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Can Tampa Bay Catch Lightning In A Bottle And Return To Their Championship Ways?

Gage Goncalves celebrates with teammates after scoring a goal against the Philadelphia Flyers (Kyle Ross-Imagn Images)

By Nicholas Rego, The Hockey News Intern

In recent years, one of the best teams in the NHL has been the Tampa Bay Lightning. They have been dominant throughout the regular season and, more importantly, in the playoffs. The Lightning won back-to-back Stanley Cups in 2020 and 2021 and then made it back to the Cup final in 2022, losing to the Colorado Avalanche in six games.  

Entering this season, there was some doubt that the Lightning were going to continue being a dominant team. And losing former captain Steven Stamkos to the Nashville Predators via free agency left some questions about the direction the team was going in. But those questions were quickly answered when the Lightning signed UFA winger Jake Guentzel to a seven-year, $63-million contract on July 1. 

One of the main reasons why the Bolts are considered one of the best teams in recent history is goaltender Andrei Vasilevskiy. During the Lightning’s three straight Stanley Cup-final runs, Vasilevskiy stood on his head. During those three playoff campaigns, he averaged a .928 save percentage, 2.10 goals-against average and posted seven shutouts. This year, Vasilevskiy is still performing at a high level, giving the Lightning a chance in the highly competitive Atlantic Division. He currently sits at a 2.01 GAA, .926 SP and has four shutouts on the season.

Another big reason for the Lightning’s success is two-time NHL scoring champion Nikita Kucherov. During Tampa Bay’s three-year run to the Cup final from 2020 to 2022, Kucherov scored 23 goals and 93 points in 71 playoff games – nearly 30 points more than the second-highest playoff scorer during that span. This season, Kucherov is still Kucherov, with 28 goals and 92 points in 61 games. When the games count the most, having someone like Kucherov leading the way on the scoring front and someone like Vasilevskiy in the crease can only lead to success deep into the playoffs. 

The supporting cast of players are contributing in so many ways that they are helping the Lightning continue their regular-season success. Players such as Guentzel, Brandon Hagel, Brayden Point and Anthony Cirelli have the ability to take over a game on any given night. And having veteran defensemen such as Victor Hedman and Ryan McDonagh to steady the blueline helps the rest of the roster breathe when the puck is on their sticks. 

Three-quarters of the regular season is in the books and the Lightning are holding their own in the Atlantic Division, chasing the Toronto Maple Leafs and the Florida Panthers for first place. The Bolts have a shot at securing the top spot and becoming a Stanley Cup threat once again as they pursue their fourth NHL championship in franchise history.

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Be The Guy: Could Canadiens Prospect Ivan Demidov Be The Next Lafleur?

Ivan Demidov (Yury Kuzmin/KHL Photo) 

One hundred and ten years ago, Lt.-Col. John McCrae wrote In Flanders Fields after the funeral of a close friend who had died in battle in the First World War. More than 30 years later, Montreal Canadiens GM Frank Selke absconded the famous line, “To you from failing hands we throw the torch. Be yours to hold it high.” And for almost 75 years, that line has greeted Canadiens players as they’ve entered the team’s dressing room, either in the Forum or the Bell Centre. It’s there to remind them of the greatness that has preceded them and their responsibility to uphold the standard that was established by the franchise’s icons.

Ivan Demidov (Yury Kuzmin/KHL Photo)

Generations of players have done their parts, but woo-boy there have been some rough years lately. With a few notable exceptions, young Canadiens players have spent the better part of the past 20 years or so handling the torch like it was a book of matches from a Crescent Street strip club that someone had inadvertently set on fire. There have been some hits, lots of misses and a team that has been among the top 20 in the NHL only once in the past five years. Of course, they finished 18th that year and made it to the Stanley Cup final, so there’s that.

Canadiens GM Kent Hughes remembers the glory days. Larry Robinson’s son played minor hockey with him in Beaconsfield, and Jacques Lemaire’s kid played with Hughes’ younger brother, Ryan. And what the Canadiens are building right now is not the 1970s dynasty that Hughes and his brother idolized, but it’s something. Lane Hutson, Kaiden Guhle and David Reinbacher will never be confused with Robinson, Serge Savard and Guy Lapointe, but they’re really good. Nick Suzuki probably isn’t Lemaire, but work with us. Cole Caufield could stand in for Steve Shutt and Juraj Slafkovsky or Michael Hage for Pete Mahovlich. Nobody is saying Owen Beck and Oliver Kapanen are the next Bob Gainey and Doug Jarvis, but let’s use our imaginations here. Arber Xhekaj as Pierre Bouchard? Sure. (Just keep him away from the modern-day Stan Jonathan.) People are saying great things about Jacob Fowler, the same way they did about Cayden Primeau at the same age, but the kid is putting up Ken Dryden-like numbers at Boston College.

And then there’s Ivan Demidov, star of YouTube and the single-season under-20 scoring leader in KHL history. He plays right wing. So did Guy Lafleur. So, let’s imagine the possibilities. The thing that sports sells better than anything is hope, so let’s give this a go. What if Demidov becomes the dynamic, lift-you-out-of-your-seat scoring star the Canadiens have lacked for decades? And what if the rest of them come together and hit their career peaks simultaneously? Hey, even a poor man’s 1970s dynasty could win the Stanley Cup in today’s parity-ravaged NHL. “I can tell you that if you made those comparisons and you were right,” Hughes said, “you’d be talking to the happiest man in the world.”

Ivan Demidov (Stephen R. Sylvanie-Imagn Images)
"His ability to move laterally suddenly is one of his calling cards."
- Kent Hughes

Which brings us back to Demidov, who fell to the Canadiens when they were picking fifth overall in the 2024 NHL draft and who has since emerged as the world’s No. 1 NHL-affiliated prospect. There’s a video going around in which Canadiens executive VP of hockey operations Jeff Gorton asks Demidov in his draft interview if the team would be crazy to pass on him at their position, and Demidov confirms they would be. Demidov is making them look pretty good, which is probably why the Canadiens allowed the video to surface.

Demidov doesn’t have Lafleur’s shirt-flapping speed – he probably doesn’t spark up a heater between periods, either – but he’s deadly in the scoring areas. His sense of deception is sublime, and he can make a puck find the net while negotiating its way past multiple sets of shin pads. Nobody in KHL history – not Kirill Kaprizov, not Matvei Michkov – has as many points in a teenage season as Demidov has so far in 2024-25. All that is great, but Hughes is most impressed with how Demidov has handled the situation with his KHL team in St. Petersburg, being sat out of the lineup by coach Roman Rotenberg, then playing sparingly early in the season. He has figured it out, which means the Canadiens have been handed a bit of a development gift in the tough love that Rotenberg has shown Demidov.

Ivan Demidov (Ilya Smirnov/KHL Photo)

In December, Hughes accompanied Canadiens head amateur scout Nick Bobrov and special consultant Vincent Lecavalier (along with Demidov’s agent, Dan Milstein) on a multi-pronged mission to assure Demidov that his early-season struggles were not a concern to them and to find out from Rotenberg what Demidov had to improve upon to get more playing time.

Ivan Demidov (Yury Kuzmin/KHL Photo)

“To be honest, some of the stuff they were asking him to do, as much as it made for some frustrating times for him, it’s probably going to help his transition to North America,” Hughes said. “With any young prospect, before you have complete control over their development, you want them in an environment where the things being asked of them are productive in terms of making them better future NHL players. The ice time was not ideal, and he couldn’t do what they were asking of him if he wasn’t playing.”

So, fans of the Canadiens – and there are apparently a few of them – watch the regular postings of Demidov’s most recent exploits in a league where Josh Leivo is the leading scorer and they wonder whether the parade is going to go the usual route down Rue Ste-Catherine. Since Demidov’s contract with SKA expires on May 31, it’s assumed that he’ll be in the Habs’ lineup next season. And there’s a good chance he will be. The Laval Rocket had the best points percentage in the AHL at the all-star break, and, hey, it’s not out of the question that Demidov could sign with the Canadiens and join the Rocket for their playoff run. But we’re getting ahead of ourselves. Both Hughes and Milstein are loath to talk about when the NHL might see Demidov because, well, Russia. Both will breathe a huge sigh of relief when the young man sets foot in Montreal.

But for now, the Canadiens are thrilled he’s turned his season around, and good things are on the horizon. When Hughes watches Demidov play, both in person and on video, he sees a player with a unique set of skills and the ability to control his edges like few other players. “His ability to move laterally suddenly is one of his calling cards,” Hughes said. “It makes him so elusive. Ivan doesn’t skate at the high speeds Connor McDavid does, but he cuts and moves from right to left, and the amount he covers is significant. He can score, but he also has the ability to see plays and make plays. He has a lot of qualities that we think are going to allow him to be successful in the NHL.”

Ivan Demidov (Ilya Smirnov/KHL Photo)Ivan Demidov (Ilya Smirnov/KHL Photo)

Hughes waits a second or two, then adds, “And very different. Not the kind of player you see every day.” That makes the Canadiens excited for the time when they can start seeing him every day.


This article appeared in our 2025 Future Watch issue. Our cover story focuses on Ducks prospect Beckett Sennecke, who is tearing it up with the OHL's Oshawa Generals this season. We also include features on other exceptional NHL prospects, including: Zayne Parekh, Porter Martone, Gavin McKenna and more. In addition, we look at the top-10 prospects in the pipeline for each of the 32 NHL clubs.

It's available on newsstands now, or you can get it in print for free when you subscribe to The Hockey News at THN.com/Free today. All subscriptions include complete access to more than 76 years of articles at The Hockey News Archive.

Golden Knights Continue Road Trip With A Clash In Buffalo

The Vegas Golden Knights will play the third game of their four-game road trip this afternoon against the Buffalo Sabres.

Buffalo Sabres goaltender James Reimer (47) makes a save against Vegas Golden Knights center Jack Eichel (9) during the third period at T-Mobile Arena. Mandatory Credit: Stephen R. Sylvanie-Imagn Images

The Golden Knights have started the Eastern Conference road trip going 1-0-1, most recently beating the Columbus Blue Jackets. During the road trip, Jack Eichel set the new franchise record for points in a season and starting goaltender Adin Hill signed a six-year contract extension. 

The three points they've picked up have also given them a five-point lead on the Edmonton Oilers and closed the gap to the Dallas Stars for second place in the Western Conference. 

The Sabres are once again going through a difficult campaign. Hope and optimism were high heading into the season, expecting breakthroughs from multiple young Sabres players, but nothing came to fruition, they sit in 30th place in the NHL and traded away 24-year-old centerman Dylan Cozens to a division rival. 

Playing against struggling teams can often lower the intensity, and this is why these games can be referred to as "trap games," but the Golden Knights need every point they can conjure at the moment. Focus and execution will likely be what HC Bruce Cassidy preaches to his players.

Puck drop is at 9:30 AM PST at the KeyBank Center.

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Flyers ‘still evaluating' Ersson, hoping for a tandem in future

Flyers ‘still evaluating' Ersson, hoping for a tandem in future originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

VOORHEES, N.J. — The goaltending situation in Philadelphia has been far from unassailable.

The Flyers parted ways with Carter Hart last summer because of the Hockey Canada sexual assault case. They lost their No. 1 goaltender in January last season, when he requested and was granted an indefinite leave of absence.

Since 2021, they’ve drafted three goalies in the third round or higher. In John Tortorella’s three-year tenure as head coach, they’ve played six goalies.

So it’s probably stating the obvious that the Flyers don’t feel like they have the position figured out in their rebuild. They’re still learning about Samuel Ersson, who had to suddenly take over the No. 1 duties with Hart’s exit.

“Sam has been thrusted into a spot that I just think it has been unfair for him,” Tortorella said Saturday morning ahead of his team’s game against the Hurricanes (7 p.m. ET/NBCSP). “This organization was set back when things changed with our goaltending situation, especially Sam, not allowing him to develop. So he has been force-fed a little bit here.”

Ersson has had an up-and-down season that started with nagging lower-body issues. He went on an excellent run from Christmas to around the end of February, putting up an 11-4-1 mark, a 2.23 goals-against average and .919 save percentage. Since then, he has gone 1-2-1 with a 4.47 goals-against average and an .826 save percentage.

On the season, the 25-year-old is 19-12-4 with a 2.96 goals-against average and an .888 save percentage.

“I think with Sam, as we move forward, we’re hoping it’s going to be a tandem,” Tortorella said. “We’re not going to ask Sam to play 55, 60 games if he’s the guy. I think it’s going to be a tandem. We’re still evaluating. He has been inconsistent. Sometimes you watch him play and you think he has got it but then he falls off.

“It happens to a lot of goalies, that’s why some goalies just don’t play and are out of the National Hockey League. So we continue to evaluate and we’re going to continue to do the same thing these last 15 games or so.”

The Flyers entered Saturday last in the NHL with an .875 save percentage. They’ve allowed 26.8 shots per game. Only six teams have allowed fewer and they’re all in playoff position: the Hurricanes, Kings, Avalanche, Golden Knights, Devils and Panthers.

It’s also fair to note the Flyers have not given their netminders consistent goal support. Over their last 20 games, the Flyers have scored just 2.20 goals per game.

“It’s a constant team evaluation as we go through it,” Tortorella said. “I’m certainly not laying everything at the doorstep, but it’s the most important position in the game as far as winning and losing and giving your team a chance to win.”

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Younger Xhekaj Makes Rocket History

Jared Davidson, Florian Xhekaj and Lucas Condotta. Photo credit: Laval Rocket X account

Arber Xhekaj’s younger brother Florian is currently playing his first year of professional hockey with the Laval Rocket, and to say the 101st pick at the 2023 draft is having a good season would be an understatement.

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Drafted by the Montreal Canadiens in his second year of eligibility for his hard-nosed play and potential, Xhekaj developed well in the OHL with the Brantford Bulldogs, going from 25 points in his draft year to 65 in the following season. He also upped his penalty minutes from 76 to 81 minutes and came to training camp ready to make an impact. On September 14, during a tilt with the Toronto Maple Leafs' rookies, he dropped the gloves against Chas Sharpe.

The Canadiens assigned him to the Rocket during camp, and he’s done very well under Pascal Vincent's tutelage. On Friday night, in the Rocket’s 4-1 win over the Utica Comets, he scored two goals, including an empty netter, which brought his total to 17 lamplighters on the season.

The goal broke the Rocket’s record for most goals in a season by a rookie player, established by Lucas Condotta in 2022-23. While coach Vincent wasn’t aware of the feat, Xhekaj’s teammates were and collected the puck for him.

Asked about his player after the game, Vincent admitted that all options were considered about Xhekaj before the start of the season. They decided to keep him in Laval and his performance shows it was the right call. The coach explained he has a great capacity to learn and is a significant contributor to the Rocket’s success.

Xhekaj plays on penalty kills but not on power plays, so his goals are scored even at strength. He’s ready to step up for a teammate whenever the situation calls for it and is a great team player.

While he won’t ever be a top-six player in the NHL, he has the potential to be a very good bottom-six forward who can play with an edge. In my opinion, he still needs some seasoning in the AHL, but eventually, he will join the Canadiens and become a success story for development in the organization.


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Three Playoff-Bound NHL Teams Trending Downward

Stuart Skinner (Kyle Ross-Imagn Images)

When we talk about NHL teams that almost certainly are going to make the Stanley Cup playoffs, there are two distinct kinds of teams. There are squads that look like they’re going to be dynamic powerhouses – think of Florida, Washington, Winnipeg, Dallas, Vegas and Colorado – but there are also playoff-bound teams trending downward. And in this column, we will identify three squads trending downward – the New Jersey Devils, Minnesota Wild and Edmonton Oilers.

The Devils have been waylaid by major injuries to crucial stars Jack Hughes and Dougie Hamilton, but the truth is, they’ve been a disappointing bunch for months now. For example, since Dec. 27, the Devils have been able to string together three wins in a row just once – in their current three-game win streak. But since Jan. 11, New Jersey has gone 11-10-2. There’s been no extended stretch of excellence to point to with the Devils. Once again, they’re the epitome of mediocrity.

It’s no wonder, then, that Devils fans are worried that New Jersey could fall out of third place in the Metropolitan Division and wind up in a wild-card spot squaring off against elite teams like the Capitals or Panthers in the first round. Would anyone other than Devils diehards bet on New Jersey to make it to the second round of the post-season? We sincerely doubt it. And even when New Jersey was at full strength, they weren’t contending for top spot in the Metro, so it’s hard to envision them doing any damage in the playoffs without Hughes and Hamilton. It’s a bleak picture for the Devils, but it’s an accurate one.

Similarly, in the extremely competitive Central Division, the Wild have tumbled out of third place and are now in the first wild-card spot in the Western Conference. Earlier this season, the Wild were second in the Central, but like the Devils, Minnesota has also had significant injuries to key players, including superstar winger Kirill Kaprizov, center Joel Eriksson Ek, and defensemen Jared Spurgeon and Jonas Brodin. And their downward trend is visible in the results of their recent schedule.

To wit: since Jan. 11, the Wild have gone 11-12-1 – and since Jan. 30, they’ve gone 7-7-1. So we’re not talking about one or two bad weeks with this team. We’re talking about sustained mediocrity, and Minnesota is now in a standings position where they’d be playing against the Vegas Golden Knights, Winnipeg Jets or Dallas Stars in the first round. And like the Devils, the Wild are going to be underdogs no matter which of those teams they face in the post-season.

Finally, the Oilers are struggling without any major injuries like the Devils and Wild have had to deal with. Instead, it’s Edmonton’s goaltending and recent all-around funk that is cause for concern for them heading into the playoffs. Since Jan. 27, the Oilers have gone 7-9-1, and after challenging for top spot in the Pacific Division earlier in the season, the Oilers sit just one point ahead of the L.A. Kings for second place in the division.

The Oilers may not fall any further than third in the Pacific, as they’re currently nine points ahead of the Calgary Flames and Vancouver Canucks, but you never know – another couple weeks of disappointing hockey could allow the Flames or Canucks to slip by the Oilers and put Edmonton in a wild-card spot. That would’ve been unthinkable early in the year, but the sub-par play of Edmonton goalie Stuart Skinner – who had an .867 save percentage in February and an .876 SP thus far in March – has created uncertainty and doubt in the mind of Oilers fans.

There’s still time for the Oilers, Wild and Devils to turn things around and salvage their season, but there’s not much time – just about one month on the dot. And it’s important to bear in mind that those three teams aren’t playing in a vacuum. Because of their recent struggles, New Jersey, Edmonton and Minnesota essentially have had control of their destiny taken out of their hands. Not only do they now have to improve significantly, but they have to hope the teams ahead of them or just behind them in the standings - in New Jersey’s case, Carolina and Columbus, in Minnesota’s case, Colorado and Dallas, and in Edmonton’s case, the Kings, Flames and Canucks – wind up struggling the rest of the season.

For those reasons, we’re not feeling confident in the Oilers, Devils or Wild this year. Their faults have come to light, and there’s no easy fix for them. And if they do fall easily in the playoffs, no one will be able to say they never saw it coming.

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Calgary Flames Recall Dryden Hunt From AHL

Dryden Hunt (Sergei Belski-Imagn Images)

The Calgary Flames have recalled forward Dryden Hunt from the Calgary Wranglers, it was announced Friday. 

Hunt, a native of Cranbrook, B.C., has been a key part of the Wranglers this season, collecting 15 goals and 33 assists for 48 points in 48 games. Hunt has also appeared in one game with the Flames, going pointless in the process. 

Having turned pro before the 2016-17 season, Hunt has appeared in 231 career NHL regular season games across parts of eight seasons with the Flames, Florida Panthers, Arizona Coyotes, New York Rangers, Colorado Avalanche, and the Toronto Maple Leafs. In that span, he has scored 18 goals and added 33 assists for 51 points. 

In his second full season with the Flames organization, Hunt has established himself as a reliable depth player. If an NHL regular goes down with an injury, Flames management knows they can rely on Hunt to come in and play his role well. As Hunt gets another recall, he will once again have the chance to show what he is capable of. 

Different Process, Same Result as Red Wings Fall 4–2 in Carolina

Mar 14, 2025; Raleigh, North Carolina, USA; Carolina Hurricanes center Jordan Staal (11) checks Detroit Red Wings center Dylan Larkin (71) during the second period at Lenovo Center. (James Guillory, Imagn Images)

11 days after Carolina smothered the Red Wings at Little Caesars Arena, the Hurricanes beat Detroit again Friday in at the Lenovo Center in Raleigh.  The game looked different than the Canes' win at LCA, with the Red Wings posing a more serious and sustained threat than they managed in the previous match-up, but in the end the result was the same, with Carolina playing its way to a 4–2 victory.

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Detroit had to absorb heavy early pressure in the first period, as the Hurricanes flew out of the gate in their signature free-firing, aggressive fashion.  Despite that early push from the home team, it was the visitors who struck first, with Alex DeBrincat nabbing his 31st of the year when the Red Wings forced a turnover on an attempted Carolina zone exit and the diminutive sniper buried a wrister from the outer slot.

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The Detroit lead was short-lived, however.  Taylor Hall tied the game just 22 seconds into the second period, with Jack Roslovic and Jalen Chatfield following it up to send the game to the third at 3–1 after a period in which the Canes held a 12–6 advantage in shots.

Michael Rasmussen cut that lead to 3–2 early in the final frame with an impressive solo effort, lugging the puck from end to end before dipping his shoulder to sashay around Roslovic.  It took three whacks at the puck to beat Frederik Andersen, but Rasmussen eventually forced home the puck, leaving his team with just over 17 minutes to find an equalizer.

The Red Wings continued to threaten down the stretch, and the third was the only period in which they outshot their hosts (14–11), but Detroit couldn't find the goal it needed, before Eric Robinson hit the empty net to make it 4–2 with just over a minute left, sealing the result.

"I thought the second was the period that really hurt us," coach Todd McLellan told reporters in his post-game remarks.  "The first, you have to weather the storm here.  They come out real hard, we got some good saves, I thought we settled in as the period wore on, scoring certainly helped us, but the second period was unacceptable.  It wasn't just Carolina-inflicted; it was self-inflicted.  It started with the very first shift...some really dumb play on our behalf, so that was self-inflicted...If you don't play your full 60 against these top teams, you're likely going to come out on the losing end."

The Red Wings have now lost six straight to the Hurricanes, with their last win coming on March 30, 2023 at LCA.  McLellan likes to talk about a 'race to three' in the modern NHL, and Detroit hasn't made it to three goals in any of those six defeats.

After the loss, the Red Wings remain two points back of the playoff cut line, with an extra game played and the Rangers and Canadiens both between them and the Blue Jackets (present holders of the second wild card berth in the East).  Detroit will be back in action Sunday afternoon at LCA, hosting the Vegas Golden Knights.

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Panthers road trip continues against Montreal squad fighting for playoff spot

Apr 2, 2024; Montreal, Quebec, CAN; Florida Panthers forward Aleksander Barkov (16) scores a goal against Montreal Canadiens goalie Sam Montembeault (35) during the first period at the Bell Centre. (Eric Bolte-Imagn Images)

The Florida Panthers will be looking to make it a perfect visit to Canada when they visit the Montreal Canadiens on Saturday night.

Fresh off Thursday’s 3-2 victory in Toronto, the Panthers will continue their nearly two-week road trip against the Canadiens squad desperate to keep pace in an extremely tight playoff race.

Entering play Saturday, Montreal is a single point behind the Columbus Blue Jackets and New York Rangers, who are tied with 70 points for the final Wild Card spot in the East, though currently Columbus holds the tiebreaker with a game in hand on New York.

Montreal has been playing some solid hockey of late, and it’s been what has prolelled them back into the thick of the Wild Card hunt.

After enduring a stretch between January and February in which the Habs lost eight of nine, things have turned around significantly since the 4 Nations break for Montreal.

They’ve picked up points in eight of nine and are hoping to build on the 6-1-2 run that has, at least for now, saved their season.

The next week will go a long way toward Montreal maintaining their position as a playoff hopeful, as they’ll face Florida, the Ottawa Senators, New York Islanders and Colorado Avalanche.

Ottawa and Colorado are currently holding playoff spots while the Islanders are four points back of the final Wild Card spot and fighting for every point they can get.

Here are the Panthers projected lines and pairings for Saturday’s matchup in Montreal:

Carter Verhaeghe – Sasha Barkov – Sam Reinhart

Mackie Samoskevich – Sam Bennett – Evan Rodrigues

Eetu Luostarinen – Anton Lundell – Jesper Boqvist

A.J. Greer – Nico Sturm – Tomas Nosek

Gus Forsling – Seth Jones

Niko Mikkola – Dmitry Kulikov

Nate Schmidt – Uvis Balinskis

Scratches: Jonah Gadjovich, Brad Marchand

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