Jets Reportedly Nearing Trade That Could Send Logan Stanley, Luke Schenn To Sabres

The Winnipeg Jets and Buffalo Sabres are reportedly discussing a deal that could send defenseman Logan Stanley to Buffalo, with veteran blueliner Luke Schenn potentially included in the package. According to early reporting from Fourth Period's Dave Pagnotta, the two teams are engaged in advanced discussions.

The potential move would align with Buffalo’s recent efforts to strengthen its blue line as the Sabres explored a trade for Colton Parayko of the St. Louis Blues on Wednesday, but the deal ultimately fell through when Parayko declined to waive his no-move clause on Thursday. With that option off the table, Buffalo appears to be evaluating other defensemen who could provide size and stability to its back end.

Stanley, 27, has emerged as one of Winnipeg’s most productive defensemen this season. The Kitchener, Ontario native is in the midst of a career year, recording nine goals and 12 assists for 21 points in 59 games.

His breakout campaign has made him an appealing trade target around the league, particularly given his ability to handle significant minutes while playing under a very manageable cap hit. Stanley is averaging just over 17 minutes of ice time per game and carries a cap hit of $1.25 million. Over the course of his NHL career, he has appeared in 261 games with 14 goals and 43 assists.

Schenn, 36, could also be part of the discussions according to early rumours surrounding the negotiations. This season he has recorded one goal and seven points in 46 games while providing a physical presence through hits and shot blocking. The veteran defenseman brings a wealth of experience, including two Stanley Cup championships across a career that has spanned more than 1,100 NHL games.

Despite the growing speculation, no official confirmation has emerged from league insiders or the teams themselves. However, with the deadline rapidly approaching, trades involving Stanley and Schenn will likely materialze before Friday's trade deadline.

Image

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.

Devils Place Dadonov, Glendening, and Tsyplakov on Waivers.

The New Jersey Devils announced on Thursday that they had placed Evgenii Dadonov, Luke Glendening, and Maxim Tsyplakov on waivers.

Dadonov, who signed a one-year, $1 million deal on July 1, 2025, has played 17 games this season without recording a point.

After being drafted 71st overall in 2007, Dadonov has played for six NHL teams, totaling 634 NHL games.

Glendening has appeared in 52 games with the Devils. The right winger has four points – all assists so far. He signed a one-year, $775,000 contract with the New Jersey Devils on Oct. 7, 2025, after he joined the team for training camp on a professional tryout.

The undrafted 36-year-old has been in the NHL for 13 seasons. He has played 916 NHL games for four teams.

Tsyplakov has appeared in 36 games this season with the Devils and New York Islanders, earning two points, one goal, and one assist. He has appeared in nine games with the Devils this season.

The undrafted 27-year-old has played 113 NHL games over two seasons.

Make sure you bookmark THN's New Jersey Devils site for THN's latest news, exclusive interviews, breakdowns, and so much more.

THN.com/free
THN.com/free

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.

Nets remain winless in last 10 games after 126-110 loss to Heat

MIAMI (AP) — Tyler Herro scored 25 points, Bam Adebayo added 21 and the Miami Heat beat Brooklyn 126-110 on Thursday night, sending the Nets to their 10th consecutive loss.

Jaime Jaquez Jr. scored 18 for the Heat (34-29), who have won six of eight and moved five games over .500 for the first time since the first week of December. Pelle Larsson and Kel’el Ware each had 16 points for Miami — with Ware adding 11 rebounds and seven blocked shots.

The Heat also improved to 15-5 on March 5 — or “305 Day,” as it is called in Miami, a nod to the city’s primary area code. No active NBA franchise has a better record on that date.

Michael Porter Jr. scored 27 points for Brooklyn, which also lost at Miami on Tuesday. Noah Clowney scored 17, Nic Claxton had 16 and Ziaire Williams finished with 15 for the Nets. Brooklyn briefly led in the third quarter, but gave up 66 points in the second half.

Miami had a 54-34 edge in bench scoring and shot 53 percent.

The Nets are the sixth team to have a losing streak of 10 or more games this season, joining Sacramento (16), Washington (14), Indiana (13), Chicago (11) and Dallas (10). It’s the longest slide for Brooklyn since the 2021-22 team dropped 11 straight.

Miami was without Norman Powell (right groin strain), Nikola Jovic (lower back) and Simone Fontecchio (left groin strain). For Brooklyn, rookie Egor Demin (left plantar fascia) missed his third consecutive contest.

Up next

Nets: Visit Detroit on Saturday.

Heat: At Charlotte on Friday.

Rangers win home game in regulation for first time since November with drubbing of Maple Leafs

The Rangers celebrate a goal during their March 5 win against the Maple Leafs.
The Rangers celebrate a goal during their March 5 win against the Maple Leafs.

Access the Rangers beat like never before

Join Post Sports+ for exciting subscriber-only features, including real-time texting with Mollie Walker about the inside buzz on the Rangers.

tRY IT NOW

For the first time in 102 days, the Rangers won a game on home ice in regulation.

A 6-2 beating of the Maple Leafs Thursday night snapped a 19-game streak without a regulation victory at Madison Square Garden, a stretch dating back to a Nov. 24 win over the Blues, just before Thanksgiving.

In a clash between two of the most disappointing teams in the Eastern Conference, the Rangers prevailed while sitting two players — Vincent Trocheck and Sam Carrick — for “roster management purposes.”

Both skaters are expected to be traded before Friday’s 3 p.m. Eastern trade deadline, with Carrick reportedly headed to Buffalo, according to Sportsnet.

“Obviously, tough,” said Will Cuylle, who scored the Rangers’ first goal of the game and their last into an empty net. “I mean, you don’t know what’s going to happen with them. Just try to focus on the game and try to get a win.”

With his 14th goal of the season, Alexis Lafrenière gave the Rangers their first lead of the night just over 5 ½ minutes into the third period.

Toronto had taken the lead on two separate occasions, once in the first and again in the second, but the Blueshirts answered every time.



The final 20 minutes saw the Rangers put the game far out of reach with a four-goal period.

The organization capped its centennial theme nights by honoring those who were a quintessential part of the 15 postseason appearances since 2004.

The Rangers celebrate a goal during their March 5 win against the Maple Leafs. Charles Wenzelberg

Glen Sather, Henrik Lundqvist, Sean Avery, Marian Gaborik and so many more were acknowledged in a pregame ceremony.

It made for a joyous start to the night, but then the puck was dropped. Just 13 seconds later, the Blueshirts were already trailing. Matias Maccelli had Toronto on the board before the home team even realized the game had started.

“I thought it was a tough start to the game,” head coach Mike Sullivan said. “I wish I had an answer for that, but I also understand. It’s not an easy circumstance. We don’t play Troch or Sam. All of this happens today. These guys are a close-knit group, they’re friends, they’re teammates and it affects people. We’re trying to do our best to focus on the task at hand. I thought we grabbed ahold of it after that.”

The Rangers were able to regroup and tie it up not too long after.

Will Cuylle, who later scored an empty-net goal, got a stick on Braden Schneider’s shot to tie the game at 1-1.

Alexis Lafrenière celebrates after scoring a goal during the third period of the Rangers’ March 5 win. Charles Wenzelberg

Just under 5 ½ into a much more evenly matched second period, the Maple Leafs regained the lead off a goal from Easton Cowan. The lead did not last long, however, with the Rangers responding approximately two minutes later.

Vladislav Gavrikov buried a long rebound on the power play for his 11th goal of the season. Offensively, the Russian defenseman has been a revelation for the Blueshirts. His 11 goals rank him among the top 15 in scoring among blueliners in the NHL.

The Rangers broke the game open with three unanswered goals in the third period.

While Lafrenière notched the game-winner, Jaroslav Chmelar scored his first NHL goal at the 10:25 mark of the final frame. He took it himself on an odd-man rush and had a massive smile on his face after seeing the puck go in.

Mika Zibanejad later added another, recording his 25th goal of the season.

“I mean, I can’t really describe how it felt right now,” Chmelar said. “I think it’s gonna take me a couple hours. I don’t know if I’m gonna sleep tonight.”

Nets drop 10th straight loss to Miami Heat, lose 126-110

MIAMI, FLORIDA - MARCH 5: Bam Adebayo #13 of the Miami Heat smiles at an opposing coach after a dunk as Day'ron Sharpe #20 of the Brooklyn Nets walks by in the first half at Kaseya Center on March 5, 2026 in Miami, Florida. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by Peter Joneleit/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Brooklyn Nets played the Miami Heat for a second straight time tonight. It was honest remake. The same characters appeared. There were a few creative spins on the script and plot. However, we got the same, predicable ending.

Much like in the Tuesday game, the Nets struggled to protect the rock this evening, once more turning it over 19 times. Seven of them came on their first 11 possessions of the game.

The other night, when the wasted trips down the floor began to stack, Brooklyn’s rookie ball-handlers shouldered most of the blame. It was fair criticism, and Jordi Fernández agreed with it postgame, as Ben Saraf and Nolan Traoré combined for 12 of those turnovers.

But this time, the kids were innocent, at least in the first quarter. Both Traoré and Saraf played squeaky clean opening frames. It was yet another instance of Fernández challenging his young talent and getting the desired response.

“I think today we we got better,” Fernández said. “Obviously, not what we want, coming out with a loss, but a lot of good things. And starting with the first group, the way they competed, and that’s what I like to see.”

Traoré was especially better early, and in more ways than one. He opened the game with a 7/2/2 line while shooting 3-4 from the field and 1-1 from deep. He only scored two more points after that, struggling to handle Miami’s zone, but Fernández brushed it off postgame.

“It’s understanding the game,” he said. “They were in a zone, and he was trying to call the plays against the zone, and I thought we got good shots. He thought that he saw something different than what it was, and you know, a couple of turnovers here and there… I trust that he’s very smart. He has a good feel, he’s got a good voice, but it doesn’t happen overnight, that he can control everything. So I’ve got keep helping him with games like this…There was a little bit of struggle, but I’m not concerned, because he’s going to keep growing and getting better.”

“They just played zone, and we struggled a little bit at the end, but we’re going to get better,” Traoré added. “Next time, it’s going to be way better. Just got to do what we know, execute what we learn, and we’ll be alright.”

Saraf also had two strong takes in the first and showed what positional size can do for you even when you don’t have the quickest feet…

That production also helped the Nets stay within reach after the first, even while throwing a possession giveaway sale.

But then, like they did in the first game, the Heat started doing what playoff-hungry teams are supposed to do to basement dwellers. Dru Smith, who appeared in 10 games for Brooklyn as a tw0-way player in 2023, gave Miami five points in less than four minutes to help his team establish a double digit lead. Kel’el Ware also started doing what seven footers are known to do, rejecting three shots in the period to help him earn a career-high seven for the game.

However, Fernández has said multiple times this year he doesn’t want his team to quietly concede games. He wants to see “the fight.”

It doesn’t seem like the message always sticks, but tonight, in the humid 305, it did.

The Nets closed the second on a 14-5 run, making this a two possession game at halftime. After being -7 in turnovers in in the first, they finished +3 in the second. Ochai Agbaji, Ziaire Williams, Terance Mann, Claxton and Clowney were all in on the action with a steal each.

“Man, we just tried to play with a little extra effort, one more charge, one more closeout, just a little more effort than we had last game,” Williams said. “Still came up short, but I thought our guys were fighting back.”

Michael Porter also flipped things after a rough game on Tuesday. Benefitting from the space created off those turnovers, he sprayed two threes in the period to give himself 11 points by halftime. He finished the game with 27 points, 13 rebounds, and three assists while shooting 9-24 from the field and 7-13 from three. He also snagged two steals and blocked a shot.

“You just look at the rebounding, 13 rebounds, and then winning plays,” Fernández said. “Like, he sprinted in transition defensively and got the deflection towards the end of the third quarter. Just things like this, when I see Mike so engaged, and then when he thinks about rebounding, about cutting, and playing as far as he can defensively, then shots go in. I thought he was aggressive. I was very happy with the game he played. That’s the Michael that the group needs, because he brings so much good energy and the level of play of a very, very, very good player, a top player in the NBA.”

Porter Jr. lifted the Nets to 7-13 shooting from three by that point. The Nets only made six threes all game on Tuesday.

Understandably, Brooklyn kept pressing those buttons when play resumed. They hit another two threes to begin the second half, cracking it open with an 8-0 run that gave them their first lead since the opening minutes. Porter Jr. also added another 13 points in the third. The basket began to look like the ocean in South Beach…

After Bam Adebayo picked up his fourth and fifth fouls just 30 seconds apart from each other halfway through the third, the thought of an upset victory started to creep in.

However, that intoxicating and foreign feeling quickly faded. Tyler Herro became exactly that for all fans in attendance and Brooklyn’s greediest tank commanders hoping for a 10th straight loss. Herro scored a dozen in the frame to weigh against Porter Jr.’s production and carry the load with Adebayo handcuffed to the bench. With Jaime Jaquez Jr. and Pelle Larsson each pumping in five points during the period too, Miami reinflated its lead to 12 by the start of the fourth.

Then, in their eighth straight quarter with the Nets on their plate, the Heat refused to play with their food. Miami outscored Brooklyn 19-7 to open the period while shooting 7-8 from the field, rendering a 20+ point advantage in the process.

The Nets did respond one more time with a 9-0 punch back, but never brought the game back within single digits. They certainly tried their best, ravaging the offensive glass and keeping their starters in until 2:20 remained on the clock.

“I like the fight even when the game went to over 20, got it to 15, and they called a timeout,” Fernández remarked. “And to me, that means the world. That means that’s the right mindset — keep fighting no matter what. I’m proud of the guys, especially the first group tonight.”

But as the Nets fought on, the basket refused to cooperate. Their jump shots looked flat. They started missing short, and even on a few occasions, everything.

Eventually, there was nothing else standing in the way of Brooklyn and its 10th straight loss.

Final: Miami Heat 126, Brooklyn Nets 110

Milestone Watch

  • Michael Porter Jr. had 27 points and 13 rebounds tonight against the Heat for his 10th 20-point double-double of the season, which breaks a tie with 2020-21 for his most in any career season.

Jordi on Cam

Jordi Fernandez had his first chance to respond to Cam Thomas’ comments to the Post’s Stefan Bondy that the Nets as an organization didn’t believe in him and “they don’t believe in anybody.”

The Nets coach who was generally positive about his shooting guard both last season and until he was finally waived at the deadline was predictably diplomatic but made his point nonetheless.

“We wish Cam the best,” he said. “We loved him while he was here. We hope that he does very well where he is. I don’t know if he has the right to speak about others. We’re happy with the guys we have here. I believe that everybody here can help us with what we have planned.”

Meanwhile, Erik Taylor posted a this item about Thomas’ defense…

Injury Report

Fernández reiterated that Egor Dëmin doesn’t have a timetable for a return tonight. He missed his third straight game this evening with plantar fasciitis.

“He’s struggled with his plantar fasciitis,” Fernández said. “The soreness has increased lately. We’re being cautious and trying to figure out what’s the best way for him moving forward.”

For anyone wondering, there isn’t a 65-game requirement for all-rookie teams, so if Dëmin’s in a running for a spot at the end of the year, these or any future games out shouldn’t affect him.

Next Up

The Nets will play the conference-leading Detroit Pistons for a final time this year on Saturday afternoon. This one could get ugly quick, so get there soon. The game tips off at 6:00 p.m. ET.

Rangers erupt in third period to beat Maple Leafs, 6-2

NEW YORK (AP) — Alexis Lafreniere scored the go-ahead goal on a deflection in the third period, and the New York Rangers beat the Toronto Maple Leafs 6-2 on Thursday night to pick up their first regulation win at home in more than three months.

It was the Rangers’ 19th game at Madison Square Garden since defeating St. Louis on Nov. 24. They had lost 13 of 18 since, with the only victories during that stretch coming in overtime or a shootout.

Falling behind 13 seconds in, they rallied to win for just the eighth time in 28 home games all season.

Jaroslav Chmelar scored his first career NHL goal a few minutes after Lafreniere put the Rangers up, bringing some joy to the team and crowd at the three-quarter mark of a season that long ago went off the rails.

Playing on the eve of the trade deadline, who was not in uniform for New York and Toronto to safeguard them from injury was just as notable if not more notable than who was on the ice.

The Rangers scratched centers Vincent Trocheck and Sam Carrick. The Maple Leafs for a second consecutive night opted not to dress defenseman Oliver Ekman-Larsson and forwards Scott Laughton and Bobby McMann. Roster management was the reason given.

Toronto, which traded center Nicolas Roy to Colorado earlier Thursday, lost its sixth game in a row coming out of the Olympic break. The Leafs’ longest-active playoff streak is well on its way to ending at nine.

The Rangers are on the way to missing in back-to-back years, with a retool on the way. Goaltender Igor Shesterkin, the backbone of the organization for the foreseeable future, made 29 saves in a glimpse of what the future could look like if general manager Chris Drury can successfully recalibrate the roster.

Up next

Maple Leafs: Host Tampa Bay on Saturday night.

Rangers: Visit New Jersey on Saturday.

Utah Jazz vs Washington Wizards, Tank Battle!

WASHINGTON, DC -  MARCH 5: Ace Bailey #19 of the Utah Jazz drives to the basket during the game against the Washington Wizards on March 5, 2026 at Capital One Arena in Washington, DC. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this Photograph, user is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2026 NBAE (Photo by Kenny Giarla/NBAE via Getty Images)

The Wizards out-tanked the Jazz tonight. Collier, and Ace had enough of losing and took this game over. While the Jazz did slip a spot in the lottery odds, remember, it’s a marathon, not a sprint, and the Jazz still have plenty of time to jump back up. For now we can all enjoy the win, and Bailey’s career night.

Isaiah Collier –A

Collier did what he does best, drive really fast to the hoop. The Wizards simply could not keep up with him, especially towards the end of the game. He posted his career high in points with 27, and dished out 11 assists.

Ace BaileyA

Ace was on fire in the first half dropping a career high 21 points. He would follow that up with his career high of 32 points in a game. Ace was aggressive tonight, shooting, and driving often. He hit 7 threes (another career high) and shot an efficient 12-19 from the field. He also had 2 steals and a block.

John Konchar –B-

Konchar didn’t shoot well tonight going 0-3, but he more than made up for it on the defensive side of the ball, where he had 5 steals, and a block. Konchar is just a really solid glue-guy, one whose shot will hopefully start to fall more as he gets more comfortable on his new team. Tonight he also had 5 rebounds and 4 assists.

Cody Williams –B

Very solid game from Cody tonight. He shot 5-6 from the floor, notched 2 steals, and had a career high 7 assists. He looks miles better than he did last year, which admittedly wasn’t a high bar to clear, but if he can take another jump offensively next season he will be a legitimate contributor to a winning team.

Kyle Filipowski –A

Flip was a monster on both ends of the floor tonight. He just dominates lesser competition (remember his Summer League performance?). When he isn’t asked to do too much he’s just awesome. He would finish with 2 blocks, 2 steals, 14 rebounds and 20 points.

Blake HinsonB

Hinson has been really solid so far. He made 2/5 of his three point attempts and grabbed 4 boards. He looks to be a real NBA depth piece that the Jazz would be wise to hold on to.

Mo Bamba –B

MO BAMBA! I’ll never complain about seeing Mo Bamba in a Jazz jersey. He was pretty solid tonight grabbing 12 boards in just 17 minutes. He also made a nice jumper, which is a skill I didn’t know he had. He would finish with 6 points.

Brice Sensabaugh –D+

Brice never really looked comfortable tonight, and shot poorly from deep. It may be time to have some uncomfortable discussions regarding Brice’s future on the team. Lately he’s been a sharp shooter that can’t shoot. Not that he was all bad tonight he had 4 assists and 14 points… on 15 shots.

Elijah Harkless –C-

Harkless was limited to just 12 minutes of action in this game because he got into foul trouble so early. He missed all 3 of his attempts from the field tonight.

Vanecek earns 1st shutout of the season, 100th career win in Utah's 3-0 victory over the Flyers

PHILADELPHIA (AP) — Vitek Vanecek stopped 16 shots in his 100th career win and Dylan Guenther assisted on two Utah goals as the Mammoth beat the Philadelphia Flyers 3-0 on Thursday night.

Nick Schmaltz and Clayton Keller scored in the second period for the Mammoth, and Michael Carcone added an empty-net goal at 18:12 of the third.

Vanecek earned his first shutout of the season and the 11th of his career. The 30-year-old had four shutouts during the 2021-22 with the Washington Capitals.

Utah has won two straight games and five of its last seven while completing a two-game season sweep of the Flyers.

Dan Vladar made 20 saves for Philadelphia and slipped to 19-10-6. The Flyers had their three-game winning streak halted.

After a scoreless first period, the Mammoth outshot the Flyers 14-7 in the second period and took a lead they never relinquished.

Schmaltz opened the scoring at 1:38 of the second with a power-play goal on a shot from a tough angle to the right of Vladar. Guenther and Sean Durzi assisted on Schmaltz’s 24th goal of the season.

About seven minutes later, Keller stretched the lead to two goals with his 19th of the season. Guenther picked up his 25th assist when his feed from along the boards sent Keller in all alone, and he beat Vladar with a shot between the pads from close range at 8:03.

Keller leads the Mammoth in points with 61 (19 goals, 42 assists). Schmaltz is next with 24 goals and 33 assists for 57 points, followed by Guenther's 53 points (28 goals, 25 assists). The Mammoth have scored 94 goals away from home this season.

Veteran defenseman MacKenzie Weegar, who was acquired by Utah from Calgary on Wednesday, was not available due to visa processing. The Mammoth recalled defenseman Dmitri Simashev from Tucson of the AHL.

The Flyers were without Forward Travis Konecny (upper-body injury) and defenseman Nick Seeler (lower-body injury).

Up next

Mammoth: At Columbus on Saturday in the third game of a five-game trip.

Flyers: At the Pittsburgh Penguins on Saturday.

___

AP NHL: https://apnews.com/NHL

Blue Jackets beat Panthers 4-2 in latest blow to 2-time defending champ's playoff hopes

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — Jet Greaves made 26 saves, Mathieu Olivier scored twice and the Columbus Blue Jackets dealt another blow to Florida's playoff hopes with a 4-2 victory over the Panthers on Thursday night.

Two-time defending champion Florida is in danger of becoming the first Cup-winning team to miss the playoffs the following season since Los Angeles in 2014-15. Ten points behind Boston for the final wild-card spot in the East, the Panthers have lost the first four games of a trip that ends Friday night in Detroit.

Defenseman Ivan Provorov had a goal and two assists and Boone Jenner also scored to help Columbus win its third straight and move within a point of Boston. The Blue Jackets were coming off a back-to-back sweep, beating the Rangers 5-4 in overtime in New York on Monday night and Nashville on Tuesday night to open a four-game homestand.

Defenseman Niko Mikkola and Sam Bennett scored for Florida in a 5:36 span of the third period.

Gustav Forsling appeared to tie it with 2:55 to go, but Columbus successfully challenged for goaltender interference. Olivier then put it away with an empty-netter with 1:42 left.

Provorov scored on a power play at 5:08 of the first, firing in a wrist shot from the blue line. Olivier struck on a tip with 9:10 left in the second, and Jenner beat goalie Daniil Tarasov from close range at 1:41 of the third. Jenner returned after missing a game because of a lower-body injury.

Mikkola scored on a tip at 9:08 of the third, and Bennett pulled the Panthers within one on a power play with 5:16 left.

Tarasov stopped 23 shots.

A day ahead of the NHL trade deadline, the Panthers sent 38-year-old defenseman Jeff Petry to Minnesota for a conditional seventh-round pick in 2026.

Up next

Panthers: At Detroit on Friday night.

Blue Jackets: Host Utah on Saturday night.

___

AP NHL: https://apnews.com/hub/nhla

Penguins/Sabres Recap: Malkin ejected, Pens spiral in 5-1 loss

PITTSBURGH, PA - MARCH 05: Rasmus Dahlin #26 of the Buffalo Sabres has a disagreement with Evgeni Malkin #71 of the Pittsburgh Penguins at PPG PAINTS Arena on March 5, 2026 in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. (Photo by Joe Sargent/NHLI via Getty Images) | NHLI via Getty Images

Pregame

The Penguins get Blake Lizotte back from injury and give Arturs Silovs his turn in net, otherwise it’s same as it has been when in the Crosby-less times.

The visiting Buffalo Sabres bring this wagon into town.

First period

The first period is defined by four penalty calls; two on each team. The early two, first a Penguin power play then later a Sabre PP, are largely uneventful.

The last two feature a shorthanded goal by each team. The Pens get what might have been a kiss of death when Anthony Mantha attempted a low-percentage chance through the middle that got picked off. Later on, Ryan McLeod played the puck off the board and rocketed by Kris Letang. Even if Letang had abandoned his position and started backpedaling he was probably already cooked given how fast McLeod is and his propensity for taking advantage of shorthanded opportunities. McLeod makes easy work of his fifth SH goal of the season with a backhand deke. 1-0 Buffalo.

It looks like the situation might have gotten worse for Pittsburgh when they took a penalty, but a nice team effort first from Connor Clifton then from Ben Kindel gets the puck to Bryan Rust. Rust takes off, drives to the net and scores on a deke of his own while shorthanded 1-1 game.

Shots are 7-6 Buffalo after one, with the ever-rare two shorthanded goals in a period to set the score at 1-1.

Second period

Angry Geno shows up early in the second. After taking a crosscheck from Rasmus Dahlin, Malkin responds with his stick to use it to slash down on Dahlin’s head. Malkin drops his glove in anger but eases up seeing Dahlin is hurt. The refs review the call and toss Malkin from the game with a five-minute major and game misconduct for his actions.

The Pens stand strong for a while on the extended penalty kill, they finally score when a rebound comes to Josh Norris and he follows up with it. However, Josh Doan was in the blue paint and bumps into Silovs. Pittsburgh challenges the goal for goalie interference. The refs take a look but rule a slight shove by Letang contributed to the contact and allow the goal to stand.

That means a delay of game penalty for Pittsburgh, who face 1:28 of a 5v3. While that is going on, Buffalo takes a penalty. Then the refs put an arm up for another delayed call on Pittsburgh and the Sabres score to make it 3-1.

The Pens are way on their back foot now, Owen Power skates up from his defensive position to take a cross-ice pass and fires a puck through Silovs. 4-1 game, still 9:32 to go in the period.

The Pens get their best offensive zone shift of probably the whole game, and even that ends in disaster when Brock Malenstyn sends Parker Wotherspoon head-first into the boards. Wotherspoon slowly scrapes himself off the ice, Malenstyn only gets two minutes on the call. Egor Chinakhov sends a puck off the post.

Well, this one spiraled out of control in the second. Awful decision by Malkin and the team got put into a hole they kept falling deeper into against a quality opponent who had plenty of chances to take advantage.

Third period

The nastiness continues, the refs blow a play dead for offsides but Justin Brazeau weakly shoots it at the goalie anyways. Buffalo players gets in his face and Avery Hayes delivers a little shot to Tuch from behind, felling Tuch for a bit. The temps are getting warmer and playoff intensity is almost here!

Ben Kindel pins a Buffalo player’s stick to his body and clamps down, drawing the ire of the refs. The Pens kill this one off.

Pittsburgh draws a penalty and then pull the goalie with over 7 minutes to play to gain a 6v4 advantage. Gotta love it! Doesn’t pay off, finally with 3:07 remaining Buffalo gets their next shot on goal, a long-distance one that finds the target. 5-1.

a

Some thoughts

  • Malkin should expect to hear from the league office for his actions. The slow motion replay, as ever, loses some context and makes the play look even worse but there’s still no excuse to respond to a cross-check by hacking a guy in the head. That’s a suspendable action. Malkin was last suspended in 2022, technically he won’t be a “repeat offender” for disciplinary purposes since it’s been more than 18 months since his last suspension. In 2017, Radko Gudas received a 10-game suspension for slashing on arguably a more savage event during the course of play. Who knows how that might compare or apply to this situation but either way it’s likely going to be a multi-game absence for Malkin coming up.
  • The one piece of good news is Dahlin returned to the game and apparently didn’t pick up an injury out of it. That’s going to be a positive factor in Malkin’s favor for whatever decision is made.
  • Dan Muse still hasn’t won a goalie interference challenge this season, but I can’t blame him too much for this challenge (unlike some in the past). This was a good opportunity to have the refs take a look at the play, we’ve seen goals across the league taken away for less. It backfired, but given the situation to potentially bring the score back to 1-1, can’t knock the decision making this time around. And that said, all in all, Letang did push Doan which may/may not have been the deciding factor, sometimes gotta chance that it’ll go your way.
  • Wotherspoon is a tough customer and fortunately was able to keep playing on. He took a nasty lick, if we’re going to review penalties that certainly could have warranted an extra look. Kinda crazy this is a league where you can nearly paralyze a guy and receive the same punishment as flipping the puck out of play in the defensive zone or send an extra player out there too soon.
  • Wotherspoon did come back after that hit, but only skated three shifts for 3:06 icetime in the third period. It’ll be worth watching what happens with him moving forward, the Pens really can’t afford to lose him for an extended amount of time.
  • Teams are scoring so much at 6v5 this season in late-game situations when pulling the goalie, why not pull the goalie with all the time in the world left while down three goals and on the power play? Gotta get creative and try new things, there’s some statistical school of thoughts that say NHL teams should be much more aggressive at pulling their goalie. Nothing ventured, nothing gained and let’s be honest down that many goals with time starting to go away it’s a good time for a drastic decision.

Well, that was forgettable. The Pens move on for two more home games this weekend, starting on Saturday.

Ryan McMahon commits another error in rough start to Yankees’ shortstop experiment

New York Yankees shortstop Ryan McMahon (19) throws to first against the Minnesota Twins.
Ryan McMahon prepares to make a throw during the Yankees' Grapefruit League game against the Twins on March 5.

Observations from Yankees spring training Thursday:

Access the Yankees beat like never before

Join Post Sports+ for exciting subscriber-only features, including real-time texting with Greg Joyce about the inside buzz on the Yankees.

Try it free

A good chime

Cody Bellinger went 0-for-1 with a walk.

More importantly, he left feeling healthy after playing right field in his first spring training game in nearly a week.

The former MVP — who had been out of action with a mild back injury — is scheduled to start again Friday. 

Black’ mark

Paul Blackburn was unable to extend his spring success, allowing two runs, three hits (one home run) and two walks against the Twins while striking out three over 2 ¹/₃ innings.

The 32-year-old had thrown six scoreless innings in his first two spring training appearances.

Caught my eye

The Ryan McMahon shortstop experiment hasn’t gone according to plan.

Ryan McMahon makes a throw during the Yankees’ 15-0 Grapefruit League loss to the Twins on March 5, 2026. Imagn Images

After the starting third baseman committed an error on a fairly straightforward grounder during his debut at shortstop Tuesday, McMahon recorded another error Thursday after sliding to his knee to get a ball in the hole, then forcing a wild throw to first.

McMahon later made another impressive stab up the middle but again threw off-target. 

Friday’s schedule

Cam Schlittler will make his spring debut in Friday night’s game against the Rays at Steinbrenner Field.

Oswaldo Cabrera also will make his first appearance of the spring, returning to action for the first time since breaking his ankle in May. 

Senators Trade Veteran NHL Forward David Perron Back To Detroit

Veteran Senators winger David Perron is heading back to the Detroit Red Wings. The Senators dealt Perron to Detroit for what will probably be either a third or fourth-round draft pick.

After acquiring Warren Foegele from Los Angeles earlier in the day, the Senators needed to clear some cap and roster room. Perron will be an unrestricted free agent at season's end, and as a 37-year-old at $4 million per season, who's had a hard time staying healthy, he likely wasn't in the plans for next fall.

Travis Green recently told the media that Perron might be able to return from sports hernia surgery at some point in this Western road trip. But the Wings obviously wanted some health assurances, working some conditions into the deal.

If Perron plays in a game before the end of the regular season or during the playoffs, the Red Wings will give the Senators the Columbus Blue Jackets' fourth-round pick, which was acquired in a previous trade.

If the Red Wings advance to the second round of the playoffs and Perron appears in 50% of the first-round games, the Red Wings will instead give up their own third-round pick to the Senators.

If Perron doesn't play another game this season, the Sens, presumably, get nothing.

Perron has spent the past two seasons with the Senators, appearing in 92 regular-season games with the team, putting up 41 points.  He returns to Detroit where he spent two seasons before signing as a free agent in Ottawa.

Steve Warne
The Hockey News

Brett Baty, Jorge Polanco get more acquainted with new Mets roles

An image collage containing 3 images, Image 1 shows New York Mets third baseman Brett Baty (7) returns to the dugout against the Washington Nationals during the first inning at CACTI Park of the Palm Beaches, Image 2 shows New York Mets’ Jorge Polanco runs drills at first base during Spring Training at Clover Field, Friday, Feb. 20, 2026,, Image 3 shows New York Mets second baseman Jorge Polanco (11) attempts to stop after running past second base against the Washington Nationals during the fifth inning at CACTI Park of the Palm Beaches
Jorge Polanco Bretty Baty Mets

WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. — The Mets got a look into their potential near future on Thursday, when Jorge Polanco started at first base, with Brett Baty behind him in right field

Both players looked fine, but went largely untested in a 7-4 loss to the Nationals. 

Access the Mets beat like never before

Join Post Sports+ for exciting subscriber-only features, including real-time texting with Mike Puma about the inside buzz on the Mets.

Try it free

They likely won’t be as fortunate when the regular season comes and more unpredictable plays develop. 

Baty and Polanco are doing what they can to be as prepared as possible. 

Baty, who played the outfield — but only left — in the minors, is still adjusting to balls moving in the opposite direction of what he’s used to seeing when he’s on the left side of the field.

He agreed with manager Carlos Mendoza’s decision to keep him on the right side of the diamond for the foreseeable future, either at first base or in right field. 

“When he mentioned it, I didn’t even think about it, but it’s a good plan,’’ Baty said. “It makes sense.” 

And though Baty and Polanco said they were growing more comfortable at their new positions, they acknowledge it’s too early to say just how good they’ll be once Opening Day hits in three weeks. 

Brett Baty returns to the dugout during the Mets’ spring training loss to the Nationals at CACTI Park of the Palm Beaches on March 5, 2026. IMAGN IMAGES via Reuters Connect

But the fact that they are both learning first base — along with Mark Vientos, who is away from the team and playing third base for Team Nicaragua in the World Baseball Classic — has helped. 

“There’s no ego with him,’’ Baty said of Polanco, primarily a middle infielder during his lengthy MLB career. “He wants to play, and he’ll play wherever. We’re both bouncing ideas off each other, working on our footwork. It’s good to have both [of] us there working — and Mark, too, when he was here.” 

Polanco, who made a smooth play on a sharp grounder from Keibert Ruiz in the third inning, taking the ball himself, said he’s also feeling more comfortable at first base. 

“He’s engaged with the dugout and the movement from batter-to-batter [and] pitch-to-pitch,’’ Mendoza said. 

Some scouts remain skeptical that the Mets’ rotating group of players will be successful. 

Jorge Polanco attempts to stop after running past second base during the Mets’ spring training loss to the Nationals on March 5, 2026. IMAGN IMAGES via Reuters Connect

In addition to Polanco, Baty and Vientos, there’s Bo Bichette moving from shortstop to third base

Bichette made a high throw to first after a nice stop and has said he’s growing more accustomed to the hot corner after a few weeks of work. 

But the reason the Mets want them to make adjustments in the field is because they want them in the lineup. 

Jorge Polanco runs drills at first base during Mets’ spring training at Clover Field on Feb. 20, 2026. Corey Sipkin for NY Post

Bichette had two hits and Baty hit an opposite-field homer. 

“It was good to see him drive the ball the other way,’’ Mendoza said of Baty’s blast.

Trade: Red Wings Re-Acquire David Perron From Senators

Follow Michael Whitaker On X

With the 2026 NHL Trade Deadline now less than 24 hours away, the Detroit Red Wings have made their first move, and it involves a familiar face.

The Red Wings have re-acquired veteran forward David Perron, who played for them from 2022 through 2024, from the Ottawa Senators. 

In return, they've sent Ottawa a conditional 2026 conditional fourth-round draft pick.

However, he hasn't played since Jan. 20 after undergoing sports hernia surgery. His initial tentative timeline for a return to the ice was between five and seven weeks. 

Perron, one of the key elements in the Stanley Cup victory by the St. Louis Blues in 2019, signed a free-agent contract with Detroit in 2022 and instantly became one of the club's top veteran voices both on the ice and in the dressing room. 

Bookmark The Hockey News Detroit Red Wings team site to stay connected to the latest newsgame-day coverage, and player features

Image

Following the 2023-24 season, Perron signed a two-year, $8 million contract with the Senators and helped them reach the postseason, during which they put a scare into the Toronto Maple Leafs in the Eastern Conference Quarterfinals. 

Perron scored twice and added an assist in the six-game series. 

A pending unrestricted free agent at the end of this season, Perron carries a $4 million salary cap hit and has scored 10 goals with 15 assists for the struggling Senators so far this season. 

Never miss a story by adding us to your Google News favorites!

Image

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.