Todd McLellan Issues Ultimatum To Red Wings After Loss To Sabres

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The Detroit Red Wings managed to make history last month, pulling off a historic comeback victory over the St. Louis Blues and marking just the fifth time in their history that they won a game in which they initially trailed by four goals. 

While they didn’t make history on Saturday evening when a nearly identical situation happened to them in reverse, it still stirred familiar feelings about what has gone wrong for the franchise throughout its lengthy postseason drought.

The Red Wings had a 4-1 lead over the Buffalo Sabres at the midway point of the second period on Saturday evening, only to eventually blow the lead and lose in overtime by a 5-4 final score. 

Not only did the Red Wings fail to convert on two key power-play opportunities in the game's final frame, but they also surrendered a shorthanded breakaway goal that knotted the score. 

Head coach Todd McLellan, who was hired nearly 11 months ago to help bring a new level of accountability to the franchise, stated the facts as plainly as he could afterward on what needs to happen in order for Detroit to get over the hump. 

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“I’ll take you all the way back to Traverse City -- on the first day (of Training Camp) we talked about game management and learning how to play certain situations,” McLellan said. “Clearly, we haven’t learned that yet. I don’t know if you could write a script like that. We’re short-handed, trying to score and creating turnovers."

"Until this group figures out what’s important at certain times of the game, we’re going to have those nights," he continued. "Simple as that."

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During the setback, the Red Wings once again surrendered multiple odd-man rushes against the Sabres, who have now won both matchups against Detroit so far this season. 

Perhaps even more frustrating for Detroit is that dropping points against a team like the Sabres—who sit in last place in the Eastern Conference, could ultimately be the difference between making or missing the Stanley Cup Playoffs in such a tightly packed race.

Detroit can't afford to allow points to slip away like that, especially in games where they had a multi-goal lead. But if they can't figure out the kind of game management skills that McLellan routinely refers to, it could be deja vu again. 

"Until we value it and figure it out, I'll be talking about this again," McLellan said. 

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Rangers Vs. Red Wings Preview, Projected Lineup, Notable Storylines

Tim Fuller-Imagn Images

The New York Rangers are set to play the Detroit Red Wings tonight at 7 PM EST at Madison Square Garden. 

Here’s all you need to know ahead of this matchup: 

Projected Lineup:

Forwards:

Will Cuylle - Mika Zibanejad - J.T. Miller

Artemi Panarin - Vincent Trocheck - Alexis Lafrenière

Conor Sheary - Noah Laba - Jonny Brodzinski

Adam Edström - Sam Carrick - Taylor Raddysh

Defensemen:

Vladislav Gavrikov - Adam Fox

Carson Soucy - Braden Schneider

Matthew Roertson - Scott Morrow 

Goaltenders: 

Jonathan Quick 

Igor Shesterkin 

Notable Storylines: 

  • Jonathan Quick is set to start for the Rangers. 
  • The Rangers are coming off of a 2-1 win over the Columbus Blue Jackets. 
  • The Rangers called up Scott Morrow from the Hartford Wolf Pack and sent Gabe Perreault back down.
  • Will Borgen is day-to-day with an upper-body injury. 
  • The Rangers currently hold a 10-7-2 record. 
  • The Red Wings are coming off of a 5-4 loss to the Buffalo Sabres.

Kingston Flemings scores 22 as No. 1 Houston holds off No. 22 Auburn 73-72

Freshman point guard Kingston Flemings scored 22 points, Chris Cenac Jr. had 18 points and nine rebounds and top-ranked Houston held on for a 73-72 victory over No. 22 Auburn on Sunday. Auburn (3-1) rallied behind a raucous neutral-site home crowd and had two chances to take the lead on the final possession. Two driving attempts by Tahaad Pettiford were nixed by Houston’s defense, including a block by Flemings.

Wild's Vladimir Tarasenko To Miss Second Straight Game With Lower-Body Injury

ST. PAUL, Minn - The Minnesota Wild (8-7-4) is back on home ice tonight to host the Vegas Golden Knights (8-4-5).  The Wild will be without forward Vladimir Tarasenko for the second straight game.

Tarasenko, 33, has two goals and ten points in 18 games this year for the Wild. He missed Saturday's game against the Anaheim Ducks with a lower-body injury and will not play again on Sunday.

Wild head coach John Hynes said after the game that Tarasenko's status will be day-to-day.

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Canadiens Call Up Skilled Prospect From AHL

Joshua Roy (© David Kirouac-Imagn Images)

Due to their ongoing injury troubles, the Montreal Canadiens have called up one of their prospects.

The Canadiens have recalled forward Joshua Roy from their American Hockey League (AHL) affiliate, the Laval Rocket. This comes after the Canadiens announced that Kirby Dach would be out for the next four to six weeks with a fractured foot. 

Roy has spent most of this season in Laval, where he has posted four goals, three assists, seven points, and a plus-4 rating in 10 games. He has also played one game for the Canadiens this season, where he recorded zero shots in 7:58 of ice time against the Calgary Flames on Oct. 22.

With this latest call-up to the Canadiens' roster, Roy will be looking to make an impact. The 2021 fifth-round pick is looking to prove that he can take that next step and be an NHL-caliber player, so this is a golden chance to show the Habs what he can do. 

Roy has played in 36 games with the Canadiens over the last three seasons, where he has recorded six goals, five assists, and 11 points. During this past season with Laval, he posted 20 goals, 15 assists, and 35 points in 47 games. 

Why Moses Moody and Co. leading win vs. Pels is important to Warriors' success

Why Moses Moody and Co. leading win vs. Pels is important to Warriors' success originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

Steph Curry needed to score 95 points, make 29 shots, including 14 3-pointers, and swish 23 free throws in a two-game stretch for the Warriors to leave San Antonio with two consecutive wins against the Spurs. 

He didn’t even reach double-digit scoring Sunday in New Orleans, yet the Warriors didn’t need him to in a 124-106 win against the Pelicans at the Smoothie King Center. That’s two wins in one for a team that far too often has needed Curry to have all his superpowers and already had two frustrating letdown losses with him earlier this season. 

Sunday night in the Big Easy wasn’t about Curry, Jimmy Butler or Draymond Green. The shining star was Moses Moody, who scored a career-high 32 points on 10-of-16 shooting and went 8 of 12 on 3-pointers. His sizzling start was beyond being on fire. Moody made seven threes in the first quarter, joining Curry and Klay Thompson as the only Warriors ever to make at least seven threes in one quarter. 

The proud product of Little Rock, Ark., was fueled by Southern comfort on his career night. 

“I’m from the South, so whenever I’m down here, my joints feel better,” Moody joked on “Warriors Postgame Live.”

Moody made his first two threes, missed one and then made his next five to finish. The first quarter alone was a new career high in threes by Moody for an entire game. But what happened before his first two was a bigger-picture moment for the Warriors to learn from. 

A wild sequence ahead of Moody’s first three went as follows: Green missed layup, Green offensive rebound; Green missed tip shot, Green offensive rebound; Green missed tip shot, Green offensive rebound; Green missed tip shot, Green offensive rebound; Green missed tip shot, Butler offensive rebound. 

Butler grabbed Green’s fifth miss in five tries and finally got the ball out of the paint, passing it to Curry at the top of the arc. Curry took one dribble to his left and dumped the ball off to a wide-open Moody for a catch-and-shoot three. 

His second three also came off an offensive rebound. Rookie Will Richard came flying high from the corner to tip out a missed three from Curry, which Butler tracked down, finding Moody for another open catch-and-shoot three from the left corner. 

The effort prior those two threes were reminiscent of Gary Payton II keeping a key possession alive with two offensive rebounds against the Spurs on Wednesday night, where the result was a huge three from Curry. The Warriors as a team in New Orleans came down with 16 offensive rebounds, highlighted by five from Richard and four from Green. 

“Those two games [in San Antonio], they were intense. They felt like playoff games,” Green said to Warriors Radio’s Tim Roye. “We knew the energy wouldn’t quite be there for this one. But we were able to find our own energy, create our own energy. We built a comfortable lead, they fought back. We closed the half strong and then were able to kind of handle the second half.

“A lot tougher, for different circumstances, than San Antonio.” 

While Curry was held to three points – all free throws – in the first quarter, the rest of the Warriors scored 41 on 15-of-26 shooting (57.7 percent) and went 10 of 15 beyond the arc (66.7 percent). The Warriors then only scored 17 points in the second quarter, but did close the second quarter on an 8-0 run. They opened the third on a 12-4 run and outscored the Pelicans by six in the second half. 

Of course, Moody’s 32 points and eight threes are the stats that stood out in front of others. The most important stats, however, were minutes played. 

Curry didn’t have to play 30 minutes, and neither did Green. The Warriors needed 34 and 36 minutes from Curry in his monstrous nights in San Antonio to get two wins. Butler (31) and Moody (33) were the only two Warriors to play at least 30 minutes in an 18-point win against the Pelicans. 

And on top of Moody’s game, the Warriors also received scoring off the bench from Brandin Podziemski (19 points) and Buddy Hield (11 points). Each made three 3-pointers. 

There are parts of the game that will need cleaning, like Curry (four), Green (five) and Butler (six) combining for 15 turnovers. When role players like Moody, Podziemski and Hield are picking up the pieces, the Warriors can survive those kinds of miscues from their top three players. 

Performances like the shows Curry put on in San Antonio certainly could happen again. Anything is possible when No. 30 is on the court. Just nine points and one three were required of him for the Warriors to get past the Pelicans.

Getting through an undermanned and undertalented team where the Warriors’ top talent doesn’t need to be worn down are the kind of wins that can produce heroics from Curry and his star teammates later in the most important times of the season.

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(11-16-25) Wild Vs Golden Knights: Goaltending Matchup

ST. PAUL, Minn - The Minnesota Wild (8-7-4) is back on home ice tonight to host the Vegas Golden Knights (8-4-5). Here is tonight's goaltending matchup.

The Wild will turn back to Filip Gustavsson tonight in goal. Jesper Wallstedt shutout the Anaheim Ducks on Saturday so Gustavsson will start on Sunday.

He is 4-7-2 on the year with a 3.09 goals-against average and a .896 save percentage in 13 games. Last season, Gustavsson went 0-1-0 against Vegas and let up four goals on 37 shots.

Gustavsson, 27, is 1-4-1 in his career against the Golden Knights with a 2.76 goals-against average and a .911 save percentage in seven career games.

Rookie goaltender Carl Lindbom is expected to start for Vegas. He is 0-3-1 on the year with a 3.29 goals-against average and a .869 save percentage.

He has not faced the Wild in his career and has only four NHL starts, all coming this season. The 22-year-old netminder is 19-15-4 in the AHL in his career with a 2.56 goals-against average and a .914 save percentage.

Vegas lost four straight games before its 4-1 win over the St. Louis Blues on Saturday.

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NCAA Player Spotlight: Will Horcoff

Will Horcoff is an 18 year-old sophomore forward for the Michigan Wolverines. He was born in Birmingham, Michigan. At 6'5", Horcoff excels at a physical, two-way center role for the Wolverines, which made him a top prospect for the 2025 NHL Draft. His path to Ann Arbor was paved through playing for Honeybaked and Little Caesars from 2020-2023, before moving onto the U.S. National Development Team until 2024, when he elected to play at Michigan.

2025-26 Stats - 14 games played, 13 goals, 5 assists, 18 points, 28 penalty minutes, +4 +/- (currently tied for 8th in total points in the NCAA)

Horcoff was drafted by the Pittsburgh Penguins in the first round of 2025 NHL Draft. (24th overall) He participated in the Penguins Development Camp this past July.

Jun 27, 2025; Los Angeles, California, USA; William Horcoff is selected as the 24th overall pick to the Pittsburgh Penguins in the first round of the 2025 NHL Draft at Peacock Theater. Mandatory Credit: Kirby Lee-Imagn Images

Will is the son of former NHL'er, Shawn Horcoff, who played 15 total seasons between the Edmonton Oilers, Dallas Stars, and Anaheim Ducks.

Horcoff has also represented the USA in the U17 World Hockey Championships and the U18 World Junior Ice Hockey Championships.

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Here, There And Everywhere With The Blueshirts

Aaron Doster-Imagn Images

1. Before Thursday dawned this past week, the New Jersey Devils looked like a potential Stanley Cup candidate. Now the Rangers look like a better one.

2. Superstar Jack Hughes' freak – and I do mean weird – hand injury figures to torpedo the Garden Staters right out of first place and into the crowded Met Division pack.

3. Suddenly, the Rangers are faced with a rare opportunity to leapfrog over the Pitchfork Puckchasers and challenge for the Met lead.

4. Not Good News Department. Maven Roundtable super seer Jess Rubenstein reports that the Hartford Wolfpack have lost seven straight – home and away.

5. More Rubenstein: "Dylan Garand has gone from promising goalie to just flat out lost. If the Rangers were to lose either Igor or Quick for any length of time, the Rangers would be in bigtrouble."

6. Nathan Aspinall, 159th overall pick in 2024, is tenth in OHL scoring after back to back two-goal games for the Flint Firebirds. "He's a Rangers Prospects best 12-15-27," adds Jess.

7. The Rangers certainly do not need Matt Rempe for police work; not with Sam Carrick slugging away. Slingin' Sam went toe to toe with the NHL's best fighter, Mathieu Olivier, before M.O. K.O'd Sammy Boy at the end.

The Trick For The Rangers Is To Follow It And Extend The StreakThe Trick For The Rangers Is To Follow It And Extend The StreakThe Rangers "Big Push Plan" has been simplicity itself.

8. Before getting too ga-ga over the Blueshirts win streak, bear in mind that they'll finally meet a real team on Tuesday when they visit Vegas to start a three-game road trip.

9. A first for the Maven: Never in my career did I ever hear a putdown like this from a seasoned hockey man who watched the BJ-Blueshirts game: "The linesmen were brutal."

10. Mike Sullivan has restored the no-whining spirit of two seasons ago. It's accepted that Chris Kreider and Jake (The Rake) Trouba will do well in Anaheim – and so what!!

Penguins' Young Forward The Latest Chapter In Injury Woes

The injuries just keep piling on for the Pittsburgh Penguins.

Ahead of Sunday's tilt against the Nashville Predators - the second of two NHL Global Series games in Stockholm, Sweden - head coach Dan Muse announced that 23-year-old forward Ville Koivunen is day-to-day with a lower-body injury.

Koivunen left Saturday's practice early and did not return, and he did not play in Sunday's game. 

After registering seven points in his first eight NHL games last season alongside Evgeni Malkin and Sidney Crosby to close out the 2024-25 season, Koivunen has gotten off to a slow start production-wise this year. He has just two assists in 11 games and is still seeking his first NHL goal. 

His injury adds to an already-heaping list of unavailable forwards for the Penguins, as Rickard Rakell, Justin Brazeau, Noel Acciari, and Filip Hallander are all on injured reserve. The Penguins are running a bit thin on their scoring depth, and Koivunen's injury - despite his slow start - will only worsen those concerns if he misses any length of time.

The Penguins will fly back to Pittsburgh from Stockholm on Sunday and resume practice on Tuesday. Their next game comes against the Minnesota Wild on Friday, which kicks off a back-to-back with the Seattle Kraken on the tail end of it.

As of Sunday, the Penguins sit third in the Metropolitan Division at 10-5-4 with 24 points. 

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;

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Takeaways: Penguins Put Together Strong Response Game, Take Home 3 Of 4 Points In NHL Global Series

After a thoroughly disappointing 2-1 overtime loss to open the NHL Global Series on Friday, the Pittsburgh Penguins aimed to take home three of four possible points in their rematch with the Nashville Predators on Sunday.

And they put together a very strong effort in Stockholm, Sweden.

The Penguins defeated the Predators, 4-0, in a game that began at 9:00 a.m. on the East Coast. Rookie netminder Sergei Murashov earned the shutout and his first career NHL win - as well as Game MVP honors and a nice watch - in a 21-save performance.

And - according to Penguins PR - Murashov required the fewest career games played (2) to record his first NHL shutout in franchise history. 

"Really great crowd, great vibe at the arena," Murashov said. "Thanks for everyone who came in who watched this game. It's a really nice opportunity in life just to change scenery and play in a different spot but still take care of our own business."

The Penguins got off to a fast start in this one, as Parker Wotherspoon fired a seeing-eye shot from the left point to kick off the scoring a little more than two minutes into regulation. Six minutes later, Evgeni Malkin had a deja vu moment from Friday when he was parked below the goal line right by the net and threw a puck toward the net-front, and it hit Nicholas Hague's foot and went in to give the Penguins a 2-0 lead. 

'It's Huge For Me': Olympics Big Motivating Factor For Penguins' Players This Season'It's Huge For Me': Olympics Big Motivating Factor For Penguins' Players This SeasonThe 2026 Olympic Games in Milano Cortina are a huge motivating factor for several Pittsburgh Penguins' players like Erik Karlsson, Rickard Rakell, and Bryan Rust - as well as for the entirety of the NHL.

Then - just two minutes later - the Penguins got a little bit of puck luck when the vulcanized rubber went off a Preds' stick and right to Sidney Crosby's stick in the left circle. Crosby sniped the puck past Juuse Saros to give the Penguins an early 3-0 lead - and one that they wouldn't surrender.

The Predators did get a lot of chances on the power play in the second period, but the Penguins wouldn't break. They generated some scoring opportunities in the third period as well, and the Penguins - and Murashov - stood tall defenisively. Their early onslaught proved too much for the Preds to overcome.

All in all, it was a solid bounceback effort for the Penguins, and they are going back to Pittsburgh with three out of four points on their trip to Sweden. And this is no small thing considering that the Penguins had lost five of their previous six games going into this one.

"We were just motivated to bounce back," Crosby said. "I thought it showed with the way we played. It doesn't always work out that you get three [goals], even if you have a good start. So, that was big, and, obviously, our penalty kill was big there in the second. But that start was huge."


Here are some takeaways from this one:

- The Penguins changed around their forward lines for this game, as Ben Kindel - who has been on Crosby's line for the past handful of games - was put back into the third-line center role, Connor Dewar was put on Crosby's left, Kevin Hayes was bumped up to Malkin's left, and Tommy Novak was moved back down with Kindel. Danton Heinen also slotted in for Ville Koivunen, who is out day-to-day with a lower-body injury.

And the lineup shifting paid off big time. 

Obviously, the injury situation doesn't make constructing a perfect - or, even, formidable - lineup easy. Moving Kindel up in the first place was more so a move of necessity rather than one of pure election, as Crosby's line was struggling to generate, and two top-six wingers in Rickard Rakell and Justin Brazeau are injured and forced their hand. 

But this team is much better with Kindel centering the third line. It wasn't a particularly loud game for the trio of Kindel, Novak, and Philip Tomasino, but they did generate some chances - and Crosby's line with Connor Dewar and Bryan Rust were fine without Kindel. And they were able to roll four lines, which is something they haven't been able to do throughout this recent stretch of games.

When the Penguins can roll lines, they're hard to play against. And that's what happened against Nashville.

- This was a good effort from the Penguins, even if things got a little hairy in the second period. The Penguins killed off a Ryan Graves tripping minor six minutes into the middle frame, and Ryan Shea took a slashing penalty a little past the midway point of the period. 

Then, with 37 seconds left on Shea's infraction, the Penguins took a Too Many Men penalty and gave Nashville a five-on-three. And Pittsburgh's penalty kill - once again - came up big.

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;

Blake Lizotte - I'll get to him in a minute - put forth a nice individual effort high in the defensive zone to stall some time and prevent the Predators from getting set up. Erik Karlsson and Wotherspoon did some nice work down low as well, and the Penguins were able to kill off both the five-on-three and the regular man-advantage that followed. 

The Penguins' penalty kill now ranks fifth in the league at 85.7 percent, and their power play - which did not get an opportunity in this game - ranks first at 34.1 percent. Special teams is winning the Penguins hockey games, and if they can keep both units operating at a high level, they should continue to help the Penguins win a lot of hockey games.

- Speaking of Lizotte, he was outstanding in this game. As a matter of fact, he's been outstanding this entire season. 

Nov 16, 2025; Stockholm, SWEDEN; Pittsburgh Penguins center Blake Lizotte (46) and Nashville Predators center Fedor Svechkov (40) collide in a Global Series ice hockey game at Avicii Arena. Mandatory Credit: Per Haljestam-Imagn Images

If Lizotte is involved in a puck battle along the wall, he wins it. If there is a race to the puck, he wins it. If there is a battle for positioning around the net - despite his size - he wins it. 

This guy works his tail off night-in and night-out. He is excellent on the penalty kill and is an energizer in the bottom-six. He's the perfect fourth-line center, and the Penguins are a better team with him on it.

- At the end of the second period, a video of Crosby smiling ear-to-ear as he cross-checked Nashville forward Luke Evangelista went viral. 

Of course, there was a lot leading up to that moment, including a few missed cross-checks by Evangelista earlier in the game. Frustration was mounting for Nashville, and hockey happened as a result. 

I'm never one to side with players taking cheap shots. But this wasn't a cheap shot by Crosby. It was barely anything more than a love tap. And seeing him smile through the entire thing was truly something else. 

- Wotherspoon continues to be a revelation for the Penguins. He is perfectly steady next to Karlsson, and he has shown an ability to manage the puck really well, too. 

On his goal, he did a little stop-and-start while possessing the puck before walking to his left and firing the puck toward the goal. I like his skating. I like his smarts. I like how he tandems with Karlsson. 

He's been an excellent find for the Penguins and a huge reason for the team's - and Karlsson's - early success.

- On the other hand, I didn't think Clifton enjoyed a particularly strong game on the bottom pairing. He did make a nice play on the backcheck during the second period to break up a play, but there were a few occasions where he was caught out of position and couldn't get back, he lost the puck in the defensive zone leading to a turnover, and he misread plays in general.

None of Clifton, Matt Dumba, or Harrison Brunicke have shown enough to secure regular playing time on the right side of the bottom pairing. Ryan Graves has been perfectly solid on the left side since his recall from Wilkes-Barre/Scranton (WBS). The only one he hasn't played with is Brunicke.

Sooner or later, it would be nice to see one of them begin to separate himself on the right side.

- Speaking of Brunicke...

...If you're keeping track, this was the 19-year-old rookie defenseman's fifth consecutive NHL healthy scratch, which makes him eligible for a one-time, five-game or 14-day maximum AHL conditioning loan

The Penguins don't play until Friday. The WBS Penguins play exactly five games within the next 14 days, and that is true up until the end of Thursday this week. Brunicke has played in nine games and has not yet reached his 10th to trigger his entry-level contract. The World Junior Championship (WJC) is coming up at the end of December.

What Will The Penguins Do With Top Defensive Prospect Harrison Brunicke?What Will The Penguins Do With Top Defensive Prospect Harrison Brunicke?On Thursday, it was confirmed by <a href="https://thehockeynews.com/nhl/pittsburgh-penguins">Pittsburgh Penguins</a>' head coach Dan Muse that 18-year-old center <a href="https://thehockeynews.com/nhl/pittsburgh-penguins/players/penguins-top-prospect-ben-kindel-to-remain-in-pittsburgh">Ben Kindel will remain in the NHL through his 10th game</a>, meaning the first year of his three-year entry-level contract will kick in.&nbsp;

You do the math. If I were a betting person, I'd say there's a clear path for Brunicke here over the coming days and weeks. He needs to see game action at some point, and a short AHL stint is the perfect opportunity for a reset before getting very competitive minutes at the WJC.

Keep an eye on this situation.

- Obviously, you don't want to get too far ahead of things. 

But Murashov is so calm, poised, and confident in his net. He operates with such composure for a 21-year-old who literally just entered the league a week ago. He had to make some tough saves in this game - namely a second-period save on Stamkos during a Preds' power play - and most of the time, he's making it look easy.

There will be bumps in the road with a young goaltender. There always are with any young player. But there is something different about this kid. He's special. 

The Penguins put together exactly the kind of bounceback game that they needed to Sunday. And Murashov was a huge part of that. If he and Arturs Silovs continue to operate at the level they have so far, this team is going to have a very good problem when it comes time for Tristan Jarry to return from injured reserve. 

Takeaways: Penguins' Lack Of Injury Depth Exposed In 2-1 Loss To Predators During First Game Of Global SeriesTakeaways: Penguins' Lack Of Injury Depth Exposed In 2-1 Loss To Predators During First Game Of Global SeriesDespite all of the excitement and fanfare surrounding the start of the 2025-26 Global Series, Friday simply wasn't the night for the <a href="https://thehockeynews.com/nhl/pittsburgh-penguins">Pittsburgh Penguins</a>.

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