Former Canadiens Goalie Having Strong Season

During the off-season, former Montreal Canadiens goalie Jake Allen signed a five-year, $9 million contract to stay with the New Jersey Devils. This was after the Fredericton, New Brunswick native had a 13-16-1 record, a 2.66 goals-against average, a .908 save percentage, and four shutouts in 31 games with the Devils in 2024-25. 

Now, as we enter the new year, the Devils' decision to keep Allen around is looking like a very good one. 

Allen is currently in the middle of a very solid season with the Devils in 2025-26. In 20 games so far this campaign with the Metropolitan Division club, he has a 10-8-1 record, a 2.54 goals-against average, a .910 save percentage, and one shutout. With numbers like these, there is no question that the former Canadiens goalie has been providing the Devils with strong goaltending. 

Allen is continuing to play well as the season rolls on, too. The 35-year-old goaltender has had a .917 save percentage or better in three out of his last four appearances with the Devils. This included him stopping 36 out of 37 shots against the Vegas Golden Knights on Dec. 17.

In 127 games over four seasons with the Canadiens from 2020-21 to 2023-24, Allen recorded a 41-68-15 record, a .899 save percentage, and a 3.30 goals-against average. 

Rangers allow three third-period goals in 6-3 loss to Capitals

WASHINGTON (AP) — Tom Wilson had two goals and an assist to lead the Washington Capitals past the New York Rangers 6-3 on Wednesday.

Wilson, who earlier in the day was named a member of Canada’s Olympic roster, got into a fight with Sam Carrick in the second period for at least his second Gordie Howe hat trick — a goal, an assist and a fight — since March 3, 2025.

Justin Sourdif also had two goals and Anthony Beauvillier and Aliaksei Protas each scored for the Capitals, who have won two of the last three games.

Adam Fox, making his return from long-term injured reserve, had a goal and an assist for the Rangers, who have lost three straight. Vincent Trocheck and Braden Schneider also scored.

With the Capitals tied 1-1 and needing a spark in the second, Wilson rose to the occasion. The 28-year-old came streaking up ice and leveled Noah Laba before getting to the front of the net and roofing a feed from Connor McMichael to restore Washington’s lead as he became the first Capital to hit the 20-goal mark this season. Minutes later, he answered for Laba’s hit, fighting Carrick.

The fight, initiated by Carrick, put the Capitals on the power play. Sourdif snuck a loose puck past Jonathan Quick, who had 21 saves, to end a 16-game goal drought to make it 3-1.

Fox responded with a power-play goal of his own soon after to pull things to 3-2 going into the third.

Protas and Wilson, netting his 200th career goal, added insurance tallies late to cushion the lead.

Schneider brought New York back within two late.

Wilson assisted Sourdif on an empty-netter.

Charlie Lindgren made 22 saves for Washington.

Up next

Rangers: Visit Florida in the Winter Classic on Friday.

Capitals: Visit Ottawa on Thursday.

 


Penguins Trade Tomasino To Flyers For Zamula

The Pittsburgh Penguins and Philadelphia Flyers made a rare trade with each other on Wednesday.

The Penguins sent forward Philip Tomasino to the Flyers in exchange for defenseman Egor Zamula. Tomasino had fallen out of favor with the Penguins and had been in Wilkes-Barre/Scranton for a good chunk of the 2025-26 season before getting sent to the Flyers.

Tomasino will report to the Lehigh Valley Phantoms (the Flyers' AHL affiliate). 

Zamula had also fallen out of favor with the Flyers and is set to report to the Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Penguins (the Penguins' AHL affiliate). 

Tomasino was initially acquired by the Penguins from the Nashville Predators for a fourth-round pick during last season. He compiled 11 goals and 23 points in 50 games with the Penguins before notching one assist in nine games this year.

Zamula has played in 13 games this season and has only one assist. He has played in 168 NHL games, scoring eight goals and recording 41 points. 


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Damian Lillard says recovery from Achilles tear 'going great,' excited to return to Portland next season

Damian Lillard is out for this season, recovering from a torn Achilles.

Don't forget about him. The seven-time All-NBA guard is working hard on his recovery and mentoring a young Portland Trail Blazers team showing promise. Lillard recently joined Allie Clifton for an episode of the Road Trippin’ Show and said this about his rehab so far (hat tip to Real GM).

"It's going great. I think it's just one of those injuries where you've got to take your time—you know, it takes what it takes. The first couple of weeks to maybe two or three months is kind of frustrating because you're so limited. But with patience, giving yourself grace, and doing the things necessary to continue progressing, you get to a point where you start to see the light at the end of the tunnel."

Lillard chose to take a year off and not push to return this season at age 35. He said he is happy with that decision, the growth he has seen from the Trail Blazers, and where this could lead next season.

"I feel great about it — even better now than I did when I made that decision. Just getting further along and seeing that everything is coming back...

"Now that I've gotten to that point, I feel better about the decision to give myself the maximum amount of time. Also, looking at our team and the type of growth that we've had, I know if I'm able to do this and come correct, we'll have a great shot next season."

Deni Avdija has played like an All-Star in Portland this season, it will be interesting to see how the Trail Blazers might look next season with him, Lillard, Shaedon Sharpe, Donovan Clingan, Scoot Henderson (who has yet to play this season due to injury), and maybe Jrue Holiday and Jerami Grant (although trade talk about those two will heat up next summer). Portland is starting to build something, and Lillard wants to be a part of it.

All Around The Blueshirts Bush And Others In The NHL

Hannah Foslien-Imagn Images

1. By far the Rangers biggest flop – in terms of expectations this season – has been former top pick Brennan Othmann. Either the Blueshirts mis-coached him, or he simply doesn't have it.

2. "Othmann is like an appendix or tonsils," says Blue Collar Blue Shirts columnist Sean McCaffrey. "He serves no function at all for the Rangers and should be removed."

3. Now for the Good News: The Blueshirts are 19-18-5 for 43 points. A year ago they were 16-19-1 for 33 points.

4. Now for the Bad News, courtesy of superscout Jess Rubenstein: "The Rangers are 1-2-1 on the road trip and have earned three points out of a possible eight. If not for goalies Igor Shesterkin and Jonathan Quick, their season would be over right now!`'

5. Now for more Good News: The return of Adam Fox will strengthen the defense, fortify the failing power play and provide missing leadership to a team without a playing captain now.

6. Friday's Rangers-Panthers outdoor "Winter Classic" at loan Depot Park in Miami once again proves how innovative – and daring –   he NHL has been under Gary Bettman's commissionership. Another outstanding, dynamic move.

Are The Rangers Any Better Than They Were Last Year?Are The Rangers Any Better Than They Were Last Year?During the Rangers last game – at Carolina – a devoted fan who I happen to know and respect – did a double-take when he viewed Vin Trocheck on the New York bench.

7. Three decades ago plus – when the Bettman Era began – nobody in his right, or wrong, mind would have dreamed that a regular NHL outdoor game would be played under Florida's sheltering palms.

8. I know a few fans who dare not dream that the Rangers can win in the great outdoors.

9. The Maven believes the Blueshirts will fool everyone and the Panthers will skate off the ice at the end singing "Am I Blue!"

Bulls' Josh Giddey out at least two weeks with hamstring strain

The Chicago Bulls will be without their two leading scorers for at least the next week, and in Josh Giddey's case, it will be longer.

Giddey has a strained left hamstring and will be re-evaluated in two weeks, the Bulls announced. Although it's a safe bet he will be out longer than that. Chicago also will be without point guard Coby White for the next week due to calf soreness. Both suffered their injuries Monday night in a loss to the Timberwolves.

The Bulls have a packed schedule with nine games in the next 14 days.

Giddey and White are tied for the team lead in scoring, averaging 19.2 points per game. Giddey also leads the team with nine assists a game (White is at 4.7) and the Australian is dragging 7.8 rebounds a game. Giddey is a borderline All-Star in the Eastern Conference, although his play has trailed off since a fast start.

The Bulls have built an ethos around depth and having the next man step up, at least that has been the plan of executive vice president of basketball operations Artūras Karnišovas, who believes that having 9-10 good players is better in the regular season than having a couple of great players but then a sharp talent drop off. That will get put to the test in the next couple of weeks.

The Bulls have lost their last two games but won five in a row before that and sit ninth in the East at 15-17. They are just 1.5 games above falling out of the play-in entirely, with one of the teams chasing them being a Milwaukee side that just got Giannis Antetokounmpo back.

BREAKING: Flyers Deal Out Defenseman, Acquire Forward Philip Tomasino in Trade With Penguins

The Philadelphia Flyers have made a notable roster adjustment, sending defenseman Egor Zamula to the Pittsburgh Penguins in exchange for forward Philip Tomasino.

The move sees Tomasino immediately report to the Flyers’ AHL affiliate, the Lehigh Valley Phantoms.

Tomasino, 24, arrives with a resume that reflects both opportunity and unfinished business. A first-round selection by Nashville in 2019 (24th overall), the right winger has moved between the NHL and AHL since turning pro, appearing in 218 NHL games with the Predators and Penguins.

Across those appearances, he has produced 95 points, with an ability to play in a variety of roles. His most productive NHL season came in 2024–25 with Pittsburgh, where he posted 23 points and finished second on the team in game-winning goals.

This season has been more fragmented. Tomasino appeared in nine NHL games for the Penguins, recording one assist, while spending most of his time in the AHL with Wilkes-Barre/Scranton. There, he was far more impactful, tallying 15 points in 14 games. 

For Pittsburgh, the acquisition of Zamula addresses a different organizational need. Signed by the Flyers as an undrafted free agent in 2018, Zamula developed patiently within the system before carving out a regular NHL role. Over parts of six seasons with Philadelphia, he appeared in 168 games, contributing 41 points from the back end. While his offensive ceiling remained modest, Zamula offered size, mobility, and familiarity with NHL minutes—qualities that can hold value for a Penguins blue line seeking depth and flexibility.

Sabres Announce Rough Alex Lyon Injury News

Buffalo Sabres head coach Lindy Ruff has announced that goaltender Alex Lyon has left the team's road trip and will miss "a bit of time" due to a lower-body injury. 

This is certainly tough news for the Sabres, as Lyon has been playing some strong hockey for the Atlantic Division club this season. In 21 games so far this campaign with the Sabres, he has recorded a 10-6-3 record, a .906 save percentage, a .906 save percentage, and one shutout. 

Lyon has also been a major reason for the Sabres' ongoing nine-game winning streak, as he has won each of his last seven starts during it. With this, there is no question that the Sabres are going to miss him while he is out. 

While Lyon is set to miss time, the Sabres also announced that goaltender Colten Ellis has been activated off of injured reserve after being in concussion protocol. With this, the Sabres will be relying on Ukko-Pekka Luukkonen and Ellis while Lyon is out with his injury. 

The Sabres signed Lyon to a two-year, $3 million contract during the 2025 NHL off-season. This was after he had a 14-9-1 record, a .896 save percentage, and a 2.81 goals-against average in 30 games for the Detroit Red Wings in 2024-25. 

(12-31-25) Wild Vs Sharks: News, Notes

The Minnesota Wild (24-10-6) is back in action today to face the San Jose Sharks (19-17-3) on the road again to continue its seven-game road trip.

Minnesota has dropped both games against the Sharks this year. One was 6-5 in overtime and the other was 2-1 in overtime. Both games were at home.

Despite losing both games this year against the Sharks, the Wild have points in nine consecutive games over San Jose. They are 7-0-2 in that span.

Wild head coach John Hynes has not confirmed who will be in net today for this 3:00 game but both goalies have played the Sharks this year.

Wallstedt let up six in a loss and Gustavsson let up two in a loss. Wallstedt is 1-0-1 in his career against the Sharks with a 3.89 goals-against average and a .852 save percentage in two starts.

Gustavsson is 2-1-2 with a 2.36 goals-against average and .901 save percentage in five starts against the Sharks in his career.

We won't know until warmups who starts. But the Wild have been going with a goalie rotation again recently so if that is the case again, it would be Wallstedt's net.

Notes

Yakov Trenin leads the NHL with 197 hits, the highest total in franchise history through a season’s first 40 games and the fourth-highest total in the NHL through 40 games since the 2006-07 season.

Gustavsson is 6-0-1 with a 1.71 goals-against average, .931 save percentage and one shutout in his last seven starts.

Wallstedt is 5-1-1 with a 1.87 goals-against average, .931 save percentage and two shutouts on the road this season.

He leads the NHL with a .931 save percentage and four shutouts and ranks fourth in goals-against average with a 2.16.

The Wild rank third in the NHL with 54 points, tied for the third-highest point total in franchise history through a season’s first 40 games.

Minnesota is 21-4-3 since Nov. 1, ranking second in the NHL in wins and points (45).

San Jose is 6-4-0 in its last ten games and is on a two-game winning streak.

Colin Graf, whom ended Brock Faber's colligate career in Overtime of the National Championship game, has five goals in his last five games.

Macklin Celebrini, who was just named to Team Canada's roster for the Olympics, has nine points in his last five games and has one goal and four assists against the Wild in two games this year. He is third in the NHL in points with 60 in 39 games.

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Seven biggest NBA stories of 2025, starting with the Luka Doncic trade

2025 was filled with seismic NBA stories, many of which will play out into 2026 and beyond. True game-changers in the literal and figurative sense.

On New Year's Eve, let's take a look back at the 10 biggest NBA stories of 2025.

1. Luka Doncic trade

On Feb. 1, we all thought Shams Charania had been hacked. No way this was real.

Turns out it was very real — Dallas Mavericks GM Nico Harrison had convinced a new ownership to trade a fan-favorite 25-year-old, top-five player in the world entering his prime to the most hated empire in the NBA. For pennies on the dollar. It was unfathomable.

It changed everything. Before the year was out Harrison had been fired. Dallas fell apart without Doncic, slid into the lottery, then got blessed by the basketball gods when its 1.8% chance ended up getting the Mavericks the top spot in the NBA Draft and Cooper Flagg. The Lakers instantly became a threat again, although they are still figuring out how to build a team around Doncic that works.

This trade out of nowhere will be one of the biggest NBA stories of the decade, maybe the first half of the century. It was seismic in the changes, and nothing in 2025 was as big.

2. Chauncey Billups, Terry Rozier arrested, indicted

Federal authorities arrested and indicted current Miami Heat player Terry Rozier and Portland Trail Blazers coach Chauncey Billups as part of two illegal gambling investigations. Also arrested was former NBA player and assistant coach Damon Jones (who was charged in both cases). One of those indictments alleged Rozier worked with illegal gambling consortiums to rig player prop bets by leaving a game early due to an "injury" (with the gamblers betting big on his unders). The other had Billups as the face of a rigged poker match, where being with the Hall of Famer and coach was the draw to bring in people who lost at the fixed games.

Both Rozier and Billups pled not guilty as their cases work their way through the court system. The NBA reopened its investigation, and both men are on unpaid leave from their teams. And through all of this, the NBA continues to have strong ties and promote legal gambling products and apps (in states where it's allowed).

This is one story we will hear much more of in 2026.

3. Thunder win NBA Title

More than just a title, it felt like the start of a dynasty.

Oklahoma City was clearly the best team in the NBA last season, winning 68 games behind MVP Shai Gilgous-Alexander, and in the end, it was fitting that this crew brought home the first title in the city's history. Jalen Williams played through incredible wrist pain, Chet Holmgren emerged as a star in the middle, and a deep team that could bring a stopper like Alex Caruso off the bench proved too much for everyone.

This is a young team — SGA is 27, Williams and Holmgren are on their rookie contracts (although that changes next season) — and while the tax aprons will hit them hard in the coming years, the club's stockpile of quality draft picks (they could have three first-rounders this season) allows them to replenish the cupboards without too much expense. The NBA has worked hard to make dynasties nearly impossible (whether that is a wise strategy is another topic), but no team is better situated to beat those odds than the Thunder.

4. Tyrese Haliburton tears Achilles in Game 7

The greatest "what if" of 2025 — and one of the big ones in NBA history — is what if Haliburton had not torn his Achilles early in Game 7 of the NBA Finals.

The Pacers had improbably pushed the Thunder to a deciding game with their depth, pressure, pace and the play of Haliburton. In Game 7, Haliburton played through a sore calf but came out red-hot, hit 3-of-4 from deep, had a fast nine points, and then came the moment midway through the first quarter when he took a step back to explode forward, his Achilles tendon tore, and he went to the ground.

Would the Pacers have won Game 7 with him? We'll never know. The injury also turned the Pacers into a lottery team for the 2025-26 season, but it sets up a great bounce-back story for 2026-27.

5. Jayson Tatum tears Achilles

Entering last season and even the playoffs, Boston was the team to beat. The defending champs had won 61 games with the second-best defense in the league and a top-10 offense. The Celtics had the talent, the experience, and a Finals showdown with the Thunder could have been epic.

Then, with about three minutes left in Game 4 of the Eastern Conference semifinals, Jayson Tatum dove to the floor in a scramble for a loose ball, tore his Achilles and could not get up. It ended his playoff run and Boston's chances (though whether they would have beaten the Knicks in that series even with him is at best debatable and more likely doubtful).

Tatum missing time was the start of an offseason financial reset for the Celtics, who sent away Kristaps Porzingis and Jrue Holiday, and set up what was supposed to be a gap year for the Celtics. It may not be that at all. Boston sits third in the open East, and Tatum is expected to return in the first months of 2026, setting up a very interesting playoff run. Still, his injury was a massive story this year.

6. Dallas wins lottery, drafts Cooper Flagg

Don't buy anyone telling you Nico Harrison had a plan — trading Luka Doncic to get a 1.8% chance of winning the NBA Draft Lottery is not a plan. It's a pipe dream.

Sometimes dreams come true. They did for Dallas, which landed a franchise cornerstone player for the next 10 years in Flagg. After a slow start because Jason Kidd played him out of position (or at least felt he had to because of how the now-fired Harrison built the roster), Flagg has come on strong and is averaging 19.4 points and 6.4 rebounds a game while playing strong defense. He looks like the next long-term, fan-favorite in Dallas, and the new ownership there is not going to make the same mistake twice.

7. Knicks make Eastern Conference Finals

There is nothing as much fun as Madison Square Garden rocking in the playoffs. It is one of the hallowed grounds in sport, and after too many years of watching their team wandering in the wilderness, Knicks fans have something worth cheering for again — not just a relevant team, but a contender.

Game 1 of the Eastern Conference Finals last season might have been the best game of the year, even if the ending is painful for those Knicks fans.

Honorable mention stories

• NBA changing of the guard with youth (like Oklahoma City, but also Victor Wembanyama and Tyrese Maxey) stepping up and taking over the league in a generational change.

• Jimmy Butler joins Stephen Curry in Golden State to chase one more ring in the Bay.

• Unending Giannis Antetokounmpo trade rumors.

• Chris Paul/Clippers break up.

• The Kawhi Leonard/Aspiration/Clippers story. Many people may think this should be higher on the list. Pablo Torre and his "Pablo Torre Finds Out" podcast created a massive splash just before the NBA season tipped off with an investigative report about what was termed a "no-show" endorsement deal between Leonard and San Francisco-based environmental credits company Aspiration, with seven anonymous former employees of the company saying the deal was set up to help the Clippers circumvent the salary cap. The Clippers have vehemently denied any wrongdoing from the start, with owner Steve Ballmer saying he was one of the investors duped by Aspiration (whose CEO pled guilty to wire fraud). The NBA resumed its investigation.

So why is this so far down the list? Because the buzz out of league circles right now is that there is not nearly as much meat on the bone as implied in the initial reports, and that the Clippers are not going to face as stiff a punishment as some expected. This is something to watch in 2026.