and past Bobrovsky, giving the Flyers a 3-2 lead with 44.5 seconds to go.

Sean Couturier added another goal 21 seconds later before Bobrovksy could get to the bench, cementing a solid victory for the visitors.

On to the Flames.

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Photo caption: Nov 26, 2025; Sunrise, Florida, USA; Philadelphia Flyers center Trevor Zegras (46) shoots the puck but cannot score against Florida Panthers goaltender Sergei Bobrovsky (72) and defenseman Seth Jones (3) during the first period at Amerant Bank Arena. (Sam Navarro-Imagn Images)

Islanders struggle to find the back of the net in 3-1 loss to Bruins

NEW YORK (AP) — Alex Steeves scored twice and Jeremy Swayman made 44 saves as the Boston Bruins downed the New York Islanders 3-1 on Wednesday night.

Tanner Jeannot also scored for the Bruins, who won for just the third time in seven games but completed a three-game sweep over the Islanders this season.

Swayman made 23 saves in the third to improve to 10-6-0. The Bruins — who missed the playoffs last season — have started 14-11-0 under first-year coach Marco Sturm.

After New York’s Mathew Barzal opened the scoring at 4:41 of the first with his seventh goal, Steeves tied it at 6:23 of the opening period.

Jeannot put Boston ahead 43 seconds into the middle period with his third.

Steeves added his second goal of the game and third of the season – shorthanded – at 10:21 of the third.

Steeves, a 25-year-old free-agent addition by the Bruins last July, had one goal in 14 games with Toronto before this season.

Boston rallied from a 2-0 deficit to win 5-2 in Boston on Oct. 28, then won 4-3 in a shootout at UBS Arena on Nov. 4.

New York’s power play was 0-19 over its previous six games, then failed four more times with the man-advantage on Wednesday. The Islanders haven’t scored in 27 straight power-play chances overall since converting early in a 4-3 win at Las Vegas on Nov. 13.

Ilya Sorokin made 11 saves in defeat to fall to 7-7-2. The Islanders are 1-2-0 on their current seven-game homestand after going 6-1-0 on their recently completed road trip.

The Islanders were coming off a 1-0 home shootout win over Seattle on Sunday.

Up next

Bruins: Host New York Rangers on Friday afternoon.

Islanders: Host Philadelphia Flyers on Friday afternoon.

Senators Try To Shake Off Brutal 1-12-1 Record Against Golden Knights As Long Road Trip Continues

After a 2-1 trip through California, the Ottawa Senators' travelling road show makes a stop in Las Vegas on Wednesday night. Historically, the Senators' performances have gone over very well in Vegas, with the Knights holding a lifetime record against the Sens of 12-1-1.

In fairness, for most of the Knights' young history, the Senators were spinning their wheels in a perpetual rebuild that's now a distant memory – a dark, brutal, distant memory. 

The Senators are 11-7-4 on the season, good for third in the Atlantic (two points out of first) and coming off a 2-1 loss in Los Angeles on Monday night. This is the fourth game of Ottawa's seven-game road trip, while the Golden Knights (10-5-7) are kicking off a four-game homestand. Vegas is coming off losses to Anaheim on Saturday (4-3 OT) and Utah (5-1) on Monday.

The Golden Knights won both matchups against the Senators last season. The first happened in Vegas, and the Sens wouldn't have minded it if stayed in Vegas. They gave up three unanswered goals in the final five minutes of the game to lose, 6-4. A month later, the Knights won 3-2 in Ottawa.

On the day that Brady Tkachuk announced he'd be returning from injury this Friday, his former Ottawa landlord, Mark Stone, is returning from injury. Like Tkachuk, Stone hurt his hand early in the season. The former Senators favourite was playing out of his mind last month with 13 points in his first six games before going down with a wrist injury.

It will be interesting to see if Stone has anything going with current Senator Hayden Hodgson, a player he thought he'd never face again. In a preseason game two years ago, when Hodgson was playing for the LA Kings, Hodgson crushed Stone into the end boards with a big hit that the Knights captain didn't appreciate, particularly in a nothing game.

“That’s probably the last time I’ll ever play against that guy,” Stone said after the game. 

Hodgson is more than happy to be proving Stone wrong on Wednesday night.

The best Senators-Knights rivalry might be the two teams' management groups. In 2022, the Knights went to NHL Commissioner Gary Bettman to demand that the Senators be punished for the poorly communicated details of their Evgenii Dadonov trade. The Senators traded Dadonov to Vegas in July 2021 and failed to supply the Knights with the player’s 10-team no-trade list.

Vegas then attempted to send Dadonov to the Anaheim Ducks in 2022, but the deal was denied by the NHL because he had not waived his no-trade clause. The Sens lost their 2026 first-round pick as punishment, and there's probably no love lost between the two ownership and management teams. 

Here's how the Senators will line it up on Wednesday:

Perron-Stutzle-Batherson
Eller-Cozens-Zetterlund
Amadio-Pinto-Giroux
Cousins-Halliday-Hodgson

Sanderson-Zub
Kleven-Spence
Matinpalo-Jensen

Ullmark
Merilainen

By Steve Warne
The Hockey News Ottawa

Josh Hart propels Knicks to big first half lead in 129-101 rout over Hornets

The Knicks had an offensive explosion on Wednesday night, beating the Charlotte Hornets, 129-101.

Here are the takeaways...

-- Things got off to a fast start as both offenses came out firing and shot the ball extremely well in the first quarter. Josh Hart, in particular, had a fantastic opening quarter in what was his second start of the season after he logged 38 minutes in a win against the Nets last time out. 

The 30-year-old looked like a man inspired and scored 11 points on a perfect 4-for-4 from the field in eight minutes on the floor. He also had a steal and an assist in what was a fast-paced and entertaining back-and-forth first quarter.

-- It wasn't just Hart, though, as every starter saw at least two baskets go through in the opening frame. Jalen Brunson (9), Karl-Anthony Towns (6), Mikal Bridges (6) and Miles McBride (5), along with Hart, combined to score 37 points and shoot 15-of-20 (75 percent) from the field. 

-- Mitchell Robinson led everybody with three rebounds in four minutes off the bench, while Jordan Clarkson and Guerschon Yabusele also saw some minutes. 

-- The Hornets had a similarly successful first quarter with Collin Sexton leading the scoring charge with seven points off the bench. LaMelo Ball and Miles Bridges each had five and after 12 minutes, New York was up 37-31.

-- Scoring slowed to start the second quarter as both teams began the period 3-for-11 from the field. Nevertheless, the Knicks continued to add to their lead and were up by 15 after Brunson completed an and-one with 3:35 remaining in the half as Charlotte struggled mightily on offense. 

-- Things exploded from there with New York ending the half on a 15-2 run to take complete control. The two daggers came in the final minute when Brunson and Hart each splashed deep three-pointers, with Hart's coming with 1.2 seconds left. The last-second triple was Hart's third of the half as he led all scorers with 19 points (7-for-9 from the field, 3-for-3 from deep, 2-for-2 at the free throw line) heading into the locker room with the Knicks up, 72-47.

-- Essentially over from there, New York did well to not let the Hornets get back into the game in the second half as Brunson carried the load offensively by scoring 16 points in the third quarter. It wasn't his most efficient night, shooting 14-for-28 from the field and 2-for-6 from three, but Brunson ended with a game-high 33 points.

-- After his incredible first half, Hart took a backseat to Brunson in the second and let the point guard cook. Still, Hart finished with 22 points, eight rebounds, seven assists and three steals in a do-it-all type performance. Towns had a double-double (19 points, 10 rebounds), Bridges had 18 points and McBride added 19 to round out most of the Knicks' scoring.

-- New York shot an incredible 57 percent from the field, 52 percent from deep and 89 percent from the charity stripe in one of its most impressive offensive showings, especially on the road. It was enough to capture just the team's third road win of the season and they are now 3-5 away from MSG. 

-- The Knicks are now 2-1 in NBA Cup group stage play.

Game MVP: Josh Hart

Hart was everywhere in the first half and was a big reason why the Knicks got out to such a big lead at halftime.

Highlights

What's next

The Knicks return home after a five-game road trip to take on the Milwaukee Bucks on Friday night in their final NBA Cup group stage matchup. Tip-off is set for 7:30 p.m.

Penguins' Top Prospect Rutger McGroarty Extends AHL Goal-Scoring Streak

Pittsburgh Penguins' top prospect Rutger McGroarty can't stop scoring goals for the Wilkes-Barre/Scranton (WBS) Penguins.

In Wednesday's tilt against the Hershey Bears - AHL affiliate of the Washington Capitals - McGroarty registered his third goal in as many AHL games this season, continuing his seamless, dominant transition back to game action.

And none of McGroarty's three goals have been cheap ones, either. 

The 21-year-old forward - acquired in the summer of 2024 from the Winnipeg Jets - missed all of training camp and the first month and a half of the regular season due to an upper-body injury. He made his return to the AHL lineup on Nov. 15 against the Springfield Thunderbirds, powering his way to the net on his first shift of the second period for his first of the season. 

Rutger McGroarty Shines In Return As WBS Penguins Complete Weekend SweepRutger McGroarty Shines In Return As WBS Penguins Complete Weekend SweepSaturday marked the return for one of the <a href="https://thehockeynews.com/nhl/pittsburgh-penguins">Pittsburgh Penguins</a>' top forward prospects.&nbsp;

Then, in Saturday's 1-0 WBS win over the Providence Bruins, McGroarty scored the lone goal shorthanded - going end-to-end, weaving around a few defenders, and earning himself a breakway opportunity that he put home. 

And that brings us to Wednesday's game. In this one, McGroarty gained the offensive zone, got to a loose puck above the right circle courtesy of a little help from Philip Tomasino, and sniped one past Bears' goaltender Garin Bjorklund to put his team up, 2-0. 

The Penguins and GM/POHO Kyle Dubas have reiterated that because McGroarty is an important piece for their future, they need to do what's right for his development and follow a return-to-play plan for him. He had a planned scratch for last Friday's game and played the next day against Providence.

But, if McGroarty continues to dominate at the AHL level and show he is ready - he has five points in three games - it's possible that the the NHL club may see him sooner than initially anticipated. 

Penguins Activate Two Players From IR, Option Murashov To AHLPenguins Activate Two Players From IR, Option Murashov To AHLAhead of their Thanksgiving Eve tilt against the <a href="https://thehockeynews.com/nhl/buffalo-sabres/">Buffalo Sabres</a>, the <a href="https://thehockeynews.com/nhl/pittsburgh-penguins">Pittsburgh Penguins</a> made a few roster moves that signify they're surely but slowly getting healthier.&nbsp;

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