Steph Curry rocks sentimental pair of Nike Kobe 11 shoes for Warriors-Raptors

Steph Curry rocks sentimental pair of Nike Kobe 11 shoes for Warriors-Raptors originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

Steph Curry’s sneaker free-agency tour continued Sunday in Toronto.

And the Warriors superstar’s choice of footwear for Sunday’s game against the Raptors was extra intentional and sentimental.

During pregame warmups, Curry rocked the “Northern Lights” Nike Kobe 11, the shoes that late NBA legend Kobe Bryant wore during his final All-Star Game in 2016 in Toronto.

He kept the sneakers on throughout the game, too.

It isn’t the first time Curry paid homage to Bryant.

In fact, during his first day of sneaker free agency after parting ways with Under Armour, Curry wore Mambacita Kobe 6 Nike shoes while warming up before the Warriors’ game against the San Antonio Spurs on Nov. 14.

After that game, Curry explained his decision.

“I know it’s weird seeing me in anything else other than my own shoes, but just the idea of what he meant — I’ve talked about Kobe a lot. That specific pair, I think it speaks for itself, what it means,” Curry told reporters after the win. “Other than that, just something I wanted to take advantage of that moment and pay tribute. I think it gave me some good energy tonight.”

Earlier Sunday, Curry arrived to Scotiabank Arena wearing rapper Drake’s Nike NOCTA Glide.

It’s clear Curry is having fun with his free agency.

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Canadiens: Back At It In Tampa

After resuming training on Saturday, the Montreal Canadiens will play their first post-Christmas game when they take on the Tampa Bay Lightning at Amalie Arena this afternoon. While the Habs eased themselves back in yesterday, the Bolts were taking on the Florida Panthers in a battle of Florida. It turned out to be a spirited tilt, with 136 penalty minutes handed out. Jon Cooper’s men still prevailed 4-2, but it certainly wasn’t a walk in the park.

Meanwhile, the Canadiens provided an update on Jake Evans, who will be missing four to six weeks because of a lower-body injury. Evans had left the previous game just minutes in after a knee-on-knee collision. In a way, the worst has been averted since he’s not going under the knife, but knee injuries (if it is a knee injury) are tricky to recover from, and it does happen that a conventional approach turns out not to be enough. Fingers crossed this is not the case here.

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As for Alexandre Texier, who also left the last game after being shaken up in a hard collision, he was practicing and wearing a regular jersey, which means he will be available this afternoon. In Evans’ absence, the lines at practice were as follows:

Cole Caufield – Nick Suzuki - Zach Bolduc

Ivan Demidov – Oliver Kapanen – Juraj Slafkovsky

Texier – Phillip Danault – Josh Anderson

Owen Beck/Samuel Blais – Joe Veleno – Brandon Gallagher

On the backend, the pairings were the same as they were before the break:

Mike Matheson – Noah Dobson

Lane Hutson – Alexandre Carrier

Arber Xhekaj/Jayden Struble – Adam Engstrom

With Samuel Montembeault being officially recalled, Martin St-Louis wasted no time in announcing that Jacob Fowler would be getting the start against the Lightning. The Florida native posted a 6-2 win against the Boston Bruins on the eve of the Christmas break and had shut out the Pittsburgh Penguins in his previous start, so the coach has decided to ride the hot hand for now. Still, he did mention that the plan was to get Montembeault some game action soon.

It’s the second year in a row that the traditional road trip over the holidays includes some uncertainty in net. Last year, Jakub Dobes made his debut in this road trip after Cayden Primeau was assigned to the Laval Rocket. The Czech goalie never went back down; it remains to be seen if the result will be the same for Fowler.

Fowler has never taken on the Lightning, while Montembeault has a 3-3-1 record against Tampa Bay with a 2.99 goal-against-average and a .898 save percentage. As for Dobes, he has a 0-1-0 record with an 8.80 GAA and a .727 SV against the hosts.

At the other end of the ice, Andrei Vasilevskiy, who was in the net on Saturday against the Panthers, has a 16-3-2 record against the Habs with a 2.08 GAA and a .931 SV. As for backup Jonas Johansson, he’s 3-2-0 with a 3.81 GAA and a .872 SV and was in the net for the only game between the two sides so far this season.

Up front, the Canadiens will need to keep a close eye on the usual suspects. Nikita Kucherov has 46 points in just 39 games against the Sainte-Flanelle, while Brayden Point has 26 points in 30 games, and Jake Guentzel has 23 points in 19 duels.

Meanwhile, the Canadiens have only three players who have reached double digits in points against the Florida outfit: Gallagher with 19 points in 38 games, Danault with 14 points in 27 games, and Suzuki with 13 points in 19 games.

Today’s game will be the second of four duels planned this season, with the other two taking place on March 31 and April 9. Tampa has won seven of the last 10 tilts between the divisional rivals, but it hasn’t been that long since the Habs grabbed a win at Amalie Arena. Montreal won there on December 29 by a score of 5-2 with Montembeault in the net.

The game is set for 5:00 PM, and you can catch it on The Spot, TSN2, and RDS. After the tilt, the Canadiens will take a short flight to Fort Lauderdale in readiness for their next game, a battle with the Panthers on December 30.


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Flyers Could Terminate Struggling Young Defender

If things don't shake out the way the Philadelphia Flyers might hope, they could find themselves a little lighter on their salary cap hit with a contract termination.

Though they started the season without him, the Flyers have turned to Emil Andrae on defense and haven't really looked back.

That decision, of course, has had consequences, leading both Egor Zamula and Adam Ginning, who made the NHL roster to start the season, back to the AHL Lehigh Valley Phantoms.

Zamula, unlike Ginning, had become an established NHL player over the last few seasons, but strings of poor performances has seen him play himself off the Flyers... perhaps for good.

According to NHL insider Elliotte Friedman, Zamula's camp has offered the Flyers an opportunity for a mutual contract termination, though the Flyers would prefer to trade the struggling 25-year-old defender for an asset.

"One player who I think is trying to work out something. . . is Egor Zamula. He was sent on waivers earlier this year, he's at $1.7 million for this year and next [sic]. He's represented by Alex Texier's agent who terminated his deal so he could sign as a free agent in Montreal," Friedman reported in his most recent "Saturday Headlines" segment for Sportsnet.

Flyers Defenseman Benched After Struggles, Agent's Criticism of TeamFlyers Defenseman Benched After Struggles, Agent's Criticism of TeamJust two games into the season, <a href="https://thehockeynews.com/nhl/philadelphia-flyers">Philadelphia Flyers</a> defenseman Egor Zamula has already been benched for his continued struggles.

"I believe the offer is there to do this too. I think there'd be interest at a lower number. Philly prefers a trade for a player who can help them at the AHL level or later this year in the NHL, but Zamula's going to be a name to watch because he cleared waivers and he is an NHL defenseman, just not at the number right now for Philadelphia."

Zamula is a pending restricted free agent at the end of this season and, as Friedman noted, carries a $1.7 million cap hit this season. That's a bit rich for a team that would like to add a depth defender on waivers, especially if that team is a contender of some sort.

As of now, the Flyers are saving $1.15 million by stowing the 6-foot-3 Russian in the AHL, but can move his full $1.7 million off their books via trade or the aforementioned contract termination offer from Zamula's camp.

The end of Zamula's tenure with the Flyers has felt almost inevitable since head coach Rick Tocchet called for him to pick up the pace in the preseason and the results, of course, never followed.

Previously, it was reported that the Calgary Flames had trade interest in Zamula.

Antetokounmpo returns to lead Bucks past Bulls

Antetokounmpo shoots for the Milkaukee Bucks
Giannis Antetokounmpo had missed the previous eight games through injury [Getty Images]

Giannis Antetokounmpo scored a game-high 29 points on his return from injury as the Milwaukee Bucks earned a 112-103 victory over the Chicago Bulls.

Antetokounmpo had missed eight games with a right calf strain, with the Bucks losing six of those matches.

The defeat for Chicago ended their five-game winning streak, but they still sit ninth and two places above Bucks in the Eastern Conference.

Elsewhere, Victor Wembanyama also made his return from injury, but his San Antonio Spurs fell to a 127-114 defeat by the Utah Jazz.

Wembanyama scored 32 points in his first start since 14 November, but 29 points from Lauri Markkanen and 28 from Keyonte George were enough for the Jazz to end Spurs' eight-game winning streak.

Anthony Black scored a career-high 38 points as the Orlando Magic beat the Denver Nuggets 127-126 despite another triple-double by Nikola Jokic.

With 21 rebounds and 12 assists, Jokic earned the 180th triple-double of his career, putting him just one behind Oscar Robertson for the second most in history.

The New York Knicks beat the Atlanta Hawks 128-125, while the Sacramento Kings secured just their second win in eight games with a 113-107 victory over the Dallas Mavericks.

Fantasy Basketball Week 11 Schedule Primer: Giannis Antetokounmpo is back!

With Christmas in the rearview mirror, the next major holiday on the calendar is New Year's Day. The good news for fantasy managers is that the five-game slate does not have a game that begins before 6 pm Eastern, so those who may have had a little too much fun the night prior will have time to set their rosters. However, there is a 1 pm Eastern game on New Year's Eve as part of a nine-game schedule, with the Warriors visiting the Hornets. That qualifies as the lone scheduling quirk for Week 11, so let's take a look at the schedule and some key storylines.

Week 11 Games Played

4 Games: ATL, BNK, CHA, CHI, CLE, DEN, GSW, IND, MIA, MIL, MIN, NOR, NYK, OKC, ORL, PHX, POR, SAC, SAS, WAS

3 Games: BOS, DAL, DET, HOU, LAC, LAL, MEM, PHI, TOR, UTA

Week 11 Back-to-backs

Sunday (Week 10)-Monday: GSW, OKC, POR, TOR, WAS

Monday-Tuesday: None

Tuesday-Wednesday: None

Wednesday-Thursday: None

Thursday-Friday: BKN, SAC

Friday-Saturday: ATL, CHA, CHI, GSW, NYK, POR

Saturday-Sunday: MIA, MIN, SAS

Sunday-Monday (Week 12): DEN, DET, OKC, PHX

Week 11 Storylines of Note

- Tuesday and Thursday are the light game days.

Unlike Week 10, which included a Christmas Eve without games, there will be action on all seven days of Week 11. Tuesday and Thursday are the light days, with four games on the slate for Tuesday and five on Thursday. The Celtics, Pistons, Clippers, 76ers and Kings are among the teams that will be active on both days, with Sacramento being the only one that will have to navigate a back-to-back (Thursday/Friday).

In addition to the Kings, Brooklyn also has a back-to-back on Thursday/Friday, which will likely impact how Cam Thomas is used as he returns from a hamstring injury. Thomas made his return to action in Saturday's game against the Timberwolves, his first appearance since November 5. In the case of the 76ers, back-to-backs have not been the only determining factor regarding Joel Embiid's availability. Philadelphia plays three games without a back-to-back in Week 11, starting with the Grizzlies on Tuesday.

- Miami and Minnesota finish Week 11 with Saturday/Sunday back-to-backs.

The Heat and Timberwolves are the only teams that will have to deal with a back-to-back to end Week 11, with the former playing three games over the final four days of Week 11. With Tyler Herro recently being joined on the injury report by Bam Adebayo, who's dealing with a lower back injury, the Heat have been left to rely on some low-rostered options. Pelle Larsson started Friday's win over the Hawks and scored 21 points, a reminder of what he's capable of when allowed to start. The absences also affect Kel'el Ware, Jaime Jaquez Jr. and Nikola Jović, who boast higher fantasy ceilings.

Regarding the Timberwolves, Mike Conley may be the only rotation player affected by the back-to-back. However, his fantasy value this season has been relatively low, so there isn't much to be concerned about there. Anthony Edwards and Jaden McDaniels have dealt with injuries recently and would be the players of note as Week 11 draws to a close.

- Golden State, Oklahoma City and Portland have two back-to-backs to navigate.

Interestingly, the Trail Blazers are the only one of these three teams that will play both games of one of its back-to-backs during Week 11 (Friday/Saturday). The Warriors and Thunder have two wraparound back-to-backs, with the first beginning on the final day of Week 10 and the second ending with the opening day of Week 12. Golden State's Stephen Curry was not available for either game of the Warriors' most recent back-to-back (December 6-7), and he sat out the second game of the team's November 18-19 back-to-back.

Oklahoma City's Chet Holmgren and Isaiah Hartenstein have also sat out games recently due to back-to-backs, but that hasn't been an issue for Shai Gilgeous-Alexander or Jalen Williams. Portland is an interesting case because the team is awaiting the returns of Jrue Holiday and Jerami Grant, while Robert Williams III has not yet reached the point where he can play both games of back-to-backs. However, the Time Lord has not been particularly impactful as a fantasy option when healthy, since Donovan Clingan is locked in as the starting center.

- How many games will fantasy managers get out of Giannis Antetokounmpo?

After a little over three weeks out with a strained calf, Antetokounmpo returned to action on Saturday against the Bulls. He played 25 minutes, finishing with 29 points, eight rebounds, one assist, one steal, one block and one three-pointer. The good news for fantasy managers and Bucks fans is that Milwaukee's four-game Week 11 schedule does not include a back-to-back. And if Giannis can play all four games, this could be a massive week for him, even if he isn't allowed to go past 30 minutes.

The Bucks play two games against the Hornets and one apiece against the Wizards and Kings. While Charlotte ranks 24th in defensive rating, the Kings (28th) and Wizards (30th) have been even worse. Bobby Portis and Kyle Kuzma are the players most impacted by the availability of Milwaukee's best player, but the usage rates of Kevin Porter Jr. and Ryan Rollins will also be affected. In the case of Rollins, Antetokounmpo's return meant that he was back in the starting lineup, raising his fantasy ceiling.

- Will Mark Williams managers have to account for a suspension?

The good news for the Suns center on Saturday was that he played both games of a back-to-back for the first time this season. Williams was used in a reserve role to help with the minutes restriction. Unfortunately, what also kept his minutes down was a third-quarter ejection after getting into a fight with Pelicans guard Jose Alvarado. Phoenix begins a four-game Week 11 in the nation's capital on Monday, and they end it with a Saturday/Sunday back-to-back against the Thunder and Rockets. If Williams has to miss time due to a suspension, the door opens for Oso Ighodaro (who started on Saturday) and Nick Richards.

- The Lakers will navigate a three-game week without Austin Reaves.

Reaves aggravated a prior calf injury during Thursday's loss to the Rockets and will be out for at least four weeks. Does that make Marcus Smart a player worth rolling the dice on, or should Reaves managers look elsewhere? Based on his production, Smart isn't a lock to provide reliable fantasy value during the Lakers' three-game Week 11. However, with the Lakers being among the worst defensive teams in the NBA, he'll be on the floor a lot.

Two other players to watch due to those defensive issues are Jake LaRavia and Jarred Vanderbilt. Rui Hachimura does not offer much value as a rebounder, which may open the door for LaRavia or Vanderbilt to play more out of necessity.

Warriors' Seth Curry out at least 2 weeks with sciatic nerve-related injury

Warriors' Seth Curry out at least 2 weeks with sciatic nerve-related injury originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

The Warriors will be without the newest Curry addition for a little while.

Seth Curry, who signed with Golden State this season, underwent MRIs on his lower back and pelvis that confirmed his injury is sciatic nerve-related, the team announced Sunday morning.

Curry will be re-evaluated in two weeks.

The younger brother of Steph, Seth has missed the past three games with the sciatic nerve issue.

Curry rejoined the Warriors in early December, leading to anticipation and excitement about a Curry Bros NBA union.

But the brothers have hardly played together on the floor.

Seth has played just two games for Golden State, dropping 14 points in one game and going scoreless in the second.

It now will be a little while longer until Dub Nation sees Seth and Steph play alongside one another as the former fully recovers.

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‘Everyone is still human’: Travis Head sends message of support to Ben Duckett

  • Australian backs Ashes rival over video controversy

  • ‘I reached out to Ducky to see if he was going alright’

Travis Head has revealed he sent a message of support to his Ashes rival Ben Duckett after the England batter found himself on the end of a social media backlash.

Unverified footage appearing to show an intoxicated Duckett in a tetchy late-night conversation with a fan during the team’s mid-series break in Noosa placed an unwanted spotlight on the opener.

Continue reading...

Blackhawks Snap Losing Streak With Quality Win Over Stars

The Chicago Blackhawks snapped their six-game losing streak on Saturday night. After traveling to Texas earlier in the day, the Blackhawks took on the Dallas Stars. Coming off a bad run entering the holiday break, playing against this elite Stars team on the same day as traveling was a tough break. 

It doesn’t make it easier that it’s another game without both Connor Bedard and Frank Nazar. Ilya Mikheyev also missed the game due to the birth of his child, so the Blackhawks called up Landon Slaggert. Everything was stacked against the Blackhawks entering the contest. 

However, the Blackhawks found a way to overcome that adversity by defeating the Stars in a shootout. Rookie forward Nick Lardis was the hero as he scored the shootout-winning goal. Ryan Donato also scored in the shootout.

During regulation, Tyler Bertuzzi scored twice and Jason Dickinson once to contribute to the 3-3 tie that went past regulation. Alex Vlasic, who was very strong in all three zones, assisted on both Bertuzzi goals. 

In goal, Arvid Soderblom was given the unexpected start following the break. He played very well as he made 28 saves on 31 shots. Some of those stops were of the high-danger variety, which allowed the Hawks to stay in it.

With a back-to-back situation looming, this was a big performance by Arvid Soderblom, which rewards Jeff Blashill’s decision-making. 

If you had to pick apart one thing about the Blackhawks game, it is that they let Mikko Rantanen run wild out there. He finished with one goal and two assists, contributing to all three Stars goals, but it could have been much worse than that if it weren't for Soderblom and the goalposts. 

Still, now the Blackhawks can let the memory of the losing streak evade them as they focus on what's ahead on the schedule. 

Watch Every Chicago Goal

What’s Next For The Blackhawks?

The Blackhawks are back in action on Sunday night, where they will take on the Pittsburgh Penguins. This match at the United Center will see a legend like Sidney Crosby battle against this young Hawks team. 

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Where'd All Edmonton's Excitement Go?

From an entertainment standpoint, Saturday night's Oilers-Flames game in Calgary was kind of disappointing.

Edmonton lost 3-2 in regulation. Connor McDavid extended his point streak to 12 games. Evan Bouchard scored on the power play. Blake Coleman, Yegor Sharangovich, and Ryan Lomberg scored for Calgary. Connor Ingram made 29 saves. It was a perfectly fine hockey game.

But where was the spice? Where was the chaos? Where was the intensity we saw from the Edmonton Oilers four days ago?

No real fighting. Sure, guys were getting shoved around—Ryan Lomberg chopped up a conversation with Darnell Nurse in warmups, Adam Klapka tried making statements with a few deep skates over the red line—but it's still the NHL. Players talk in warmups. They skate around. That's not exactly entertainment.

No Trent Frederic doing what Trent Frederic was brought to the Oilers to do. Tuesday he fought Kevin Bahl after a blindside hit on Zach Hyman. Saturday? Nothing. He dressed. He played 7:15. He wasn't a factor.

Four days after a 5-1 beatdown that featured Leon Draisaitl's hat trick, Connor McDavid's five assists, and Mackenzie Weegar getting kicked out for bashing his stick against the glass in protest, you might expect a little more from the visiting team.

Cole Hutson (Quinn Hutson’s Brother)  Rejoins Team USA After Scary InjuryCole Hutson (Quinn Hutson’s Brother) Rejoins Team USA After Scary InjuryAfter a scary puck incident, Cole Hutson (brother of Oilers' Quinn Hutson) is out of the hospital and back with Team USA, bringing welcome relief and good news.

Now don't get me wrong, this was far from a boring game. But it wasn't quite what we were hoping for.

The moral of the story is that had we had nothing to compare this to, it'd actually be a really good game. Calgary came out fast and energetic. They scored first through Sharangovich at 7:00 of the first period. Edmonton responded with Bouchard's power play goal at 8:36. The game stayed tight. Calgary took the lead on Lomberg's steal and breakaway goal at 3:28 of the second. Blake Coleman made it 3-1 at 12:31 of the third. McDavid cut it to 3-2 with 4:32 left, but that was as close as Edmonton got.

From Calgary's perspective, this is exactly the kind of game the Flames need to play. They were fast. They were physical without taking stupid penalties. They defended well. Dustin Wolf made 29 saves. They protected a lead against one of the league's best offences and walked away with two points.

It's The Best Time Of Year For Hockey FansIt's The Best Time Of Year For Hockey FansIf you're a hockey fan, this is the best time of year. Period.

If they play like they did Saturday night every night, then we should all be worried. The Flames looked structured, committed, and dangerous. They scored timely goals. They didn't collapse when McDavid started pushing late. They earned the win.

But good news is they don't play like that every night. Calgary is 16-18-4 and outside the playoff picture for a reason. Saturday was them at their best, responding after getting embarrassed at Rogers Place four days earlier.

"Coming out of three days off, we wanted to have a little better start than we did," Bouchard said afterward. "But I thought as the game went on, we got better."

Isaac Howard's Ideal TimelineIsaac Howard's Ideal TimelineThe question hovering over Isaac Howard isn’t whether he’s good enough for the NHL. It’s whether there’s actually room for him, and whether six weeks in Bakersfield is enough time to understand just how fast the show really moves.

Andrew Mangiapane, a former Flame, had basically the same thing to say.

"I think their intensity was kind of up there today. I think it also falls on us that our start was a little slow and sluggish. It's a couple of days off, and all that you don't want to use as an excuse because they're going through the same thing."

That's the problem. Both teams were coming off the holiday break. Both had three days off. Calgary came out with energy. Edmonton didn't match it until the third period when it was too late.

"We did get off to a slow start. We had a push in the third period," summed up Kris Knoblauch. "They were hanging on, and we just couldn't find that tying goal. Some goal posts and chances, but we weren't as sharp as we were before the break."

Oilers Officially Announce Plans to Terminate David Tomasek's ContractOilers Officially Announce Plans to Terminate David Tomasek's ContractDavid Tomasek's NHL tenure ends as the Edmonton Oilers will terminate his contract, clearing cap space for his return to Europe.

So there you go; not as sharp. Tuesday's game spoiled us. Five goals. A hat trick. Five assists from one player. Fights. Misconducts. Players getting kicked out. Complete domination from start to finish.

Saturday was just hockey. Good hockey, even. But after Tuesday's circus, good hockey felt a little flat.

The Oilers went 1-for-3 on the power play after going 3-for-6 on Tuesday. McDavid had one goal instead of five assists. Draisaitl was held off the scoresheet. No fights broke out. No one got kicked out. Calgary didn't fall apart. Edmonton didn't dominate.

Can The Money Saved On Tomasek Be Used On a Game-Changer in Goal?Can The Money Saved On Tomasek Be Used On a Game-Changer in Goal?The Oilers' placing Tomasek on waivers frees up $1.2 million. Could this cap space lure Marc-André Fleury to the team if he comes out of retirement?

It was a 3-2 game that stayed competitive until the final five minutes. That should be entertaining enough. But context matters, and the context is that four days ago we watched these two teams produce one of the most lopsided Battle of Alberta games in recent memory.

Saturday was fine. It was respectable. It was a game both teams could take positives from.

But where'd all the excitement go? Because it wasn't around in that 3-2 loss in regulation to the Flames.

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Golden Knights Squander Pair Of Two-Goal Leads, Lose To Colorado, 6-5, In Shootout

LAS VEGAS -- Another overtime. Another loss for the Golden Knights.

Vegas blew a pair of two-goal leads against the league's top team Saturday night, and the Colorado Avalanche made the Knights pay with a 6-5 shootout win.

Nathan MacKinnon and Martin Necas scored in the shootout, while Mitch Marner was the only one to score for Vegas, which lost for the fourth time in five games.

It marked Vegas' 15th time it played past regulation, while it dropped to 4-11 in overtime and shootout games. The Golden Knights are now 1-5 in shootouts this season.

Five different skaters scored for the Knights, while 12 collected points.

Alexander Holtz, Ivan Barbashev, Ben Hutton, Brett Howden and Colton Sissons scored in regulation for Vegas. Carter Hart made 33 saves and dropped to 4-1-3 since making his debut on Dec. 2.

"We should have been able to close the game out, recognizing, okay, now it's 5-4 (and) the goalie is out," Vegas coach Bruce Cassidy said. "We're usually pretty good in those scenarios. There's a simple breakdown. They got the puck in the middle. That should never happen. So we'll address that.

"After that, overtime, we never got control. We try to challenge people one-on-one in overtime, and unless you're flying, that's a tough way to go, because if you lose possession, now you're chasing it again. So I think a bit of our overtime mentality has to change a little too, when to attack, when not to.

"The shootout is the shootout. I don't know what to say there. We just haven't been able to finish in that."

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KEY MOMENT

MacKinnon's game-tying goal at the 8:21 mark of the third period was Colorado's first that didn't deflect off a Golden Knight, and a statement that the Avalanche weren't going away that easily. After Hart stopped Sam Malinski's shot from the blue line, the puck squirted free and MacKinnon was there to punch it home and tie the game, giving Colorado life in the third period with the game tied at 4-all.

KEY STAT

5 - All five of the Golden Knights' goals were at even strength. While Vegas had its six-game streak with at least one power-play goal come to an end, Cassidy was pleased with the fact his troops were able to put five in the net during 5-on-5 against the league's top team, which arrived in Vegas leading the league in goals against per game (2.11).

"They're clearly a better team than we are right now, you can see that with their record and their push," Cassidy said. "But I also feel like we're walking out of here tonight, and couple of things change, and where we get the two points, right?"

"No one feels good when you lose, I don't. We'll take the positives. We got to fix some things."

WHAT A KNIGHT

Holtz scored his first goal of the season and also had an assist. Playing in just his ninth game this season, Holtz made his presence felt early with the game's first goal 2:43 into the opening period. Holtz had two shots and also blocked two shots, in what was arguably his best performance of the season.

"Yeah, he was feeling it, I think," Hutton said about Holtz. "He scored early, he got his confidence and he was flying out there. Confidence goes a long way, especially with a guy like that. And I was happy for him tonight."

UP NEXT

The Golden Knights continue their four-game homestand by hosting the Minnesota Wild on Monday night.

PHOTO CAPTION: Colorado Avalanche center Martin Necas (88) collides with Vegas Golden Knights goaltender Carter Hart (79) after scoring a goal during a shoot out at T-Mobile Arena.

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Avalanche Rally Late, Edge Golden Knights 6–5 in Shootout

The Colorado Avalanche earned a 6–5 shootout victory over the Vegas Golden Knights on Tuesday night, overcoming multiple deficits in a high-scoring affair at T-Mobile Arena. 

How It Went Down

Vegas opened the scoring in the first period when Alexander Holtz recorded his first goal of the season to give the Golden Knights a 1–0 lead. No additional goals were scored in the opening frame. Colorado controlled much of the play during the period, finishing with an edge in puck possession and expected goals, but was unable to convert on its opportunities and entered the intermission trailing by one.

The second period featured a rapid exchange of scoring. Colorado tied the game early in the frame when Samuel Girard was credited with a goal following a deflection. Martin Nečas later added a second goal for the Avalanche after the puck redirected off Kaedan Korczak and past goaltender Carter Hart, briefly leveling the score at 2–2.

Vegas responded shortly thereafter to regain the lead. Ben Hutton and Brett Howden then scored within roughly thirty seconds of one another, extending the Golden Knights’ advantage to two goals. Vegas carried that lead into the third period.

Martin Nečas opened the third period by scoring his second goal of the night, pulling Colorado within one. Nathan MacKinnon later contributed on the tying goal, ensuring Sam Malinski’s shot crossed the goal line to even the score at 4–4.

Vegas regained the lead with four minutes remaining in regulation when Colton Sissons scored to make it 5–4. Colorado responded late, as Artturi Lehkonen converted with the extra attacker on the ice after goaltender Scott Wedgewood was pulled, sending the game to overtime tied at 5–5.

The Avs Won A Shootout

Before we get too ahead of ourselves, the Avalanche did have some juicy opportunities in overtime, and Brock Nelson one-timed a pass that clanged off the post.

After both teams failed to score in the additional frame, the shootout, the achilles heal of the Avalanche this season, appeared before them once again looking to keep their curse alive.

Colorado ultimately brought its shootout drought to an end. Martin Nečas converted for the Avalanche with a well-placed attempt against Carter Hart, who finished the night with 33 saves. Vegas responded immediately, however, as Mitch Marner scored on the ensuing shot against Scott Wedgewood, who made 20 saves on the night in what could be described as an off night.

While Colorado’s defense was pressured at times—leading to several odd-man rushes—Wedgewood made a number of timely saves that kept the Avalanche within reach throughout the game. He closed the shootout by stopping the final attempt, securing the win and officially snapping Colorado’s shootout skid.

The Avalanche extended their winning streak to seven games and have now earned points in 27 of their last 28 contests, posting a 23-1-4 record over that span. Meanwhile, Vegas has dropped four of its last five games.

Next Game

The Avalanche return home to Ball Arena for the penultimate game of 2025 as they take on Darcy Kuemper and the Los Angeles Kings. Coverage begins at 7 p.m. local time. 

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Observations From Blues' 3-2 Win Vs. Predators

ST. LOUIS – A team that had their number in two previous meetings this month alone, the St. Louis Blues needed a better effort – and result – against the Nashville Predators, who have been coming on as of late.

And with the Blues coming off a four-day Christmas break, nobody ever knows how a team will play after having a lengthy break.

The Blues were able to play a grind-it-out game and use a two-goal effort from Pavel Buchnevich, and Brayden Schenn scored for his 700th NHL point, and Joel Hofer made 29 saves in a 3-2 win against the Predators at Enterprise Center on Saturday.

The Blues (15-16-8) moved two points ahead of the Predators (16-17-4) in a bunched up group of teams chasing one of two spots in the Western Conference wild card.

Let’s tackle Saturday’s game observations:

* A strong start was needed – Let’s face it. In two previous matchups against the Predators, who have outscored the Blues 12-4 in games on Dec. 11 in Nashville (7-2) and Dec. 15 in St. Louis (5-2), Nashville has had the better jump and had played with the lead for the majority of those games.

The Blues’ first period was sharp and much needed and they carried a 2-1 lead into the second intermission.

The Predators are a heavy forechecking side, and the Blues didn’t allow them – at least early on – to establish a territorial edge.

“Our first period I thought was our best period in the game,” Blues coach Jim Montgomery said. “We were fast, we were good in transition offensively and defensively. From scoring chances we keep, they were not exact maybe, but they were pretty exact, 8-2 in the first. That was a pleasant surprise after a four-day break.”

In Nashville, the Blues were down 2-0 midway through the opening period and had to chase the result. And four nights later in this building, they fell behind 27 seconds into the game, and even though they tied the game, they fell behind 1:23 into the second and chased the rest of that game.

Saturday was their first lead against this team.

“It was all about the start tonight,” Schenn said. “I think the past few times we’ve played them, we haven’t came out the way we needed to and we’re chasing the game. I thought tonight, was it our ‘A’ game? No, but we played hard. There were spurts in that game. I thought we had a good first, parts of a good second and played good defense in the third.”

Robert Thomas, who had two assists, said, “Any time you’re coming out of the brwak, first periods are usually sloppy. But we came out with purpose and played well and really set the tone for the game. Starts are so important, something we’re really emphasizing on. It’s nice to feel good about yourself coming out of the first period.”

* Buchnevich needs to score – Let’s face it, it hasn’t been a season thus far that Buchnevich has been satisfied with, at least from an offensive standpoint.

He’s up to seven goals on the season in 39 games, which isn’t great by any stretch, but he now has five the past 15 games after just two – in back-to-back games – the first 24. And Saturday marked his first multi-goal game of the season.

His first of the game put the Blues up for good at 2-1 at 18:14 of the first period when a little bit of good fortune came his way off a 2-on-1 in which Buchnevich tried passing to Jake Neighbours, but Nashville defenseman Roman Josi went down to block it, the puck came right back to Buchnevich, who put the backhand into the top half of the net, pulling a monkey off his back with his first goal in nine games:

“Time will tell,” Buchnevich said. “Time will tell.”

And his second, which ultimately was the game-winner at 4:40 of the third that made it 3-1, it was a perfectly-executed play with Philip Broberg’s outlet pass to Thomas, who dropped it to Buchnevich inside the blue line. Buchnevich carried the puck into the slot, and Juuse Saros made the first save, but Buchnevich followed his rebound and patiently outwaited the Nashville goalie before calmly lifting a shot into the far side of the net:

“It was a muffin shot before and I got kind of a rebound myself,” Buchnevich said. “Can’t score on first shot, so I just take (the) rebound.”

“Second goal was awesome,” Thomas said. “That’s something that you can kind of see him go he’s getting his confidence back and scoring instead of looking to pass all the time. Just having the patience to kind of flick it in that corner is a great sight for everyone to see and happy for him to get two tonight.”

The Blues’ top line with Neighbours, Thomas and Buchnevich needed a game in which it helped carry the load and got it.

“That line was really good for us,” Montgomery said.

* Hofer played well, but got away with a near fatal error – Hofer, who started his eighth game the past 14, was locked in and playing well. He was seeing pucks again and not allowing any juicy rebounds with Predators forwards crowding the crease and crashing his net. And as customary to teams nowadays, the Predators were doing everything possible that when they were putting pucks into the Blues’ zone, they were doing their best to make them hard rims. But Hofer was getting to most, if not all of them.

However, he has a penchant of sometimes either holding onto the puck too long or making a risky but in his eyes, confident play. But he was playing with fire on this night and got lucky he didn’t get burnt by a particular rim he corralled but then trying to play the puck through the middle of the ice, old friend Ryan O’Reilly, who is as shrewd and sharp with his hand-eye coordination, knocked down a wrister outlet right in front for Steven Stamkos to slam home that would have tied the game 2-2 at 17:07 of the second period.

But … but … hold on. The Blues challenged for offside. Here comes the mulligan, and it wasn’t even close.

On the entry, Stamkos was clearly offside, and the goal would be wiped off and back to 2-1, a lead in which the Blues would carry into the third before holding off.

“Yeah, we thought it was (an easy challenge),” Montgomery said. “We were surprised, but maybe they didn’t understand. Maybe it took a while for them to catch on that the guy had come back out, so it wasn’t a delay anymore.”

Hofer, according to stats, had four defensive zone turnovers trying to relay pucks, and it would have been five had the goal not been wiped off. It’s good to have a solid puck-playing goalie. But it’s also good to have one that isn’t as risky at times.

“We’re going to trust him and ‘Binner’ when playing the puck because they make good decisions,” Montgomery said. “Unfortunately if you’re a goaltender and you don’t make the right decision, everybody knows it. There’s no one behind you. But he’s really good with the puck, we encourage him to play the puck as much as he can and he wants to. He’s a very athletic goaltender.”

* Third period was not with an attack mindset – The Predators at times seemed to smell blood in the water when it came to attacking the Blues.

The offensive zone possession time would up being 9:14 for the Predators and around 4:30 for the Blues. Not good by any stretch, but it was a lot of third period stuff when the Blues had a lead, and unlike the 6-2 win against the Florida Panthers on Dec. 20, they sat back and just played to protect the lead for the most part instead of managing the flow of the game at their pace.

“We come out in the second and we had some good moments and we had some poor moments, just not managing the puck well enough, things that you don’t want to see that bad habits would come back after not playing for four days, not even being on the ice,” Montgomery said. ‘We got through that, and then the third period, I thought we gave up too much. We just sat back. When you see forwards skating backwards for us and three at the same time, that’s not good. We’re not puck-pressuring, we’re not doing the things we need to do to not only defend a lead but extend a lead.”

The Blues are now 12-1-1 when leading after two periods. They should be comfortable in that position, but there needs to be more reps in that department.

“We’re not a confident team in that time of the game right now, and we’ve got to build towards that,” Montgomery said. “We haven’t been in that situation all that much and we’ve got to develop the confidence to be the way out for each other. The empty-net goals, we could have at least five by now. It looks like we just panic and throw the puck down for an icing.”

* Congrats to Schenn – Schenn’s road to 700 points took 1,061 games, and it came on the power play that got the ball rolling at 8:45 of the first period, a power-play goal that made it 1-0 on a tipped shot at the right side of the net off a Cam Fowler wrister:

“It means you’ve got to keep going,” Schenn said of the milestone. “That’s kind of the mentality you have, you’re never satisfied but obviously an accomplishment you don’t get without an opportunity from coaches and being on good teams, good teammates, good linemates. That’s the reality of it. Just fortunate and lucky and grateful for playing this league as long as I have.”

* Shorthanded goal was a result of a bad mindset with the power play – It was a chance to put the game on ice.

A high-sticking penalty on O’Reilly with 9:17 remaining was the chance to make it a three-goal game and end it.

Somehow, the Blues used it as a hand grenade, and they were all discombobulated in Nashville’s attack mindset down two goals, and Fedor Svechkov made it a 3-2 game with 7:57 to play when the Blues were changing and Erik Haula came off the boards on a give-and-go and Svechkov fired a beautiful shot into the top right corner and make it a game instead the rest of the way:

“Obviously you’d like to have that PK goal back that they scored, but ‘Hofe’ was great there tonight and we were able to close it out 6-on-5,” Schenn said.

* Broberg continues to play big minutes – It was another ho-hum game for Broberg.

Not only are his outlet passes exceptional, as evidenced by the one he put to Thomas that led to Buchnevich’s eventual game-winner, but he’s playing in all important minutes.

The defenseman finished with 22:58 time on ice and was a plus-2 in the game with a team-leading four of 19 blocked shots.

“He was incredible tonight,” Thomas said. “He really set the tone for the team, he was skating so well, he made a ton of plays. I should have buried one on the first shift. That was a great play by him and it’s nice seeing guys like that feeling good, trust themselves.”

Montgomery added, “He’s a young man that really pushes himself to try and be the best he can be every day. And we’re seeing that this year that every game. He’s been excellent for us, but he’s had some games where first period wasn’t very good, but he wills himself to be good in the second. And he’s becoming a tough-minded pro that doesn’t accept mediocrity.”

* Return of Kyrou, Snuggerud should balance offense – Jordan Kyrou and Jimmy Snuggerus each returned from injury on Saturday, and each will eventually provide some balanced offense.

Kyrou had his chances but didn’t bury them but played 17:11 in the game and led the Blues with four shots on goal on six attempts; Snuggerud played 14:09 and had two hits.

“I think you saw it in the first period the addition of those two back into our lineup, the skill and the speed, our team played really fast in the first period,” Montgomery said. “I think it was in large part was because everyone was excited to have them back.”

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After punches were thrown, Suns' Mark Williams, Pelicans' Jose Alvarado were ejected

Que the suspensions from the league office.

New Orleans' Jose Alvarado and Phoenix's Mark Williams were ejected in the third quarter Saturday night. Everything started with the 6'0" Alvarado trying to get around a screen from the 7'1" Williams, which led to a little pushing, then quickly escalated into punches being thrown. After review both players were ejected.

Alvarado was called for the initial foul for pushing Williams, but the Suns' big man shoved Alvarado in the back, and things escalated from there. There were legitimate punches thrown and both men were ejected. The punches mean there will be suspensions for the players.

This was the second night of a back-to-back between the two teams, and the familiarity may have escalated the situation. Phoenix went on to get the win 123-114, sweeping the two games.