Scoot Henderson says he 'made a lot of progress' but is not near return, is still 'week to week'

Portland has been one of the fun on-the-court stories of the early season. This is a promising team that plays hard and is entertaining to watch, behind Deni Avdija and Shaedon Sharpe, with good young players such as Toumani Camara and Donovan Clingan (not to mention the potential of Yang Hansen), and veterans Jrue Holiday and Jerami Grant. Portland has been a pleasant
surprise this season.

They have done all this without Scoot Henderson.

The former No. 3 pick and potential franchise anchor has been out since late September with a torn left hamstring. When the injury occurred prior to the start of training camp, the Trail Blazers put a 4-8 week timeline on his return, but we now just hit the eight-week mark, and Henderson is not close to returning. Here is what he told Jason Quick of The Athletic.

Entering his eighth week since tearing his left hamstring, the third-year point guard told The Athletic he has "made a lot of progress," but he said his return to basketball activity remains "week to week."...

"I can walk around to spots, but no jumping, no exploding," Henderson told The Athletic... "I shoot free throws, some ballhandling, but without moving much."

Henderson doesn't sound particularly close to returning, but Portland is wise to be patient with hamstring injuries, which can be slow to heal and prone to reaggravation.

Entering his third season, this was going to be a big evaluation season for Portland and Henderson. He had taken steps forward in his first two seasons, but would he live up to his hype and potential? Was he going to be a franchise cornerstone at the point? A quality starter? A rotation player? The Trail Blazers needed to evaluate him alongside Avdija and Sharpe, then decide on a direction for this team going forward. It's an evaluation season for everyone in Portland — including coach Tiago Splitter, who was forced into the head coaching job after the arrest of Chauncey Billups as part of a federal gambling investigation.

That evaluation of Henderson is paused while he recovers. And it looks like it'll be paused for at least a few more weeks.

Sabres Feeling Good About Win Streak — But Challenge Ahead Of Them Is Still Massive

Zach Hyman (left); Josh Doan (right) -- (Timothy T. Ludwig, USA TODAY Images)

The Buffalo Sabres are riding the high of beating the Edmonton Oilers, giving Buffalo a two-game win streak. But those good feelings may not last.

The Sabres’ next game comes Wednesday against the sad-sack Calgary Flames. Two nights later, they square off against the Chicago Blackhawks. Sounds like winnable games, right? That’s because they are.

However, after that, Buffalo takes on the Carolina Hurricanes, Pittsburgh Penguins, and New Jersey Devils. Then, after a ‘gimme game’ against the Minnesota Wild, the Sabres will have tilts against the Winnipeg Jets twice, as well as games against Philadelphia Flyers, Flames and Oilers.

As you can see, the Sabres could get to the second week of December with a slew of losses. And although games against the Flames, Blackhawks and Wild are games that Buffalo should win, those teams also are desperate to string together a number of wins. So even the ‘gimme’ games aren’t guaranteed two standings points for them.

When you look at the standings, you can see why Sabres fans are pessimistic about this Buffalo team. If you’d told Sabres fans at the start of the season that Buffalo would be a last-place team in the third week of November, they would’ve been busting out pitchforks and torches. No matter what the excuse for that was going to be – injuries; slow starts from veterans; first-year Sabres players acclimating to a new organization – the reality is that there’s no excuse for how this team came out of the gate.

Sabres' Modest Win Streak Shouldn't Fool You – The Pressure Is Still On Buffalo To Be A Playoff TeamSabres' Modest Win Streak Shouldn't Fool You – The Pressure Is Still On Buffalo To Be A Playoff TeamThe Buffalo Sabres' modest win streak has taken off some heat on them, but make no mistake -- there's going to be high-stakes pressure all season long.

Realistically, Buffalo has to start winning games at a .600-point pace if they’re going to overcome this brutal beginning to the year. And that feels like a task that is too big of an ask for a core of talent that’s never been able to win at that pace.

It’s all adding up to another bleak competitive situation for the Sabres. No opponent is going to be charitable to them. Buffalo has to immediately turn things around, and they have to sustain a winning pace week-in and week-out. 

There’s no sugar-coating it – the challenge in front of the Sabres is considerable, and the pressure on them to produce is immense. Buffalo has once again dug themselves a massive crater, and climbing out of it may take a minor miracle.

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Islanders' Matthew Schaefer, Avalanche's Cale Makar Already Near-Locks in NHL Award Races

The 2025-26 NHL season is barely a month old, but two players are already emerging as near-locks for the league’s top individual honors. On the Calder Trophy front, New York Islanders defenseman Matthew Schaefer has taken the hockey world by storm, while Colorado Avalanche star Cale Makar looks poised to make a third run at the James Norris Trophy. 

Schaefer at just 18 years old has taken the league by storm. Through 20 games, he has recorded seven goals and eight assists for 15 points, leading all rookies in scoring ahead of Montreal’s Ivan Demidov. His breakout season has not only put him in the conversation for rookie of the year but also raised discussions about his potential inclusion on Team Canada for the 2026 Olympics. Schaefer has broken multiple records in his young career, including becoming the youngest player in league history to score an overtime goal at 18 years and 70 days, surpassing Sidney Crosby’s previous mark set in 2005.

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The Islanders defenseman also made history with his strong start to the season. In the first nine games, he recorded seven points, including two goals and five assists, during a six-game point streak, becoming the youngest defenseman ever to accomplish such a feat. He ranks fifth on the Islanders in blocked shots, second in takeaways, and has logged the most ice time on the team, nearing 450 minutes, far ahead of the second-place total. 

Schaefer plays significant minutes on both the penalty kill and power play, and his 307 shot attempts lead all Islanders defensemen. If his current pace continues, he is on track for 20 goals this season, a milestone that has only been reached three times in NHL history by defensemen, and 60 points, which would make him just the 11th rookie defenseman ever to reach that total. 

Meanwhile, Cale Makar has continued his dominance from the back end. In 19 games this season, he has six goals and 19 assists for 25 points, leading all NHL defensemen in scoring by four points over Winnipeg’s Josh Morrissey. Makar also leads all defensemen with a +17 rating and has exceeded 90 points in each of the past two seasons and is on pace for 108 points this season.

Over the last four seasons, he has recorded at least 86 points in three of them, and in the one season he fell short, he missed 20 games but was on pace to surpass 86 points. He leads Colorado in ice time, totaling 485 minutes, and also leads the team in blocked shots and takeaways. 

Both players have been instrumental to their teams’ early-season success and are being reflected as such in the betting markets. Schaefer is listed with -238 odds for the Calder Trophy while Makar sits at -233 odds for the Norris, signaling strong confidence that these young stars are on track to claim the NHL’s top individual honors this season.

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Some Good Things You Should Know About Gabe Perreault

Vincent Carchietta-Imagn Images

Gabe Perreault's yo-yo cup of coffee routine with the Blueshirts has fans wondering when this gem of a prospect will stick with the big club.

Well, it's not really as bad for Gabe as it might seem and The Maven got this after talking to a friend who is an NHL amateur scout. Listen up for your sake and Gabe's as well.

This is what the bird dog, who has studied Perreault for years, reports:

"Gabe might be as smart as any player I've scouted or watched at the amateur level. The comment as 'being a first-round pick means that someone thinks at some point you can be a very special player.' 

"That being said, he very well might be, but it won't be tomorrow. Staying at BC and riding shotgun with James Hagens might have been a better idea than turning pro. He needs the schedule that allows him to work on his physical strength and how it applies to today's NHL game for a player like him.

"He'll be an NHL player and, despite being a winger, he can drive a line. He's that skilled. 

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The Rangers staff at the AHL level is excellent for player development but the NCAA 34-game schedule might have been better to build his body for pro hockey."

Excellent insights. Now we have to see how the Blueshirt brass handles the top prospect

for the rest of the season.

NHL Rumors: Sabres Star Included On New Trade Board

Alex Tuch (© Timothy T. Ludwig-Imagn Images)

The Buffalo Sabres are currently at the bottom of the Eastern Conference standings with a 7-8-4 record and 18 points. This is certainly not the kind of start the Sabres wanted to have, especially when noting that they are aiming to snap their 14-year playoff drought.

Now, with the Sabres off to a shaky start to the season, one of their top players is continuing to create chatter in the rumor mill as a trade candidate: forward Alex Tuch.

Tuch, who is a pending unrestricted free agent (UFA), was given the No. 3 spot on Chris Johnston's latest NHL trade board for The Athletic.

"He’s the kind of player it makes sense to keep around long-term, but he’s also too valuable to potentially lose for nothing, especially if the Sabres aren’t firmly in the playoff race come the trade deadline," Johnston wrote about Tuch. 

This is not the first time that Tuch has been discussed as a trade candidate, and it likely won't be the last. With the star forward being a pending UFA, he should get a lot of interest around the NHL if he does not have a contract extension signed with the Sabres once we get closer to the deadline. 

Tuch is once again having a strong season with the Sabres, too, as he has posted seven goals, nine assists, 16 points, and a plus-2 rating in 19 games. This is after he had 36 goals, 31 assists, and 67 points in 82 games this past season with the Sabres. With numbers like these, he would be a big-time addition for a playoff team looking to improve their top six. 

Why Numbers Don’t Tell the Whole Story for Ilya Nabokov

For much of the past two seasons, Colorado Avalanche fans have been eagerly following 22-year-old goaltending prospect Ilya Nabokov. This year, the highly touted netminder has posted numbers that fall short of expectations, though the decline is not as severe as it might appear.

Before Colorado selected him in the second round of the 2024 NHL Entry Draft, one of the main concerns about his game was his size. At 6-foot-1, he is considered relatively small for a modern NHL goaltender, and his unusually low stance only adds to that concern. In the KHL, that style has worked in his favor, as his athleticism allows him to move quickly across the crease and make difficult, highlight-worthy saves from sharp angles. Yet many within the hockey world remain fixated on numbers rather than acknowledging the fundamental differences between North American play and the KHL, or they may simply be unaware of those differences altogether.

KHL (@khl_eng) on XKHL (@khl_eng) on XIlya Nabokov says NO

Styles Make Goalies

Nabokov currently has a record of 9-3 with a 2.63 goals-against average and a .899 save percentage. On paper, it appears he is having the worst season of his career, especially compared with his last two years with Metallurg Magnitogorsk, where he posted an average save percentage of .928 and a goals-against average of roughly 2.18. But people are missing the point.

At the KHL level, Nabokov’s low stance is generally not a liability, as the league does not feature the same concentration of elite snipers found in the NHL who would torch him like a volcano top shelf if he utilized that same style. He is not suddenly a fragile goaltender; rather, he is developing and adjusting to a more North American style of play. This transition has inevitably affected his KHL statistics, but it should not be a cause for widespread concern.

Avalanche Loaded With Goaltending Depth

The Avalanche are in a good position right now, with a strong group of goaltenders—a luxury they haven’t had much of since winning the Stanley Cup in 2022. Scott Wedgewood is leading the way in this goaltending resurgence. Since joining Colorado, he’s played at the highest level of his career, a performance that earned him a well-deserved contract extension last week. The 33-year-old signed a one-year, $2.5 million deal, keeping him with the Avalanche through the 2026–27 season.

It’s clear the team still believes Nabokov is their goalie of the future. If that weren’t the case, Wedgewood likely would have received a longer deal. Based on that, it’s reasonable to expect Nabokov will spend next season with the Colorado Eagles in the AHL, while also getting a chance to start for the Avalanche. If Wedgewood continues to perform well and Nabokov struggles adapting to the North American game, the team could reconsider a bigger deal for Wedgewood. There’s also the Mackenzie Blackwood situation to factor in—he’s still working to get back into form. For now, Wedgewood seems to be the guy, Blackwood is still finding his rhythm, and Nabokov remains a developing talent in Russia, quietly sharpening his skills.

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