The Bulldogs are headed to the College Football Playoff. Are they headed to the SEC title game too?
Panthers can't build on quick start, lose 5-3 to suddenly surging Flames
The Florida Panthers continued their season-long six-game homestand on Saturday afternoon against the Calgary Flames.
Despite coming in with a poor record, Calgary earned their fourth win in five games by defeating the Panthers 5-3 at Amerant Bank Arena.
Interestingly, it was Florida that got the scoring started, and they did it less than a minute into the game.
After Jesper Boqvist denied a Calgary zone exit, Sam Reinhart swept the loose puck back down toward the Flames’ net.
The puck went straight to Evan Rodrigues, and he quickly deposited a shot behind Evan Cooley to give the Panthers an early 1-0 lead just 54 seconds in.
Exactly 2:04 later, Florida doubled their lead on a play that came directly off a neutral zone turnover forced by Carter Verhaeghe.
A.J. Greer brought the puck into Calgary’s zone on an odd-man rush, quickly feeding Sam Bennett for a shot that Cooley couldn’t catch up with, and just like that it was 2-0 Panthers.
It didn’t take long for the Flames to answer back.
A long wrist shot by Yan Kuznetsov fooled Panthers goaltender Daniil Tarasov and cut Florida’s lead in half at the 5:35 mark. The goal was also Kuznetsov’s first in the NHL.
Another long shot by a Flames blueliner would tie the game up midway through the period.
Former Panther MacKenzie Weegar wound up and took a big slapshot after taking a few steps in from the blue line, and while Tarasov got a piece of the shot with his blocker, it wasn’t enough to keep the puck out of the net.
Calgary added a pair of goals during the second period off the sticks of Morgan Frost and Nazem Kadri to send Florida into the final frame trailing by two.
That’s how the score would remain until around the 12-minute mark of the third period.
With Florida flying into the Flames end, Reinhart found Brad Marchand entering the zone and the veteran’s wrist shot beat Cooley’s glove and brought the Cats to within one.
They wouldn’t get any closer.
An empty-net goal by Joel Farabee cemented Florida’s second straight loss.
On to the Maple Leafs.
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Photo caption: Nov 28, 2025; Sunrise, Florida, USA; Calgary Flames defenseman Yan Kuznetsov (37) celebrates after scoring against the Florida Panthers during the first period at Amerant Bank Arena. (Sam Navarro-Imagn Images)
Avalanche Comeback Falls Short as They Lose to the Wild 3-2
It's the first time the Colorado Avalanche will face off against the Minnesota Wild this season. The Wild are coming into this game on a six-game winning streak with the help of their own star goaltender, Jesper Wallstedt. The Avalanche were able to come back from a 2-1 lead to force extra time, but it wasn’t enough as the shootouts still haunt the Avalanche, and they fall 3-2.
Period 1:
An early showing of the period suggests how the rest of the period, if not the game, could go. Fast, physical, both teams/goaltenders will need to do everything they can to beat their opponent. Sam Malinski is called for roughing, but the Avalanche manages to kill it off. The Avalanche gets a power play of their own when Zeev Buium is called for hooking, but can't convert on the opportunity.
It's Nathan MacKinnon who buries home a loose puck that crosses Jesper Wallstedt's crease. Artturi Lehkonen does a great job setting up the play, as he won a difficult puck battle in the corner to free the puck, and MacKinnon was able to bury the free rebound. With that goal, MacKinnon passes Milan Hejduk for most goals scored against the Minnesota Wild in franchise history.
Period 2:
The first ten minutes of the period were a show that the Wild were not going to give up so easily, and put the pressure on the Avalanche hard. The pressure finally broke through as Buium's shot from the left wing bounced off Kirill Kaprizov’s skate and into Scott Wedgewood's five-hole, tying the game up 1-1. Scary moment when Cale Makar gets hit hard by former teammate Yakov Trenin into the boards and is in a bit of pain getting up. However, he would be fine as he took a shift off but was right back into the action.
97 breakin' the streak pic.twitter.com/zilPLo7Yiv
— Minnesota Wild (@mnwild) November 28, 2025
It’s Kaprizov to get the Wild the lead when he comes racing into the offensive zone, and Ryan Hartman finds him and rips a wrist shot top shelf past Wedgewood to take the lead, 2-1. The Wild outshot the Avalanche 17-10 in the second period, and it showed, with the Avalanche doing a lot of chasing in their own end of the ice as the Wild were able to set up multiple times. Cycling the puck well and able to stay in the offensive zone numerous times throughout the period.
Period 3:
The Avalanche came out as they did in the first period, with even more intensity, to tie the game up. Though they are running into one major problem: the play of Wallstedt and how well he has been stopping pretty much everything they throw at him. It's Captain Gabriel Landeskog who refuses to give up the play after being high-sticked in the face, as he buries MacKinnon's shot for the rebound to tie the game, 2-2.
THAT'S OUR CAPTAIN 🫡 pic.twitter.com/5jGe1hFPv7
— Colorado Avalanche (@Avalanche) November 28, 2025
The Avalanche outshot the Wild 14-8 in the period as they tried to push for the win, but were unsuccessful, and the game heads to overtime.
Overtime/Shootout:
It was a pretty uneventful overtime, as both teams played keep-away with the puck until they found the perfect shot or tired out their opponent. The Avalanche outshot the Wild 3-0 in the period, but nothing was particularly dangerous so this game will need a shootout.
Martin Necas and Mats Zuccarello went first for their team and were successful. Both MacKinnon and Kaprizov were denied in the second round. Matt Boldy to start the third round, and Makar misses on his chance, so the Wild win 3-2.
The Avalanche are back in action tomorrow, November 29th, against the Montreal Canadiens at home, wearing their throwback Quebec Nordiques jersey.
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Lane Kiffin says he’ll make a decision about his future on Saturday
Kyle Palmieri Leaves Friday Islanders Game vs. Flyers With Lower-Body Injury
New York Islanders forward Kyle Palmieri left Friday's game against the Philadelphia Flyers with a lower-body injury.
Palmieri went down with over five minutes played in the second period. He was racing to the left wing corner with Flyers defenseman Travis Sanheim. After Sanheim went to the ice, Palmieri fell onto the ice back-first, before getting up and skating over to the Islanders' bench mid-play.
Before leaving the ice, Palmieri stripped Flyers' defenseman Emil Adrae, leading to the Islanders' first goal of the night:
The hardest earned assist in Kyle Palmieri’s career. Hope he’s ok.
— The Elmonters (@TheElmonters) November 28, 2025
pic.twitter.com/TvYbN9rEVY
This story will be updated following the game.
Mike Sullivan Feels The Rangers Are Beginning To Buy In After Win Over Bruins
The New York Rangers came away with a 6-2 victory over the Boston Bruins on Friday afternoon.
Despite a win in Carolina on Wednesday night, Mike Sullivan made a slight change to the offensive lines, putting J.T. Miller with Mika Zibanejad and Alexis Lafrenière, while placing Will Cuylle on a line with Artemi Panarin and Vincent Trocheck.
Cuylle seemed to thrive on his new line, forcing a turnover early in the first period, which led to a 2-on-1 chance in which he found Panarin for a goal.
On the Rangers’ second goal of the first period, Cuylle’s nifty play to keep possession in the offensive zone and get the puck to Vincent Trocheck developed into a Carson Soucy goal.
Through the first 20 minutes of the contest, the Rangers dominated the pace of play. A large part of that was due to the aggressive forechecking from New York’s forwards.
The Blueshirts’ relentless forechecking allowed for them to generate multiple high-quality scoring chances through the turnovers they were creating.
The Bruins provided some pushback to start the opening frame, but momentum quickly shifted back into the Rangers’ favor after they were awarded two consecutive power plays, including a four-minute double minor.
New York cashed in with two power-play goals from Mika Zibanejad to take a commanding 4-0 lead.
The power play was clicking on all cylinders, led by the first unit consisting of Adam Fox, Zibanejad, Panarin, Miller, and Trocheck.
“The power play, obviously, was the difference maker in the game,” Mike Sullivan emphasized.
It was in the third period, up 4-0, when the Rangers began to take their foot off of the gas and let the Bruins creep back into the game with two quick goals.
While the Rangers managed to hold off the Bruins’ attempted comeback, Sullivan still feels it’s imperative moving forward to remain aggressive even when the team is attempting to maintain a lead.
“When you get a four-goal lead heading into the third period, you are guarding against human nature,” said Sullivan. “You want to exhale, but you can’t in today’s game. I just think it's so important that you continue to keep your foot on the gas. Continue to play the game that has brought you success.”
Any time the Bruins did seize momentum, the Rangers adapted and were able to take control back, which is a sign of a well coached unit that is able to manage the ebbs and flows of a game.
Panarin also had a notable performance, recording four points on the day. His offensive game has begun to come alive as of late, and that’s no surprise to Sullivan.
“He has game-breaking ability with his playmaking. Once again, it was on display tonight. He was dynamic,” Sullivan said of Panarim. “Just his ability to create time and space for himself. He uses the width of the rink really well to create just this amount of separation that he needs to make that next play. He has such great vision. He sees the play away from the puck so well. He's one step ahead of everybody on the ice.”
Early on in the season, the Rangers’ top forwards were struggling to produce offense. That has not been the case through the team’s most recent stretch.
Over the past five games:
Panarin: 6 points
Zibanejad: 6 points
Miller: 4 points
Trocheck: 5 points
Cuylle: 3 points
Lafrenière: 2 points
The Rangers’ offense operates effectively when their top-six forward core is producing, and after a slow start, they are beginning to score at a high level and build confidence.
The Blueshirts have rattled off two road victories in a row. Maybe it hasn’t been perfect, but there are a lot of positives to take away from this Thanksgiving road trip.
Players are beginning to fully buy into Sullivan’s system and are growing accustomed to the way that he wants them to play.
“I think our execution can continue to improve, just getting a little bit sharper with our puck possession game, but I think the guys are buying into the game that we’re trying to play as a team,” Sullivan said. “We're trying to continue to build our team game. It's essential to win in this league consistently. Obviously, we've gone into some pretty tough buildings. … I think the group is buying in.”
The Rangers will be back in action on Saturday afternoon against the Tampa Bay Lightning.
2 Blackhawks Ranked Among Hockey's Best Young Players
Chicago Blackhawks forward Frank Nazar and defenseman Sam Rinzel have landed themselves some big praise.
Nazar and Rinzel have both made The Hockey News' Top 100 Hockey Players 21-And-Under list. THN's Ryan Kennedy gave Nazar the No. 35 spot, while Rinzel picked up the No. 36 spot.
Nazar making THN's list is not surprising in the slightest, as the 21-year-old forward has been continuing to improve as he gains more experience. In 21 games so far this season with the Blackhawks, the young forward has recorded five goals, 10 assists, 15 points, and an even plus/minus rating. This is after he posted 12 goals, 14 assists, and 26 points in 53 games for the Blackhawks during his rookie year.
Rinzel, on the other hand, is well on his way to becoming a very good NHL defenseman. The 21-year-old blueliner has played in 22 games this season with the Blackhawks, where he has recorded one goal, six assists, seven points, and a plus-2 rating. He also had five assists in nine games for Chicago this past season.
Both Nazar and Rinzel have the potential to blossom into very impactful NHL players and are already impressing early on. Due to this, them making THN's list is entirely justifiable.
Xaivian Lee scores 20 and No. 10 Florida’s frontcourt excels in 90-78 win over Providence
Xaivian Lee scored 17 of his game-high 20 points in the second half, Thomas Haugh and Reuben Chinyelu each had double-doubles, and No. 10 Florida beat Providence 90-78 on Friday in the third-place game at the Rady Children's Invitational. Haugh had 16 points and 12 rebounds, and Chinyelu had 13 points and 10 rebounds for his fourth double-double in five games. Florida's frontcourt has 11 double-doubles this season.
Sabres Big Prospect Featured On Top Young Players List
With the ninth-overall pick of the 2025 NHL Entry Draft, the Buffalo Sabres selected defenseman Radim Mrtka. With the Sabres needing help on the right side of their blueline, they are hoping that the 6-foot-6 defender will be a big part of their roster in the future.
With Mrtka having high potential, he has now landed a spot on The Hockey News' Top 100 Hockey Players 21-And-Under list. THN's Ryan Kennedy gave Mrtka the No. 37 spot on the rankings.
Mrtka is showing off his potential this season with the Seattle Thunderbirds of the Western Hockey League (WHL). In 10 games with the WHL squad so far this campaign, he recorded one goal, 11 assists, 12 points, and a plus-4 rating. This was after he posted three goals, 35 points, and a plus-10 rating in 43 games with the Thunderbirds back in 2024-25.
Mrtka also played in four games this season with the Rochester Americans, where he recorded one assist, seven penalty minutes, and an even plus/minus rating.
Overall, there is a lot to like about Mrtka, so it is understandable that he has made this list. It will be fascinating to see how he continues to grow his game from here.
"A Little Fragile": Dylan Larkin Makes Tough Admission After Third Straight Red Wings Loss
It's not easy to score three goals on Tampa Bay Lightning goaltender Andrei Vasilevskiy during a game, but it's what the Detroit Red Wings managed to do on Saturday afternoon.
The only problem was that once again, they weren't able to keep the puck out of their own net.
Multiple defensive turnovers spelled defeat for the Red Wings, as they dropped a 6-3 final score at Little Caesars Arena for their third consecutive regulation defeat.
Perhaps even more worrying is the fact that it was the fourth time in the last five games that the Red Wings have allowed at least four goals.
While head coach Todd McLellan has repeatedly spoken of essentials like mental fortitude, team captain Dylan Larkin acknowledged that the club is a bit brittle right now.
Bookmark The Hockey News Detroit Red Wings team site to stay connected to the latest news, game-day coverage, and player features.
"Even when we were winning games, we were down a goal or two early and right now, we're just a little fragile and mistakes seem to be compounding," Larkin said. "We're finding ourselves down early in games and that's the way it's going right now. There's a blueprint in how we play well and you saw it parts (Friday) but in this league against a team like that, you have to be ready all 60 (minutes) and show what you are made of all those 60."
Among the mistakes in Detroit's end was a misplay on the puck by young defenseman Albert Johansson as he was stripped of the puck from behind by Gage Goncalves, who scored Tampa's second goal a moment later.
Rookie Nate Danielson inadvertently sent the puck right into his own crease from the slot after getting his stick on a Tampa pass attempt, setting up the first of what would be two goals from Yanni Gourde on the afternoon.
Finally, Moritz Seider misplayed the puck behind his own net during the third period, leading directly to Jake Guentzel's deflection goal seconds later that put the game out of reach.
The Red Wings have shown at various points this season that they're capable of putting together consistent, 60 minute efforts. A prime example of it was their victory earlier on Nov. 16 over the New York Rangers at Madison Square Garden, arguably their most complete defensive performance of the campaign.
Conversely, the Red Wings have also strayed away from what has made them successful at various points, with their recent losses to the NHL-worst Nashville Predators and on Saturday against Tampa Bay being prime examples.
J.T. Compher, who scored the game’s opening goal, said that although younger players’ fear of making a mistake can sometimes cause exactly that, good players and teams find ways to stay consistent regardless of how long they’ve been in the NHL.
"You're going to learn in this League a bunch of different ways. Even guys that aren't in their first year, it could be their third, fourth, sixth, seventh years. It's a battle to be consistent in this League, and the good players do it, the good teams do it."
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Why the needless mystery from Australia over Cummins and Khawaja for second Test? | Geoff Lemon
Mixed messages over captain Pat Cummins’s potential return to bowling in the Ashes are a curiously dismissive attitude towards the paying public
You could speculate about whether Cricket Australia deliberately prefers to be opaque regarding player availability and team plans, or whether it just has a deficiency in communications, but once again the fitness of players and the makeup of the XI is left to be inferred from the selection in the larger squad of 14 players for the second Ashes Test in Brisbane.
Normally, a board naming an unchanged squad would not be much news. This time it is, thanks to the possible movement in either direction of Pat Cummins and Usman Khawaja, neither of which has now eventuated.
Continue reading...Observations after Sixers beat Nets, Drummond exits early with knee injury
Observations after Sixers beat Nets, Drummond exits early with knee injury originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia
NEW YORK — The Sixers reached double-victories on Black Friday in Brooklyn.
With a 115-103 win over the Nets, they improved to 10-8 on the season. Brooklyn fell to 3-15.
Friday’s game was the Sixers’ final NBA Cup contest of 2025. They went 1-3 in East Group B and did not advance to knockout play.
Tyrese Maxey had 22 points, nine rebounds and seven assists. Quentin Grimes scored 19 points and dished out nine assists. Jared McCain added 20 points and five steals.
Nets rookie Egor Demin posted 23 points, nine rebounds and five assists.
The Sixers began the night down Joel Embiid (right knee injury management), Kelly Oubre Jr. (left knee LCL sprain), VJ Edgecombe (left calf tightness) and Trendon Watford (left adductor strain).
“They’ve been thinking he’s been trending toward getting there and he just isn’t yet,” Sixers head coach Nick Nurse said of Embiid, who’s missed nine straight games. “They just haven’t cleared him to go. That’s all it is.”
Edgecombe ran through a pregame workout with Sixers assistant coaches.
“He is on court and getting some workouts individually,” Nurse said. “He hasn’t done any team stuff yet. I’ll get a report here in a little bit, but I think he’s doing OK with his on-court workouts and hopefully trending upward quickly.”
Andre Drummond also exited Tuesday’s game with a right knee injury. More on that below.
Brooklyn’s injuries included Cam Thomas (left hamstring strain) and Michael Porter Jr. (lower back tightness).
The Sixers will host the Hawks on Sunday night. Here are observations on their win over the Nets:
George and Bona back
Paul George returned after missing the Sixers’ loss Tuesday to the Magic with a right ankle sprain. Adem Bona also came back from a sprained right ankle that had sidelined him the past five games.
The Sixers immediately established superiority over the young, lowly Nets. Their first three hoops were all layups, including a lefty George bucket in transition. The Sixers’ first made jumper was a Drummond corner three-pointer. Drummond did a little bit of everything in his first stint, posting seven points, four rebounds, a block and an assist.
George had a nice start as well.
He played over nine minutes in his first run, hit a top-of-the-key three-pointer and scored seven points on 3-for-4 shooting in the opening period. The opposition was obviously not elite, but George was a smooth, self-assured shotmaker in the first half Friday.
Drummond goes down, Sixers patch things together at center
Bona helped the Sixers grow their lead early in the second quarter, scoring inside on three occasions. He continued swatting shots in high-flying fashion, too. The 22-year-old had 13 points, six rebounds and four blocks in his 23 minutes.
The Sixers started the second with an extremely surprising substitution. Kyle Lowry came in to spell Maxey.
Lowry’s only two appearances this season have come in Brooklyn. His first was a garbage-time stint in the Sixers’ blowout win on Nov. 2. Lowry wasn’t in the middle of much action, but he did his job. The 39-year-old dished to George for a three that gave the Sixers a 49-31 advantage. They led by as many as 21 points in the second quarter.
The Sixers were struck by more injury misfortune in the second.
Drummond leapt for a rebound, landed awkwardly and stayed down on the baseline grabbing his right leg. He was assisted back to the locker room with 6:52 to go in the first half.
At halftime, the Sixers ruled Drummond out with a right knee sprain. We’ll see how long he’s out, but the injury is clearly a bummer for Drummond, who’d been a substantially better (and healthier) player than last season. Entering Friday, Drummond had played 16 games, averaged 24.2 minutes and recorded 8.3 points and 10.7 rebounds per contest.
Once Drummond left, Nurse turned to everyone he had available in the frontcourt. Jabari Walker and Johni Broome shared the floor in a zone defense. Though the Sixers maintained a comfortable lead, Walker, Broome, Bona and Dominick Barlow all committed at least two fouls in the first half.
Grimes, McCain with big buckets in 2nd half
The Nets stayed competitive early in the third quarter and cut into their deficit. The Sixers’ offense was a bit less crisp and featured more rushed, contested jumpers. A Demin three trimmed the Sixers’ lead to 74-65.
George had no points on 0-for-2 shooting in the third quarter and didn’t appear in the fourth. He played 21 minutes and ended with 14 points, three rebounds, two assists and two steals. Through four games this season, the most minutes he’s played is 25.
In contrast to Maxey, who generally let the defense and flow of the game dictate his decision-making, Grimes was ultra-aggressive in the second half. He made several timely driving layups and constantly attacked the rim.
McCain helped the Sixers avoid any true late-game stress by canning two key threes. He had a quick, confident trigger all night.
Bona also knocked down an improbable corner three late in the shot clock for the first triple of his career.
Former Sabres Forward Placed On Injured Reserve
Former Buffalo Sabres forward Marcus Foligno is going to be missing some time.
The Minnesota Wild have announced that they have placed Foligno on injured reserve. In addition, the Wild shared that the former Sabres forward will be out week-to-week due to a lower-body injury.
This is certainly tough news for Foligno, especially when noting that the 34-year-old forward has been looking to bounce back from a tough start to the season. In 23 games so far this campaign with the Wild, the former Sabre has posted zero goals, two assists, and a minus-10 rating. This is after he recorded 14 goals, 15 assists, 29 points, and a plus-7 rating in 77 games with the Wild this past season.
Foligno kicked off his NHL career with the Sabres after being selected by them with the 104th overall pick of the 2009 NHL Entry Draft. In 347 games over six seasons with the Sabres from 2011-12 to 2016-17, the 6-foot-3 forward posted 49 goals, 67 assists, 116 points, 334 penalty minutes, and 1,023 hits.
Foligno's time with the Sabres ended when he was traded to the Wild during the 2017 NHL off-season.
Report: Mavericks have no interest in trading Kyrie Irving; Anthony Davis might be different story
Buzz is growing around the league that — with a new front office in place — Dallas is going to be active around the NBA trade deadline next February.
Just don't expect Kyrie Irving to be one of the players moved. Anthony Davis on the other hand...
On his Howdy Partners podcast, ESPN's Tim MacMahon echoed his previous reporting, and that of others, that Irving is off the table in trade talks with Dallas. The focus, instead, is likely on what the Mavericks might land for Anthony Davis.
"What I would tell you about Kyrie is the Mavericks do not want to trade him...
"Trading AD is a real possibility—and I would even say likelihood—this season. Trading Kyrie is not something that's on the Mavericks' priority list, or it's just straight up not something that they are interested in doing right now."
Irving, who is still out recovering from ACL surgery (but could return later this season), is on a reasonable contract ($35.6 million this season, a guaranteed $39.5 million next season, followed by a $42.4 million player option for 2027-28), which is part of the reason for the interest in him. However, it likely would take an over-the-top, Godfather offer to get the Mavericks even to consider it.
Davis is a different story.
He is set to return to the court tonight against the Lakers after missing 14 games with a calf strain. Any serious discussion of a Davis trade has to start with him staying on the court through December and January, putting up big numbers and showing teams that he is still an All-Star, maybe an All-NBA level player.
Dallas' challenge in trading Davis is that there is a very limited market for his services — he is a 32-year-old (33 in March) with a history of nagging injuries who is making $54.1 million this season, has a guaranteed $58.5 million next season, and will be seeking a contract extension this summer.
Teams have been mentioned in Davis rumors — Chicago, Golden State, New York and Phoenix (though those final two are highly unlikely) — but even if they are interested, actually constructing a trade is next to impossible. AD's huge salary and the fact that Dallas is right up against the second-apron hard cap make it incredibly challenging to actually put together a trade that works financially and makes sense for both sides. For example, to make a trade to "win now" and struggling Golden State work, the Warriors would have to send back either Jimmy Butler (straight up) or a trade package built around Draymond Green and Jonathan Kuminga, and neither of those makes much sense for both sides.
That's not going to stop the Davis rumors. Just know the ones about Kyrie are not coming together this season.