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Devils Down Oilers, Win Third Consecutive Game

The New Jersey Devils have won three consecutive games for the first time since late December. 

Mar 13, 2025; Newark, New Jersey, USA; New Jersey Devils goaltender Jake Allen (34), center Nico Hischier (13), and right wing Timo Meier (28) celebrate the Devils win over the Edmonton Oilers at Prudential Center. Mandatory Credit: Ed Mulholland-Imagn Images

On Thursday night, the Devils defeated the Edmonton Oilers by a final score of 3-2. Goaltender Jake Allen made 31 saves on 33 shots. The team now has an eight-point lead over the Columbus Blue Jackets in the playoff race. 

Defenseman Brett Pesce opened the scoring three minutes into the second period. Erik Haula won the draw against Adam Henrique. Jesper Bratt made a beeline to the blue line, allowing Pesce to skate toward the net. While Oilers' defenseman Troy Stecher was focused on Haula in front of his net, Pesce found a spot and shot the puck past opposing goaltender Stuart Skinner. Haula and Bratt were credited with the assists.

Halfway through the middle frame, The Oilers' most dangerous weapons tied the game. Leon Draisaitl scored his league-leading 47th goal, with Connor McDavid earning the primary helper. 

Edmonton took a 2-1 lead early in the third period, but it would be short-lived. Bratt tied the game at the 6:50 mark. It was the winger's second shot on Skinner and his second point of the night. 

Less than two minutes later, defenseman Simon Nemec scored his first goal of the season, giving his team a 3-2 lead. It was the youngster's first game back in the lineup after serving as a healthy scratch over the last two. 

"I thought he played a good game," head coach Sheldon Keefe said of Nemec. "I thought he was assertive, moved the puck, killed some plays defensively and a great shot to finish a great sequence." 

With his primary assist on Nemec's goal, Bratt earned back-to-back three-point games. It marked his 100th career multi-point game.

The Devils hit the road and play the Pittsburgh Penguins on Saturday night at PPG Paints Arena.

Make sure you bookmark THN's New Jersey Devils site for THN's latest news, exclusive interviews, breakdowns, and so much more.

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Hischier’s Manager Patrick Fischer: 'He’s Driven to Succeed, but Not Easily Satisfied'

'Oh My God, He's Such A Stud': Senators' Ullmark Makes Diving Save Against Former Team

Linus Ullmark (Marc DesRosiers-Imagn Images)

Ottawa Senators fans bowed to goaltender Linus Ullmark after he pulled off a save-of-the-year candidate against his former team.

With the Senators leading the Boston Bruins 5-3 late in the second period, Ullmark’s diving catch led to a stellar third frame in net that helped extend the team’s win streak to five games in a tight battle for the playoffs.

“Oh my God, he’s such a stud,” Senators defenseman Tyler Kleven told reporters after the 6-3 win.

After Ottawa led 4-1 after the first period, the Bruins scored twice in the second period to reduce the deficit to two goals. Ullmark had a 0.786 save percentage up to that point in the game with 11 saves on 14 shots.

Boston controlled possession in the offensive zone with about 90 seconds to go in the middle frame. As newly acquired center Marat Khusnutdinov and defenseman Andrew Peeke passed the puck back and forth, blueliner Mason Lohrei found an open lane to the net on the far side of the ice.

Khusnutdinov turned toward the net, which led Ullmark to challenge him at the top right corner of the crease. But Khusnutdinov found Lohrei all alone with the setup for a one-timer.

Lohrei had a wide-open net to shoot at from the faceoff dot. Ullmark was nearly out of the crease when he saw the pass, and Senators defenseman Thomas Chabot could only stick out his stick and skate to try to block the chance.

As Lohrei connected with the puck, Ullmark pivoted to angle himself diagonally toward the left post and swung over. He stretched out his glove hand quickly enough to get in front of the biscuit right before it entered the crease.

By the time Ullmark completed the grab, he was almost standing on his head, his left leg sticking up over his body.

“I was laughing,” Ullmark told the media post-game, as reported by Graeme Nichols. “Sometimes I wonder, how did that happen?”

Ullmark stopped all eight shots after that as the Bruins outshot the Senators in the final 20 minutes. He even tried to score a goalie goal on the empty net but missed wide.

“He’s such a big part of this team, and he wins us a lot of games,” Kleven said. “I’m honestly not even surprised that that happened – I see it all the time. He’s an awesome guy off the ice and an even better teammate on the ice.”

It wasn’t a perfect game for the 31-year-old Ullmark, who finished with a .880 save percentage and minus-1.24 goals saved above expected, but the game’s second star beat the team that traded him last June for the second time this season.

His former tandem-mate, meanwhile, only lasted one period in net on Thursday.

Jeremy Swayman allowed four goals on 15 shots for a .733 SP as Shane Pinto, Kleven, Drake Batherson and Ridly Greig got on the board. Bruins interim coach Joe Sacco pulled him in favor of Joonas Korpisalo, who went the other way in the Ullmark trade with Ottawa. Korpisalo stopped 14 of 15 shots to keep his team in the game, but it wasn’t enough for the Bruins to complete the comeback.

The Bruins still sit two points behind the Columbus Blue Jackets for the second wild-card spot, while the Senators are now five points ahead of Columbus for the first wild-card place.

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Ottawa Senators Beat Boston 6-3, Powered By Ullmark's Save Of The Year

Make it five straight wins for the Ottawa Senators. Drake Batherson had two goals and an assist on Thursday night as the Senators defeated the Boston Bruins 5-3 at Canadian Tire Centre.

Mar 13, 2025: Ottawa Senators goalie Linus Ullmark (35) makes a ridiculous save against the Boston Bruins at Canadian Tire Centre (Marc DesRosiers-Imagn Images).

With 22 saves against his old team, Linus Ullmark wasn't all that busy on the night, at least not compared to his 48-save performance on Monday against the Detroit Red Wings.

But his save on Boston's Mason Lohrei won't soon be forgotten.

It didn't go quite as well for Ullmark's old running mate, Jeremy Swayman, who was yanked in favour of former Senator Joonas Korpisalo after the first period.

The Senators were good and ready for this contest, jumping out to a 4-1 lead in the first on goals by Shane Pinto, Tyler Kleven, Drake Batherson, and Ridly Greig.

Batherson got another one in the second period, sandwiched between a pair of Bruins' goals from David Pastrnak and Marat Khusnutdinov.

Claude Giroux put the game away with a late empty-net goal, making a winner of head coach Travis Green in his 400th game as an NHL head coach.

The victory expands the Senators' lead in the Eastern Conference Wild Card race. They hold the first wild card spot, five points up on the Columbus Blue Jackets, who lost 4-0 to the Vegas Golden Knights.

With another victory, the Sens are 6-0-1 in their last seven games, 10 games above .500. That's prompted some fans to start looking up in the standings instead of down. Ottawa now trails third-place Tampa Bay by four points after the Lightning lost to the Philadelphia Flyers 4-3 in a shootout on Thursday.

The Senators now get ready for a couple of road games against old familiar rivals. They're in Toronto on Saturday and in Montreal on Tuesday.

By Steve Warne
The Hockey News Ottawa

Be sure to bookmark The Hockey News Ottawa for great Sens coverage all year around.

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Ottawa Senators Beat Boston 6-3, Powered By Ullmark's Save Of The Year

Make it five straight wins for the Ottawa Senators. Drake Batherson had two goals and an assist on Thursday night as the Senators defeated the Boston Bruins 5-3 at Canadian Tire Centre.

Mar 13, 2025: Ottawa Senators goalie Linus Ullmark (35) makes a ridiculous save against the Boston Bruins at Canadian Tire Centre (Marc DesRosiers-Imagn Images).

With 22 saves against his old team, Linus Ullmark wasn't all that busy on the night, at least not compared to his 48-save performance on Monday against the Detroit Red Wings.

But his save on Boston's Mason Lohrei won't soon be forgotten.

It didn't go quite as well for Ullmark's old running mate, Jeremy Swayman, who was yanked in favour of former Senator Joonas Korpisalo after the first period.

The Senators were good and ready for this contest, jumping out to a 4-1 lead in the first on goals by Shane Pinto, Tyler Kleven, Drake Batherson, and Ridly Greig.

Batherson got another one in the second period, sandwiched between a pair of Bruins' goals from David Pastrnak and Marat Khusnutdinov.

Claude Giroux put the game away with a late empty-net goal, making a winner of head coach Travis Green in his 400th game as an NHL head coach.

The victory expands the Senators' lead in the Eastern Conference Wild Card race. They hold the first wild card spot, five points up on the Columbus Blue Jackets, who lost 4-0 to the Vegas Golden Knights.

With another victory, the Sens are 6-0-1 in their last seven games, 10 games above .500. That's prompted some fans to start looking up in the standings instead of down. Ottawa now trails third-place Tampa Bay by four points after the Lightning lost to the Philadelphia Flyers 4-3 in a shootout on Thursday.

The Senators now get ready for a couple of road games against old familiar rivals. They're in Toronto on Saturday and in Montreal on Tuesday.

By Steve Warne
The Hockey News Ottawa

Be sure to bookmark The Hockey News Ottawa for great Sens coverage all year around.

Ottawa Senators Head Coach Travis Green Reflects on 400 NHL Games

Ottawa Senators Newcomer Fabian Zetterlund On Fourth Line Duty For A Third Straight Game

Will Brady Tkachuk Threaten Daniel Alfredsson's Ottawa Senator Records?

Don't Forget The Top Two 2024 NHL Draft Picks Play In Sharks v. Blackhawks Matchup

Chicago Blackhawks defenseman Artyom Levshunov (55) warms up before the game against the Colorado Avalanche at Ball Arena. Mandatory Credit: Ron Chenoy-Imagn Images

The hockey world will be interested in Macklin Celebrini vs. Connor Bedard when the San Jose Sharks host the Chicago Blackhawks on Thursday.

Celebrini vs. 2024 NHL Draft No. 2 overall pick Artyom Levshunov is an underrated storyline that isn’t being talked about.

Unlike Celebrini, Levshunov didn’t start with his NHL team and only recently made his debut for the Blackhawks on March 10th against the Colorado Avalanche.

Celebrini and Levshunov both went the NCAA route for their draft seasons. Levshunov attended and played for Michigan State University. The d-man wasn’t nominated in the 2024 top ten for the Hobey Baker award as the NCAA’s best player.

That season, the nominees included Celebrini, Will Smith, and Collin Graf. Celebrini won the award and became the youngest player to win it at 17.

Read the full story on Sharks Hockey Digest

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Bennett has big night as Panthers take down Toronto, retain top spot in Atlantic Division

Mar 13, 2025; Toronto, Ontario, CAN; Florida Panthers center Sam Bennett (9) scores a goal and celebrates with center Sam Reinhart (13) against the Toronto Maple Leafs during the second period at Scotiabank Arena. (Nick Turchiaro-Imagn Images)

The Florida Panthers got back on the winning track as their road trip continued north of the border on Thursday night.

After blowing a late two-goal lead on Tuesday in Boston, Florida held tight to a third period lead in Toronto, defeating the Maple Leafs 3-2 at Scotiabank Arena.

Exactly two minutes into the game, John Tavares one-timed a long cross-ice pass from William Nylander past a sliding Sergei Bobrovsky to give the Maple Leafs an early 1-0 lead.

Then with nearly two minutes to go in the opening period, Sam Bennett slammed home a Mackie Samoskevich rebound while Florida was on the power play to tie the game at one.

Florida took their first lead of the game about six minutes into the second period.

A.J. Greer dug the puck free in the corner and found a wide-open Niko Mikkola in the high slot. Mikkola wired a wrist shot past the blocker of Anthony Stolarz to put the Cats ahead 2-1.

Bennett’s second goal of the game was not that dissimilar from his first, putting the puck home from the doorstep to extend the Cats lead heading into the third.

Less than five minutes into the final frame, Max Domi caught Florida trying to change their defensive pairing and beat Sergei Bobrovsky glove side to bring Toronto back within one of the Cats.

That would be as close as the Leafs would get, thanks to some big stops by Bobrovsky down the stretch.

On to Montreal.

QUICK THOUGHTS

Bennett extended his point streak to four games, with three goals and five points during the run.

He’s also averaging more than a point per game dating back to late January.

Samoskevish has now accumulated six points over his past six games and eight points in 10 games since the start of February.

Sam Reinhart picked up a pair of assists, giving him six points over his past four games.

After going six straight games without a point, Greer now has four points over his past seven outings.

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If Canucks Coach Rick Tocchet Doesn't Return, Should The Penguins Sign Him?

Rick Tocchet (Bob Frid-Imagn Images)

It was only last year that Vancouver Canucks bench boss Rick Tocchet was on top of the coaching world. 

He led the Canucks to the top spot in the Pacific Division with a 50-23-9 record. The NHL recognized Tocchet for his success, winning the Jack Adams Award as the coach of the year.

Things are notably different for Tocchet's team this season. 

The Canucks fell to fifth place in the Pacific, and they’re behind the Calgary Flames for the second wild-card berth in the Western Conference. 

That makes Tocchet’s future a little hazier than expected heading into the campaign. 

TSN’s Pierre LeBrun reported in January that the Canucks have a team option to keep Tocchet for one more season, but the coach reportedly has the right to decide whether or not he would sign. Injuries have been a factor in the team’s drop in the standings this season, but there have also been a fair share of distractions, including the rift between J.T. Miller and center Elias Pettersson and Pettersson’s drop in production this season leading to more trade rumors.

On Sportsnet 590, Canucks journalist Rick Dhaliwal pointed out there’s no extension in place for Tocchet down to the homestretch of the season, even though he's the reigning coach of the year.

“I know the media’s getting to Tocchet, because he made a couple of comments in the last two games that tells you the media’s getting to him,” Dhaliwal said.

“It’s been a really trying year,” he added. “He’s had to babysit Miller, Pettersson, the feud. Media’s all over him now. If this team doesn’t make the playoffs, what’s going to happen then? But he’s got a decision to make, Rick Tocchet.”

Another factor that could decide Tocchet’s future is that his former team, the Pittsburgh Penguins, could be looking for a new coach if they decide to move on from longtime bench boss Mike Sullivan. The Penguins have been committed to Sullivan since 2015 and gave him a vote of confidence early this season. His job on Team USA at the 4 Nations Face-Off also shows why Pittsburgh values him so much.

But Pittsburgh’s inability to make the Stanley Cup playoffs for likely three-straight years could put Sullivan’s job in jeopardy.

If the Penguins do part ways with Sullivan, Tocchet would be an excellent fit with the Pens. Tocchet won a Cup as a player with Pittsburgh in 1992 and as an assistant coach in 2016 and 2017, so he’s very familiar with the organization. As good a coach Sullivan has been for Pittsburgh, changing things up could spark the club. Tocchet could give the core of Sidney Crosby, Evgeni Malkin, Kris Letang and Erik Karlsson a real bump, the same way he did for Canucks players last season.

The Penguins clearly would still want an experienced hand as they try to retool on the fly, and that describes Tocchet to a ‘T.’ That said, there are no guarantees the Penguins would pursue Tocchet or that the Canucks would even make him available.

Vancouver still has time to keep Tocchet around. Despite being caught battling for a wild-card spot instead of first place in the Pacific Divsion, the Canucks’ power-play percentage under Tocchet is still about as good as last season, and their penalty-kill rate is slightly better, at 82.1 percent compared to 79.1 percent in 2023-24. But with Demko’s injury issues, the team’s goals against per game increased from 2.70 last season to 3.03. The goals-for per game also fell from 3.40 to 2.71.

It’s tough to overly fault Tocchet for his team’s struggles, but the closer we get to the off-season with no extension, the more talk there will be about his future. The NHL’s coaching carousel spins fast these years, after all, with teams having less patience than usual for their bench bosses. 

The Canucks might be squandering the improvement Tocchet created in Vancouver if they don’t bring him back, whether it’s their choice or the coach’s. Either way, the Penguins may want to stay tuned to his situation.

Get the latest news and trending stories by following The Hockey News on Google News and by subscribing to The Hockey News newsletter here. And share your thoughts by commenting below the article on THN.com.

Breaking Down Avalanche's Remaining Schedule — And Their Chances At Rising In Hyper-Competitive Central Division

Nathan MacKinnon (center), Cale Makar (right) -- Isaiah J. Downing, USA TODAY Sports

The Colorado Avalanche have been one of the NHL's toughest teams of late, going 10-3-1 since Jan. 28. That stretch of hockey has allowed the Avs to vault over the Minnesota Wild for third place in the incredibly-competitive Central Divsion. And if the Avalanche are going to catch the Dallas Stars for second spot in the Central, they're going to have to be almost as good, if not better. But let's break down their remaining 16 games and project how well they'll be doing.

According to the very useful Tankathon web site, the Avs have the NHL's 11th-toughest remaining schedule. Starting Friday in Calgary, Colorado has nine straight games against either teams who are in serious contention for a playoff spot, or who already occupy a playoff spot -- the Flames (twice), Dallas, Toronto, Ottawa, Montreal, Detroit, Los Angeles, and St. Louis. After that, they've got Chicago, Columbus, the Blues, Golden Knights, Canucks, Kings, and Ducks. So if they can play well in those first nine games, the Avalanche's remaining seven games should be considerably easier.

Getting into second spot in the Central is important for the Avs in many ways -- most notably, in terms of their home and road record. When they're playing in Denver, the Avalanche are an impressive 22-10-2 this season. But away from home, the Avs are only 17-14-1. Nine of their remaining 16 games are on the road, and that means Colorado needs to be better than that in order to challenge the Stars for second place and home-ice advantage in Round One of the post-season this spring.

Either way, it certainly seems like the Avs are destined for a first-round showdown with Dallas. And considering their season series record against the Stars is 1-1-0 -- with a less-talented squad than the Avalanche are after this season's trade deadline -- Colorado should feel confident they can hang with Dallas and get at least to the second round for the sixth time in the past seven seasons. The Avs did lose to the Stars in the second round of last season's playoffs, but this is a much stronger Colorado team we're talking about this season.

The Avalanche have arguably the deepest defense corps in the NHL, a strong goaltending tandem, and legitimate superstars in Nathan MacKinnon and Cale Makar. Most teams do not have that combination of depth and elite skill.

It took them a while to get up to speed this season, but as it stands right now, the Avs are as dangerous as any team in the league -- and they could wind up winning their second Stanley Cup in the past four years. Time will tell how they fare this season, but the Avalanche look like they can do a whole lot of damage the rest of the regular-season and the post-season.

Penguins V. Blues Preview: Game Notes, Lineup, And More

Dec 30, 2023; Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA; Pittsburgh Penguins center Sidney Crosby (87) reacts after scoring an empty net goal against the St. Louis Blues during the third period at PPG Paints Arena. Pittsburgh won 4-2. (Charles LeClaire-Imagn Images)

The Pittsburgh Penguins will look to build on the momentum of two consecutive victories against Western Conference playoff teams when they take on the St. Louis Blues in Pittsburgh on Thursday.

And they will - once again - deploy the same guy between the pipes to do it.

Goaltender Tristan Jarry has allowed just three goals on his last 67 shots against, which is good for a .955 save percentage in those last two outings. 

His teammates believe he can keep things going in positive direction, especially after the tough season that Jarry has endured:

Jarry has not been the only player carrying the torch for the Penguins in the last few games, however. Captain Sidney Crosby has four goals in the last two games, and he is just 10 points shy of clinching his 20th consecutive season at point-per-game, which would break the previous NHL record set by Wayne Gretzky.

Although goaltending and the Crosby effect has carried the Penguins through most of these last two wins, other parts of the lineup are beginning to find some traction. The second line combo of Evgeni Malkin and Philip Tomasino - with the addition of Danton Heinen for this game - has been generating chances. 

And another player who will get a second chance in an elevated role is Blake Lizotte, who registered five goals and nine points in nine games earlier this season during a brief stint as the team's third-line center. He will slot in there again tonight alongside newcomer Connor Dewar and Noel Acciari.

Here is the rest of the Penguins' lineup:

Although they are still two points removed from the second wild card spot in the West, the Blues have been one of the league's hottest teams. They are 7-1-2 in their last 10 games and have outscored the opposition, 39-25. 

St. Louis is a balanced team up and down the lineup, and their leading scorer, Robert Thomas, has 17 goals and 51 points in 53 games.


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Flames Star Huberdeau First Flourished In Florida

(FEB 28, 2022 -- VOL. 75, ISSUE 12)

Calgary Flames star left winger Jonathan Huberdeau has had a stellar season this year. But in this cover story from THN's 2022 Trade Deadline Preview, writer Matt Larkin covered Huberdeau's ascent as an elite competitor with the Florida Panthers:

APPRECIATION VALUE

By Matt Larkin

A 1999 Saturn Station Wagon? Really?

Imagine being an impressionable teenager, thrilled to pass your driver’s test and own your first car. Better yet: mom and dad run a used-car dealership. You’re not getting driven onto some dusty lot to buy the cheapest thing on wheels; you have your pick of the family fleet. This will be sweet.

But…nope. You get that ’99 Saturn, the blandest, most forgettable vehicle on the lot.

Alain Huberdeau has run Prev-automobiles Inc. in Prevost, Que., for more than 30 years, and even he admits the car he gave his youngest son, Jonathan, was second-rate. “It was not a nice car,” said Alain with a laugh. “Five-speed nowhere nothing.”

But that car did exactly what it was supposed to. It was an intelligent, efficient purchase. It got great gas mileage. It was affordable. It smoothly transported 16-year-old Jonathan to and from Saint John, N.B., where he began playing for the QMJHL’s Sea Dogs in 2009-10. It forced him to learn how to drive a stick shift. It also instilled a brainy sensibility in young Jonathan.

Rather than feeling entitled to the fanciest sports car on the lot, he learned the value of making the most out of what he had. He learned he would have to work harder than everyone around him if he wanted to make it as an NHL hockey player with ordinary skating ability. Even when he earned his first NHL contract and signing bonus after the Florida Panthers drafted him third overall in 2011, he made the sensible choice of another used car from the Huberdeau family dealership, this time a Honda Civic. He wanted to think his way to success – behind the wheel and on the ice.

Everything in Huberdeau’s life was a slow build to progress – tracing back to his early childhood. Ironically, one of the greatest current puck wizards in hockey got his start on ice without a puck, without a stick and almost without hockey skates. Huberdeau pushed back on the latter when his parents enrolled him in speed skating as a five-year-old. That’s not to be confused with power skating, which many future hockey players try before starting organized hockey.

We’re talkin’ actual speed skating, the kind you see in the Olympics, consisting of athletes with tree-trunk legs in bodysuits zooming along the track on flat blades. Huberdeau refused to wear those, so he took speed skating in his hometown of Saint-Jerome, Que., as the only kid in the class wearing hockey skates. But he wasn’t the typical youngster yawning his way through each session, complaining of frozen feet and wishing he was playing real hockey. “I was OK with it,” Huberdeau said. “It was actually better for me to start doing speed skating because you got to learn how to skate without a stick.”

Once he got a stick in his hands, speed skating had granted him the mobility to play keepaway with other kids – particularly when playing on ponds with far more people than are allowed in a regular game. “You do learn a lot of things when you play with 40 kids who want to keep the puck for themselves,” Alain Huberdeau said. “You have to work hard to keep it, so that’s probably where he learned a lot of hockey.”

Jonathan, his older brother Sebastien and their younger sister Josiane also learned a lot about the game watching their beloved Montreal Canadiens and, more specifically, the Canadiens facing the Panthers in Florida. The Huberdeaus dabbled in the snowbird life. Every Christmas, they’d head down to South Florida in an RV, and they’d catch games whenever the Habs and Panthers overlapped on the schedule. And after beach days, the kids played for hours on end at a local roller rink.

“We’d take a break to eat dinner quick, and we’d go play a big game,” Huberdeau said. “And I feel like, in Florida, there weren’t a lot of people playing with rollerblades and playing roller hockey, so we’d have the rink to ourselves.”

Being drafted by Florida, then, constituted a homecoming for Huberdeau. By the time the Panthers called his name in 2011, he was considered a star in the making, having led Saint John to a Memorial Cup weeks earlier. But he never viewed himself as a can’t-miss prospect. He wasn’t the child phenom who had video-game stats and agents sniffing around when he was barely starting puberty. Even in bantam, he was only playing BB. His parents didn’t sense he had NHL potential until he began to excel in U-18 AAA.

The speed skating had Huberdeau’s footwork at an acceptable baseline when he started hockey, but he was no burner. He never even felt he stood out on his own teams as a kid. “I was a good player, but I wasn’t the best player,” he said. “I wasn’t the fastest guy, so it wasn’t all pretty what I was doing out there. I had good vision, and I liked to pass the puck. When you’re young and you’re not that fast, you think you’re not special. I feel like special players are fast, and they’re really skilled, and that’s not what I was. But my hockey sense brought me to where I am right now, and that’s what I had when I was younger. I tell kids sometimes, no need to give up if you’re not always the best at everything. Sometimes you just get better when you get older.”

Huberdeau carried that modesty with him into the NHL, where he embarked on what was trending toward a good-but-not-great career. He won the Calder Trophy in the shortened 2012-13 campaign but with a mere 31 points in 48 games during a down year for rookies. Across his first five seasons, he amassed 198 points in 303 games, amounting to an average stat line of 18 goals and 54 points per 82 games. He played in one playoff series over the span. No one would’ve characterized him as a bust, but he wasn’t dominating in the same way he did in his final major-junior years.

Even if he was too humble ever to see himself as that player, he did believe he could evolve himself into that player. “His biggest ability was to persevere,” Alain said. “He had some tough years in Florida, but he wanted to stick there, and he really believed in that organization. They always treat him well. He could see that one day, they would be better.”

Slowly, the Panthers surrounded Huberdeau with talent. They selected center Aleksander Barkov with the No. 2 overall pick in 2013, and defenseman Aaron Ekblad with the No. 1 pick in 2014. They stole defenseman MacKenzie Weegar in the seventh round of the 2013 draft. The company Huberdeau kept began to improve, and something started to change in his game.

He could always rag the puck, but he started to pile up points once he had teammates who could finish his setups. In 2017-18, he had a career-best 69 points. The following season, he leaped to 92. Then it was 78 in just 69 games, then 61 in 55 games, and then, by the 2021-22 all-star break, 64 in 47 games, good for the NHL scoring lead. Was it simply a natural progression of talent causing his numbers to explode? Was it the influx of high-quality teammates? GM Bill Zito has peppered the Panthers lineup with effective forwards since he took over in September 2020. Zito’s additions – from right winger Anthony Duclair to left winger Carter Verhaeghe to center Sam Bennett to right winger Sam Reinhart – have been difference-makers.

In Huberdeau’s mind, the steady incline of his play came from understanding what he did best and what gaps in his game needed filling once he reached his mid-20s. He feels he’s transitioned from support player to star-caliber by improving his play without the puck and becoming more involved in every aspect of the game, whether it’s physical play, general intensity or killing penalties. He cites defensive play as the area of his game in which he’s least confident, and he’s worked to improve it.

He has shown an innate ability to rub off on his linemates – who may have more raw physical skill – and use his brain to make them better. According to Bennett, who came over in a trade in April 2021 and has been Huberdeau’s most common linemate this year, Huberdeau has a massive influence on the team because he works so hard that he spurs others to follow him. Add in the playmaking skill and it’s no wonder Huberdeau’s linemates are always over the moon to have him on their left wing. The sense of humor doesn’t hurt, either. “He does a really good job of bringing life to our room, and he’s pretty much in the middle of every joke or every friendly chirp that’s going on,” Bennett said. “He’s always involved. He really is a leader off the ice. Of course, on the ice, too, but he really is one of the main leaders off the ice as well.”

Over the past five seasons, Huberdeau, 28, ranks sixth in the NHL in assists, seventh in points and 14th in points per game. Those are hardly the types of numbers that make a player invisible. And yet he’s played in two All-Star Games, has one second-team post-season all-star selection to his name and has received Hart Trophy votes in only one season, though that will surely change after this one. 

You know he’s been cloaked in obscurity when a new linemate is surprised to learn how good he is. “When I got to actually play with him every day and see what he’s like, it’s pretty remarkable,” Bennett said. “I had no idea how talented he really was, his vision, the way he can make plays. He makes plays that I don’t think anyone else would even attempt. So it’s been really cool to actually see how gifted he is and get the chance to play with him so much.”

Has Huberdeau taken the unofficial crown from Mark Stone to become the NHL’s most underrated player? Yes, if we judge him based on how those around him evaluate his skills. “He’s deceptively fast,” said Panthers coach Andrew Brunette. “If you asked me which skill of his is underrated, it’s his puck protection and ability to hang onto the puck. It’s a little bit like Sidney Crosby, a little like Pavel Datsyuk, where they get it on a string, they get it in their feet, and you just can’t get it off him when he gets on that roll.”

There’s no clichéd chip on Huberdeau’s shoulder, no indication he feels he deserves more acknowledgment. He’s aware of the “underrated” label but unfazed. “We’re in a market where we don’t get talked about too much, playing in Florida, but I don’t care,” he said. “I know what I’m worth. I know what I can do, and that’s all that matters for me. Obviously, I think I’ve stepped up my game, but I don’t care if I’m the most underrated player. I know I’m a good player, and I know I can make a difference out there.”

Fulfilling his duty like pretty much every Canadian hockey player when asked to sing his own praises, Huberdeau prioritizes the team instead. There’s something to it in this case, however. The Panthers have achieved such strong group chemistry that, in another recent interview with The Hockey News, Zito expressed reticence over making any major trades that might upset the vibes. Huberdeau says 2021-22 is the most fun he’s had as a Panther, that the team operates like a family, that he’s never felt closer to his teammates.

The harmonious atmosphere shows in the standings, too. As of Feb. 16, Florida held the Eastern Conference’s highest points percentage at .734. How dominant were they? Not only was it by far their highest mark in franchise history, but only 21 teams in NHL history have posted a higher points percentage over a full season – out of 1,599 teams total. That puts the Panthers’ current pace in the 98th percentile of every NHL team, ever. Now it makes more sense that Huberdeau would turn the attention toward team goals.

Florida has easily the best team in its 28-season history. Through the all-star break, it averaged an incredible 4.09 goals per game, the most of any NHL team since the 1995-96 Pittsburgh Penguins. The Panthers are a clear Stanley Cup threat. But they must conquer the chore of sharing a division – and, woof, a playoff bracket – with the two-time defending champion Tampa Bay Lightning.

We should know better than to bet against Huberdeau’s crew by now, though. Their improvement in recent seasons, from .524 to .565 to .705 to .734 hockey, has been steady and methodical, just like the improvement in his personal play – and to his car collection. No more Saturns or Civics for Huberdeau now.

He earned his way to a two-year bridge deal on a $3.25-million AAV coming off his entry-level contract and is now five seasons into a six-year contract with a $5.9-million AAV. According to capfriendly.com, his estimated career earnings exceed $36 million. So, yes, he can afford the sexy cars now. Lots of them. Among his favorites: a Dodge Challenger SRT Hellcat, a Cadillac Escalade and a Tesla.

But Huberdeau’s most cherished automobile symbolizes everything he has accomplished to date: the Ferrari. It personifies loud, flashy success. It’s everything Huberdeau wasn’t for so much of his career, but it’s what he’s becoming. He’s a superstar now, and he can’t hide from that, even if he still feels like a 1999 Saturn on the inside.