Post Game: Hughes is a Norris Caliber Defender

Sat Shah and Bik Nizzar breakdown the Canucks 5-3 win over the Florida Panthers. Hear from Head Coach Rick Tocchet (24:35), Phil Di Giuseppe (1:03:14) and Andrei Kuzmenko (1:07:55) post game. Iain McIntyre (1:25:42) and Dan Riccio also provide their post game analysis. 

The views and opinions expressed in this podcast are those of the hosts and guests and do not necessarily reflect the position of Rogers Media Inc. or any affiliate.

The views and opinions expressed in this podcast are those of the hosts and guests and do not necessarily reflect the position of Rogers Media Inc. or any affiliate.

Coyotes’ Dermott becomes 1st known NHLer to use Pride tape since ban

Arizona Coyotes defenseman Travis Dermott became the first known NHL player to defy the NHL's recent ban on using Pride tape on the ice.

Dermott put the rainbow-colored tape on his stick's shaft for Saturday's 2-1 win over the Anaheim Ducks.

Norm Hall / National Hockey League / Getty

The NHL plans to determine whether or not to discipline Dermott for defying the ban.

"We will review it in due course," the league told The Athletic's Ian Mendes in a statement.

The makers of Pride Tape showed their appreciation to Dermott for using the product.

Longtime NHL executive Brian Burke also expressed his support for the Coyotes blue-liner.

The NHLPA has yet to comment on the matter. However, many players have spoken out against the league's ban since it was first reported on the opening day of this season. In a memo that clarified the Pride tape ban, the NHL didn't specify how it would punish those who use the product.

Philadelphia Flyers forward Scott Laughton said he'd probably wrap his stick in Pride tape regardless of the punishment. Flames rearguard Rasmus Andersson said the ban "sucks," and Toronto Maple Leafs defenseman Morgan Rielly lamented that he wished players "had the right to do more" in the wake of the league's decision.

In June, the NHL said it wouldn't allow teams to wear specialty jerseys during pregame warmups this season. That came in response to several players refusing to wear Pride jerseys supporting the LGBTQ community.

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Bruins scratch DeBrusk for being late to team meeting

Boston Bruins forward Jake DeBrusk is a healthy scratch Saturday against the Los Angeles Kings as punishment for being late to a team meeting, head coach Jim Montgomery announced.

DeBrusk is coming off his best season in which he tallied 27 goals and 23 assists in 64 games, but he's been held off the scoresheet in three games in 2023-24.

The 27-year-old is in a pivotal year, as he's set to become an unrestricted free agent at season's end.

Veteran power forward Milan Lucic skated in DeBrusk's place at left wing on the top line with Pavel Zacha and David Pastrnak during Saturday's morning skate. Journeyman Patrick Brown appears poised to make his season debut on the fourth line.

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Predators claim Foudy off waivers from Blue Jackets

The Nashville Predators announced Saturday they've claimed forward Liam Foudy off waivers from the Columbus Blue Jackets.

Columbus selected Foudy 18th overall in the 2018 NHL Draft, but he hasn't lived up to his first-round billing. He's tallied seven goals and 12 assists in 90 career NHL games across parts of five seasons.

Foudy brings a terrific combination of size and speed. He's 6-foot-2 and one of the sport's best skaters, but it hasn't translated to strong on-ice results.

Evolving-Hockey.com

The London Knights product will be reunited with his former OHL teammate, Luke Evangelista, in Nashville.

Foudy is in the final year of his contract with a $762,500 cap hit. He'll be a restricted free agent at season's end and is under team control until 2027.

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Flames’ Andersson to have hearing for high hit on Jackets’ Laine

Calgary Flames defenseman Rasmus Andersson will have a hearing with the NHL's Department of Player Safety for elbowing/charging Columbus Blue Jackets forward Patrik Laine on Friday.

Andersson received a five-minute major and a game misconduct for the hit, which occurred in the waning seconds of Columbus' 3-1 victory.

Laine didn't travel with the Blue Jackets for Saturday's contest against the Minnesota Wild and is considered day-to-day with an upper-body injury. The winger-turned-center has tallied a goal and an assist in four games thus far.

Andersson has never been suspended in his eight-year NHL career, although he was fined in 2021-22 for head-butting Kailer Yamamoto. He's recorded three points in five games this season while averaging a team-high 23:39.

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Ekman-Larsson was ‘surprised’ by buyout from Canucks

Oliver Ekman-Larsson had no inclination that he was going to be bought out by the Vancouver Canucks in the offseason.

"I was surprised," Ekman-Larsson told The Athletic's Thomas Drance. "We had exit meetings, and I didn't see it coming."

Ekman-Larsson had four years left on his contract with an $8.25-million cap hit, resulting in the largest compliance buyout in the salary-cap era in terms of total value. The Canucks are paying him $17 million over the next eight years to play elsewhere, per CapFriendly.

The veteran blue-liner inked a one-year, $2.25-million pact with the Florida Panthers as a free agent in the offseason.

Ekman-Larsson was one of the game's top defensemen during his 11 seasons with the Arizona Coyotes, receiving downballot Norris Trophy votes on five occasions. He was traded to Vancouver in 2021, but his two-year stint with the Canucks was marred by injuries and inconsistent play.

"Look, we loved living in Vancouver and I loved playing for the Canucks," Ekman-Larsson said. "So it was disappointing. Obviously there were a couple of tough years, but I don't feel like it was all bad like everybody else does.

"There were ups and downs and we didn't make the playoffs, we were struggling as a team, there were a lot of changes. It wasn't easy, but I don't have a bad thing to say about the city of Vancouver or the organization. It's just part of the business. You get disappointed when things like that happen and you're not ready for it."

Ekman-Larsson is thriving with his new team. He's recorded two points in four games, and, with Aaron Ekblad and Brandon Montour out to begin the year, OEL is logging huge minutes, averaging a team-high 25:31 per contest.

The Canucks and Panthers square off in Sunrise on Saturday. Ekman-Larsson will make his return to Vancouver on Dec. 14.

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Ted Nolan’s memoir details ‘life in two worlds’ as Indigenous NHL coach

Ted Nolan opened the front door to his house and "felt a stab of anxiety."

A delivery man handed him a box, and the coach knew what was in it: the Jack Adams Award, presented annually to the NHL's top bench boss. A range of emotions rushed through Nolan's body, then "pure anger."

Nolan's recently released memoir begins with this dramatic scene from 1998.

"I lifted my foot and, with all the strength I had, kicked the box, sending it hurtling down the basement stairs," Nolan writes in "Life In Two Worlds: A Coach's Journey from the Reserve to the NHL and Back."

"I heard it land with a loud metallic crash," he continues. "Then I turned and went upstairs, determined to forget everything about it."

Bruce Bennett / Getty Images

Nolan, who coached 471 career games in the NHL, couldn't bear to enjoy his accomplishment that day, months removed from when he first posed with the trophy on the big stage. In the intervening period, he felt betrayed by the hockey world, especially the Buffalo Sabres, and found himself in a dark place.

"I was so angry. At that time, every tough situation in my life - in hockey, outside of hockey - I had sucked in. I hadn't dealt with any of it," Nolan recalled in a recent phone interview with theScore.

Nolan's faced many tough situations throughout his life.

Racism at every turn

Nolan is a member of the Ojibway tribe. The third youngest of 12 kids, he grew up in the Garden River First Nation east of Sault Ste. Marie, Ontario. The family lived in a relatively small house, and didn't have access to electricity or running water for the first few years of Nolan's life, in the late 1950s and early '60s.

Nolan details in his memoir the racism he faced at seemingly every turn of his playing and coaching careers as an outsider in a predominantly white sport.

His welcome to Junior A in Kenora, Ontario, included a teammate asking, "What are you doing here, ya stinkin' Indian?" Fans hurled slurs associated with Indigenous stereotypes - that he was poor or drunk. He was targeted physically on and off the ice, always having to protect himself.

"I was up there by myself and I learned to fight through. Thankfully, I did," Nolan said of deciding to ride out the season in Kenora, despite family insisting he return to Garden River, where everybody accepted him.

Jeff Vinnick / Getty Images

The pros weren't much better for Nolan, a winger who dressed for 78 NHL games split between the Detroit Red Wings - who drafted him in the fifth round in 1978 - and the Pittsburgh Penguins.

Nolan had tears in his eyes when he stepped onto NHL ice for the first time. He thought about his community, particularly countless Indigenous kids who never realized their dreams. "This is for all of you," he said quietly to himself.

Nolan's father, who died when Nolan was 16, told his children to "always be proud of who you are," and Nolan's kept those words in mind.

But the lack of respect continued.

"Some of the guys on the other pro teams would call me names on the ice," Nolan said. "I'd look back at them, and I could see in their eyes that they felt sheepish about what they said. They probably didn't really know what they were saying. They just heard it from someone else. It was pure ignorance."

After retiring in 1986, Nolan began climbing the coaching ranks, first landing a job in the OHL as an assistant coach, then becoming an OHL head coach, NHL assistant, and finally an NHL head coach. Racism followed him around the continent. Vitriol from rival fans got so bad during a stint with the QMJHL's Moncton Wildcats in 2005 that he needed a police escort to exit the arena.

Fighting negative labels

Nolan coached in Hartford (Whalers assistant) and New York (Islanders head coach), but he's best known for two stints in Buffalo: 1995-97 and 2013-15.

He won the 1996-97 Jack Adams Award the same year Sabres center Michael Peca took home the Selke Trophy and goalie Dominik Hasek won the Vezina, Hart, and Pearson. The Sabres, a blue-collar squad with arguably the best goalie of all time in the prime of his career, lost in Round 2 of the playoffs.

Denis Brodeur / Getty Images

Nolan and the club's general manager, John Muckler, didn't see eye to eye from Day 1 of Nolan's first stint. Nolan felt the GM wanted too much control of the lineup. Nolan also believed the GM felt his coach was too cozy with captain Pat LaFontaine and some members of ownership.

Local media made behind-the-scenes drama public, and when Hasek told a radio station he wanted Nolan gone, there was no turning back.

First, Muckler was fired, which led to Nolan being called a "GM killer" by commentator Don Cherry. Incoming GM Darcy Regier offered Nolan a one-year contract extension. The lack of commitment was an "insult," so he turned down the deal, hoping to negotiate something better. Next thing Nolan knew, Regier was at his house, firing him face to face.

Nolan wouldn't run another NHL bench for six years, only returning when a retired LaFontaine gained hiring power in Buffalo's front office. The reunion, amid shameless tanking for Connor McDavid, lasted just 17 months.

Nolan wonders now if rejecting Regier's offer was shortsighted, and if another label - that Nolan's his "own worst enemy" - is at least partially true.

"Maybe I should have swallowed my pride and accepted the contract," Nolan writes. "At least I could have continued doing the work I loved, and had another chance to show I belonged in the league. Maybe, if I'd spent another year in Buffalo, I would have repaired any damage done to my reputation with the NHL power brokers and gone on to entertain big offers."

"But," he continues, "as difficult as the following years would be, I never for a moment looked back and thought accepting that one-year contract was a real possibility. The insult of it, along with the rumour of my drinking and irresponsibility, had revived such dark memories."

The lighter side

Andre Ringuette / Getty Images

Nolan's book is mostly serious in tone, as he discusses some of the lowest points of his life, and Canada's history of mistreating Indigenous people.

Still, there are a few lighter anecdotes sprinkled in.

On playing with Wayne Gretzky, 5-8, baby-faced, and 16 years old on the Junior A Soo Greyhounds:

He probably weighed only about 155 or 160 pounds. A real string bean of a guy. Oh boy, I thought, he's going to get killed. And then he stepped out on the ice.

On the time he grabbed postgame drinks with legendary coach Mike Keenan:

'Always be ready to be fired, Ted,' he said. 'And always get fired when you have a year left on your contract, so that when you start somewhere else you're getting two paycheques.' He was already on his fourth NHL franchise as a coach (he'd get to eight during two decades in the league), and I guess his method meant a number of years with great income.

On former Islanders owner Charles Wang urging him to make a pick in the 2006 draft, and choosing Andrew MacDonald, a defenseman he previously coached:

As soon as I mentioned his name to Charles, the scouts began to flip through the scouting lists. 'He's not on here,' one of them said. 'I know,' I replied. 'But that doesn't mean we can't draft him.' ... Only three of our choices that year landed in the NHL for more than a couple of trial games, and only one, Kyle Okposo, our number one pick, had a longer NHL career.

Fire still burns

Bruce Bennett / Getty Images

Nolan has hope.

For one, his sons Brandon and Jordan, now 40 and 34, didn't encounter the kind of overt racism he did when they played hockey at the minor, junior, and pro levels. For another, he recently watched little kids show empathy towards his baseball-playing grandson after he misjudged a ball and got hit in the head. "A lot of them ran over and asked him if he's OK," Nolan said.

He adds that recent hiring trends across the NHL, which have seen more women and people of color join front offices and coaching staffs, are a "step in the right direction." And he's immensely proud of the 3Nolans organization, founded by him and his sons, for its impact on Indigenous hockey players.

Nolan, who turned 65 this year, also has hope these days because he's feeling markedly better after being diagnosed with a form of blood cancer in March.

"My new heroes are people who go through this terrible disease. It's tough," he said. "Especially the chemo. It was really, really tough times. I went through it, and it wasn't fun. I had a stem cell replacement operation not too long ago. So I'm slowly getting my strength back. Knock on wood, we put this in remission for a little while and I'll be able to get back on the ice."

Nolan's last official coaching job was with Poland's national team five years ago. He said in the past he'd still be coaching at a high level if his skin was white. Does he believe that in 2023? Yes, "I still believe that," Nolan said.

"I really believe in relationships and growing up in the same environment," he said of feeling overlooked. "If you know someone, you're going to want to work with them. If you don't know them, it's hard. You make judgments."

Asked what his response would be if an NHL head coach called him today about joining the staff, Nolan didn't hesitate.

"I'd say: 'When can we start?'"

John Matisz is theScore's senior NHL writer. Follow John on Twitter (@MatiszJohn) or contact him via email (john.matisz@thescore.com).

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