James' 18-year-old record comes to an end

LeBron James reacts after a win over the Toronto Raptors
LeBron James is the league's all-time leading scorer [Reuters]

LeBron James' incredible run of 1,297 regular-season NBA games scoring 10 or more points ended as the Los Angeles Lakers beat the Toronto Raptors 123-120.

James, 40, scored eight points against the Raptors and handed out 11 assists, including the pass for Rui Hachimura to score the buzzer-beating game-winner.

"Just playing the game the right way," said James, who is in his unprecedented 23rd season.

"Always make the right play. That's how I was taught the game."

James last failed to score in double digits in January 2007, breaking Michael Jordan's previous record by 431 games.

James struggled with his shot for much of the night, connecting on just four of 17 and missing all five of his three-point attempts.

With the NBA's leading scorer Luka Doncic absent for personal reasons, Austin Reaves delivered a double-double of 44 points and 10 assists for the Lakers.

In March, James became the first player to score 50,000 points in NBA regular season and play-off matches.

Kings' Late Push Not Enough As Blackhawks Hold On 2-1

It was the healthiest the Kings have been all season, getting Drew Doughty back from injury, but the team chemistry looked disconnected and flat through the first 40 minutes of regulation.

Despite Trevor Moore scoring the only goal of the night for the Kings in the third period, L.A. could never overcome the Blackhawks' defense, which silenced the Kings' offense and crowd, continuing the team's home struggles.

The Kings generated 27 shots and dominated the faceoff circle at 55.9 percent. However, it still wasn’t enough to solve Chicago’s goaltender Spencer Knight or erase the two goals they gave up in the second period. 

Blackhawks Strike in the Second

Chicago broke open the scoreless match in the second period when Connor Bedard won the face-off against Quinton Byfield and ripped the power-play goal, capitalizing on the Kings' weak penalty kill. 

The Blackhawaks then added a late-period dagger with just six seconds remaining, as defenseman Wyatt Kaiser beat Darcy Kuemper in the shooting lane to make it 2-0. 

The Kings were competitive on the ice but not on the scoreboard for the first 40 minutes. After the game, Warren Foegele commented that the team wasn't in sync early on tonight.

“We weren't really connected in the first 40 minutes, and it bit us, “Warren Foegele.”
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Kings Power-Play Struggles

The Kings had five power-play chances of their own and had a chance to tie it up on the final power-play, but came up empty. The scoreboard and stat sheet were close and even between the two teams, but on the ice, Chicago was clearly the better team tonight, with more focus and a stronger desire to play together. 

Los Angeles out-hit the Blackhawks 20-13, but that doesn’t mean anything if you lose the game when the buzzer sounds. Too many mistakes and sequences broke down before they became threats.

A Familiar Frutsration at Home

With another tough loss at home that could’ve gone either way, the offense is still searching for consistency. The Kings are winning face-offs, getting saves, and outshooting their opponents for the most part, but the goals simply aren't coming. 

Until that changes, these issues will continue in Los Angeles and may get worse as the season approaches April. 

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Observations From Blues' 5-2 Loss Vs. Bruins

St. Louis Blues fans, we have a problem.

Actually, it’s been a problem for quite some time, but the culmination, or frustration, however one wants to call it, boiled over on Thursday night.

The Blues looked disinterested, disoriented and disorganized. It resulted in a 5-2 loss to the Boston Bruins at TD Garden in Boston.

Pavel Buchnevich and Pius Suter scored for the Blues (9-12-7), who once again couldn’t crack more than two goals in a game for the ninth time in the past 10. Jordan Binnington, who was pulled in his last start when he allowed two goals on five shots in a 4-1 loss to the Anaheim Ducks on Monday, made 22 saves.

Aleksanteri Kaskimaki made his NHL debut and was on the ice for the Buchnevich goal (more on him later).

Let’s go into the game observations:

* Where is the effort?  Rarely do I question effort. It’s usually execution that does in a game.

But on Thursday, effort comes into play.

The Blues are coming off having two days off between games, a rarity. And they won’t have that again until Christmas break. So Thursday started a stretch of 11 games in 19 days.

So being on front end of it, where was the urgency? Where was the energy? Where was … yes … the effort?

Boston (16-13-0) was playing without their best players in this game, including David Pastrnak and Charlie McAvoy due to injuries, and No. 1 goalie Jeremy Swayman was getting the night off for Joonas Korpisalo.

Yes, the Blues are playing a few players short themselves, but not nearly of that caliber, and coming out with a good start was imperative.

But just look at the first goal scored by Alex Steeves at 6:30 of the first period to make it 1-0.

First off, it was another bad line change by the Blues, but the urgency of two forwards in the neutral zone, and two defensemen on the ice never challenged the play into the zone, then things were allowed to play out on the lefthand side with nobody hustling back to pick up Steeves at the backdoor and he slams the shot past Binnington:

It was a precursor of things to come.

And on Morgan Geekie’s goal at 11:25 that made it 2-0, there were two defensemen along the corner boards (Colton Parayko and Philip Broberg) trying to win a wall battle with one player (Steeves), whose effort and determination enabled him to pop the puck to Elias Lindholm, and he found Geekie open in the slot, a pass that Dalibor Dvorsky couldn’t get enough on. But once again, it was way too easy:

The effort and determination of winning wall and/or board battles continues to be a sore spot, and in this point of the season, it shouldn’t be.

* So many defensive breakdowns; why is there so much disconnect at this juncture in the season – The Blues actually get the kind of start they needed early in the second when Buchnevich made it 2-1 at 1:59, after Parayko jumped a pass along the O-zone wall and curled around the net to find Buchnevich for a one-timer from the left circle:

You’re back in the game just like they were looking for.

But the next three goals scored by the Bruins, hoo boy.

Viktor Arvidsson cracked one off the right side wall at 6:04 made it 3-1, but it was the buildup that was more baffling than anything.

How does Mason Lohrei get all that free ice uncontested from his zone all the way into the Blues’ zone, gets a shot off from the top of the left circle that Binnington blockered to the right wall that Arvidsson corralled?:

How does a guy get that much free ice?

That’s where the disconnect comes in. Guys backing into the zone, forwards playing too spread out allowing so much free ice, easy breakouts.

It’s still happening. This was the 28th game of the season.

And for Pavel Zacha, the first of his two goals, there’s a cross ice pass that is there because of a large gap for Zacha to move into the Blues’ zone, cut to the middle of the ice, three skaters around him with no resistance, and a fourth getting in there late, and I’m not putting that on Kaskimaki because this is his first game, and he has teammates on the ice that should be setting an example of hard work and being connected. But that goal scored from the high slot over Binnington’s glove hand made it 4-1 at 12:26, and this team’s penchant – or lack thereof – scoring goals, it was game over:

And the icing on the cake when Jake Neighbours was called for interference at 19:45, there’s 15 seconds to close a period out.

Even after losing a face-off, the puck was at the blue line with 5.5 seconds left. There's no way the Bruins could work it into the left face-off circle (they did), get an uncontested shot from there (they did), collect the rebound with only one player around the puck (they did) and get it to the low slot off the edge of the right circle (they did):

It boils down to defensive breakdowns, disconnect and lack of execution. It’s 5-1 at that point rubbing salt in the wound.

* This was supposed to be Kaskimaki’s night – The 2022 third-round pick made his rookie lap at one of the top venues around the league. It was supposed to be a special night for the forward.

But Blues teammates didn’t give Kaskimaki, who was a minus-1 and played 15:17 with a shot on goal and a blocked shot, much to be happy about.

Sure, he’s thankful to finally get to the NHL, and I didn’t think Kaskimaki, who played with Buchnevich and Dvorsky on a line, looked out of place, but he only has to go up from here.

Pius Suter, who missex the past two games, did get on the board with his seventh ay 9:07 of the third period but too little, too late:

* Needless to say, Blues coach Jim Montgomery was none too pleased from his comments to media after the game, along with Binnington and Parayko:

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Takeaways: Luck On Penguins' Side As They Steal Controversial 4-3 Win Over Lightning

Well, that was one of the crazier National Hockey League games you might ever witness. 

And - despite getting outplayed for most of the game - the Pittsburgh Penguins somehow prevailed in the end.

The Penguins survived to beat the Tampa Bay Lightning, 4-3, amidst controversy to close out the game. While that will be discussed in a moment, Penguins goaltender Tristan Jarry deserves a significant amount of credit for the win, as he stopped 37 of 40 Lightning shots he faced - many of which were point-blank chances surrendered by a leaky Penguins' defense. 

The scoring opened up on a first-period power play for the Penguins when 22-year-old rookie forward Ville Koivunen finally registered his first NHL goal after career games. He sniped a rocket high-glove side and into the corner of the net from the left circle to put the Penguins up, 1-0. 

Then, in the second period, Evgeni Malkin forced a turnover, pushed the puck out to himself, skated in for a breakaway, and went five-hole to make the score 2-0. Rookie Ben Kindel also added a power play goal midway through the second on a perfect tip-in off a beautiful shot-pass by Erik Karlsson to put the Penguins up, 3-0.

Then, Tampa took over. Nikita Kucherov was found on the doorstep for his 12th of the season with only a minute and change remaining in the middle frame to make it 3-1. Then - just a minunte and change into the third period and on the power play - Brandon Hagel scored to make it 3-2, and he scored again midway through the period by getting behind the Penguins' defense to tie the game. 

The Penguins had been here before. They blew a 3-0 to the Toronto Maple Leafs on Nov. 3, and they didn't recover en route to the loss. This time, however, they did respond, as Malkin took a perfect feed from Tommy Novak to one-time it into the net from the right circle, putting the Penguins back up by one.

And this is where things got hairy. Late in regulation, the Lightning pulled their goaltender for a six-on-five, and Kucherov seemed to have his second goal of the evening. However, the officials convened after they heard from the situation room that there may have been a hand pass prior to the goal. 

As it turns out, there was. Hagel - accidenal or not - committed a hand pass to Jake Guentzel, which nullified the tally and gave Pittsburgh it's fourth win in the last five games. 


Here are some thoughts and takeaways from this crazy game:

- Let's make one thing clear: The Penguins were getting absolutely boatraced for 90 percent of this game.

Tampa Bay exposed every mistake the Penguins made - there were many - and turned seemingly every single one into a high-danger opportunity. This was especially true in the first period and in the back half of the third period, when the Bolts were just taking it to the Penguins.

The Penguins were opportunistic. It wasn't unlike watching the 2017 Penguins somehow squeak out a Cup run despite getting outplayed in the majority of games. 

Obviously, it's important to simply play like a good hockey team the majority of the time, especially when you're trying to make the playoffs. But, sometimes, it's okay to be lucky.

The Penguins were certainly lucky Thursday. 

- Now, onto their biggest stroke of luck. The no-goal.

All I'll say is that there are a whole lot of people misunderstanding the rule. Is the rule a good one? Like over-the-glass delay of game penalties, I think there is a conversation to be had there. 

But by rule, I think that's a handpass. It's not the best rule, but it is what it is.

Revisiting The Jake Guentzel Trade TreeRevisiting The Jake Guentzel Trade TreeOn Thursday, the <a href="https://thehockeynews.com/nhl/pittsburgh-penguins">Pittsburgh Penguins</a> will take on the <a href="https://thehockeynews.com/nhl/tampa-bay-lightning">Tampa Bay Lightning</a> in Florida, as Pittsburgh looks to hold onto its playoff positioning and Tampa looks to extend its Atlantic Division lead.&nbsp;

- Erik Karlsson and Parker Wotherspoon have been tremendous for the Penguins this season. They were fine for the most part in this game. 

But the tying goal was defensive malpractice.

Both players somehow got caught too high in the defensive zone, and Brandon Hagel quite literally walked right behind both of them and straight to the net, where he beat Jarry with an impossible shot. 

I don't know what the goal was there, but the Penguins really need to play more responsibly when they're holding a lead against teams with supremely talented offensive players who can burn you on every mistake. That's what happened against the Toronto Maple Leafs on Nov. 3, and that's what happened again Thursday.

- Tristan Jarry was magnificent in this game. He quite literally was the sole reason the Penguins were in the game at all, as even their power play was bleeding chances against despite registering two goals on the night. 

I didn't love the second Kucherov tally, but it doesn't matter because it didn't count, anyway. Still, Jarry didn't seem as confident in the final period of that game despite looking like he could walk on water for the first 40 minutes. 

Is Tristan Jarry's Early Season Success Sustainable?Is Tristan Jarry's Early Season Success Sustainable?Pittsburgh Penguins goaltender Tristan Jarry has been lights out to start the 2025-26 season. The only question is, can he sustain it for a whole year?

Either way, his teammates owe him a very fancy steak dinner. He was the primary reason the Penguins won that game. 

- It's pretty crazy what Malkin is doing this season. He has the same amount of points as Crosby in the same amount of games. Neither of his two goals in this one were flukey. 

Malkin tends to fall off a bit after hot starts, but that hasn't exactly happened yet this season. I don't think he's consistently playing at the level he was in the first month of the season - and since Justin Brazeau went down - but he's still producing, and he's still maintaining over a point-per-game pace.

What he's doing at 39 is special. He had a few blips on the radar in this game, but he more than made up for it with a two-goal, three-point effort.

- What a day it was for the kids.

As far as the third line of Kindel, Koivunen, and Rutger McGroarty, they were the Penguins' best line in this game. They were generating chances throughout the evening, and they seem to have some legitimate chemistry. That line could be a revelation for the Penguins if it continues to click. 

And then there's the two goal-scorers. 

Good for Koivunen. He deserved that one. He's been playing well for a stretch of games here, but he was so, so snakebitten. And, wow, was it a snipe.

I've been saying that Koivunen just needed to get that "first NHL goal" monkey off his back. I think the points will start to come in bunches now. 

Then there's Kindel. The tip-in goal was perfectly executed by both him and Karlsson, and he continues to look like a natural on the first power play unit. He played on the penalty kill yet again created a few shorthanded chances. There was a PK sequence where he blocked a shot then cleared the puck out of the zone. He was driving play five-on-five, too.

What impresses me most about Kindel - at only 18 - is that he can walk into any situation, have no adjustment period, and play like a 10-year NHL veteran in that role. He did it with the power play, and now, the penalty kill. He continues to play a calculated, smart, high-IQ brand of hockey, and his ability to distribute the puck is so advanced for his age. 

New 'Kid Line' Might Be Just What Penguins NeedNew 'Kid Line' Might Be Just What Penguins NeedThe Pittsburgh Penguins debuted their new "kid line" of Rutger McGroarty, Ben Kindel, and Ville Koivunen against the Philadelphia Flyers on Monday - and it paid off.

I can't say the last time I watched an 18-year-old thrive in every situation they're thrown in immediately. He needs no adjustment and just introduces himself like he owns the place. 

The Penguins have a special young player on their hands. 

- Another player deserving of a shoutout is Imama. 

Imama is not a guy who needs to be in the lineup on an everyday basis. He's an enforcer. He goes about his business, and he's always looking to stir things up. 

But his impact extends into the locker room, too. Imama is well-liked, well-respected, and personable in the locker room, and that energy is contagious. His fight sparked some energy for the Penguins Thursday, even if they were pretty decidedly getting beat. 

I wouldn't be entirely surprised to see him stick around for a little bit. 

- The Penguins next play the Dallas Stars on Sunday. 

I expect a much better performance by the Penguins against yet another tough opponent. 


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Rangers Secure Win Over Senators With Strong All-Around Performance

David Kirouac-Imagn Images

It was all about the fundamentals in the New York Rangers’ 4-2 win over the Ottawa Senators on Thursday night.

Going into this matchup, the Rangers were coming off of an emotional, come-from-behind victory over the Dallas Stars. 

The Rangers carried that momentum into Ottawa, as they came into the game with a fiery and intense energy. 

A clean breakout started by Artemi Panarin, followed up by nifty stick work from J.T. Miller, ended in a Mika Zibanejad goal to put the Rangers up 1-0, 3:19 into the first period. 

A few minutes later, it was Noah Laba’s physicality to steal the puck in the neutral zone and keep the puck in the offensive zone that led to Vladislav Gavrikov’s goal, giving the Blueshirts a quick 2-0 lead. 

"It was critical,” Mike Sullivan said of how impactful Laba’s physical play was to Gavrikov’s goal.  “I thought Labs was physical all night. He brings a speed element with his size and his strength. When he brings some physicality to his game I think he's a lot more effective...I thought this was one of his more physical games that he's had in a while."

Gavrikov now has three goals over his past five games, as he’s far exceeded his offensive expectations going into the season. His six goals has him tied for fifth among all NHL defensemen in goals this year.

“Obviously, his core competency is his ability to defend,” Sullivan said on Tuesday about Gavrikov. “He's hard to play against. He's one of the better defending defensemen, we think, in the league. Having said that, we believe has the ability to help our offense, whether it be with outlet passes or joining the rush or being active off the offensive blue line. I won't lie, I'm surprised with how effective he's been just with his instincts. In particular, the way he jumps off the offensive blue line.”

All night long, the Rangers’ relentless forecheck allowed them to sustain offensive pressure and put the Senators on their toes. 

Between the constant forecheck and net-front presence, the Rangers were able to make the Senators’ life a lot harder. 

That was especially evident on Will Borgen’s goal in the second period.

Sullivan has always preached for forwards to go after pucks hard and try to hold onto pucks when they can in order to sustain pressure, while strong net-front presence is an element of the game he’s tried to instill into the Rangers’ game. 

Vladislav Gavrikov Exceeding All Of Mike Sullivan's Expectations Vladislav Gavrikov Exceeding All Of Mike Sullivan's Expectations The signing of Vladislav Gavrikov is turning out to be extremely impactful for the New York <a href="https://thehockeynews.com/nhl/new-york-rangers/">Rangers</a>.&nbsp;

“I thought we competed hard all night long,” Sullivan said. “We just kept trying to play the game the right way. I think overall, I thought it was a pretty good effort…  “I thought we did a real good job, in particular tonight, getting inside a little bit more of the forwards we're getting to the net more there was intention there.”

Igor Shesterkin made some big stops when the Rangers did up some high-quality chances, and he made 25 saves on the night  

Panarin reached a milestone in this game, recording the 900th point of his career. 

“Happy to get that, but glad we win tonight,” Panarin said of recording 900 career points. “Especially in a winning game, I have that number. So nice.”

The Rangers will be back in action on Saturday against the Colorado Avalanche.   

Johnson, Fulwiley help No. 5 LSU beat Duke 93-77 in ACC/SEC Challenge

Flau'jae Johnson had 18 points to lead six players in double figures as No. 5 LSU beat Duke 93-77 in the ACC/SEC Challenge on Thursday night. MiLaysia Fulwiley added 16 points for the Tigers (9-0), who failed to reach 100 points for the first time this season to end an NCAA-record streak at eight games. No matter, it was still a dominating offensive performance, with the Tigers shooting 59.7% and scoring 52 points in the paint while needing just five made 3-pointers to crack the 90-point mark.

Takeaways: Steven Stamkos Completes Nashville Predators' Comeback With Overtime Goal Over Panthers

Revenge is sweet, when it's on your side.

The Nashville Predators avoided a sweep by the defending Stanley Cup Champion Florida Panthers with a 2-1 come-from-behind thriller in overtime on a goal that was allowed after the net had come off its moorings.

Sound familiar?

The Preds lost a controversial game in overtime earlier this season to the Minnesota Wild after the goal was allowed when goalie Justus Annunen knocked the net loose.

Thursday at Amerant Bank Arena in Sunrise, Florida, the Preds tasted the benefit of a loose net and sent Panthers fans home disappointed.

Carter Verhaeghe scored for the Cats' lone goal, while Ryan O'Reilly and Steven Stamkos got the Preds' two hard-fought goals.

The win avenges an 8-3 loss to the Cats in late November, and Florida has now dropped four straight, languishing in last place in the Eastern Conference.

After Panthers goalie Sergei Bobrovsky robbed Matthew Wood on a breakout, Carter Verhaeghe faked out Juuse Saros on the other end after a nice setup by Sam Bennett for a 1-0 lead at 16:26 of the opening frame.

Both teams had numerous chances to change the scoreboard, but it wasn't until the third period that the Preds finally knotted the game.

Ryan O'Reilly put in a rebound off a Michael Bunting shot at the 13:41 mark to make it a 1-1 game, spoiling Bobrovsky's shutout bid and requiring overtime.

Then, Steven Stamkos fired in the golden goal at 4:01 of the extra frame from O'Reilly, and the Preds come away with an unbelievable win.

The net came off its moorings, but upon further review, the goal was allowed.

Earlier in the game, the Preds thought they had a power-play goal, but the officials determined the puck never crossed the goal line. Stamkos' goal made certain the no-goal wouldn't come back to haunt them.

The Predators have won four of their last five games, their best stretch of the season thus far. The Panthers haven't won since beating Nashville at Bridgestone Arena Nov. 24.

Here are three takeaways from the game.

Saros Outduels Bobrovsky.

After a rocky stretch, Preds goalie Juuse Saros appears to have found his form. He stopped 27 of 28 shots in the Preds' 5-1 victory over the Calgary Flames Tuesday, and passed almost every test against Florida.

Saros and Panthers netminder Sergei Bobrovsky put on quite a show, but Saros outdueled the Stanley Cup Champion, stopping 30 of the 31 shots fired his way.

His biggest test came in the second period, as the Panthers held a 16-5 shot advantage in the frame. The only blemish came on Verhaeghe's goal to put the Cats ahead 1-0.

Verhaeghe deked Saros out of position after being fed by Sam Bennett. This came just moments after Bobrovsky robbed Matthew Wood on a breakaway at the other end.

For the game, Florida outshot the Preds 31-29, but Saros earned his money on this night.

The Preds’ penalty kill was heavily tested.

As good as the Predators’ penalty kill has been most of the season, it had allowed a goal in three of its last four games coming into Thursday.

In all fairness, the unit was without Cole Smith and Michael McCarron, two of their best penalty killers, both fighting injuries. McCarron was back in the lineup against Florida, and the kill was back in form.

There were some close calls. Nick Blankenburg went to the sin bin for a high-sticking double minor, sending Anton Lundell to the locker room briefly. The Cats had several great chances, including one sequence when Saros lost his stick. Disaster was averted, and the Preds killed off the double minor.

Florida was 17-for-89 (19.8%) on the power play, 18th in the league heading into Thursday. The Preds shut down the Cats' power play, killing all six penalties. The Preds' own power play failed to score on all five of its chances.

Ozzy Wiesblatt exited early.

Nov 26, 2025; Detroit, Michigan, USA; Nashville Predators right wing Michael McCarron (47), right wing Ozzy Wiesblatt (89), and Detroit Red Wings center Marco Kasper (92) are broken up during the game at Little Caesars Arena. Tim Fuller-Imagn Images

Wiesblatt has been a bright spot in Nashville’s lineup this season. He scored his first NHL goal Tuesday against Calgary, and celebrated by pointing to the sky in honor of his late brother, Orca.

Early in Thursday’s contest, Wiesblatt lost a glove and appeared to injure his hand. He left for the tunnel and didn’t return. He's currently listed as having an upper-body injury.

Penguins Forward Ville Koivunen Notches First Career NHL Goal On Thursday

Thursday night was indeed the night for Pittsburgh Penguins forward Ville Koivunen.

Koivunen, who hadn't scored an NHL goal in his first 23 NHL games, ended that streak on Thursday with his first career NHL goal against the Tampa Bay Lightning. His power play goal opened the scoring in the game.

Koivunen took a feed from Kris Letang and ripped the puck past Lightning goaltender Jonas Johansson. His celebration was also so sick.

Koivunen had been getting so many chances to start the season before scoring this one. He had been a bit unlucky on some of his previous chances, but now that this first one went in the net, the floodgates should open. He can relax a bit, knowing that he now has his first NHL goal. 

His goal helped the Penguins beat the Lightning 4-3 and jump up to third place in the Metropolitan Division. 


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Special Teams Help, Hurt Red Wings In Wild 6-5 Shootout Loss To Blue Jackets

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Thursday evening's game against the Columbus Blue Jackets at Nationwide Arena was nothing short of a roller coaster for the Detroit Red Wings, who gained a point in the standings but missed out on the second as part of their 6-5 shootout loss. 

The Blue Jackets, who twice had a lead evaporate, tied the game late in the third period with goaltender Elvis Merzlikins on the bench for an extra attacker, and then picked up the win thanks to goals in the shootout from Kent Johnson and Kirill Marchenko. 

Special teams were the name of the game for both clubs, who each scored multiple power-play goals. 

With the setback, the Red Wings are now 14-11-3 in their centennial campaign, but are now tied for the second overall spot in the Atlantic Division with 32 points. They also won't like the fact that they've now allowed at least four goals against in five of their last six games. 

The Blue Jackets struck first after a shot from defenseman Ivan Provorov beat Cam Talbot from distance, but the Red Wings knotted the score early in the second period thanks to a power-play tally from Dylan Larkin. 

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Marchenko restored the Columbus lead with a power-play goal of his own, followed by an even-strength tally from Johnson. But after Dmitri Voronkov was whistled for a four-minute double minor after his high sticking infraction on Andrew Copp drew blood, Detroit twice converted courtesy of Lucas Raymond and James van Riemsdyk, tying the game. 

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A power-play goal from former Michigan Wolverines forward Adam Fantilli put Columbus ahead late in the second period, only to see the Red Wings roar back in the final frame thanks to goals in quick succession from Patrick Kane and Alex DeBrincat. For Kane, it was the 496th goal of his career. 

Fantilli scored his second of the night to tie the game late in the third period after his shot deflected off defenseman Albert Johansson, setting up overtime. 

"Would Be Really Cool": Patrick Kane Would Love Mike Modano In Attendance For Milestone Achievement "Would Be Really Cool": Patrick Kane Would Love Mike Modano In Attendance For Milestone Achievement From one U.S.-born NHL legend to another, Patrick Kane says he’d welcome Mike Modano’s presence when he breaks the record for most points by an American-born player.

While the Blue Jackets got shootout goals from both Johnson and Marchenko following a scoreless five-minute overtime session, Merzlikins stopped van Riemsdyk and Raymond, securing the extra point. 

This was Detroit's first game of a six-game road trip which continues on Saturday night against the Seattle Kraken from Climate Pledge Arena. 

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Nets allow 42 points in fourth-quarter collapse, fall to Jazz, 123-110

NEW YORK (AP) — Lauri Markkanen scored 30 points, Keyonte George had 29 and the Utah Jazz used a huge fourth quarter to beat the Brooklyn Nets 123-110 on Thursday night.

The Jazz outscored the Nets 42-20 in the final quarter after trailing by 15 points in the first half. Markkanen and George nearly outscored the Nets by themselves, combining for 18 points.

Kyle Filipowski had 15 points and Walter Clayton Jr. added 13 off the bench for Utah, which shot 14 for 22 (63.6%) in the fourth.

Noah Clowney scored 29 points and Ziaire Williams had 23 off the bench for Nets, who had their two-game winning streak snapped.

With the game tied at 98 with 6:29 remaining, George hit consecutive 3-pointers. Williams answered with a three that made it 104-101.

On the ensuing possession, Tyrese Martin turned the ball over after stepping out of bounds and Bryce Sensabaugh was fouled on a three-point attempt and made two free throws to extend the lead 106-101.

Filipowski then connected on another three-pointer and Markkanen followed with one of his own after Clowney’s layup with 3:39 to play to make it 112-103.

The Nets rested leading scorer Michael Porter Jr. for injury management in the second game of a back-to-back. Porter, who is averaging 25.3 points, scored 33 and had 10 rebounds in Wednesday’s win at Chicago.

Up next

Jazz: Remain in New York to play the Knicks on Friday.

Nets: Host the New Orleans Pelicans on Saturday.

Rangers keep up road success with 4-2 win over Senators

OTTAWA, Ontario (AP) — Artemi Panarin reached 900 NHL points with a goal and an assist and the New York Rangers won for the league-leading 12th time on the road, beating the Ottawa Senators 4-2 on Thursday night.

The Rangers have won five of their past six to improve to 15-12-2. They are 12-4-1 on the road.

Panarin has 311 goals and 589 assists in 781 regular-season games.

Mika Zibanejad, Will Borgen and Vladislav Gavrikov also scored, and Igor Shesterkin made 25 saves. J.T. Miller had three assists.

Drake Batherson had a goal and an assist, and Dylan Cozens also scored for Ottawa. Leevi Merilainen stopped 24 shots.

The Senators are 13-10-4. They have lost three of four.

Up next

Rangers: Host Colorado on Saturday.

Senators: Host St. Louis on Saturday night.

Islanders hand NHL-best Avalanche their second regulation loss after 6-3 win

NEW YORK (AP) — Mathew Barzal had a goal and two assists, and the New York Islanders defeated the NHL-leading Colorado Avalanche 6-3 on Thursday night.

Kyle MacLean, Anders Lee, Bo Horvat and Adam Pelech also scored a goal for the Islanders, who won their second straight. Ilya Sorokin finished with 35 saves and Casey Cizikas added an empty-net goal.

Valeri Nichushkin, Martin Necas and Artturi Lehkonen scored for Colorado. Mackenzie Blackwood made 36 saves.

The Avalanche’s 17-game point streak was snapped and they lost in the first game of their four-game East Coast road trip.

Barzal scored with less than two minutes remaining in the second period to extend the Islanders’ lead to 5-2 when he converted a backhander on the power play.

The Avalanche scored two goals in 85 seconds to cut their deficit to 4-2 midway through the second period.

Nichushkin redirected a point shot, and Necas benefited from a fortuitous bounce off the skate of Islanders defenseman Travis Mitchell at 10:04 of the middle frame.

But Barzal’s highlight-reel goal helped New York regain control and hand Colorado just its second regulation loss in 27 games this season.

Lee buried a cross-ice pass from Barzal with 1:40 remaining in the opening period to make it 2-0 after MacLean opened the scoring at 5:56.

Horvat knocked in a Matthew Schaefer rebound for his team-leading 17th goal, pushing New York’s lead to 3-0 at 6:58 of the second.

Lee has 295 career goals for the Islanders, tied with Brock Nelson for fifth in franchise history.

Nelson, who returned to UBS Arena for his first game since being dealt last winter from the Islanders to the Avalanche, also received a video tribute during the first period.

Up next

Avalanche: Colorado remains in New York to play the Rangers on Saturday.

Islanders: New York visits the Tampa Bay Lightning on Saturday.

Spencer Jones 'trying to prove' to Yankees he should be in MLB as he prepares to fight for 2026 roster spot

The Yankees' outfield is currently in flux and top prospect Spencer Jones hopes to be in the mix when the team breaks camp next March.

Jones, 24, had his breakthrough season in 2025, demolishing Double-A pitching before being promoted to Triple-A Scranton/Wilkes-Barre, where the outfielder held his own. 

Through both levels of the minor leagues in 2025, Jones slashed .274/.362/.571 with an OPS of .932. He also had 35 home runs and drove in 80 runs. 

“Being able to be more consistent month-to-month, that was the biggest thing for me,” Jones told SNY’s Michelle Margaux at the Italian American Baseball Foundation Gala in the Bronx on Thursday night. “A lot of confidence and something I look forward to bringing in next year.”

It was a bounce-back season for Jones, who struggled in 2024 once he got to Double-A. He credits a change in his swing for his consistency and continues to work on it this offseason in preparation for spring training. 

“I changed some stuff with my swing, learned a lot about it and going into this offseason is just cleaning up some of the things that went wrong and moving into this next season,” he said. 

Outside of Aaron Judge in right field and Trent Grisham -- who accepted the qualifying offer -- in center, the Yankees have an opening in left field after the departure of Cody Bellinger. While the Yankees continue to try and bring Bellinger back, it’s not a guarantee, which gives Jones and other youngsters like Jasson Dominguez a chance to win the job this spring.

GM Brian Cashman said Jones "put himself in the conversation" to make the roster at the Yankees' end-of-season news conference in October, and the outfield prospect is getting ready to earn it.

When asked what he could do to prepare to compete for a roster spot, Jones described his mindset.

“Trying to prove to them, every reason why you should be there,” he said. “Being as competitive as possible and showing them how bad you want it is important and that’s going to be my job going into camp.”

LeBron James' record scoring streak ends, but Austin Reaves and Rui Hachimura deliver win

TORONTO, ON - DECEMBER 4: LeBron James #23 of the Los Angeles Lakers celebrates.
Lakers star LeBron James celebrates after a 123-120 victory over the Toronto Raptors on Thursday night. (Andrew Lahodynskyj / Getty Images)

Of course.

Stuck between trying to extend his record streak of 1,297 consecutive games with 10 or more points or passing to an open Rui Hachimura to take the potential winning shot, LeBron James made the right play.

Because that’s what he’s done for 23 years in the NBA.

James’ assist on Hachimura’s buzzer-beating three-pointer punctuated the Lakers’ dramatic 123-120 win over the Toronto Raptors on Thursday at Scotiabank Arena.

After the Lakers (16-5) forced a miss by Brandon Ingram with 22.9 seconds left, Austin Reaves heard Raptors coach Darko Rajakovic calling for a double team. Scottie Barnes rushed to guard Reaves near the sideline and the Lakers guard sent a left-handed bounce pass to James near the top of the arc. James, with eight points on labored four-for-17 shooting, took one dribble and fired it to Hachimura in the corner.

“I just make the right play,” James said. “That's all that matters. Win, lose or draw, make the right play.”

James’ 11 assists and Reaves’ 44 points and 10 assists helped the Lakers overcome the absence of Luka Doncic, who missed the game because of personal reasons. The NBA’s leading scorer and his fiancee are expecting their second child. Coach JJ Redick said the team hopes to get Doncic “back soon, but don’t have a pinpointed day yet.”

Without the team’s primary offensive engine, center Deandre Ayton chipped in 17 points and Jake LaRavia scored 14 off the bench. Two-way guard Nick Smith Jr. delivered 12 points in 14 minutes off the bench as the Lakers dug deep into their roster ahead of another game in Boston on Friday.

James last scored in single digits on Jan. 5, 2007 when Milwaukee held him to eight points on three-for-13 shooting in 43 minutes. But Cleveland still won that game 95-86 as James dished nine assists.

Read more:'A lot of slices of pizza left': Where the Lakers stand after 20 games

At 40, James has continued to rely on his playmaking, averaging 7.8 assists in six games since missing the first 14 because of sciatica. James acknowledged he still is finding his rhythm offensively.

He faded into the background of the Lakers' blowout loss to the Phoenix Suns on Monday, when he barely extended the streak by scoring four of his 10 points in the fourth quarter. He came out aggressively against the Raptors with nine shots by halftime.

But he scored only four points. He missed his first six shots, some even missing the rim.

Behind 22 third-quarter points from Reaves, the Lakers were clinging to a two-point lead entering the fourth. James was “acutely aware” of how many points he had as the game progressed, Redick said. With only six points in the first three quarters, James opened the fourth with two quick three-point attempts. Neither was close to going in.

Lakers guard Austin Reaves, left, drives against Toronto guard Ja'Kobe Walter.
Lakers guard Austin Reaves, left, drives against Toronto guard Ja'Kobe Walter during the first half of the Lakers' win Thursday. (Andrew Lahodynskyj / Getty Images)

The first Lakers points in the fourth quarter came from Smith. Of course, he was assisted by James.

Throughout his celebrated career, James often has been criticized for his passing. In big moments, critics questioned whether he could be the true face of the NBA if he was passing on winning opportunities to create open looks for his teammates. If he passed, he was ridiculed for not stepping up. If he shot and missed, he was torn down for it.

James, the career scoring leader who ranks fourth in assists, still remembers “everything [that] has been negatively said” about his game. Any insinuation that he wouldn’t always choose the right play sticks with him the most.

“That aspect was always like the most, one of the most foolish things I've ever heard as far as making the right pass, making the right play,” James said. “We are in the business of winning basketball games. My whole life I've just played the game that way. I was taught the game that way and I've won at every single level I've played at by playing the game that way. So there was no reason for me to ever change once I got to this level.”

James’ unselfish play rubbed off on teammates who worked to earn his trust.

Lakers forward Rui Hachimura celebrates with Austin Reaves, top left, and Jake LaRavia.
Lakers forward Rui Hachimura, left, celebrates with Austin Reaves, top left, and Jake LaRavia, center, after making the winning three-pointer against Toronto on Thursday. (Andrew Lahodynskyj / Getty Images)

“When you got someone like that, everybody's gotta fall in line,” said Reaves, who is averaging 41 points in four games without Doncic this season. “If you don't fall in line with someone like that, then you look crazy.”

The Lakers made it look perfect. Hachimura, who scored 12 points, sprinted down the sideline after his first winning buzzer-beater. Reaves jumped on his back. James yelled toward the Lakers bench with outstretched arms. Redick relished the look of pure joy on James’ face.

The superstar took no time to mourn the streak that he never truly tried to build. When asked for his feelings about the end of a run that was set to turn 19 years old next month, James looked almost puzzled at the question.

“None,” James said. “We won.”

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This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.