Nets fall to 76ers for third straight loss, finish winless in NBA Cup

NEW YORK (AP) — Tyrese Maxey scored 22 points, Jared McCain had 20 off the bench and the Philadelphia 76ers beat the Brooklyn Nets 115-103 on Friday night in an NBA Cup game.

Quentin Grimes added 19 points, and Paul George had 14 to help the short-handed 76ers snap a two-game losing streak.

The 76ers played without starting center Joel Embiid (right knee management) and VJ Edgecombe (left calf tightness), and then lost backup center Andre Drummond (sprained right knee) midway through the second quarter.

Drummond attempted to block Tyrese Martin’s floater and then tried to grab the rebound with his left hand, but fell on the court and immediately reached for his knee.

Egor Demin scored a career-high 23 points, and Martin had 16 for Brooklyn. The Nets have lost three consecutive games and fell to 0-9 at home this season. They are the only team without a home win this season, with their last one at Barclays Center on April 8 against New Orleans.

The 76ers led by 1 points in the first half and saw their lead cut to nine after Brooklyn went on an 11-2 run, capped by Denim’s 3-pointer that made it 74-65 with 4:07 left in the third quarter.

Denim cut it to nine again with a 3-pointer with 4:35 to play. Demin’s layup made it 112-103 with 1:13 left in regulation before Grimes found an open Adem Bona, whose 3-pointer extended the lead for good.

Both teams were 1-3 in NBA Cup play.

UP NEXT

76ers: Host Atlanta on Sunday night.

Nets: At Milwaukee on Saturday night.

Josh Hart, Jalen Brunson push Knicks past Bucks in Giannis Antetokounmpo's return

The Knicks won Friday's NBA Cup game against the Bucks, 118-109, for their third straight victory while they extended Giannis Antetokounmpo-led Milwaukee's seven-game skid.

Takeaways

  1. For the third straight game, the Knicks started Jalen Brunson, Miles McBride, Mikal Bridges, Josh Hart and Karl-Anthony Towns. Mike Brown's move paid off particularly with Hart, who gave the Knicks (12-6) a first-half boost by scoring 13 points on 4-of-9 shooting while adding six rebounds and two assists. Hart finished with a 19-point, 15-rebound double-double, plus seven assists, and continues to trend up after totaling 22 points on 8-of-13 shooting, eight rebounds and seven assists in Wednesday's 129-101 win at the Charlotte Hornets.
  2. Another notable contributor in the lineup was McBride, who gave the Knicks a pop with 19 points on 5-of-7 shooting from deep to complement Brunson's backcourt scoring. Among McBride's big shots was his triple with 2:53 left, an immediate and needed response after Kyle Kuzma's trey moments earlier cut the Knicks' lead to 107-105 at the 3:16 mark.
  3. Speaking of Brunson, the Knicks' catalyst offered a balanced game by dropping 15 first-half points while the Bucks (8-12) clung to a 62-61 halftime edge. Brunson especially came alive in the third quarter, scoring 16 of his game-high 37 points (12-for-21 shooting) during a 31-26 period where the Knicks outscored the Bucks. Before the Bucks closed the gap with the Knicks in the fourth quarter's tightly contested final six minutes, New York's largest lead of 101-88 at the 10:40 mark, fueled by Brunson's third-quarter heat check.
  4. The Knicks advance to the quarterfinals of the NBA Cup after winning East Group C. In beating the Bucks, who won last year's NBA Cup, there will be a new winner this season. Also of note, Milwaukee's seventh straight loss is its longest skid since the 2013-14 campaign when it suffered multiple lengthy skids and went 15-67.

Who's the MVP?

Antetokounmpo, who was questionable with an abductor strain but willed the Bucks with 30 points on 10-of-14 shooting while adding 15 rebounds and eight assists in 28 minutes of what was his first game since Nov. 17.

Highlights

What's next

The Knicks host the Toronto Raptors Sunday at 6 p.m. The Raptors (14-5) enter Saturday's 6 p.m. game at the Charlotte Hornets with nine straight wins.

Lukas Dostal out 2-3 Weeks with Upper-Body Injury, Importance of Upcoming Ducks Schedule

Anaheim Ducks netminder Lukas Dostal (25) has been the sole reason for several of Anaheim’s wins over the past two seasons. A season ago, he played behind one of the worst defensive teams in the NHL since the 2004-05 lockout, and this season, the Ducks are once again in the basement in terms of expected goals against per 60 minutes (3.03), 31st, behind only the Vancouver Canucks (3.08).

Again, to begin the 2025-26 season, he’s had to carry a heavy load early for Anaheim, as they continue to adjust to new defensive and offensive systems as well as several new faces on their roster. To date this season, Dostal has posted an 11-5-1 record, a .904 SV%, and has saved 10.1 goals above expected (10th in the NHL).

Dostal practiced with the Ducks on Tuesday, but was ruled out of Wednesday’s game against the Canucks ahead of the team’s morning skate with an upper-body injury, and was given a “day-to-day” designation. The team announced just before warmups, ahead of their Black Friday game against the Los Angeles Kings, that Dostal would miss the next 2-3 weeks.

Takeaways from the Ducks 5-4 Shootout Win over the Kings

Game #24: Ducks vs. Kings Gameday Preview (11/28/25)

The Ducks recalled Finnish goaltender Ville Husso before Wednesday’s game, and he started the Ducks’ game on Friday against LA, his first NHL action of the 2025-26 season. He posted a 6-4-3 record in the AHL, with a .908 SV% and three shutouts.

The Ducks will rely on Husso and regular backup Petr Mrazek. To date, Mrazek has started six games for the Ducks this season, has a 3-3-0 record, and an .881 SV%.

In the next three weeks, the Ducks will play eleven games, including seven on the road, mostly coming on a five-game road trip to the East Coast before returning to Anaheim on Dec. 19. The Ducks (31 points) exited Friday’s game in sole possession of first place in the Pacific Division, with only a two-point lead on the Kings (29), with the Seattle Kraken (28) and Vegas Golden Knights (28) just behind them.

The compressed NHL schedule and compressed NHL standings have left the Ducks in first place in the Pacific, but just four points separate them and the second wild card team (Utah Mammoth, 27 points), with the San Jose Sharks nipping at their heels. All that to say, this next 2-3 week stretch is tremendously important for Anaheim’s playoff odds.

They’ll have to tighten up several areas of their defensive game that have plagued them this season, including net-front defense, questionable pinches, and sorting assignments against rush attacks.

Husso and Mrazek have had relatively up-and-down NHL careers, and will have to be up to a difficult task if the players in front of them continue to surrender some of the chances that they have to this point in the season.

Takeaways from the Ducks 5-4 Loss to the Canucks

Beckett Sennecke Is More Than A Manchild

Pavel Mintyukov Returns to Ducks Lineup Impressing, Potentially Shifting Conversation

Mets’ Luisangel Acuña swinging hot bat in Venezuelan Winter League

Luisangel Acuña survived his injury scare down in Winter Ball. The young Mets infielder was forced to leave the game last week after being hit by a pitch in the forearm. Just days later, though, he’s back doing damage in the Cardenales de Lara lineup.

Acuña was on-base a total of five times on Thursday night, including a pair of extra-base hits.

He started the game with a solo homer to dead center, lined a double to the gap in the fourth, drew a pair of walks over his next two at-bats, then kept things going with a two out single in the bottom of the 10th.

The 23-year-old then followed that with another two-hit game on Friday.

He tripled and came around for the little league homer in the fourth.

Then, after grounding out in the sixth, he came up in the bottom of the eighth and beat out an infield single to spark a game-tying rally.

Acuña grounded into a double play the 10th, but still has been putting together a stretch of strong play. 

He’s now hitting .268 with 10 extra-base hits, 13 RBI, 17 walks, 18 strikeouts, a .430 on-base percentage, and a .950 OPS through 22 games.

Fourteen of those games have been at shortstop, and he's been out in center in the other eight.

Can't Miss Takeaways From Colorado’s Shootout Loss to Minnesota

No period of good fortune endures indefinitely. 

The Colorado Avalanche saw both their 10-game winning streak and their run of three consecutive shutouts come to an end on Friday afternoon, as the Minnesota Wild edged them 3 to 2 in a shootout. The matchup lived up to its billing as a clash between the league’s two hottest teams, with Minnesota entering the contest on a six-game surge of its own. 

As The Hockey News noted in the game preview, no team can keep opponents off the score sheet indefinitely, and if there was a night when Colorado’s defensive wall might finally crack, this matchup was the likely candidate. Entering the contest, Kirill Kaprizov — fresh off an eight-year, $136 million dollar extension, the largest contract in franchise history — had already produced 14 goals and 14 assists in 28 games. He was the one to break Colorado’s shutout streak at 221 minutes and 42 seconds, redirecting a centering pass from Zeev Buium off his left skate and into the net early in the second period. The previous franchise mark, set in November 2001, stood at 192 minutes and 39 seconds. In any case, Colorado’s run was nothing short of historic. 

Kaprizov struck again with 1:57 remaining in the second period, one-timing Ryan Hartman’s wraparound pass from behind the net past Wedgewood to give the Wild a 2-1 lead. 

Of course, the Avalanche fought back valiantly, but it just wasn’t enough. 

Further Takeaways 

1. Landeskog Leads by Example 

If there is anyone still inclined to doubt that Gabe Landeskog is the heart and soul of this Avalanche team or question his drive to capture a second Stanley Cup, the video below makes it abundantly clear.  

Landeskog unleashed a shot from a challenging angle, absorbed a high stick to the face, and collided forcefully with the boards in what was unquestionably a painful sequence. Yet he did not linger on the ice or succumb to frustration. Instead, he battled through the discomfort, regained his footing, and positioned himself perfectly to finish Nathan MacKinnon’s rebound for the crucial game-tying goal with just under nine minutes remaining in regulation. 

MacKinnon rarely displays unguarded emotion, but the way his face lit up the instant Landeskog scored revealed just how integral the captain is to both the team and the organization. 

2. Shootout Struggles Continue 

The Avalanche secured an overtime victory against the Vancouver Canucks, courtesy of Gavin Brindley, yet Colorado remains in search of its first shootout win of the season. On the positive side, the team displayed resilience and determination. Martin Nečas converted the lone shootout goal, deftly sliding the puck past Wild goaltender Jesper Wallstedt in a smooth, elegant sequence. Despite the effort, it was not enough to claim the full two points. 

3. MacKinnon Reaches Another Milestone

Nathan MacKinnon became the first NHL player this season to reach 40 points, thanks to a two-point performance in the contest. He now leads the league in goals with 19 and overall points with 41. In assists, he ranks second with 22, trailing only Edmonton Oilers’ Connor McDavid, who has 24 on the year. 

4. Girard’s Slipping?

Could Samuel Girard be on the verge of a healthy scratch? The 27-year-old has appeared in only nine of the 24 games this season following recovery from an upper-body injury. After sustaining a lower-body injury over the summer, he was poised to start the regular season but suffered a setback just a couple of games in. Known for his speed, puck movement, and versatility, Girard has yet to display the form he once had. 

In overtime, Sam Malinski saw ice time while Girard did not, signaling a potential shift in the pecking order. Meanwhile, Ilya Solovyov has been receiving additional work in practice with Avalanche skills coach Mark Popovic, suggesting he may be poised for a game appearance soon, possibly as early as tomorrow against the Montreal Canadiens.

Next Game 

The Avalanche (17-1-6) return to Ball Arena on Saturday to face the Canadiens (13-7-3). Coverage begins at 1 p.m. local time.  

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Observations From Blues' 4-3 Win Vs. Senators

ST. LOUIS – Urgency and desperation. Desperation and urgency.

Any way you twist the words, they fit into a common place for the St. Louis Blues, and it came together in the third period with the most complete act of desperation of the season.

The Blues rallied for three goals in the final 20 minutes, with Matthew Kessel providing what turned out to be the game-winner in a 4-3 win against the Ottawa Senators at Enterprise Center on Friday.

The Blues (8-10-7), who trailed 2-1 entering the third period, were 0-8-1 on the season when trailing entering the final 20 minutes; the Senators (12-8-4) were 7-1-1 when leading. Things didn’t look good.

But along with Kessel, Jordan Kyrou and Pavel Buchnevich scored third-period goals, and Oskar Sundqvist scored his first of the season, and Jordan Binnington made 25 saves.

It was just the Blues’ second win the past eight games (2-2-4) but they have points in six of eight and have now scored first in nine of the past 10 games; they didn't give it up this time around and improved to 6-4-6 when doing so.

Here are Friday’s observations:

* Third period of the season – Let’s face it, this game was a dud for the longest.

Things got a bit spicy when Sundqvist finally scored, but when the Blues fell behind 2-1 late in the second period on a Fabian Zetterlund goal at 18:26, it felt like a repetitive theme of late for this squad.

But things changed, play changed. Desperation set in.

Kyrou’s team-leading seventh of the season came off a beautiful read and ensuing seam pass from Jake Neighbours into the slot, and Kyrou did the rest pulling it to his backhand and scooping it up over Leevi Merilainen at 2:01 for a 2-2 game:

“It was just great patience by (Neighbours),” Kyrou said. “Kind of hold it and wait for the lane to open up. It was a helluva pass.”

Buchnevich’s first goal in 17 games and first even-strength goal of the season put the Blues ahead 3-2 at 5:33 off a 2-on-1 pass from Brayden Schenn and ensuing one-timer inside the right post:

“Every goal feels good,” Buchnevich said, “especially now, it’s hard to score a goal. … I know 100 percent (Schenn) is going to give it to me. He doesn’t look at the net. He (had) a tough time to score before, I got a tough time to score (now). It’s an easy read, I know he’s a helluva player. I know he wants to make a pass.”

There was a comprehensive sigh of relief from the veteran forward, and the crowd was in appreciation that they showered Buchnevich with chants of, ‘BUUUUCH’ after the goal.

“(Felt) good,” Buchnevich said. “Hopefully they don't go through what I've been (through) and don't sit in a cold tub that long. I'm thankful for the support. They support us so well. Even after a tough second period, they get us going.”

Even after old friend David Perron tied the game 3-3 after Colton Parayko flubbed a puck trying to rim it around the boards and it bounded to the slot for a backhand finish at 7:31, the Blues marched back and grabbed the lead for good when Kessel backhanded a shot from the crease in following a series of opportunities at the net by the Blues at 9:19:

So the Blues had a lead, and this time, instead of just trying to sit on it, they played with a purpose. They played with … urgency.

“I think we showed the most desperation of the year so far,” Blues coach Jim Montgomery said. “The one thing you love about playing in St. Louis and being part of the Blues is how the fans react to desperation (and) to hard work, second- and third-effort. The third period’s the best we’ve done it all year and that’s why we got three goals. We got three goals because we were desperate and we didn’t give up a goal at the end because we were desperate defensively.”

So where did that desperation come from?

“I got to say it's because of our leaders,” Montgomery said. ‘Schenn's line started the period off right. The Sundqvist line always plays with desperation, that's why they probably have the most 5-on-5 goals of our team. Then the (Robert) Thomas line followed up and they made a great play off the rush. That's how you build momentum. When you talk about team building, shift after shift, every line won a battle and it culminated after three shifts with a tying goal.”

* The fourth line continues to generate – They’re supposed to be the energy line, the one that goes out and sets the scorers up with good ice and generate a buzz with physicality, grit, forechecking, responsible defensively and just plain, hard work.

But once again, they unlocked a gridlock when the game didn’t generate much and Sundqvist opened the door to the scoring when he banked in a shot from the side of the net off Merilainen at 7:59 of the second period to make it 1-0:

Nathan Walker had the puck along the right side, saw Mathieu Joseph driving the net and steered a backhand there that Joseph redirected. Sundqvist wound up collecting the loose puck and from just below the goal line made a play to put it in off the goalie.

It doesn’t have to be pretty. Just effective.

“I can’t score when I’m in front of the goal, so I might as well try from behind the goal, I guess,” Sundqvist joked. “Great play by ‘Mojo’ and ‘Walks.’ I kind of saw him being out of position and tried to just bank it off him. Happy it worked out”

But the line just keeps making things happen. Why?

“I think it’s just playing north, playing simple. I think for our line, our biggest strength is the forechecking, getting pucks back that way. We’re not going to dangle three, four guys. We’re getting on forechecking and getting pucks back, attack the net. It’s been feeling good lately.”

Montgomery said, “Yeah, it is that simple. They are just playing north, but they're extremely connected. They're 15-20 feet apart from each other instead of being 85 feet apart from each other, hoping to put pucks through two people to get a breakaway. They're coming, they're slashing, they're chipping it off the wall, playing north and they've got support. Then they go low to high, D-men pound the puck and they've got two on the inside. That goal they scored today, they put a puck to the net, they got a strong-side drive and a weakside drive and they end up putting it in from the goal line. That's Sundqvist, how clever of a hockey player he is.”

* Buchnevich’s Uber driver broke the streak – Buchnevich hasn’t scored an even-strength goal in the regular season since the final game last season against the Utah Mammoth (25 games) on April 15, 2025, and it was his first goal this season in 17 games (Oct. 25 against the Detroit Red Wings), but there was a logical reason on Friday why this streak was broken: he had a driver to the game.

It was Oskar Sundqvist.

Why?

Buchnevich’s billet parents are in town and needed a car, so Buchnevich left them his, and hitched a ride with Sundqvist.

“I drove him today, I think I drove him to the rink twice last year and he scored both games,” Sundqvist said. “I'm 3-for-3 with driving him to the rink. I'm going to see if I'm going to have to keep driving him to the games.”

Buchnevich was doing his media interview and Sundqvist comes by and offers, “I can't wait for my Uber tip.”

Buchnevich replied, “You're driving me tomorrow too!”

Maybe there’s something to it, maybe not. Whatever works, right?

* Blues make good on the 5-on-6 – It’s a broken record talking about the Blues’ deficiencies defending the sixth attacker last year. We all know the results, in the regular season and in the Game 7 playoff game against the Winnipeg Jets.

The Senators came with a hard, aggressive push. They pulled Merilainen with 2:47 remaining in the third period and the Senators generated 10 shot attempts. Five were on goal and five were blocked.

But the blocks, or many of them, were a result of guys diving to the ice to make plays, guys sacrificing bodies to keep the opposition and pucks away from Binnington, who did his part and made the saves.

But it’s easy and motivating to play like that when the team generated the quality chances and got rewarded for the 5-on-5 goals.

“I mean, the third period, the desperation that got us three goals, I think it's the most 5-on-5 goals we've had in a period this year,” Montgomery said. “That's the catalyst that we need to carry on if we want to get on a roll, and we're going to get on a roll. That's the kind of game when you come from behind, your crowd is going nuts, you've got another game tomorrow night in front of the same crowd, it's time for us to show the desperation and just keep building on this. And it starts right from the first puck drop.

“Rinse, repeat, remember how you did it. We're going to show video on how we did and we're going to go out and execute it with the effort and emotion that you need to have the desperation like that.”

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The Colorado Avalanche Have What It Takes To Break NHL Points Record

When the Boston Bruins set the NHL record for most points in a season with 135 in 2022-23, it was tough to believe any team could break it.

But lo and behold, three seasons later, the Colorado Avalanche are going to give the Bruins a run for their money.

While Boston’s 65–12-5 record in '22-23 was absolutely stunning, the Avalanche are off to an even more impressive start this season with their 17-1-6 record out of the gate.

After picking up a loser point in Friday's shootout loss to the Minnesota Wild, the Avalanche are now on pace for 136 points – one more than the record.

While a lot of things have to line up perfectly for the Avs to tie the Bruins’ mark – or improve on it – you only have to look at how dominant Colorado has been thus far this year to believe the Avalanche can pull off an amazing feat and set a new standard for the rest of the NHL to try living up to.

For instance: the Avs’ 4.00 goals-for per game is nearly half a goal more than the next best team the Anaheim Ducks at 3.63. That same dominance is there on defense, as Colorado’s goals-against average of 2.08 leads the league. Those are simply astonishing numbers that illustrate how deep, talented and balanced the Avalanche are.

Another metric that shows you how dominant the Avs are at the moment is the fact that 11 of Colorado’s 17 wins have come by three goals or more. And if you include games where the Avalanche have won by two goals or more, that number rises to 13. Of course, the Avs can also beat opponents in nailbiter games this season, such as the Utah Mammoth, Tampa Bay Lightning, Vancouver Canucks and Chicago Blackhawks in games decided by a single goal. But when the grand majority of your victories come in games where you had a terrific goal cushion, that says everything about how strong you are as a group.

But the most impressive part of Colorado’s season could be their 10-game win streak that ended on Friday. The Avalanche have won 12 of their past 14 games, and they show no sign of slowing down. In fact, if you remove the Avs’ four-game losing skid from the third week of October, their record would be 17-0-3. This is just jaw-dropping efficiency.

In a nice nod to fate, the only team that’s beaten the Avalanche in regulation this season is…the Bruins, who beat Colorado 3-2 on Oct. 25. But even then, that was a one-goal win. And that tells you the Avs have yet to be blown out in even a single game this year. 

Colorado’s upcoming schedule is a chance to pad the record, facing the Vancouver Canucks, New York Rangers and Nashville Predators (twice). They will have tougher tests against the Montreal Canadiens and the upstart Philadelphia Flyers, but the Avs will still be favored to win every game they play until further notice.

Colorado Avalanche left wing Gabriel Landeskog celebrates his goal against the Minnesota Wild during the third period at Grand Casino Arena on Nov. 28. (Matt Krohn-Imagn Images)

Colorado is nearly one-third of the way through the regular season, and while injuries and/or slumps could ratchet up their number of regulation-time losses in a hurry, we don’t see that happening. The Avalanche have too many excellent competitors, two solid goaltenders and too much skill to envision a prolonged stretch of subpar hockey for them. 

If the hockey gods smile upon them in terms of their team health, there could be literally no stopping this Colorado team. They’ve got superstars in Nathan MacKinnon and Cale Makar. They’ve got great coaching. And they’ve generated a whole heap of confidence in this start to their year. 

So yes, this writer sees the Avalanche steaming straight toward the Bruins’ record season. Everything is going Colorado’s way – and with a little luck mixed in, the Avs could put up 135 points or more.

Former Duck Corey Perry gives Kings a boost, but they still lose rivalry game

The Kings' Corey Perry attempts a shot in front of Ducks Olen Zellweger (51) and Ville Husso (33) at Honda Center.
The Kings' Corey Perry attempts a shot in front of Ducks Olen Zellweger (51) and Ville Husso (33) at Honda Center on Friday. (Harry How / Getty Images)

A lot of people return home for the Thanksgiving weekend. But for Corey Perry, Friday’s homecoming was more than a little bit awkward.

One of the most decorated players in Ducks’ history, Perry was greeted by a smattering of boos when he wore a Kings’ sweater into the Honda Center for the first time. Two hours later he left, carrying the sting of a Ducks’ victory that saw his old team rally from deficits three times before winning the first rivalry game of the season 5-4 in a shootout.

“Great comeback,” said winger Chris Kreider, whose second-period power-play goal got the Ducks started. “A good job of fighting back. It’s definitely a confident feeling.”

Leo Carlsson, who suffered through two dismal losing seasons during the long post-Perry rebuild in Anaheim, had two assists and the game-tying goal with 91 seconds left in regulation for the Ducks, who trailed 4-2 with less than 10 minutes to play.

The Kings' Jacob Moverare blocks a pass from Duck Mason McTavish to Beckett Sennecke Friday at the Honda Center.
The Kings' Jacob Moverare blocks a pass from Duck Mason McTavish (23) to Beckett Sennecke (45) Friday at the Honda Center. (Harry How/Getty Images)

“It’s a different team,” Carlsson said. “Hungry. Different mentality, too. So it's been great so far season.”

Only Ryan Getzlaf has played more games for the Ducks then Perry, who left Anaheim in 2019 after 14 seasons, beginning an aimless tour of the NHL that saw him play for five teams before signing a free-agent contract with the Kings last summer.

The Ducks haven’t posted a winning record since he departed.

But after Friday’s victory they lead the division and are off to their best start in more than a decade. The Ducks are second in the Western Conference in wins (15), second in the NHL in goals (89), fourth in the conference in points (31) and were tied for fourth in points (31). For Carlsson, meanwhile, his 13th goal and 19th and 20th assists of the season Friday left 20, is tied for fourth in the league with 33 points.

The Ducks’ other scores Friday came from Olen Zellweger in the second period and Pavel Mintyukov in the third.

The Kings’ scores came from Alex Laferriere, Kevin Fiala, Alex Turcotte and Joel Edmundson. With the point they earned by taking the game to overtime, the Kings headed back up the freeway Friday afternoon second in the Pacific Division, two points behind the Ducks.

The Kings' Corey Perry looks on during the second period against the Ducks at the Honda Center on Thursday.
The Kings' Corey Perry looks on during the second period against the Ducks at the Honda Center on Thursday. (Debora Robinson/NHLI via Getty Images)

And, surprisingly, they have Perry to thank for that.

“He’s a massive piece for us right now,” center Philip Danault said. “He’s not the fastest guy on the ice but he’s so smart. He goes into the crease, he gets goals. He gets in the opponent’s head.

“He’s probably one of the big reasons we’re winning.”

Since leaving Anaheim, Perry has come off the visitors’ bench at the Honda Center several times. So Friday’s game wasn’t necessarily one he had circled on his calendar.

“It was home,” he said before the game. “I have nothing but tremendous things to say.”

After missing the start of the season following knee surgery, Perry was activated last month on the same day captain Anze Kopitar was placed on injured reserve with a foot injury. And he immediately took up the slack, scoring the first of his seven goals — good for second on the team — in his second game. He also has six assists, is fourth on the team with 13 points and is averaging more than 14 minutes of ice time just the second time since he left Anaheim.

“You know, it’s fun,” said Perry, who is nearly halfway to his point total of a season ago. “This is what we do for a living.”

Perry, 40, is the second-oldest player in the NHL. But with a Stanley Cup, an MVP award, a goal-scoring title and two Olympic gold medals in his trophy case, he has a resume few players can match. Yet the Ducks bought out the final two seasons and $8.625 million of his contract in 2019, part of a rebuild that has seen the franchise go through three coaches and three general managers without posting a winning record.

“Now it’s seven years later. I don’t know anybody on the team,” Perry said of the Ducks, who have the second-youngest roster in the Western Conference. “It’s turned over so much that it’s a new group.”

Ducks center Mason McTavish scores the winning goal during a shootout of against the Kings on Friday at the Honda Center
Ducks center Mason McTavish scores the winning goal during a shootout of against the Kings on Friday at the Honda Center. (William Liang/AP)

And new coach Joel Quenneville, who has a history of coaching success with young players, has that new group playing with confidence.

“We’re never going to give up,” said Carlsson, one of six Ducks younger than 23. “That’s the mentality.”

Laferriere got the scoring started late in the first period, parking himself in front of the goal and banging the puck past Ducks’ goalie Ville Husso, who made two big saves in the shootout on a day the Ducks announced that No. 1 goalie Lukas Dostal will miss two to three weeks with an upper-body injury.

Kreider tied it seconds into a power play midway through the second period, then Fiala and Zellweger exchanged goals just 59 seconds apart to send the teams into the second intermission tied 2-2.

Turcotte’s first goal of the season on a tip-in put the Kings back in front early in the third period before Edmundson doubled the lead on a slap shot from outside the right faceoff circle. He was helped by Perry’s presence in front of the goal, screening Husso on the shot.

The Kings wouldn’t score again though, allowing the Ducks to force overtime on goals from Mintyukov and Carlsson, who game-tying score came after his team pulled Husso to get an extra attacker.

“It was fun,” Mason McTavish said of his first rivalry matinee, which drew a sellout crowd of 17,174. “It was loud. There was a lot of energy in the building. So it was a ton of fun, and obviously more fun to come away with both points.”

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This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

Takeaways from the Ducks 5-4 Shootout Win over the Kings

In what’s become a tradition, the Anaheim Ducks hosted the Los Angeles Kings for a Black Friday matinee at Honda Center.

In what’s become an important date for NHL playoff odds, the Ducks sat in first place in the Pacific Division 23 games into the 2025-26 season. The Ducks were coming off a disappointing 5-4 loss to the Vancouver Canucks on Wednesday. They were looking to end their six-game homestand with another two points before heading out on a quick two-game road trip.

The Kings, on three days' rest, entered play in a three-way tie for second place in the Pacific and just a point behind the Ducks. They had earned points in seven of their last eight games before this one.

Game #24: Ducks vs. Kings Gameday Preview (11/28/25)

Takeaways from the Ducks 5-4 Loss to the Canucks

Just before warmups, the Ducks announced starting netminder Lukas Dostal will miss the next 2-3 weeks with an upper-body injury. He had previously been given a “day-to-day” designation and missed the Ducks game against the Canucks on Wednesday.

Ducks head coach Joel Quenneville pulled out the blender, making significant changes to every line and two of his three D pairs. Ryan Poehling returned to the lineup for his 300th career NHL game after having missed seven games with an upper-body injury.

Here’s how the Ducks lined up to start this game:

Cutter Gauthier-Leo Carlsson-Troy Terry

Chris Kreider-Mason McTavish-Beckett Sennecke

Nikita Nesterenko-Ryan Poehling-Alex Killorn

Ross Johnston-Ryan Strome-Frank Vatrano

Jackson LaCombe-Radko Gudas

Olen Zellweger-Jacob Trouba

Pavel Mintyukov-Drew Helleson

Ville Husso

Ville Husso was recalled from the San Diego Gulls on Wednesday and started this game for the Ducks. He saved 23 of the 27 shots he faced in this game.

In the opposite crease, the Kings turned to starting goaltender Darcey Kuemper, who stopped 27 of 31.

Game Notes

The Ducks were far more detail-oriented to start this game, but wound up playing too much how the Kings wanted to dictate play: low-event, conservative, trap, and chip. When the Ducks started to kill plays on the Kings’ entry, build rush chances, and generate offense on the ensuing cycles, the game turned into more of the track meet style they have thrived in this season.

As the game went on, Quenneville slowly reverted to more familiar line combinations. That is an aspect of the coaching staff’s style that will likely remain and will require getting used to. As good teams do, the Ducks found a way to take this game to overtime late and win it in a shootout.

“On the bench, we never feel like we’re out of the game,” Quenneville said after the game. “It’s almost like we get more angry when we get down by one or two. We did a lot of good things to sustain some pucks, (get some) kills, clears, and some timely goals around the net.”

Defensive Zone Coverage: With fear of sounding like a broken record, defending around the front of the net remains an area of concern for the Ducks this season. When pucks switch at the top of the zone, the Ducks' defenders struggle to identify when to challenge, try to block, or box out their assignment in front.

Mason McTavish: McTavish didn’t see a second of special teams play in this game, but was instrumental to the Ducks’ comeback. After a recent dip in form, he’s been doing all the little things right to get his play back on track. His defensive game is improving, especially in coverage, but where he’s at his best is battling on the halfwall and in small areas of the ice.

McTavish’s refusal to lose a late board battle to Anze Kopitar in the final minutes of the game, when the Ducks had their net pulled, led directly to Carlsson’s late-game-tying goal.

Ville Husso: Husso’s efforts in key moments kept this game from getting out of hand and within grasp for Anaheim. With mostly hits and only one miss (on LA’s fourth goal), Husso tracked pucks well from East to West and displayed some impressive athleticism. It’s unclear if he can win the Ducks games like Dostal can, but if these performances are the norm, he won’t lose them games.

Beckett Sennecke: Sennecke is becoming a more impactful offensive weapon with each passing game. His board play, once a negative, is now one of his best assets, as he’s far more calculated in his approach and has learned when and how opposing contact will come.

He’s at his best in open ice and has quickly learned how to break down opposing defenses, whether in transition or coming off the wall. He’s now riding a six-game point streak, scoring six points in the process (1-5=6), and has tallied 13 points (4-9=13) in his last 14 games.

The Ducks will head out for a brief back-to-back road trip to face the Chicago Blackhawks and St. Louis Blues on Sunday and Monday, respectively, starting with the Hawks on Sunday at 12:30 pm PST.

Beckett Sennecke Is More Than A Manchild

Pavel Mintyukov Returns to Ducks Lineup Impressing, Potentially Shifting Conversation

Takeaways from the Ducks 4-3 OT Win over the Golden Knights

Ducks Stun Kings in Shootout After L.A. Blows Two-Goal Third-Period Lead

The Los Angeles Kings  (11-6-7) watched a sure victory slip away from their fingertips yet again, surrendering a 4-2 third-period lead before falling 5-4 in a Shootout to the Anaheim Ducks (15-8-1) on Friday afternoon. 

This loss marks yet another collapse in extra time for L.A., a trend that continues to haunt them in their season. 

The Kings entered the third period tied 2-2. After Alex Laferriere opened the scoring late in the first, and a back-and-forth second period featuring goals from Kevin Fiala and Anaheim’s Olen Zellweger and Chris Kreider, Los Angeles surged ahead early in the third period. 

Goals from Alex Turcotte and Joel Edmondson in a span of 3 minutes in the final frame pushed the Kings to a commanding 4-2 lead with just over 12 minutes left. 

And then it unraveled just like how Kings fans are used to seeing all season. 

Kings Collapse

Anaheim flipped the momentum in the third period. It all started when Pavel Mintyukov fired the puck through traffic to cut the deficit to one. The Ducks continued to put pressure on the Kings on defense, giving them no easy shots in their own net. 

Down one score with just under 1:30 left in the final regulation, with the Kings pinned in their zone, 20-year-old Leo Carlsson buried the goal, sending Honda Center to erupt while Los Angeles was just standing there, stunned that they let the game get away from them just like that. 

Despite surviving in overtime thanks to Darcy Kuemper coming up big with key saves, the Kings once again failed to end it in extra periods. In the shootout, Troy Terry and Carlsson both buried a goal for Anaheim, while the Kings came up empty on all shots, continuing a frustrating trend. 

L.A. has now dropped five of its last six overtime or shootout decisions, which has quickly become a flaw they can’t seem to solve. 

The numbers tell the story: the Kings, despite leading for most of the game, were outshot 31-26 overall, gave up two third-period goals, and managed just one shot on goal in the final five minutes of regulation. 

It was definitely a statement win for Anaheum, never giving up even when the odds are stacked against them. But, for the Kings, they let the game get away from their own hands, and it was another reminder of their season-long struggles to finish games. 

Their inability to protect leads and repeated failure in overtime doesn’t make them a playoff contender to fear in April. In a tough division race, they need answers quickly or else their season might end before the playoffs start. 

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St. Louis 4 Ottawa 3: Bittersweet Return For Tkachuk As Senators Blow Third Period Lead In St. Louis

After missing 20 games, that wasn't the result Brady Tkachuk was hoping for in his return. In the third period, the Senators lost focus, battles, and inevitably, the game, in a 4–3 loss to the St. Louis Blues.

The Sens took a 2–1 lead into the third period against a Blues team that was 0-8-1 when trailing after two periods. Shane Pinto, Fabian Zetterlund, and David Perron had the Ottawa goals, while Tkachuk had an assist in his return from a thumb injury. Leevi Meriläinen made 27 saves as the Sens were outshot 31–28.

There was no scoring for almost half the game, until the 8-minute mark of the second period. After former Senator Mathieu Joseph put one wide, Oskar Sundqvist grabbed the puck off the end boards and banked it in off Sens goalie Leevi Meriläinen to make it 1–0.

Just over two minutes later, Pinto evened the score with his 12th of the season. The puck bounced around in front, Nikolas Matinpalo swatted it toward the net, and Pinto corralled it, pushed it to open ice, and beat Jordan Binnington with a diving wrist shot along the ice.

Later in the period, Fabian Zetterlund added one for Ottawa. He got the puck behind the Blues’ net, stopped, and cut the other way. His wrap attempt didn’t make it around, but the puck deflected in off Binnington to give the Senators a 2–1 lead in the dying moments of the second.

In the third period, things got a little loose for the Sens, who looked like a group that had maybe a little too much Thanksgiving cheer.

Two minutes in, Jordan Kyrou tied the game at 2. On a Blues rush, the Senators had good numbers with four men back, but Tim Stützle and Artem Zub both veered toward the same man. So Jake Sanderson left his post to help, and Drake Batherson didn’t realize it. That left Kyrou wide open for an easy pass and path to the net, and he made no mistake.

Just over three minutes later, defenseman Jordan Spence jumped up in the Blues’ zone. Brady Tkachuk was in good position to cover for him, but when Spence turned it over, Tkachuk made the decision to attack instead of staying back, leaving Tyler Kleven alone. The Blues roared back on a 2-on-1, and Pavel Buchnevich made it 3–2 on a one-timer.

Two minutes after that, David Perron got a gift from Colton Parayko, who misplayed a puck in the corner and put it right onto Perron’s stick in front. His backhander beat Binnington to tie it at 3.

The Blues went in front to stay less than two minutes later on Matthew Kessel’s second of the season. Again, the Senators had good numbers defending a three-on-three, but after a shot near the blue line, everyone lost track of their man, leading to a goalmouth scramble and Kessel finishing it off for the eventual winner.

The regulation loss drops the Senators’ record to 3-2 on this road trip. They'll be back at it again on Sunday at 6:00 p.m. in Dallas.

By Steve Warne
The Hockey News

Three Takeaways: Flames Respond To Disastrous Tampa Bay Game With Emphatic Win Over Champions Panthers

Calgary Flames defenceman Yan Kuznetsov (37) celebrates after scoring against the Florida Panthers during the first period of their game at Amerant Bank Arena in Sunrise, Florida. (Source: Sam Navarro-Imagn Images)

The Calgary Flames redeemed themselves big time by besting the back-to-back Stanley Cup Champions Florida Panthers 5-3 on early Friday NHL action.

Here are the takeaways:

Kings of the Comeback

Almost everything went well for the Flames. 

Key word: "almost".

Before the first TV timeout at the 6:12 mark of the first period, Calgary found themselves in a familiar hole from two days ago. They were out-chanced 3-1 in high-danger scoring chances in even-strength situations, two of which led to goals for the home team even before the three-minute mark. A first career goal scored by Yan Kuznetsov 2:37 later was a low-danger goal, but badly needed.

The tide changed as by the 14:35 mark, it was the Flames that came back and were out-chancing the Panthers 5-4, including one that led to a game-tying goal by MacKenzie Weegar.

Florida eventually out-chanced Calgary 10-5 in the first period, but in the next two periods combined, the Flames would restrict Panthers to put up only seven high-danger scoring chances and would not have the same first period fire.

Special Teams

Yep, the power play worked its charm too.

The Morgan Frost PP goal was the game-winning goal and had Florida playing from behind and under pressure throughout the rest of the game.

The penalty-kill was VERY important: Out of their 26 games, this game ranks fourth in most total shots given up in the PK (12) without allowing a PP goal.

Devin Cooley

Just nine days ago, he was looking for his first win as a Flame and now after making 37 saves off 40 shots, he has three. Outstanding stuff.

Bottom Line

The Flames have continued their good offence

This is their fourth consecutive game where they have put up double-digit high-danger scoring chances (10) in even-strength hockey, something it hasn't done all season.

The defence and PK has already been great and seems like the offence is catching up now.

I really think this team can achieve something memorable this season.

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Canadiens Shock Golden Knights In Vegas

After losing five games in a row earlier this month, the Montreal Canadiens are now on a three-game winning streak after surprising the Vegas Golden Knights on the road. With Jakub Dobes having backstopped the Habs to their last two wins, all eyes were on Samuel Montembeault to see how he would respond.

Given the tall task awaiting the Tricolore in Colorado, winning this game was pivotal for Montreal, which was trying to get back into the playoff picture. When the final buzzer rang at the T-Mobile Arena, Canadiens fans could be heard singing the traditional “Ole, Ole, Ole”.

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A Statement Game From Montembeault

While the Canadiens’ number one has struggled since the start of the season, his performance in this challenging test was impressive. He stopped all but one of the 31 shots he received, and the one goal he gave wasn’t a bad one. Mark Stone was left all alone in front of the net, a recipe for disaster.

Throughout the game, the masked man looked comfortable, and his positioning was sound. All too often lately, he was finding himself deported to one side and couldn’t do much when the shots were coming. On Friday afternoon, though, he looked in control and didn’t overplay any shot.

The one-on-one work done with the goalie coach of late finally paid off, and he ended the game with a .968 save percentage. One can almost wonder if perhaps the pressure of the possibility of making Team Canada for the Olympics might have been on his mind since the start of the season. At this stage, his chances to make it are slim to none, and he certainly looked more loose in the net. Of course, this is only one game, but if it’s a sign of things to come, it’s a good omen.

An Interesting Top Six

While some were quick to criticize the Canadiens’ newly formed top six, any line adjustment needs some time to take, so to speak. This game was the fifth in which Zachary Bolduc was skating alongside Cole Caufield and Nick Suzuki. At the same time, Juraj Slafkovsky played with Ivan Demidov and Oliver Kapanen, and both lines created opportunities.

For a second game in a row, Bolduc had a multi-point game with a goal and an assist after putting up a goal and two assists against the Utah Mammoth. With an assist on Bolduc’s goal, Caufield extended his point streak to six games. Furthermore, he scored a goal from a very tight angle, near the goal line, a spot around which he has spent some time with Martin St-Louis lately; clearly, the private tutelage paid off.

As for Slafkovsky, he was directly responsible for Bolduc’s goal, which was scored on a deferred penalty call. With 11 skaters on the ice, the big Slovak still found a way to send a fantastic cross-zone pass to Bolduc, who didn’t need much effort to bury the goal. Oftentimes this season, the former first-overall pick at the 2022 draft has turned the puck over by attempting those kinds of passes; the difference is that on Friday, he took his time to do it, and he didn’t try a Hail Mary no-look pass. As St-Louis likes to say, he was more calculated. The empty net goal he scored was a much-deserved reward.

As for Demidov and Kapanen, they were kept off the scoresheet, but the Finn had quite a few choice opportunities; he couldn’t bury them. Akira Schmid just had his number tonight.

About The Newcomer

Recently signed free-agent Alexandre Texier played his first game with the Bleu, Blanc, Rouge and grabbed an assist for his trouble, sending Jake Evans off on a breakaway. Skating alongside Evans and Josh Anderson, he had a solid game.

He spent 13:41 on the ice, had one shot on goal and one hit. The coach was satisfied with his game, saying he had made good reads and good plays on the ice.

The Canadiens are now heading to Denver, where they’ll take on the Colorado Avalanche at 3:00 PM ET on Saturday. Against all odds, Montreal will be attempting to grab six points out of a possible six on this western road trip.


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Islanders rally from three goals down but fall to Flyers in shootout

NEW YORK (AP) — Trevor Zegras scored in regulation and during the shootout, Travis Konecny also had a goal in the shootout, and the Philadelphia Flyers beat the New York Islanders 4–3 on Friday.

Tyson Foerster and Sean Couturier also scored in regulation for Philadelphia, which took a 3-0 lead less than two minutes into the second period. Samuel Ersson finished with 28 saves as the Flyers won for the fourth time in their last five games.

Rookie Matthew Schaefer had a goal and an assist, and Emil Heineman and Anders Lee also scored for New York, which lost for the third time in its last four games. David Rittich made 18 saves.

Schaefer became the first teenage defenseman in NHL history to score eight goals through his first 25 career games, breaking a tie with Bobby Orr when he scored 8:11 into the second.

The Islanders erased the three-goal deficit with a second-period scoring burst. Lee capped the barrage, tying the game on a power play in the final minute of the period. It was New York’s first man-advantage goal in its last 30 opportunities.

Kyle Palmieri appeared to injure his left knee but stole the puck from Emil Andrae to set up the Islanders’ first goal. Heineman then buried a wrist shot at 5:42 of the second to cut the Flyers’ lead to 3–1. Palmieri did not return.

The 24-year-old Heineman set a career high with 10 goals.

Foerster and Couturier both scored off Islanders turnovers 22 seconds apart midway through the first period.

Zegras’ shot deflected off Islanders defenseman Ryan Pulock on a power play 1:55 into the second to extend Philadelphia’s lead to 3-0.

Up Next

Flyers: Visit the New Jersey Devils on Saturday to end a four-game road trip.

Islanders: Host the Washington Capitals on Sunday.