Red Wings Recall Erik Gustafsson, Place Soderblom On IR

On Sunday, the Detroit Red Wings announced that veteran defenseman Erik Gustafsson has been recalled from the AHL’s Grand Rapids Griffins, marking his first NHL call-up of the season. In a corresponding move, forward Elmer Soderblom was placed on Injured Reserve, retroactive to November 9th, with an undisclosed injury.

Gustafsson, 33, has been one of the driving forces behind the Griffins’ historic 12-1-0-1 start, leading all Grand Rapids defensemen with eight assists in ten games. His strong play has not gone unnoticed as several insiders reported that Detroit had explored the trade market in hopes of finding the veteran Swede an NHL opportunity elsewhere, though no deal ultimately materialized. Now, that opportunity may come in Detroit itself.

A seasoned NHL defender, Gustafsson is best remembered for his explosive 60-point breakout season in 2018–19 with the Chicago Blackhawks, where he posted 17 goals and 43 assists in 79 games. He came close to replicating that production with Washington in 2022–23, tallying 42 points, and followed with a 31-point campaign in the 2023-24 season with the New York Rangers.

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

Since joining the Red Wings, Gustafsson has appeared in 60 games, collecting 18 points but struggling defensively with a –19 rating. Despite the down year, he reaffirmed his international pedigree by earning a spot on Team Sweden for the most recent World Championships.

Gustafsson’s recall comes at a crucial moment for Detroit, which is dealing with multiple absences, including Soderblom’s injury and fellow Swede Simon Edvinsson, who is currently out with an illness. The veteran blueliner is expected to step in immediately as the Red Wings look to stabilize their lineup.

Patrick Kane Joins Former Red Wing Brendan Shanahan With Latest MarkPatrick Kane Joins Former Red Wing Brendan Shanahan With Latest MarkDetroit Red Wings forward and future Hall of Fame forward Patrick Kane has tied former Detroit forward Brendan Shanahan in total career points. Image

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

For action-packed issues, access to the entire magazine archive and a free issue, subscribe to The Hockey News at THN.com/free. Get the latest news and trending stories by subscribing to our newsletter here. And share your thoughts by commenting below the article on THN.com or creating your own post in our community forum

Warriors' Steve Kerr unsure about Jonathan Kuminga's rehab from knee tendinitis

Warriors' Steve Kerr unsure about Jonathan Kuminga's rehab from knee tendinitis originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

Jonathan Kuminga already has missed the Warriors’ last five games due to bilateral patellar tendinitis, and it doesn’t seem like a return to action is imminent.

Golden State coach Steve Kerr shared an uncertain update on Sunday, failing to provide much of a timeline for the young forward’s recovery from what is effectively soreness in both knees.

“He’s got to tell you where he is,” Kerr told reporters when asked about Kuminga’s activity on Sunday [h/t ClutchPoints’ Kenzo Fukuda. “He didn’t do anything. We didn’t do scrimmages, but we did live drill work, and he barely did any of that. So, [he’s] not moving well, so training staff [is] working with him. I have no idea what he’s doing.”

Still, Kerr asserted Kuminga’s status remains day to day.

“Honestly, I just talked to the training staff. They tell me it’s day to day,” Kerr explained. “So, talking to JK, and he said he’s not moving that well, so I can’t tell you what the outlook is.

“JK can tell you that better than I could, so he needs to feel better and be able to move better before we can put him out there. Maybe we’ll get imaging done on the knee, but yeah, we got to figure it out. We missed him. We played in Miami, when we were missing all our guys. The other night, we were tired. We need him, but he’s got to get right before he can play.”

Communication between the Warriors’ staff and Kuminga already has been a hot topic in recent days, and there appears to be some disconnect between Kerr and the promising 23-year-old regarding this ongoing injury.

“I didn’t talk to him today, but I was hoping that he was going to scrimmage today,” Kerr continued after a follow-up question about the exact nature of the ailment. “But he didn’t do that, so it’s obviously worse than we thought.”

Kuminga is averaging 13.8 points, 6.6 rebounds and 2.8 assists in 27.7 minutes across 13 games during the 2025-26 NBA season. He started in the Warriors’ first 12 regular-season games before coming off the bench in Golden State’s win over the San Antonio Spurs on Nov. 12.

However, Kuminga reportedly felt like the “scapegoat” as a result of that change in his role, and he hasn’t played in any games since then. Golden State has gone 2-3 in his recent absence with three straight losses as the team tries to get back to winning ways after a hot start to the season.

Download and follow the Dubs Talk Podcast

Observations after Sixers lose to Heat in 1st game without Edgecombe

Observations after Sixers lose to Heat in 1st game without Edgecombe  originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

The Sixers had a slow start to their Sunday afternoon and never managed to earn a lead against the Heat.

They fell to a wire-to-wire 127-117 defeat at Xfinity Mobile Arena, dipping to 9-7 on the season. Miami moved to 11-6 with its fourth consecutive win. 

Tyrese Maxey posted 27 points and six assists. Andre Drummond scored 14 points and grabbed 23 rebounds.

Norman Powell poured in 32 points. Kel’el Ware had 20 points and 16 rebounds.

Rookie VJ Edgecombe missed his first game with left calf tightness. Sixers head coach Nick Nurse called Edgecombe’s absence “precautionary.” 

The Sixers remained without Joel Embiid (right knee injury management), Kelly Oubre Jr. (left knee LCL sprain) and Adem Bona (right ankle sprain). 

Bona has returned to on-court work but will stay out Tuesday night vs. the Magic, a team official said Saturday. Embiid is still classified as “day-to-day.” Though he’s continued to experience “some soreness,” doctors say he’s progressing, per the official. 

Here are observations on the Sixers’ loss Sunday:

Subpar start without Edgecombe 

Quentin Grimes started for the first time this season and began the day with Maxey, Justin Edwards, Paul George and Drummond. 

The Sixers’ starters struggled. Powell sunk a transition three-pointer to put Miami up 12-5 and scored eight quick points.

Fresh off of his career-high 54-point night against the Bucks, Maxey posted seven of the Sixers’ first nine. Outside of Maxey, however, the Sixers began 0 for 5 from the floor.

The Sixers didn’t have much pace or movement offensively in the first quarter. One reason was the Heat hardly ever handed the Sixers a free opportunity to attack in the open floor. Miami scored the game’s first 13 points off turnovers. Meanwhile, Grimes tallied just two points in the first period. 

Handy 2nd-unit scoring 

Especially when Drummond sat, the Sixers’ lack of size emerged as a big problem early on. 

Second-year center Ware had six offensive rebounds in the first quarter and Jaime Jaquez Jr. got rolling in the post. Miami scored 37 first-quarter points, 22 in the paint, and had a 10-point advantage through 12 minutes. 

The Sixers fell behind by 16 points early in the second … and then surged back with a 16-0 run. 

Trendon Watford had a productive stint, including an and-one layup, and was much better overall than he’d been in Milwaukee with an 19-point, nine-rebound, seven-assist outing. Grimes made a driving layup that evened the game at 49-all. 

Jared McCain also chipped in useful offense off the Sixers’ bench. He scored a season-best 15 points Sunday on 5-for-11 shooting and played a season-high 26 minutes.

The Sixers couldn’t quite grab a first lead of the afternoon. They fouled Powell twice on three-point attempts in the final minute of the second quarter and trailed by four at intermission. 

Heat fend off every run  

The Sixers’ third quarter opened poorly — not an unfamiliar storyline early this season — and Grimes’ foul trouble became a major issue. 

After Grimes picked up his fourth personal with 10:15 left in the third quarter, Nurse kept him in. The 25-year-old guard then fouled Powell yet again on a long-range jumper. He exited with five fouls and a little under nine minutes to play in the third. McCain subbed in. 

The Sixers appeared to be in serious trouble when they went down 85-71 on a put-back Bam Adebayo dunk. Again, they answered right away and prevented the game from getting out of hand.

McCain and Maxey each hit threes during a 10-0 run. A Drummond triple on the Sixers’ last possession of the third quarter cut the Heat’s lead to 99-93.

Grimes checked back in to begin the fourth and scored a couple of layups to trim the Sixers’ deficit to three points. Watford made a coast-to-coast lay-in to bring the Heat’s advantage down to 105-103.

Miami scored the next seven points and soon restored a double-digit lead. While the Sixers kept the game interesting, Miami never trailed and did solid work to capitalize on a strong start, fending off the Sixers’ comeback efforts.

Untimely injuries could impact inconsistent Warriors' hopes of recovery

Untimely injuries could impact inconsistent Warriors' hopes of recovery originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

SAN FRANCISCO – Coming off three consecutive losses, the Warriors went back to school on Sunday. They spent two hours watching video displaying highlights and lowlights. They studied. They scrimmaged. 

These are things that any NBA team sensing slippage yet still aspiring for a championship ought to do when it’s sitting on a 9-9 record nearly a quarter into the season.

But the Warriors, in addition to the Jonathan Kuminga being on the sideline, also are nursing new wounds. Draymond Green has a foot sprain and could miss the game against Utah on Monday, and Al Horford is coping with sciatica and will miss at least a week.

Asked if the Warriors might assemble their eighth starting lineup of the season Monday, coach Steve Kerr left open the possibility.

“Well, just depends on Draymond’s availability,” he said. 

One week removed from a three-game win streak and hoping to build momentum, the Warriors since have lost the final two games of a six-game road trip, at Orlando and Miami, before coming home Friday seeking recovery, only to get smacked by the sub-.500 Portland Trail Blazers for the second time this season.

The Warriors, eighth in the Western Conference, analyzed all three games, watching “about 40 clips,” according to Kerr, who came away believing the failures are fixable.

“Rebounding killed us,” Kerr said, referring to Portland’s 52-32 advantage on the glass. “But probably five or six egregious defensive errors in communication and scheme, just getting back cut. Basic stuff.

“If you look at the three games as a whole, there were different things each game. In Orlando, the turnovers killed us. In Miami, obviously, we played without a lot of our (starters). We missed shots, but for three quarters, we were solid. And then the turnovers killed us. With Portland, we took care of the ball but had major defensive breakdowns.”

Jimmy Butler III, speaking after the game, implored everyone to be more prideful in their defense. To take matchups personally.

Seems that approach should reduce the number of open 3-pointers and layups Golden State is allowing lately.

“There’s some of that, and activity level often just covers up a blown coverage if you’re flying around,” Kerr said. “There were a lot of clips from the other night where the activity level wasn’t there. There were several missed, back cuts, behind us that shouldn’t happen. Is that fatigue? Is that lack of focus? Is that ‘Hey, let’s take it upon ourselves?’ It could be any of those. I don’t care which one we categorize it as.

“What I care is that we don’t give up a damn back cut with the game on the line, and we gave up several.”

So, where do the Warriors go from here? Depends. Recognizing the need for greater size, Kerr has more frequently turned to lineups featuring two players capable of playing center. He acknowledged Horford’s absence could force the staff to “rethink” that plan.

If Green and Horford, a generally effective duo, are out on Monday, that would leave only Quinten Post and Trayce Jackson-Davis. It’s a young combo but worth a look. Post’s 3-point shooting provides needed spacing, and Jackson-Davis can work the paint, focusing on rebounding and rim protection.

It is evident that the Warriors, ranked 22nd in rebounding, will have a difficult time chasing a championship if they remain in the league’s bottom 10.

It is evident that the Warriors, who rank 26th in number of turnovers committed at 16.9 per game, also must remain focused on limiting the giveaways.

It is evident, too, that Golden State’s season will remain a war on mediocrity unless its weaknesses on defense, particularly at the point of attack and the untimely lapses in concentration, aren’t addressed and corrected.

The cold fact is that with injuries to crucial players being a factor, meeting these challenges becomes increasingly difficult.

Download and follow the Dubs Talk Podcast

Islanders Welcome Lane Lambert & The Red-Hot Seattle Kraken To UBS Arena

After falling 2-1 to the St. Louis Blues on Saturday night after a dominating road trip, the New York Islanders welcome their former head coach, Lane Lambert, and the Seattle Kraken to town. 

Puck drop is scheduled for 5 PM ET on MSGSN. 

Lambert, who was part of Barry Trotz's staff, was named head coach of the Islanders following the 2021-22 season after Trotz was relieved of his duties following a trying season. 

The longtime assistant went 43-31-9 in his first season as the bench boss, getting the Islanders back into the postseason before the Carolina Hurricanes swept them in the first round. 

However, Lambert only made it 42 games into the 2023-24 season before then-general manager, Lou Lamoriello, relieved him, hiring Hockey Hall of Fame goaltender and former Colorado Avalanche head coach Patrick Roy

While ultimately Lambert wasn't getting the most out of his players, especially on that last road trip before Lamoriello pulled the plug, Lane was dealt a tough hand on Long Island. 

He took over for his longtime mentor, who was able to get the most out of a flawed roster. Lambert's squads weren't able to play the fast-style of hockey that the NHL had shifted too.

Could he have been better? No question, and the belief was that he'd get another shot to be a head coach at some point down the line. 

Lambert's unemployment didn't last long, but his next stop wasn't as a head coach. 

He joined the Toronto Maple Leafs bench as their associate coach for the 2024-25 season, before applying and being hired as the Kraken's head coach.

He took over for Dan Bylsma, who was let go after just one season in which the Kraken went 35-41-6, finishing second-to-last in their division. 

So far, the Kraken have been one of the surprise teams early on. 

Right now, Lambert has his team sitting in second place in the Pacific Division, with an 11-5-5 record through 20 games. 

While their offense has only scored 2.71 goals per game, which ranks 27th in their league, it's their defense and goaltending that have propelled them up the standings.

They've allowed 2.67 games, for fourth best in the NHL. 

Their goaltending has been phenomenal as well, a three-goalie group led by Joey Daccord. 

Image

Like the Islanders, the Kraken are on the second of a back-to-back. However, they were victorious on the first leg, defeating the Pittsburgh Penguins in overtime, courtesy of Brandon Montour. 

This won't be the first time Lambert's back at UBS Arena since being behind the Islanders bench -- he came back with Toronto -- but, of course, this will be his first time back as a head coach. 

After Injuring Islanders’ Alexander Romanov, Mikko Rantanen Faces More Scrutiny For Dangerous Plays

Dallas Stars forward Mikko Rantanen may not be considered a dirty player. But his actions this past week have certainly changed the narrative surrounding him.

On Tuesday, with 27.3 seconds to play in regulation, Rantanen extended his arms, sending New York Islanders defenseman Alexander Romanov hard into the boards. 

Romanov had to be helped off the ice with an upper-body injury -- he's going to miss significant time if not the whole season -- while Rantanen received a five-minute major for boarding and a game misconduct.

However, the NHL's Department of Player Safety deemed that Islanders defenseman Scott Mayfield played a part in Rantanen falling in the first place, leading to no fine or suspension.

On Thursday night against the Ottawa Senators, Rantanen went hard through the crease and made contact with goaltender Linus Ullmark's blocker, grabbing the goaltender's arm before falling to the ice.

The league reviewed the play and found it to be embellishment, leading to a $2,000 fine. Rantanen had been previously flagged for another diving incident from a game against the Vancouver Canucks on Oct. 16. 

Rantanen of Stars fined for embellishment | NHL.comRantanen of Stars fined for embellishment | NHL.comForward penalized $2,000 as supplementary discipline for repeated offense

But wait, there's more. 

On Saturday night against the Calgary Flames, Rantanen was ejected for the second time in three games after he drilled Long Island native Matt Coronato from behind. It was a bloody scene. 

Rantanen cannot get out of his own way. We'll see what punishment player safety hands out. 

Kevin Durant reportedly will miss Warriors-Rockets NBA Cup game on Wednesday

Kevin Durant reportedly will miss Warriors-Rockets NBA Cup game on Wednesday originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

The Warriors are set for a rematch of their 2025 NBA playoffs first-round series against the Houston Rockets on Wednesday at Chase Center.

However, it appears the visiting Rockets will be without their key offseason addition, who happens to be an old friend of Golden State.

Fifteen-time NBA All-Star Kevin Durant will miss Wednesday’s NBA Cup game due to a family matter, ESPN’s Shams Charania reported Sunday, citing sources.

Durant was a major part of two Golden State championship runs in 2017 and 2018 — he led all scorers during the infamous seven-game battle between the Warriors and Rockets in the 2018 Western Conference Finals.

But now, Durant apparently won’t be active for his first opportunity to face his former squad since joining the Warriors’ rival this past offseason. Of course, that move came after these teams squared off in last season’s memorable playoff series, in which Golden State also prevailed in seven games.

According to Charania, the star forward also will miss the Rockets’ matchup on Monday against the Phoenix Suns — another one of Durant’s former teams.

Download and follow the Dubs Talk Podcast

'We're A Veteran Team, It's Inexcusable': Craig Berube Has No Answers For Maple Leafs' Inability To Play Hard When Down In Games

MONTREAL — It came down to one period.

The Toronto Maple Leafs fell to the Montreal Canadiens 5-2 at the Bell Centre on Saturday, a loss defined by a disastrous second period.

The Leafs actually started well, carrying the pace of play and outshooting the Canadiens 9-3 in the opening frame. But once Montreal opened the scoring on Lane Hutson’s goal midway through the first, Toronto wasn’t able to get its game back.

What ensued was a fall expected from a team having lost their confidence. Montreal struck one more time in the first period and twice more in the second period, outshooting the Leafs 16-2, leading up to their fourth Habs goal. That marker finally prompted the mercy pull of goaltender Joseph Woll.

It is a familiar narrative for a Leafs team that has now lost seven of its last eight games.

“We just weren't able to get off our heels there for a good portion of it,” John Tavares said of Montreal’s play in the middle frame. "And then we give up the early one, which really hurts,” Tavares continued. “That continues to feed life into their game and [forces] us to continue to have to dig out of a bigger and bigger hole. So, we have to do a better job of maintaining the momentum and then how we get our game going... the other direction and staying with it and battling through times like that.”

The Leafs clearly lack confidence during this recent slump. While head coach Craig Berube acknowledged injuries to much of the roster as a contributing factor, he seems to be out of answers when trying to figure out why the Leafs stop playing when trailing in games.

"What I've seen a few times this year is when we get down a couple of goals at times — this happened in the second period — where we go out there and we don't play. We don't play with any urgency or any confidence in the second period because we get down a couple of goals,” Berube said.  “That's an excuse all day long for me. This is a veteran hockey team. It's inexcusable, and it's on me too. It's on all of us. And with a veteran team like that, that shouldn't happen."

This is essentially a plea from Berube to the leadership group to step up when times are tough—something they haven’t done. That’s fair, but there is no sign that a solution is going to come from anywhere else.

Toronto doesn’t have the assets or ability right now to make a big trade. They need help before things sink fast.

“This is what we have, and we've got to be better. We've got to be better. That's the bottom line. I mean, we showed we could do it,” Berube said.

“These guys have been out for a while now. We played some pretty good hockey at times. That didn't happen tonight. And like I said, we came up with that mindset in the first period and we did a pretty good job. But you can't lose all the momentum because they scored a couple of goals. Like I said, we're a veteran team and it's inexcusable.”

The Leafs have now lost seven of their last eight games and fell to 1-6-0 on the road this season. That doesn't bode well for a club that is about to embark on a five-game road swing beginning Wednesday against the Columbus Blue Jackets.

Latest stories:

'I Don't Know The Timeline Right Now': Maple Leafs Unsure About Jake McCabe After Taking Puck To Face Vs. Canadiens

‘In The Back Of My Mind For Sure’: Maple Leafs Mindful Of Joseph Woll's Workload As Goaltender Prepares For Fourth Consecutive Start

Why The Maple Leafs Are Swapping Sammy Blais For Jacob Quillan Ahead of Game Vs. Canadiens

LeBron James' return has Marcus Smart becoming Lakers' 'Swiss Army knife'

LOS ANGELES, CA - NOVEMBER 18, 2025: Los Angeles Lakers forward Jake LaRavia (12) drives to the basket against Utah Jazz center Jusuf Nurkic (30) at Crypto.com Arena on November 18, 2025 in Los Angeles, California.(Gina Ferazzi / Los Angeles Times)
Forward Jake LaRavia, trying to score against Jazz center Jusuf Nurkic, led Lakers reserves in the win Tuesday with 16 points and four rebounds. (Gina Ferazzi / Los Angeles Times)

In the starting lineup, coming off the bench or even on the pickleball court, Marcus Smart knows he can deliver what the Lakers need. So LeBron James’ return and the question of how it could affect his role isn’t slowing down Smart.

“I like to [think of] myself as a Swiss Army knife,” Smart said Saturday as the Lakers prepared for a game at Utah on Sunday. “It's not one thing I do great, but I do everything very well. … People come back, people get hurt. People have great games, have bad games. You have to adjust to whatever the game is calling for at that moment."

With four days to regroup after James made his long-awaited season debut, the Lakers (11-4) want to continue their strong start. Smart had started nine times in a row before James’ return. Smart then played a season-low 17 minutes in Tuesday's 140-126 win against the Jazz at home, scoring five points with three rebounds. He made just two shots, but coach JJ Redick commended Smart’s play off the bench along with the performances of Jake LaRavia, Jaxson Hayes and Gabe Vincent.

Vincent returned from a sprained ankle that cost him 11 games to score six points on two-for-three shooting from three-point range. LaRavia led the bench group with 16 points and four rebounds. He was six for 10 from the field, including two three-pointers.

Signing as a free agent this offseason, LaRavia knew getting to play with James was part of the deal. He had to wait through training camp, the preseason and 14 games to get his wish, but it was worth it. The 24-year-old LaRavia, who was five days shy of his second birthday when James made his NBA debut, knocked down a first-quarter shot off a James assist.

“It was dope to finally get on the court with him,” LaRavia said. “He brings something to this team that I don't think we really had. It's another level of passing ability that he's able to do, and just the force he is on offense in transition and just when he has the ball in his hands.”

Read more:Hernández: LeBron James' 'very unselfish' play shows he can fit in. Will it continue?

The Lakers are tied for the second-fewest transition possessions per game but they've been picking up the pace. Through the first nine games the team was scoring 9.5% of its points in transition. That mark ticked up to 13.4% in the last five games.

Utah (5-10) is one of the fastest teams, averaging 102.6 possessions per game. With pace increasing over the years, the heavier workloads have made minor soft-tissue injuries unfortunate realities in the NBA. They also make extended breaks between games, like the four-day reprieve the Lakers had last week, a major luxury.

In between much-needed rest and efficient practice sessions for a team that has been fully healthy for only a week, the Lakers also used the time for team bonding in the form of a trash-talk-filled pickleball tournament.

Smart and Redick and a third teammate, head video coordinator Michael Wexler — whom Redick anonymously accused of eating during the entire tournament — went to the semifinals. They lost to Luka Doncic and player development coach Ty Abbott. LaRavia and assistant coach Beau Levesque won the championship. Redick raised questions about the fairness of the team pairings.

As with everything involving ultracompetitive athletes, even the innocent pickleball games got heated. Smart was trying to be mindful to not push his limits too much.

“The last thing I need to get out and do is roll my ankle trying to play pickleball,” said Smart, who said he would rather play tennis.

It was still a welcome break from the monotony of the season, Redick said. He graded the experience an A.

“We got through this week without wanting to kill each other,” Redick said with a smirk.

Etc.

Center Deandre Ayton missed practice Saturday because of an illness. He was expected to join the team on the trip to Utah.

Sign up for our weekly newsletter on all things Lakers.

This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

Fired Up Canadiens Dominate Maple Leafs

The stage was set for an epic battle at the Bell Centre on Saturday night. Even though the Montreal Canadiens and the Toronto Maple Leafs have both been struggling of late, this is the kind of rivalry matchup that brings out the best in everyone and plenty of away fans, making the building electric.

With both Xhekaj brothers playing, the Habs wasted no time throwing big hits, and while they weren’t shooting much on net, they built momentum that way and by killing a two-minute penalty.

Canadiens May Get A Big Boost From Energetic Forward
Canadiens Prospect Defender Has Monster Game In AHL
Canadiens: Why Jacob Fowler Is Not The Answer

A Rare Saturday Night Home Start For Dobes

With Samuel Montembeault having been pulled from the last game, Martin St-Louis decided to give rookie goaltender Jakub Dobes a rare Saturday night start at the Bell Centre, and the coach didn’t regret his decision in the first frame.

While Toronto put 11 shots on net, Dobes stopped them all, even though he was almost beaten on a wrap-around after overplaying a shot to his right, but he got to the puck in extremis to make the save. Aside from that, we saw some safe and sound goaltending by the Czech netminder in the first frame. The one shot that did beat him ended its run on the crossbar, and there was no harm done.

Toronto finally broke through on their 15th shot of the night, a bullet of a shot from Oliver Ekmann Larson that got the best of Dobes. While he received only six shots in the second frame, he remained alert and tracked the puck pretty well. This is the kind of performance that could go a long way toward rebuilding his confidence.

The Canadiens played a deep game in the final frame, taking only three shots and attempting to manage both the game and the puck, but it still allowed the Leafs to see more of the puck and attack more. Dobes was steady, stopping eight of the nine shots he faced. Toronto did hit another puck, but you’ve got to be lucky to be good and good to be lucky, as they say.

When all was said and done, Dobes stopped 24 of the 26 shots he faced, giving him a .923 save percentage, the kind of number he had accustomed us to earlier in the season.

A Successful Baptism Of Fire

Much had been made of Florian Xhekaj’s insertion in the lineup, and it turned out to be a good move by the Canadiens’ coach. St-Louis had said earlier in the day that he wanted the youngster to play his game in the Canadiens’ game, to be smart even if he’s walking the line, and that’s precisely what he did.

He seemed to energize his line, and after 40 minutes, four Habs had three hits: both Xhekaj brothers, Josh Anderson and Jayden Struble. On top of it, Anderson also scored his fourth goal of the season, a picture-perfect shot above Woll’s shoulder, and the youngest Xhekaj got his first career point on the play.

In the third frame, defenseman Dakota Mermis took some liberties with Brendan Gallagher, pushing and shoving him for a whole shift before ramming him into the Leafs’ net. The younger Xhekaj took note, and when he had a chance, he forced Mermis to answer the bell, sending the Bell Centre into a frenzy. The crowd loved it, and so did his teammates, who went to congratulate him in the box for taking care of his teammates. Meanwhile, his big brother was beaming with pride on the bench.

As first games go, it would have been hard to write a better scenario, as the hero of the night said himself, it would have been if he scored a goal, but he had no complaints. As for the coach, when asked about the youngster’s first game, he replied:

He played to his identity; he brought his game: his toughness, his pace, his presence.
-

The coach also spoke about the coaching staff in Laval, crediting them with how ready the players recalled lately have been:

I tip my hat to the staff in Laval. We got a lot of call-ups recently, and the guys come, and they look ready; they don’t look out of place. I know there are other players that are knocking on the door too down there, our staff do a great job to facilitate the transition.
-

With the way Xhekaj’s first game went, Joshua Roy shouldn’t expect to get back in the lineup anytime soon.

Slafkovsky’s Big Night

Tonight, Jujar Slafkovsky wasn’t on the top power-play unit; he had lost that spot to Ivan Demidov, and he still found himself skating on the second line alongside the young Russian and Oliver Kapanen. After a challenging game Thursday night against the Washington Capitals, the first overall pick of the 2022 draft stood very tall and shone bright.

The coach obviously liked what he saw:

Listen, tonight was one of his best games of the season. That’s his standard; we try to keep him there, and it’s hard. But you know, when he plays like that, he makes you want that all the time. […] I think for any young player, the last box to check is consistency. They show their ceiling, and it’s hard to find that consistency at a young age, but that’s what we’re after.
-

Slafkovsky’s stat line was impressive on the night: two shots, two shots blocked and two missed ones; one hit, one takeaway and one blocked shot. But what was even more impressive was the confidence with which he skated, the awareness he showed on the ice and his ability to play an effective transition game. Furthermore, even though he didn’t get an assist on Noah Dobson’s first goal of the night, that wouldn’t have gone in if it hadn’t been for the way he screened the goaltender. He did get an assist on the second Dobson tally, however, a tic-tac-toe with Demidov and the blueliner.

In the end, the Canadiens secured a much-needed 5-2 win and showed they can still be a dominant team when they pay attention to the details and commit to both sides of the game. Granted, this was a depleted Leafs side missing its number one goaltender, its captain, Auston Matthews and Matthew Knies, but the Canadiens have their own injury woes as well and just rose above.

The Canadiens will take a day off tomorrow. Still, they will be back on the ice in Brossard on Monday morning at 10:30. Their next three games will be out west, where they’ll take on the Utah Mammoth (a side they beat 6-2 two weeks ago, the Vegas Golden Knights and the Colorado Avalanche  in the second game of a back-to-back.


Follow Karine on X @KarineHains Bluesky @karinehains.bsky.social and Threads @karinehains.

Bookmark The Hockey News Canadiens' page for all the news and happenings around the Canadiens.

Join the discussion by signing up to the Canadiens' roundtable on The Hockey News.

Subscribe to The Hockey News at THN.com/free. Get the latest news and trending stories by subscribing to our newsletter here

Three takeaways: Tarasov shines in relief after rough night for Bobrovsky, Balinskis fills in well for Ekblad

The Florida Panthers dropped a tough one on Saturday night in Sunrise.

It was a Stanley Cup Final rematch with the Edmonton Oilers, and unlike during the past couple postseasons, this time it was the Oilers who came out on top, pulling away late to defeat the Panthers 6-3.

Despite facing a three-goal deficit early in the second period, the Panthers did what they usually do and attempted to mount a ferocious comeback, thrilling the 19,534 fans who packed Amerant Bank Arena.

Goals by Mackie Samoskevich and Sam Reinhart 3:26 apart had the building rocking and rolling, but that was as close as the Cats would get, allowing a pair of empty-net goals in the final minutes to take what was a close game and make it appear anything but.

Now the Panthers will embark on a one-game road trip to Nashville before returning to South Florida for their longest homestand of the season.

Let’s get to Saturday’s takeaways:

ROUGH NIGHT FOR BOB

Fresh off what was his best outing of the season – a 32-save shutout of the New Jersey Devils on Thursday – Panthers goaltender Sergei Bobrovsky struggled mightily against Edmonton.

It started with a weak goal from a bad angle just 25 seconds into the game that squeaked between Bob’s skate and the post, and then it ended with a goal from a worse angle in which the puck went off his shoulder and into the net.

Bobrovsky was called to the bench after playing just 26:45 of the game, allowing four goals on 17 shots.

While he did stop four of the five high danger shots sent his way by Edmonton, Bob also allowed two low danger shots to get by him, and those can be demoralizing for any squad.

“Yeah, he had had enough,” Panthers Head Coach Paul Maurice said of his decision to pull Bobrovsky. “I think, like our team, Bob is so very consistent and so very strong, there's no point in leaving him in. We're down 4-1, we're going to open up our game, so it's a great time for Danil (Tarasov) to go in. He came in off a really great performance the last time, and he’s scheduled to play (Monday) in Nashville, so he gets some work to tune him up before he plays.”

CLOSER EXTRAORDINAIRE DANIIL TARASOV

Speaking of Tarasov, boy oh boy did he perform well in relief of Bobrovsky.

It’s never easy for a goaltender to come into a game cold off the bench, but don’t tell that to Tarasov.

During his five seasons in the NHL, Tarasov has been called into action off the bench five times, including Saturday against Edmonton.

In those five appearances he has yet to allow a goal, stopping all 51 shots he’s faced during the 138 minutes and 17 seconds of relief time he’s played during his career.

That’s quite impressive.

On Saturday, Tarasov made 12 saves against the Oilers, including all five of the high danger shots sent his way, in 32:47 of ice time.

“He made four or five really big saves,” said Maurice. “We're pushing at that point, so we're not in our defensive structure as much as we like, so we give up more than we wanted to in that part of the game and he had to make those saves to give us a chance to be able to come back.”

UVIS STEPS UP

Aaron Ekblad was expected to play on Saturday night, but he never came on the ice for pregame warmups and was eventually ruled out of the game with what the Panthers called an upper-body injury.

Turns out, Ekblad is under the weather. He’ll travel with the team to Nashville on Sunday and barring any setbacks, should be back in the lineup on Monday against the Predators.

With Ekblad out, Maurice called upon Uvis Balinskis to step into a top pairing role alongside Gus Forsling.

Balinskis said he didn’t find out until he arrived at the rink that his role had expanded for the night, but he sure seemed to handle it well on the ice.

When the dust settled, Balinskis ended the night with an assist and a plus-one on-ice rating to go with a season-high 19:01 of ice time.

“I thought he was right on,” Maurice said of Balinskis. “When you get moved up the food chain in the National Hockey League, you're playing against a completely different kind of player. And I thought he was trying to win the game, so he wasn't passive, and he wasn't tentative at all. He was aggressive, physical…I liked his game.”

LATEST STORIES FROM THE HOCKEY NEWS - FLORIDA

Panthers drop Stanley Cup Final rematch to visiting Oilers 6-3

Despite Inconsistent Start Panthers Could Inch Closer To Top Of Atlantic Division Standings

The Panthers Den: Florida starting to show consistency with playing winning hockey

Panthers set to host Oilers in Stanley Cup Final rematch as Cats search for third straight win

The Hockey Show: Winter Classic uniforms, endless injuries, Adnan Virk

Photo caption: Nov 22, 2025; Sunrise, Florida, USA; Florida Panthers goaltender Daniil Tarasov (40) makes a save against the Edmonton Oilers during the second period at Amerant Bank Arena. (Sam Navarro-Imagn Images)

New Penguins' Winger On Pace For Career-Highs This Season

One year ago, right wing Anthony Mantha tore his ACL on a freak kind of play as a member of the Calgary Flames

At that point in the season, Mantha had only played in 13 games, and he missed the rest of the year. It's safe to say that - upon signing a one-year, $2.5 million deal with the Pittsburgh Penguins this summer - he felt there would probably be a bit of a reacclimation period. 

When looking at his numbers this season, it sure doesn't seem like it. 

The 31-year-old forward has gotten off to a fast start with his new team, as he has eight goals and 14 points in 21 games. Those numbers are good for a 31-goal, 55-point pace - both of which would be career-highs for him.

Mantha may not necessarily have expected this start. But he's not surprised by it.

"Obviously, things are going well," Mantha said. "I was not expecting to get off to that start. I mean, I worked on it over the last 11 months of rehab - physically and mentally - to have that kind of start. And I did everything I could to have that kind of start.

"So, am I surprised? I would say, not really. But, obviously, when it does happen, you take it the right way, and you need to keep pushing forward."

Takeaways: Penguins Lose Heartbreaker To Seattle Kraken, Fall Out Of Playoff PositionTakeaways: Penguins Lose Heartbreaker To Seattle Kraken, Fall Out Of Playoff PositionAfter a <a href="https://thehockeynews.com/nhl/pittsburgh-penguins/latest-news/takeaways-penguins-no-show-in-5-0-loss-to-minnesota-wild">disappointing effort in a 5-0 loss to the Minnesota Wild</a> on Friday, <a href="https://thehockeynews.com/nhl/pittsburgh-penguins">Pittsburgh Penguins</a>' young goaltender Sergei Murashov declared that the team would come out much better on Saturday.

His hard work to come back from a major injury hasn't gone unnoticed by his coach, either. 

"I think it goes back even in the summertime. I know it was important to him to just set himself up there for the start of the year," head coach Dan Muse said. "And coming off an injury, being out for a while, too, I think he clearly - based on the start - put in that work. You've seen steps taken here, too. So, that's what we're looking for.

"Obviously, credit to him for putting in that work, and we want to be able to work together with him here so he can continue to take those steps in his game."

Mantha's career season up to this point came in 2018-19, when he put up 25 goals and 48 points in 67 games for the Detroit Red Wings, the team that drafted him 20th overall in 2013. He's had the opportunity to play with some elite talent throughout his career, including Dylan Larkin and Alex Ovechkin.

But he's never flanked a playmaker quite like Evgeni Malkin, who - as his centerman - has been a big part of Mantha's success so far this season.

Penguins Have Found Their Ideal Fourth-Liner In Connor DewarPenguins Have Found Their Ideal Fourth-Liner In Connor DewarPittsburgh Penguins forward Connor Dewar has been outstanding this season.

"Playing with Geno for sure helps," Mantha said. "He's an All-Star, Hall-of-Fame guy, and he's just able to find those plays that maybe other centermen can't necessarily find. That's why he's had so much success in his career. And, for me, to blend in, I let him do his own things, try to find the open spot or try to find that give-and-go. Because you know he loves to play with the puck."

But it's not just Malkin's playmaking that has helped elevate Mantha's game to high level. There has been a lot of discussion around the size of the Penguins' second line this season, whether it's Justin Brazeau - a 6-foot-6, 232-pounder currently injured - or Kevin Hayes at 6-foot-3, 217 pounds on the left wing. 

Malkin and Mantha both stand at 6-foot-5, and Mantha is 240 pounds. The size of their line - the biggest line Mantha has ever played on - gives them an advantage in puck battles and net-front positioning.

"I think it's just that we're creating space for each other, whether it's a low pick or winning those one-on-one battles, and then getting out of corners," Mantha said. "Just making space for each other and having a net-front presence. I mean, either me or Braz, or me or Hayesy... you know Geno's going to be playing with the puck and more roaming around than straight at the net-front. So, everyone kind of plays their own role, and it's been connecting."

Oct 18, 2025; San Jose, California, USA; Pittsburgh Penguins right wing Justin Brazeau (16), right wing Anthony Mantha (39) and center Evgeni Malkin (71) celebrate after the goal against the San Jose Sharks during the third period at SAP Center at San Jose. Mandatory Credit: Neville E. Guard-Imagn Images

As far as his tenure in Pittsburgh so far, Mantha is fitting right into a locker room that is tight-knit as well as diverse in terms of age, background, and experience. And he has noticed the way that everyone and everything has effortlessly gelled together.

Mantha gives a lot of credit to the Hall-of-Famers in the room, too, and he hopes that his time as a Penguin continues to be a positive experience like it has been for the guys in the room so far.

"Obviously a lot of - how do you say it - a lot of older guys with maturity," Mantha said. "Quite a bit of middle-aged guys, like 25 to 33, 34, you know. And a couple rookies. I mean, the blend of everyone and just being shown in the proper way by those vets and learning every day... and the maturity level.

"Like, you need to bring it up a notch when you're around those guys. And it's been positive for everyone."

For Pittsburgh Penguins' Olympic Goaltender Artūrs Šilovs, No Stage Is Too BigFor Pittsburgh Penguins' Olympic Goaltender Artūrs Šilovs, No Stage Is Too BigPittsburgh Penguins goaltender Arturs Silovs - acquired from the Vancouver Canucks over the summer - has proven he can perform when the stakes are highest and will get another chance with Team Latvia at the 2026 Olympic Games.

Bookmark THN - Pittsburgh Penguins on your Google News tab to follow the latest Penguins news, roster moves, player features, and more!