Crosby out with injury, could miss a week

Sidney Crosby will miss Thursday night's game against the Tampa Bay Lightning with an upper-body injury.

Pittsburgh Penguins head coach Mike Sullivan confirmed the news Thursday morning.

"Sid will not play tonight ... Right now his status is day to day, but my sense is it's going to be a week," Sullivan said.

Sullivan added the injury is not a concussion. Crosby missed practice Wednesday as the ailment was evaluated.

The superstar forward will miss his first regular-season game since the 2016-17 season.

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Ducks’ Fowler sidelined with facial fracture

Anaheim Ducks defenseman Cam Fowler will have surgery Friday after suffering injuries to his orbital bone, cheekbone, and upper jaw bone, the team announced Wednesday.

A timetable for his return will be announced following the procedure.

Fowler suffered the injury Monday against the Nashville Predators when he was hit in the face with a puck.

He's picked up three goals and seven assists in 19 games this season.

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Bruins’ Chara exits with lower-body injury

Boston Bruins captain Zdeno Chara left Wednesday's game against the Colorado Avalanche with a lower-body injury and will not return, the team announced.

Chara's left knee took a noticeably awkward jolt as he attempted to check Carl Soderberg.

The 41-year-old blue-liner entered Wednesday with four points in 17 games while averaging a team-high 22:27 per night.

The Bruins are already without four defensemen - Charlie McAvoy (concussion), Brandon Carlo (upper body), Kevan Miller (hand), and Urho Vaakanainen (concussion).

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Kuznetsov leaves game with upper-body injury

Washington Capitals forward Evgeny Kuznetsov did not return to Wednesday's contest against the Winnipeg Jets after suffering what the team announced was an upper-body injury.

Kuznetsov appeared to suffer the injury when he was elbowed in the head by Jets forward Brandon Tanev.

Kuznetsov is the Capitals' leading scorer with 21 points through 17 games.

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Capitals’ Holtby day to day with upper-body injury

Washington Capitals goalie Braden Holtby is out Wednesday with an upper-body ailment, the team announced. The injury is not expected to be serious and he's listed as day to day, according to Isabelle Khurshudyan of the Washington Post.

Pheonix Copley, who was in goal for the Capitals' 5-2 win over the Minnesota Wild on Tuesday, will get the call once again Wednesday against the Winnipeg Jets.

Gavin McHale, a 31-year-old goalie coach for the University of Manitoba's women's team, will serve as Washington's emergency backup behind Copley on Wednesday, Khurshudyan adds.

Holtby has struggled for a second consecutive regular season, despite a rock-solid playoff run last year. He owns a .900 save percentage and a 3.24 goals-against average in 13 games over the campaign.

Copley has fared marginally better, posting a .904 save percentage and a 2.91 goals-against average in five contests.

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Paul Martin retires after 14 NHL seasons

Paul Martin is calling it a career.

The longtime defenseman retired from professional hockey, the University of Minnesota confirmed Wednesday morning.

Martin explained his decision in an interview with The Athletic's Michael Russo, in which the veteran blue-liner said he wants to finish his college degree and start a family.

His agent, Ben Hankinson, tried to land the unrestricted free agent a job for this season, but Martin didn't want a tryout and wasn't interested in continuing his career in Europe, according to Russo.

Martin played parts of 14 seasons in the NHL with the New Jersey Devils, Pittsburgh Penguins, and San Jose Sharks.

He represented the United States multiple times on the international stage, earning a spot on the Olympic team on three occasions (in 2006, 2010, and 2014), but he saw no action in the 2006 Games and missed the 2010 event with a broken arm.

The Sharks bought out Martin's contract in June.

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Kings, Penguins shake things up with Hagelin-Pearson trade

Rob Blake and Jim Rutherford had both seen enough.

The general managers completed the first meaningful trade of the 2018-19 NHL regular season Wednesday, swapping underachieving left wingers to jolt their respective clubs back to life.

Carl Hagelin, a two-time Stanley Cup champion with the Pittsburgh Penguins, is off to Los Angeles in exchange for Tanner Pearson, who earned a ring with the Kings.

“Our team is obviously not in a position that we are comfortable with in terms of how we are playing,” Blake said in a press release announcing the one-for-one swap.

"This could be the start of more changes,” Rutherford warned in a post-trade briefing with reporters. “We'll see how it goes.”

What this means for the Penguins

Pearson, 26, is the younger player in the deal. He’s probably a better finisher than Hagelin, and he's under contract for two more years at a digestible $3.75-million cap hit.

That's the good news.

The bad?

Pearson has struggled mightily through the opening stretch of the season, recording just a single assist - in the Oct. 5 home opener - in 17 games. For the first time in his six-year career, Pearson’s 5-on-5 shot metrics sit below 50 percent, and the Kings were outscored 10-1 with him on the ice over 198 even-strength minutes.

Noah Graham / Getty Images

Yet Rutherford seems to believe Pearson can reinvigorate the Penguins, who have lost six of their past seven games and face the conference-leading Tampa Bay Lightning on Thursday.

"He was able to play with their top guys (in L.A.),” Rutherford said, referring to Pearson’s past experience skating alongside Anze Kopitar and Jeff Carter. “I believe that a change will be good for him. He will be a good fit for us.”

Pearson bagged 24 goals in 80 games at his peak in 2016-17. The 6-foot-1, 201-pounder contributed solid top-nine value in his other two seasons with the Kings, registering 36 and 40 points.

The talent is there and if he slides into Hagelin’s old spot on a line with Evgeni Malkin and Patric Hornqvist there will be no excuses. Over to you, Tanner.

What this means for the Kings

By acquiring Hagelin, the Kings - arguably the slowest team in the NHL - have gained one of the sport's premier speedsters. Hagelin is a dynamite penalty killer, too, which should help L.A.’s 21st-ranked unit.

Hagelin’s best NHL season was way back in 2011-12 when he posted 14 goals and 24 assists in 64 games as a rookie for the New York Rangers. Through 16 games this season, the 30-year-old has just one goal and two assists.

SEASON TEAM(S) GP G A PTS
2011-12 NYR 64 14 24 38
2012-13 NYR 48 10 14 24
2013-14 NYR 72 17 16 33
2014-15 NYR 82 17 18 35
2015-16 ANA/PIT 80 14 25 39
2016-17 PIT 61 6 16 22
2017-18 PIT 81 10 21 31
2018-19 PIT 16 1 2 3

Given the direction the Kings' season is trending (see: down, way down) and Hagelin's contract situation (pending unrestricted free agent), is this a rent-to-sell situation? It's not a crazy thought.

The last-place Kings are spiraling right now; they've lost three straight, including a 5-1 defeat on home ice Tuesday against the Maple Leafs. The league’s second-oldest roster just got older and, although they could use a boost of some kind and Hagelin’s tantalizing wheels fit the short-term bill, a second deal around the Feb. 25 trade deadline may be the right long-term play.

Suitors surely haven’t forgotten about Hagelin’s performance in the 2016 playoffs, when he starred on the vaunted HBK Line with six goals and 10 assists in 24 postseason games.

(Side note: The Penguins retained $250,000 of Hagelin’s $4-million salary in the trade, eliminating any financial discrepancy between the two contracts.)

The main takeaway

In the grand scheme of things, the Hagelin-for-Pearson deal will not lose or win another Cup for either of these franchises. The players involved, even at their absolute best, are secondary contributors.

But this trade does serve a purpose. L.A. and Pittsburgh both need a kick in the rear end and found their targets in a pair of underperforming vets.

The Kings are in a state of flux under a new, interim head coach. Blake and Co. are navigating the waters between relevant and irrelevant, seemingly unsure of which side of the tide they will ultimately end up on.

Is this the beginning of the end for a core that won two Cups in three years at the start of the decade? Maybe. The departure of John Stevens last week certainly got the ball rolling. Is a full tear-down coming? Perhaps.

The Penguins, while on stronger footing overall, are also feeling the heat, albeit in a subtler fashion. Rutherford, who signed a three-year contract extension hours before announcing the trade, has voiced his displeasure with the current supporting cast around Malkin, Sidney Crosby, and other untouchables, according to The Athletic's Josh Yohe.

Is this a one-off move or a start of a furious shopping spree from Rutherford? It sounds like the former.

"I just think we're in a funk now," Rutherford said. "We're a fragile team. We're struggling. But for the most part, I still believe in this team."

The common thread: Winning is fleeting in professional sports and both GMs seem willing to do everything in their power to keep another championship within reach.

John Matisz is theScore's National Hockey Writer. You can find him on Twitter @matiszjohn.

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Golden Knights’ Haula month to month with injury

The Vegas Golden Knights have lost another forward to a long-term injury.

Erik Haula is now on a month-to-month timetable, head coach Gerard Gallant told reporters on Wednesday.

Haula had to be stretchered off the ice during a loss to the Toronto Maple Leafs on Nov. 6 after falling awkwardly on his leg following a hit by Patrick Marleau.

He's missed the Knights' last three games and was placed on injured reserve Tuesday.

Vegas is already without center Paul Stastny, who was hurt during the third game of the season and ruled out for up to two months in mid-October.

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