Senators acquire Mike Condon from Penguins

The Ottawa Senators have acquired goalie Mike Condon from the Pittsburgh Penguins in exchange for a fifth-round draft pick in 2017, Ottawa confirmed Wednesday.

As a rookie last season, the undrafted Condon filled the cratering void left by Carey Price when the Montreal Canadiens superstar went down with injury.

He made 51 starts for Montreal, authoring a .903 save percentage.

Condon's only appearance for Pittsburgh came in relief of Marc-Andre Fleury. He stopped all seven shots he faced, and didn't factor in the decision in a loss to the Nashville Predators.

The Senators' goaltending situation remains fluid with Andrew Hammond out with a lower-body injury and starter Craig Anderson needing the flexibility to be with his wife, who last week was diagnosed with cancer.

Condon provides the club with capable insurance, and likely means they'll continue carrying three goaltenders.

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Report: Ducks place Mason Raymond on unconditional waivers

The Anaheim Ducks have placed winger Mason Raymond on unconditional waivers, according to Bob McKenzie of TSN.

It's expected the move will result in a mutual agreement to terminate his contract with the club.

Raymond was on a one-year, $675,000 deal with the Ducks, recording no points in four games so far this season.

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3 unexpected individual stat leaders

The NHL season is officially three weeks old, and a quick look at the statistical leaderboard reveals a few unexpected names.

Here are three categories where players are stealing the spotlight seemingly out of nowhere.

Goals / Points

With a goal and an assist during Tuesday's win over Calgary, Chicago Blackhawks center Artem Anisimov jumped into first among all NHL players in points with 13.

The goal, a game-winning power-play marker, was Anisimov's seventh in 10 games, putting him in a tie for first with Steven Stamkos of the Tampa Bay Lightning.

Anisimov began the season with two pointless games in which he took four penalties, but he's been on quite a tear ever since.

Anisimov scored a career-high 20 goals for Chicago last season, with the 44 points he recorded in 2010-11 as a member of the New York Rangers serving as his personal single-season best.

Save percentage / Goals-against average

Jimmy Howard appeared on track to lose his starting job with the Detroit Red Wings, or get traded, in light of the emergence of Petr Mrazek as a high-end option in goal.

For the time being, Howard has silenced critics with a ridiculous performance, stopping 110 of 113 shots against for a save percentage of .973.

His 0.86 goals-against average is also tops among all goalies.

Howard explained what's working for him in an interview with Josh Cooper of Yahoo's Puck Daddy Blog:

It’s sort of revamping the way I play and to be less aggressive and sit back a little bit more, which is allowing me not only see plays develop but also watch how the puck’s coming off a guy’s stick and giving myself that extra split second to react to a shot rather than just being out of the net and hoping it hits you.

Howard has not recorded a single-season save percentage over .910 in any of the past three seasons, and while he's bound to regress at some point, it's yet to be seen just how long he can keep up this play.

Wins

Goalie wins aren't necessarily a great measure of individual success, but it would have been hard to predict that an Edmonton Oilers netminder would lead that category at any point.

That's exactly where Cam Talbot sits, however, with a record of 7-2-1.

It should be noted that Talbot has started all ten of Edmonton's games, and Oilers head coach Todd McLellan will be forced to give him a break at some point in order to keep him fresh when needed most.

For now, the Oilers are the Western Conference's first-place team, and Talbot has helped the club bank some points in hopes of a playoff push.

Talbot tied a career-high with 21 wins in 53 starts for the Oilers last season.

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Report: No hearing expected for de Haan following hit on Drouin

Calvin de Haan appears to be in the clear.

The New York Islanders defenseman will reportedly not face a hearing for elbowing Tampa Bay Lightning forward Jonathan Drouin in the head during Tuesday's game in Brooklyn.

Related - Drouin takes De Haan elbow to the face, leaves with injury

De Haan received a major penalty for interference on the play, as well as a subsequent major for fighting Ryan Callahan, who came to Drouin's defense.

Drouin was forced to leave the game and did not return.

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Sutter concludes Kings can’t win without goals or saves

Hockey's a pretty simple game, really.

Following Tuesday's 4-0 loss to Anaheim, Los Angeles Kings head coach Darryl Sutter pointed out as much, offering a pretty clear conclusion as to why his team lost.

"Not a recipe for success tonight when you don’t score and don’t get any saves," Sutter said, per Jon Rosen of LA Kings Insider.

The Kings were shut out for the third straight game, their first such scoring drought since 1968-69, their second season in the NHL. They now sit last in the NHL with a goal differential of minus-10, having scored 20 goals and allowing 30 through 10 games.

Compounding the lack of scoring is the fact Jonathan Quick remains out long term with a groin injury, and Sutter was especially critical of Peter Budaj, who was pulled in favor of Jack Campbell after allowing four goals on 16 shots.

"(Budaj) wasn’t very good. I mean, did you look at the shots and scoring chances? He wasn’t very good. That’s clear. I don’t pull goalies very often, but they’re expected to make some saves."

Sutter maintains his goal is to help the Kings stay in the playoff race despite Quick's injury, and said the first step towards turning things around is obvious.

"Score a goal."

The next chance to do just that comes Thursday against Pittsburgh.

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Landeskog promises Avalanche fans they won’t see another dud

Gabriel Landeskog performed his duties as captain of the Colorado Avalanche on Tuesday night.

First it was a scrap with Austin Watson 68 seconds into the third with his team facing a two-goal deficit and needing a spark. And when that failed, it was a promise to fans that the team will be better than its 5-1 loss to the Nashville Predators, which saw Colorado fall to the .500 mark after a promising 3-1 start.

"Tonight, it's got to be said that this was embarrassing, and I promise all the Avs fans out there that this is not going to happen at home again," Landeskog said, according to the team's official website.

Landeskog was sprung into action by the chaos that's crept into Colorado's game. Head coach Jared Bednar suggested the Avalanche are reacting to their opponent, rather than dictating the scheme he's trying to implement.

"It's not at all how we want to play. It's pretty bad," Bednar said. "The first period, we traded chances the whole time, which isn't what we want to do. We created some real good looks. So did they. Then after that, I just felt like their big guys turned it up a notch and we didn't.

"We didn't find the intensity that we needed for the game. So it was disappointing because it's a chance for us to go a couple games above .500, and now we're just spinning in the mud again."

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Senators send Chabot back to junior

The Ottawa Senators have decided to return defenseman Thomas Chabot back to the QMJHL's Saint John Sea Dogs.

Chabot, 19, was drafted 18th overall by the Senators in 2015 and stuck with the team out of training camp only to appear in one of Ottawa's nine games to date.

Chabot has recorded 108 points in 168 junior games, and will likely represent Canada at the World Junior Championships once again this year.

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Kadri sends reminder that Maple Leafs are more than Matthews

All eyes were on Toronto on Tuesday night.

Wayne Gretzky was in the house. Bobby Orr was at the Air Canada Centre, too. They came to watch Auston Matthews and Connor McDavid face off for the first time, but left having witnessed The Nazem Kadri Show.

A first-round pick, seventh overall of the Toronto Maple Leafs in 2009, Kadri signed a big-money, six-year contract over the summer. He's in for the long haul, deemed part of the solution in T.O. Yet over the first month of the season, the center has become the forgotten man, with Auston Matthews, William Nylander, and Mitch Marner making headlines.

On Tuesday, Kadri sent notice: He's still a Maple Leaf. An important one, at that, at 26 a veteran on the NHL's youngest team. A player who will, along with the kids, bring Toronto out of the darkness.

Motivated

"I'm not here to just be a role player," Kadri told TSN's Mark Masters after scoring the game-winner Tuesday - his second goal of the game - in overtime on an impressive individual effort, fighting off McDavid before deftly putting the puck past Cam Talbot to give Toronto a 3-2 decision. "I want to help this team win."

Born in London, Ontario, Kadri clearly wears the blue and white with pride.

"I don't want people coming in here thinking it's easy to play against the Leafs," he added.

Shutting down McDavid

Kadri meant trouble for McDavid, specifically, who was playing at home - he was born just north of the city - for the first time.

From the opening faceoff, Kadri was matched up against McDavid, giving him shot after shot - a cross-check or two here, a slash there - whenever he could, doing his best to get under the skin of one of the NHL's most talented players. And it was all orchestrated.

"You don't want (McDavid) to walk all over you and he's a player capable of doing that," Kadri said.

After shoving McDavid after a whistle in the first period, Kadri not only had the attention of No. 97, but also his linemate, Milan Lucic. And when Kadri's irking numerous guys on the opposition, that's when he's at his best.

Edmonton, as a team, took notice. Head coach Todd McLellan double-shifted McDavid, trying him on different lines, in an effort to get him away from Kadri.

"He was awesome out there," Matthews said of his teammate. "He was creating havoc, making it tough on that big line."

Kadri was a two-way force Tuesday, playing the type of game that got him noticed, showing skill, two-way prowess, and a ton of emotion. And he did it all in only 14:05 of ice time.

Maturity, and production

Kadri made strides last season, his first with Mike Babcock as his head coach. Almost from day one behind the bench, Babcock raved about how much Kadri impressed him, in all facets of the game. Kadri cares - he's made that clear in his time with Toronto.

But the 2015-16 season came with its frustrations, despite a career-high 18:16 in ice time per game and a whopping 260 shots. Kadri finished with 17 goals and 45 points in 76 games, but his 6.5 percent shooting percentage was the lowest of his seven-year career - and it wasn't close.

Last year is in the past, though, and so is Kadri's team-imposed three-game suspension in 2015 for missing a team meeting, his future in Toronto appearing somewhat in doubt.

Kadri's matured. And he's quietly off to an impressive start in 2016-17, even though he's seeing much less ice thanks to a much deeper crop of Toronto forwards. He's got five goals and eight points in 10 games. He's shooting 23.8 percent. He didn't hit the five-goal mark until Dec. 5 last year, and went into 2016 with only six goals in 36 games. If anyone deserves some puck luck, it's No. 43.

Kadri won't be flying under the radar much longer, especially as Matthews finds himself in the first slump of his young career.

The Maple Leafs are Matthews' and Nylander's and Morgan Rielly's team, of that there's no doubt. But Kadri will undoubtedly be influential in Toronto's rise out of the basement. He made that clear Tuesday night.

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