Category Archives: Hockey News

Marner sets Leafs’ rookie record in assists

Another game, another franchise record broken for the Toronto Maple Leafs' incredible crop of rookies.

Just two days after Auston Matthews broke Wendel Clark's rookie goal record, Mitch Marner set a mark of his own.

With a secondary assist on James van Riemsdyk's first period goal Thursday night, Marner established a new franchise record in assists by a freshman (41), eclipsing the previous mark set by Gus Bodnar in the 1943-44 season.

The helper also pushed Marner into a tie with William Nylander - the other prominent figure in Toronto's rookie triumvirate - for second in team scoring with 58 points on the season.

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Mantha done for season with fractured finger

Anthony Mantha's solid rookie season is over.

The Red Wings forward sustained a fractured finger Thursday against the Tampa Bay Lightning and won't play in Detroit's remaining five games, general manager Ken Holland said, according to MLive.com's Ansar Khan.

That means the kid will miss Detroit's final game at Joe Louis Arena on Sunday, April 9.

Mantha finishes his freshman NHL campaign with 17 goals and 36 points in 60 games. He averaged 16:09 in ice time and did most of his damage on the road, with 14 goals and 24 points in 33 games as a visitor.

The 22-year-old was drafted 20th overall in 2013 and will be relied upon heavily in the coming years to make the Red Wings great again.

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Watch: Marchand sets new career-high with scramble goal vs. Stars

By no means was it his prettiest goal of the season, but Brad Marchand's first-period tally Thursday versus Dallas was certainly a memorable one.

The Boston Bruins winger was able to bank his 38th goal of the season off the pad of Antti Niemi, establishing a new career-high in the process.

The goal also put Marchand in a tie with Nikita Kucherov for second place in the "Rocket" Richard race.

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Isles fans apoplectic on Twitter after team’s horrific start in Philly

Must-win game on the road, No. 76 out of 82, playoff chances about as slim as they can get, and the New York Islanders simply didn't show up to play Thursday against the Philadelphia Flyers.

Ten minutes into the game, New York was stuck four. It was 5-0 at the end of the first period. Nightmare.

Islanders fans did what any respectable supporter would do: Tweet.

Here are some of the better ones:

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Weise, Simmonds record Gordie Howe hat tricks in 1st period vs. Islanders

Dale Weise came ready to do a little bit of everything Thursday.

The Philadelphia Flyers forward opened the scoring against the New York Islanders at the 4:30 mark of the first period, assisted on his club's third goal at 8:06, and fought Travis Hamonic at 8:28.

Gordie Howe hat trick, just like that. Impressive.

Thomas Greiss started for the Islanders but was pulled after he was beat three times on eight shots. Jaroslav Halak came into the game and made one save before Jordan Weal made it 4-0 Flyers less than a minute later.

By the time the first period ended, Wayne Simmonds had himself a Gordie Howe hat trick, too, after assisting on Weal's tally, scoring his 30th to make it 5-0, and fighting Anders Lee.

The Islanders came into the game four points back in the Eastern Conference wild-card race, and their season may have gone down in flames in under 10 minutes.

Also impressive, but in a bad way.

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Kucherov sick, out vs. Red Wings

Huge blow for the Tampa Bay Lightning.

Nikita Kucherov is sick and won't play against the Detroit Red Wings, the club announced 30 minutes before puck drop.

The 23-year-old Russian sniper is Tampa Bay's most productive player this season, with 38 goals and 80 points in 68 games, but the Lightning will have to find a way without him Thursday at home.

The good news is the opposition is Detroit, officially eliminated from the playoffs for the first time in a generation. Tampa Bay, on the other hand, is three points back of the Boston Bruins for the second wild-card spot in the East, with a game in hand.

With Boston hosting Dallas on Thursday, and likely to take those two points, Tampa Bay needs to win to stay within three.

Kucherov has three goals and five points in three games versus Detroit this season.

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Karlsson to miss 1st game of season vs. Wild

Ottawa Senators captain Erik Karlsson will not play Thursday versus Minnesota, the team announced.

Karlsson was injured after blocking a shot Tuesday in Philadelphia, and while no specifics of the injury have been reported, the Sens' top defenseman will miss his first game of the season, ending his personal streak of 324 consecutive contests.

25-year-old Jyrki Jokipakka, who was acquired from the Flames in the Curtis Lazar trade, will make his Senators debut in place of Karlsson.

Karlsson, of course, has been a workhorse for Ottawa this season, registering 68 points in 75 games while logging an average of 26:52 of ice-time per game.

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NHL looks at China as a ‘very long-term relationship’

China wants to get its hockey program up to par before hosting the 2022 Winter Olympics in Beijing. The NHL is using that as a starting point for a long-term vision to turn the country into a hockey nation.

The league is making the country of almost 1.4 billion people a top priority internationally. The Los Angeles Kings and Vancouver Canucks will play exhibition games in Shanghai and Beijing in September, and the games and the Olympics are only the beginning of what the NHL hopes is a bigger investment.

''The way we're looking at it is it's really not about 2022. It's about 2032 and '42 and so on and really building the game,'' NHL executive vice president of media and international strategy David Proper said by phone from Beijing. ''It's doing a disservice ultimately to the building of hockey in China to just target a five-year range and not be looking past that.''

At a news conference announcing the exhibition games, commissioner Gary Bettman called them ''the beginning of what we believe will be a very long-term relationship.''

The upcoming Olympics in Pyeongchang, South Korea, next year has created conflict for the league, which has expressed reluctance to stop its season to play 13 hours ahead of Eastern Time in a place that isn't necessarily a hockey market. The NHL may yet decide to go to Korea because of players' interest but also in part because of the lure of Beijing.

The NHL looks at the NBA, which has had a foothold in China for decades, as a blueprint for the future. But before there's a hockey version of Yao Ming, Chinese fans need to learn more about the sport.

Andong Song, the first Chinese player drafted by an NHL team, said most people in his homeland didn't know much about hockey even when the New York Islanders took him in the sixth round in June of 2015. Song was part of China's presentation to the International Olympic Committee alongside Yao and said getting the Games in 2022 got people buzzing about hockey and other winter sports.

From the initial meetings with Chinese government officials, the league and NHL Players' Association saw untapped potential.

''The exciting thing is you're starting from a baseline of zero, so any effect that we have is going to be a positive effect,'' NHL chief revenue officer and executive VP of global partnerships Keith Wachtel said by phone from Beijing. ''The question is just how much, and that's going to be about the dedication of resources that we have.''

While the exact financial investment the league is making in China was not revealed, it's substantial.

Proper said the league will put on at least 15 clinics in China this year in addition to what teams might also be doing. The Canucks, Kings, Boston Bruins, Montreal Canadiens, New York Islanders, Toronto Maple Leafs, and Washington Capitals have already conducted camps for young Chinese players.

As China aims for 2022, Proper considers it a ''perfect storm'' of a motivated government and private sector combined with a league that wants to spread out far beyond North America and Europe.

''When somebody comes to you and says, 'We are committed to 300 million people playing winter sports and hockey is one of the primary winter sports we want to focus on,' you have to make that country a priority and you really have to kind of figure out how to help them as best they can to achieve their goals,'' Proper said.

The NHL is getting a lift from goaltender-turned-billionaire Zhou Yunjie, chairman of metal can manufacturing company ORG Packaging, in making strides in China. The league signed a multiyear deal with ORG Packaging and will use some of that money to help refine Chinese hockey infrastructure while trying to increase exposure, sell jerseys and make an impact.

The ultimate goal is talent development, which will spawn fandom and interest if a Chinese player turns into an NHL star.

''We think that it's only a matter of time till we're able to get a Chinese national into the NHL,'' Wachtel said. ''That will be the proof point when millions of kids are playing the sport in China and one day that you see one of those kids that was in a clinic that was run by the NHL and ORG and all our other partners that that kid is playing in the NHL.''

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Real transparency still a long way off for NHL despite sharing protected lists

The NHL came around on going public with teams' unprotected lists for the upcoming expansion draft, but the league still has plenty of work to do when it comes to sharing information with its fans.

While announcing the decision to both publicize the lists and televise the event, deputy commissioner Bill Daly stated Wednesday that "one of our guiding principles from the start of this process was to prioritize transparency," admitting keeping the lists private wouldn't have accomplished that.

The league's general managers didn't initially want to share the lists of players their clubs were leaving unprotected for possible selection by the Vegas Golden Knights, which Daly confirmed, saying he believed GMs "on balance favored maintaining the privacy of the process."

This should come as no surprise to anyone who's followed the NHL recently. While the decisions to reveal the lists and make the expansion draft a TV spectacle represent two steps toward transparency, the league has attempted to conceal information and thus protect its key figures in a host of ways over the years.

The most obvious example is the fact that the NHL allows its clubs to individually set policies about revealing contract terms, rather than insisting teams publish the financial details - which inevitably leak out within minutes of a signing announcement regardless.

Some teams make a point of disclosing their deals, giving year-by-year breakdowns and providing other useful details, but the majority of clubs offer a simple "per club policy, terms were not disclosed" and withhold the info that emerges moments later from one or more of many reliable insiders.

Commissioner Gary Bettman added fuel to the fire a couple of years ago when he said he's not sure fans care about player salaries, despite the overwhelming success of (and demand for) websites like CapGeek and CapFriendly.

Bettman's comments were predictably panned, but it's clear he was speaking on behalf of the league's owners and GMs, who may not enjoy being embarrassed down the road for offering ill-conceived deals.

The NHL's secrecy about injuries is another issue. Unlike the NFL, NBA, and MLB, this is the only league within the four major U.S. pro sports that allows its clubs to be purposefully vague about physical ailments.

Rather than being required to tell reporters - and by extension, fans - what's bothering a player, coaches and GMs can simply resort to calling it an "upper-body" or "lower-body" injury, a practice that's become commonplace in the NHL but nowhere else.

Another strategy the league uses to shield its employees from scrutiny is failing to denote which teams have been officially eliminated from playoff contention on the official standings page. This might not seem like a big deal, but the NBA has no problem publicizing which teams' seasons are effectively over on its official website, and the NHL does identify which teams have clinched postseason berths.

It's another element of the league's clear focus on the positive, which comes with a reluctance at times to present negative news - an approach the NHL takes in a number of ways, some of them ever-so subtle. The adoption of the "loser point" for overtime or shootout losses has been debated since its inception, but it also has a convenient effect on team records, making owners, GMs, and coaches look better in the process.

Maintaining a third column in the standings - which used to be reserved for ties - and dividing a team's losses between two columns makes every team's record more aesthetically pleasing. Although the OTL column certainly matters, there are still only two true outcomes (wins and losses) rather than the three different results seen in pre-shootout times.

When ESPN's Pierre LeBrun first reported the GMs' reluctance to publicize the expansion-draft lists during their meetings earlier in March, it provoked an immediate backlash from members of the hockey media. The next day, Colin Campbell admitted the league was considering changing its mind because the information is "going to get out there."

The NHL's executive vice president and director of hockey operations is exactly right. Whether it's expansion-draft lists, contract details, injuries, teams eliminated from the playoffs, or a club's true win-loss performance, the info is always going to get out thanks to plugged-in reporters and the advent of social media.

Wednesday's announcement was a refreshing acknowledgement of that from the league, but a rich history of truth-averse practices demonstrates the NHL still has a long way to go before it can be considered truly transparent.

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Sharks’ Couture to miss at least 3 more games with facial injury

The San Jose Sharks will be without Logan Couture for the duration of their Canadian road trip, head coach Pete DeBoer announced Thursday.

Couture, who was taken to hospital after being struck in the face by a puck on March 25, is not in Edmonton for Thursday's game, and will not join the Sharks for subsequent dates in Calgary and Vancouver.

San Jose has won just one of the past seven games, yet remains in a fight for first place in the Central Division. The Sharks will host the same three teams to finish the regular season, with or without Couture.

Couture ranks third on the Sharks with 25 goals and 52 points.

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