All posts by NHL Hockey News, Scores, Standings, Rumors, Fantasy Games

Columbus Blue Jackets (77 pts) vs. Ottawa Senators (90 pts) Game Preview

Marc DesRosiers-Imagn Images

The Columbus Blue Jackets and Ottawa Senators play the third and final game of the season series tonight at Nationwide Arena.

The Columbus Blue Jackets are one loss and a Montréal Canadiens win away from being eliminated from playoff contention. It's April 8th with six games to go, and the CBJ and just now being knocked out. It's been a long time since it came down to the final days for Columbus. 

But the games must be played, and you never know, the Blue Jackets could rattle off six straight wins, and Montréal could falter down the stretch as well. Nothing is over until it's over. 

Until then, it's game on against the Ottawa Senators, and the CBJ owe the Sens a loss this season. The Jackets will be trying to avoid a season series sweep at the hands of the Senators. 

Senators Stats

  • Power Play – 23.1% - 12th in NHL
  • Penalty Kill – 77.9% - 17th in NHL
  • Goals For - 221 – 20th – 2.93 GPG – 20th
  • Goals Against – 213 – 10th – 2.87 GPG – 13th

Series History vs. The Senators

  • Columbus is 7-12-2 on the road and 18-19-5 in 42 all-time meetings vs. Ottawa.
  • The Jackets are 9-5-3 in the last 17 against the Sens and 2-2-1 in the last five. 

Who To Watch For The Senators

  • Tim Stutzle leads the Senators with 51 assists and 72 points. 
  • Linus Ullmark is 23-14-3 with a SV% of .911.
  • Anton Forsberg is 10-11-2 with a SV% of .907.

CBJ Player Notes vs. Senators

  • Boone Jenner has 13 points in 25 career games against Ottawa.  
  • Zach Werenski has 18 points in 18 games.  
  • Sean Monahan has 18 points in 30 games against the Senators. 

Injuries

  • Kevin Labanc (shoulder) is on Injured Reserve as of Feb. 21 and is out for the season (20 Games) 

TOTAL MAN GAMES LOST: 309

How to Watch & Listen: Tonight's game will be on FanDuel Sports Network. Steve Mears will be on the play-by-play. The radio broadcast will be on 97.1 The Fan, with Bob McElligott behind the mic doing the play-by-play.

Let us know what you think below.

Stay updated with the most interesting Blue Jackets stories, analysis, breaking news, and more!

Tap the star to add us to your favorites on Google News and never miss a story. 

Canadiens: Taking On A Chaser

Brendan Gallagher tries to beat Cam Talbot - Photo credit: Rick Osentoski-Imagn Images

After Sunday night’s game, the Montreal Canadiens found themselves with a six-point lead over two teams in the wild card race: the New York Rangers and the Detroit Red Wings. The latter will be in town on Tuesday night for a crucial duel with the Habs. It will be the fourth and final game of the season between the two sides, and the stakes have never been higher.

Patrik Laine’s Lack of Shots on Net is Weird
Canadiens: What’s Next For Demidov?
Three Takeaways As Dobes Stole The Game

The Red Wings won the last meeting 4-2 in January, but the Canadiens won both of the December back-to-back games by scores of 4-3 and 5-1. Montreal has won its last five games, while Detroit is running a two-game winning streak. The Habs have a 5-3-2 record in the previous 10 games, while the Wings are 5-4-1.

Montreal had a day off yesterday, so there’s been no update yet on the availability of either Emil Heinman or David Savard. As for the starter, Jakub Dobes was great on Sunday night, but Samuel Montembeault remains the number one goaltender and should be back in the net. He has a 3-1-2 record against the Wings with a 2.97 goals-against average and a .902 save percentage. As for Dobes, he has never faced them.

Detroit has already confirmed that Cam Talbot will be in the net on Tuesday night. He has a 9-3-1 record, a 1.61 GAA, and an excellent .940 SP. It looks like the Canadiens will have their work cut out for them.

Up front, Brendan Gallagher is the Canadiens’ most prolific scorer against Detroit with 30 points in 36 games, followed by Patrik Laine, who has 21 points in 23 games, and Nick Suzuki with 14 points in 18 games. The Wings would do well to keep a close eye on Lane Hutson, who is now tied with Chris Chelios for the most points by a Canadiens’ rookie defenseman with 64. Expect the roof to come off the arena if the rookie does break the record; he has become a fan favourite in no time.

On the other side, Patrick Kane has 22 points in 27 games, followed by Dylan Larkin with 21 points in 33 tilts and Alex DeBrincat with 19 points in 18 games.

The Red Wings have won six of the last ten games against the Canadiens, with Montreal grabbing the other four. The Habs have five games left, while the Wings have six. A regulation loss on Tuesday night would be disastrous for the Wings; it would put the Canadiens eight points ahead of them, with only 10 points up for grabs on the season. It wouldn’t mean a mathematical elimination but would make the prospect even more likely. As for the Canadiens, they'll try to win a sixth game in a row for the first time this season. 

According to Moneypuck, the Canadiens currently have an 87.2% chance of making the playoffs, whereas the Wings’ odds are only 5.6%. That’s an uphill battle if there ever was one.


Canadiens stories, analysis, breaking news, and more! Tap the star to add us to your favorites on Google News, never to miss a story.  

Follow Karine on X @KarineHains Bluesky @karinehains.bsky.social and Threads @karinehains.

Bookmark The Hockey News Canadiens' page for all the news and happenings around the Canadiens. 

Three Takeaways from the Calgary-San Jose Game (April 7)

Calgary Flames right wing Adam Klapka (43) shoots the puck past San Jose Sharks goaltender Georgi Romanov (31) during the third period at SAP Center at San Jose on Monday, April 7, 2025 (Photo: Stan Szeto-Imagn Images)

The Calgary Flames. Will. Not. Quit.

They beat the San Jose Sharks in a come-from-behind 3-2 victory on Monday night in the shark tank.

Here are my three takeaways from the game:

1)     Comeback from an atrocious 40 minutes

We’re always told “it’s not how you start, but it’s how you finish.”

Well, the Flames may have gotten that memo.

In the first period, San Jose outshot Calgary 18 to 8. The final shot for the home-side resulted in the ice-breaking goal.

By the end of the second period, the Sharks had blocked shooting lanes on the Flames to a point that San Jose players had registered 12 blocks, while Calgary had eight.

The tide turned in the third period where in a span of 7:18 minutes, the Flames scored three unanswered goals and never trailed again. Absolutely brilliant stuff.

2)        Special teams showed up

I mentioned in my preview article that after the 0-for-4 showing against Vegas, the Flames power play had to make an emphatic comeback.

Well… nothing better than scoring the go-ahead goal off the man-advantage.

The penalty kill was as great as expected going 2-for-3, although understandably, the 4 vs 6 situation at the end was never going to end well for the Flames.

3)      Dustin Wolf proves he is the REAL Calder Trophy favorite

We sound like a broken record at this point, but when Wolf earns his second consecutive First-Star award in a row, can you blame us? He was pelted with 31 shots, including four coming from current rookie of the year favorite Macklin Celebrini. The first-overall pick from last year had an Expected Goal value of 0.49 (highest on the team) against Wolf, but was ultimately stonewalled by the California kid.

The Flames gathered two valuable points in their pursuit of snatching the second wild-card spot from the Minnesota Wild, who had widened the gap between themselves and Flames after their win on Sunday.

The two teams will get a chance to prove who is really deserving of a playoff spot when they face off on Friday.

But before then, the Calgary Flames will stay in sunny California to play the Anaheim Ducks at 10:00 MDT/8:00 EDT on Wednesday.

 

LA Kings Get Blindsided by Seattle Kraken in 2-1 Loss

© Kiyoshi Mio-Imagn Images

Los Angeles, CA — The Los Angeles Kings (44-24-9) were defeated and shocked by the Seattle Kraken (34-38-6) in a close 2-1 match at Crypto.com Arena on Monday, April 7. 

This loss will impact the chances of the Kings playing to win the Pacific Division, but may affect the seeding for Los Angeles as the Stanley Cup playoffs near the corner, with the Las Vegas Golden Knights and the Edmonton Oilers vying to clinch the division. 

Going into this game, the Kings had a 29-4-4 home record, treading new waters as the new franchise record. Notably, though, Kings defenseman Drew Doughty was kept on the bench tonight with an ankle injury in order to heal and maintain him with playoffs around the corner. 

In the first period, Kings center Quinton Byfield struck first blood early for his team by hitting a backshot into the Seattle net with help from defenseman Kyle Burroughs to score, 1-0. Byfield’s goal also cements him in Kings history as one of the players able to score 20+ goals in consecutive seasons. 

The last time that happened was way back in 1991-1992 and 1993-1994, both times by Luc Robitaille during the Forum days. 

Though the Kings committed the first penalty of the night — defenseman Brandon Clarke tripping one of the Kraken players —, Seattle gave up a hooking and high sticking penalty to give the Kings two power plays. Neither were taken advantage of. 

Near the end of the first period, Seattle’s offense began rolling with a tipped wrist shot from Kraken center Matty Beniers to even the scoreboard, 1-0. Less than a minute later, there was a roughing play between Kings’ Brandt Clarke and Kraken’s Jared McCann, stopped just in time by the referees before they were gunning to fight each other. Right after that moment, the Kraken took the lead away from Los Angeles when Seattle defenseman Brandon Montour scored with a wrist shot, making it a 2-1 score going into the second period. 

The Kings began the second period with a much more aggressive push onto the Seattle Kraken. LA catches a break after the Kraken makes a slashing penalty, granting them a power play. The Kings make no use out of the power play. Despite a few great saves by Kuemper throughout the second period, the Kings were denied progress by the Kraken goaltender Joey Daccord. 

The third period reared its head around, and throughout the first half of the final period both teams went back and forth with missed shots into each respective net. Throughout the first half of the third period, both the Kraken and the Kings played clean hockey, with neither team giving up a goal nor a penalty. The rest of the period played out the same way, and at this point Los Angeles became desperate enough to leave their net empty in order to add another player to their scoring drive. 

As the final minutes of the game reared their head around the corner, the Kings went out without any roar to lose the game 2-1 despite many good attempts by the offense. The Kings perhaps played too clean of a period, since they kept the scoreboard clean of any additional goals. 

If anything, despite Seattle being a relatively worse team in the Pacific Division, Daccord’s superb goaltender play tonight proved to challenge the Kings’ offense will make or break the LA Kings’and stand as their biggest challenge to prepare for and outmaneuver as the Stanley Cup playoffs inch ever closer.

Their 30th home game win may have to be put on hold for now.

‘Great One’ Gretzky and ‘Great 8' Ovechkin: Great goal-scorers and completely different players

NEW YORK — The only player in NHL history who has been teammates with Wayne Gretzky and Alex Ovechkin chuckled.

Mike Knuble loves the stat that Gretzky has more assists than any other hockey player has points.

“If he didn’t score a goal, he’d still be leading everybody in points,” Knuble said. “That’s crazy.”

Now, Ovechkin has more goals after breaking Gretzky’s record by scoring the 895th of his career Sunday, putting the “Great 8” ahead of the “Great One” in terms of putting the puck in the net. But Gretzky’s dominance through the high-scoring 1980s and into the ‘90s was more about playmaking and setting others up, while Ovechkin entered the league in 2005 during a new era of rule changes that opened the door for more offense and earned the record as a hard-shooting pure scorer who affected the sport in different ways.

“Wayne, the way he changed his game was by his thinking: just the turn-ups, the delaying, kind of evolving the game into a little bit more of a thinking man’s game and figure out how to capitalize the area behind the net, really use that to his advantage,” said Knuble, who played a combined 1,133 NHL regular-season and playoff games from 1997-2013. “Alex is just straightforward like, ‘I’m just going to go around you, I’m going through you or however to get this puck in the net.’ Two different styles.”

Reigning Stanley Cup-winning coach Paul Maurice opined, “They’re completely different styles of play: completely different players, other than what an incredible record.”

By the time Maurice started coaching in the NHL in the mid-'90s, Gretzky and Mario Lemieux were on the downside of their careers, and Ovechkin was nearly a decade from starting his.

Teams turned to clutching, grabbing, hooking and holding to slow down skilled stars such as Gretzky.

“Gretzky made the game offensively so much more dynamic,” said St. Louis Blues coach Jim Montgomery, who played a few NHL seasons against Gretzky as well as one game in Russia against Ovechkin. “That led to real more defensive-minded approach by a lot of coaches: How do we stop these delays? How do we stop Gretzky behind the net, so the game got better offensively and then it got better significantly defensively.”

From a height of 8.02 goals a game in 1981-82, when Gretzky set the single-season record with 92, the so-called dead puck era hit its nadir in 2003-04 at 5.14. The Washington Capitals won the draft lottery that spring — 21 years to the day of Ovechkin scoring No. 895 — but a lockout wiped out the entire next season, bringing with it a salary cap and better enforcement of penalties that encouraged scoring with extra room for skating and creativity and more power plays.

“The game opened for most things, and I think that created the opportunity for a great player to come in and challenge the record,” said Maurice, who has coached the second-most games in NHL history behind the legendary Scotty Bowman. “If the game doesn’t change, you wouldn’t have seen somebody challenge Wayne Gretzky’s record.”

Ovechkin has scored a record 325 power-play goals. Gretzky has the most at even strength with 617 and 73 short-handed.

“Ovechkin is the best goal-scorer ever,” said Hall of Famer Teemu Selanne, who’s 12th on the career goals list with 684. “I don’t think a lot of people would consider Gretzky as a goal-scorer, really. He has 894 goals. It’s unbelievable. And he still has 1,000 points more than No. 2 on the scoring list, so those are sick numbers.”

Technically 936 more than second-place Jaromir Jagr and 714 more assists than Ron Francis. Gretzky’s 2,857 points and 1,963 assists are records are far more untouchable than his goal mark ever was.

Gretzky was also so influential that he made the league rewrite part of its rulebook. His teams were too good at 4 on 4 with more ice to work with that each team taking a penalty no longer led to that, and the play remained 5 on 5.

Goaltenders also geared up more along the way, adding padding as stick technology improved and shots got harder and faster. It got more difficult to score, yet Ovechkin still did it more than anyone else.

“It’s so hard,” Gretzky said. “I don’t care what era you play in: ’50s, ’60s, ’70s, ’80s, it’s hard to score goals. Good for him. Players are better today. The equipment’s better. The coaching’s better. But that’s the progression in our game.”

The game also got faster and more physical — not fighting, exactly, but bigger and stronger players dishing out bone-crushing hits. And unlike so many of his Soviet predecessors, Ovechkin was not fancy and finesse.

“You think of the great Russian players — Pavel Bure, Alexander Mogilny, Sergei Fedorov, Artemi Panarin, Kirill Kaprizov — all of these guys are beautiful skaters with great passing, and they’re the chess players that you expect from Russia,” said Steven Warshaw, a marketing executive who lived and worked in Moscow for the Pittsburgh Penguins in the 1990s when they invested in a team there. “Whereas Ovechkin is more like Bamm-Bamm from the ‘Flintstones.’ He’s got his 100 mph slap shot. He’s a brutal player. He defines power forward. He is clearly a machine.”

Trying to stop Ovechkin the machine and Gretzky over his career that overlapped theirs, Mike Grier acknowledged one was a physical battle and the other more mental.

Gretzky, Lemieux and their ilk were always thinking two steps ahead, while Ovechkin was two steps from laying out a big hit or sniping a shot into the top corner.

“It was kind of a different job when you checked them versus someone like Ovechkin,” said Grier, now general manager of the San Jose Sharks. “Ovi, you have an idea where he’s going to be and he’ll engage in the physical game with you a little bit. I think that sometimes gets him going. But that was the challenge: He could physically take over games and be hard on you and your defensemen, but I think Wayne and those guys, they were just so smart that you think you had a lane covered or something and they’d find the next option.”

Rick Tocchet, who played against and coached with Gretzky and has been on the other bench facing Ovechkin during several playoff series over the years, thinks physicality is a big reason why Ovechkin broke the record.

“People are like, yeah, he’s a great goal-scorer, but this guy’s made some big hits in his career that’s loosened up those goals,” said Tocchet, now coach of the Vancouver Caucks. “That’s why he gets those goals because the next thing you know, the (defensemen) are not going as hard and they lose him and he gets those slot shots and he scores on a million shots around the net, too, because he’s not afraid to go in front of the net.”

But is it harder to score goals during Ovechkin’s time than Gretzky’s?

Tocchet isn’t sure. Knuble is well aware that changes in equipment, goalies and more make it difficult, if not impossible to compare the two, and he and others around the sport prefer to appreciate the varying degrees of greatness.

“It’s a little different era,” Selanne said, “but getting close to 900 goals like Ovechkin right now, it’s remarkable.”

Three Takeaways From Blues' 3-1 Loss Against Jets

St. Louis Blues forward Jordan Kyrou (25) battles Winnipeg Jets defenseman Haydn Fleury on Monday. (James Carey Lauder-Imagn Images)

All good things must come to an end, and for the St. Louis Blues, a franchise record came to an end on Monday.

The Winnipeg Jets ended the Blues' record 12-game winning streak with a defensive clinic, winning a knock-em-out, drag-em-out 3-1 victory at Canada Life Centre.

Alex Iafallo's rebound goal at 7:05 of the third period snapped a 1-all tie and enabled the Jets (53-21-4) to end the Blues' streak and keep them from clinching a playoff spot in the process and dropping their record to 43-29-7.

Pavel Buchnevich scored for the fourth time in five games, and Joel Hofer had himself a steady performance with 23 saves.

The Blues' lead on the Minnesota Wild remains two points, but the Wild now have a game in hand and hold the tie-breaker with regulation wins (33-31), so the Blues will all but likely need to have more points than Minnesota in the battle for the first wild card.

Let's dive into Monday's Three Takeaways:

* Blues didn't handle Jets pressure -- For the first time in quite some time, the Blues seemed a bit overwhelmed.

The Jets came out with a plan of attack with a forechecking style and had the Blues hemmed in the zone for large swaths of the game.

The Blues have been good at puck retrievals and moving it out of the zone effectively, especially during this 12-game run, but the Jets seemed to be a step ahead and disrupted a lot of the play, hemmed the Blues in their own end, retrieved pucks and kept pressure on, especially in the first period when shots were 8-3 and 31-8 on attempts.

What the Blues did do well was block shots (14 in the first period) and kept the Jets away from Grade A scoring opportunities, and when Hofer was called upon, he stood his ground.

The Blues pushed back in the second period and played pretty evenly there, and got an equalizing goal from Buchnevich on what amounted to be the line with Robert Thomas and Jimmy Snuggerud, their best shift of the game to that point, but the Jets were able to get back on the front foot again in the third and limited the Blues to four shots while putting on pressure in all three zones and again clogging the middle of the ice.

On the Buchnevich goal, Thomas, who was named the NHL's third star of the week last week, did extend his point streak to nine games (four goals, 16 assists).

The Blues just had trouble for large portions of the game moving through the three zones and when they did, the Jets were right in their face to disrupt the flow. There simply wasn't any time or space out there.

* Two costly mistakes; in a game like this, Blues didn't KISS -- In what amounted to be a playoff type of feel to it, this game had all the earmarks of just playing a simple, play-it-safe, chip pucks and go on the hunt, not risky types of plays.

And it amounted to be just that, but two costly errors in a game where scoring chances were going to be limited proved to be the fatal pills to swallow for the Blues.

On the first, the Blues had, for one of the few times after being overwhelmed in the first period, possession of the puck in the offensive zone and near the blue lineCam Fowler gave the puck to Mathieu Joseph, and instead of making a 'KISS' play (Keep It Simple Stupid), perhaps just whipping it down low and allow the forecheckers to go to work, Joseph tried a return flip pass, and a stick from Josh Morrissey broke it up and Morgan Marron was off to the races down the right side.

Joseph was in pursuit, but Barron fought off Joseph and cut to the net and buried a shot low to the far side at 2:34 of the second period for a 1-0 Winnipeg lead.

And despite being outplayed for a good stretch, in a 1-1 game in the third period, the Jets had a hard forecheck in progress again, but the Blues were able to move the puck to the wall and get it away from danger and onto the stick of Buchnevich. Again, 'KISS' ... flip it out of the zone and reload, move it along the wall, not make that flip pass towards the middle of the ice. Well, that's what he tried to do, it got picked off and Iafallo knocked in a rebound at 7:27 for a 2-1 lead.

This game had all the earmarks that it needed to be a safe kind of a period, manage the game properly, get it to overtime, get a crucial point and fight for a second one, which they've been able to do.

Once the Jets got that go-ahead marker, it just felt like they would lock the remainder of the game down and that's what they did.

When the Blues did pull Hofer, they did have some good sustained zone time, but there were simply no shooting lanes. The Jets clogged the middle and made the ice as mucky as possible. Buchnevich did have a big chance late but hit Connor Hellebuyck in the chest with the chance to tie.

* Faksa line provided consistent forecheck -- On a positive note, I liked the play of Radek Faksa, Alexey Toropchenko and Nathan Walker in this game and coach Jim Montgomery rewarded that trio with 14:27, 14:38 and 16:06 of ice time, respectively.

The Blues had just 15 shots on goal in the game, which matched a season low, and that group had 33 percent of them.

The first period in particular, when the Blues could not generate anything offensively, when the Faksa line stepped onto the ice, it played the game to its strengths: get pucks deep, go to work, play below the goal line, force the Jets to work and they did.

Faksa had an early two-shot chance early in the second period to actually put the Blues ahead by driving the net but was stopped. The game was played to this line's strengths and I thought this trio played it to a tee and did exactly what it needed to do to have success.

* Hear what Montgomery and Buchnevich and Brayden Schenn had to say after the game:

Former NHL Goalie And Broadcaster, Greg Millen, Dies At 67

(Mark J. Rebilas-USA TODAY Sports)

NHL goaltender-turned-broadcaster Greg Millen died at 67 years old on Monday, the NHL Alumni Association announced.

No cause of death was announced.

“It is with heavy hearts we share the sudden passing of Greg Millen today,” the NHL Alumni Association wrote in a statement. “He was known and loved by all in the broadcasting world.”

Millen played for six teams across 14 seasons from 1978 to 1992. He stood between the pipes for the Pittsburgh Penguins, Hartford Whalers, St. Louis Blues, Quebec Nordiques, Chicago Blackhawks and Detroit Red Wings.

After his NHL playing days, Millen became a broadcaster and covered the Ottawa Senators for 11 seasons, beginning with their inaugural campaign in 1992-93. He joined Hockey Night in Canada in 1995 and worked alongside familiar voices in Bob Cole, Jim Hughson, Don Cherry and Harry Neale.

Millen covered 12 Stanley Cup finals, 12 NHL All-Star Games, three Olympic Games and two World Cups of Hockey, NHL Alumni wrote.

He also covered the NHL on Sportsnet, including Toronto Maple Leafs regional games. Most recently, he covered the Calgary Flames on Hockey Night in Canada.

"Greg left an indelible mark on the sport as as everyone who had the pleasure to know him, watch him, and listen to him," Sportsnet PR said in a statement. "With his infectious passion for the game, sharp insights, and quick wit, Greg was a trusted and familiar voice in the homes of millions of Canadians for more than 30 years."

The hockey community and old colleagues of Millen remembered him on Monday.

Former NHL goaltender Mike McKenna shared how much Millen meant to him and the impact he had on his life. 

“Greg Millen was my first hockey hero,” McKenna wrote on social media. “He's the reason why I became a goaltender. One day, Grandpa Bill took me to the St. Louis Arena for practice and took this picture. Years later we became friends. Thank you, Millsy. You gave me a reason to dream.”

Added Sportsnet’s Elliotte Friedman on social media: “Awful day for everyone who worked with Greg. Loved hockey and his role in it. The only thing he loved more was his growing family: wife, children and, now, grandchildren. Very, very sorry for their loss.”

Analyst John Shannon said many people in the hockey and broadcast community lost a great friend who put family above everything else but was so passionate about the sport.

“As a player, Greg Millen accomplished something every Canadian kid aspires to do. He played in the NHL,” Millen wrote. “In fact, he played 14 seasons in the greatest league in the world. Greg worked hard every day at his craft, and that carried on when he became a broadcaster. I was proud to work alongside him in every NHL arena and at the Olympics.”

The Senators also paid their respects to the longtime former commentator. 

“The Ottawa Senators were deeply saddened to hear of the passing of Greg Millen, the first ever Sens TV color commentator and a beloved national broadcaster,” the team said on social media.

The team remembered his memorable call in the 2017 playoffs when Erik Karlsson made a long stretch pass to Mike Hoffman, who completed "the ol' hockey school move," a one-handed tuck past Boston Bruins netminder Tuukka Rask.

The Flames said they were fortunate to have him as part of the Flames on Sportsnet community.

Millen is survived by his wife and four children.

“To Ann and Caroline, Emily, Allison and Charlie, I am so sorry,” Shannon said. “You lost the greatest of husbands and the greatest of fathers. To the rest of Greg’s friends, I feel your pain on this day. I will miss his laugh, his stories and above all, his loyalty.”

Rangers hurt playoff chances with second straight loss, fall to Lightning 5-1

NEW YORK (AP) — Brayden Point had two goals an an assist, Nikita Kucherov added a goal and two assists, and the Tampa Bay Lightning beat the New York Rangers 5-1 on Monday night.

Yanni Gourde and Brandon Hagel also scored, and Jake Guentzel had three assists for playoff-bound Tampa Bay, which was 3 for 4 on the power play. Andrei Vasilevskiy stopped 38 shots.

Mika Zibanejad scored for the Rangers, who lost their second straight and remain six points behind Montreal for the second wild card in the Eastern Conference. Both teams have five games remaining. Igor Shesterkin finished with 18 saves.

Kucherov opened the scoring on the power-play with 6:51 left in the first period, sliding the puck past Shesterkin for his 34th goal.

Gourde made it 2-0 just 36 seconds later, and Point scored on the power play with 5:06 remaining.

Zibanejad scored his 17th goal of the season the power-play at 3:16 of the second, just the third power-play goal by the Rangers in the 45 chances.

Point scored his second of the game and team-best 41st goal on another power play with 4:20 left in the third to make it 4-1, and Hagel had an empty-netter with 2:42 remaining.

Takeaways

Rangers: New York is 3-5-1 in its last nine games overall and fell to 18-18-3 at home one year after finishing with 30 wins at Madison Square Garden.

Lightning: Tampa Bay got its 45th victory to reach that mark for an NHL-leading eighth time in 11 seasons. The Lightning are two points behind Toronto for first place in the Atlantic Division.

Key moment

Kucherov’s first-period goal with the man advantage set the tone for Tampa Bay. The 31-year-old Russian forward has 115 points, tied for the league lead with Colorado’s Nathan MacKinnon.

Key stats

With his assist on Point’s first goal, Kucherov became the fourth player in NHL history with 80 assists in three consecutive seasons — joining Wayne Gretzky, Paul Coffey and Bobby Orr.

Up next

Lightning host Toronto on Wednesday, and Rangers host Philadelphia.

Playoff Kings: Is This the Year Los Angeles Finally Breaks Through?

© Robert Hanashiro-Imagn Images

The Los Angeles Kings are returning to the Stanley Cup Playoffs—again. With their latest 3-0 shutout victory over Edmonton on Saturday and a Calgary Flames loss to the Vegas Golden Knights later in the night, the Kings secured their playoff spot for the fourth consecutive year. 

Despite the Kings beating the Oilers on Saturday, the game still shouldn't mean much to the Kings or their fans because it was without arguably their two best players, Connor McDavid and Leon Draisaitl, who have been out with injuries. The last time the Kings played a healthy Oilers team was on Jan.13, when they were held to zero points and lost the game with McDavid and Draisaitl healthy. 

The game will mean much more in a week when they meet again for the final time this season at Edmonton when, most likely, McDavid or Draisaitl will be back for that game, which will be very crucial in who will get home ice in this potential first-round matchup. 

But as the team seeks to possibly repeat the last three year's first-round series against the Oilers, fans and analysts ask: Will this year be different?

The Kings are no strangers to postseason disappointment the past few years. If they play Edmonton, it will be the fourth year the two clubs meet in the first round. Connor McDavid and his team shipped L.A. home in all three of the last series. 

The Kings' pattern of first-round eliminations is beginning to sound like a tough patch in franchise history between 1978 and 1981, during which the team did not get beyond Round 1 for four consecutive postseasons.

But there is an increased feeling around the NHL—and among the Kings themselves—that 2025 might be different.

A More Balanced, Battle-Tested Group

One of the most significant differences this season is the Kings' depth and experience. Having ridden out a rocky midseason stretch that included a change in coaches—firing Todd McLellan and promoting Jim Hiller—the Kings have caught fire. Under Hiller, L.A. has played a more physical, disciplined game, and the results are evident. The team has won four straight, outscoring opponents 19-3 in the process, and is now positioned for home-ice advantage in the first round.

Offensively, the Kings are getting good play out of their top six forwards. Kevin Fiala has restored his goal-scoring skills, Anže Kopitar is the pulse of the franchise, their newly acquired players in Warren Foegle and Andrei Kuzmenko have started to fit in very well, and young guns like Quinton Byfield and Alex Laferriere have become reliable contributors. Meanwhile, the blue line—led by Drew Doughty and Darcy Kuemper—is physical and disciplined.

Rob Blake's Best Roster Yet?

General Manager Rob Blake has received criticism since assuming the position in 2017. The Kings' rebuild has not been seamless, but Blake has built what could be his best roster to date through diligent drafting and impactful free-agent signings.

The franchise's pipeline—once one of the strongest in the NHL—is now producing as expected. Byfield and Adrian Kempe are receiving heavy minutes and have been making at a high level this season, especially Kempe, who scored over 30 goals, joining only Fiala in that feat. 

Blake opted for tweaks at the trade deadline rather than a splash, showing confidence in the current core. That confidence may be worth it, especially if the Kings' depth on defense can contain a high-powered offense come playoff time. 

Can They Beat the Oilers?

That's the million-dollar question.

The Kings have been the punching bag of the Oilers, a lot of which is because of McDavid and Leon Draisaitl's tee-for-towing. Last season, the series saw Edmonton assert itself in the final two games by exploiting the mismatches and special teams' failures of L.A. 

Every year, the Oilers get rid of the Kings quicker in the playoffs because of their adjustments and rotations that exploit them. The Kings believe they've learned from those losses, however.

The Kings may also take advantage of Edmonton's injury concerns, which remain a question mark with six games remaining. Draisaitl and McDavid, who missed some time, are expected to return from injury before the playoffs, but if both are not 100%, it will be hard to ask them to beat a healthy Kings team. Still, a 75% McDavid and Draisaitl will be hard to beat in the playoffs, so the Kings must do everything possible to get the home-ice advantage over the Oilers. 

Los Angeles can stay disciplined, win the special teams game, and control possession, and it has a shot at reversing the script.

Why Could This Year Be Different?

There are several reasons to believe the Kings can avoid another early-season playoff exit:

Coaching Clarity: Jim Hiller has brought structure and clarity to the team in its systems. The Kings play faster and with purpose under his direction.

Defensive Identity: L.A. is one of the league's top teams in goals against per game, with a renewed focus on team defense and responsible puck management.

Depth Success in April: From Byfield to Fiala, the Kings' forward depth is more balanced than in past playoff forays. They're not relying on Kopitar, Danault, and Doughty alone to carry the load. It's easily the most balanced forward group in the Rob Blake era. 

Motivation and Maturity: With three straight heartbreaks behind them, this team isn't satisfied with just making the playoffs. The window is open now—and they know that.

Looking Ahead 

With only a few regular-season games left, the Kings are in charge of their playoff fate. They'll finish the season playing Seattle twice, the Ducks, Oilers, Avalanche, and Flames—games that will decide whether they begin Round 1 at home.

Whomever they face, the bar is raised: anything less than advancing past the first round would be a letdown. But if this truly is Rob Blake's best team, they'll have an opportunity to prove it—to a familiar foe, in the largest of stages.

Former Penguins Goalie And Sportnet Broadcaster Millen Suddenly Dies

Image courtesy of @NHLFlames X account

Sad news broke late Monday afternoon that former Pittsburgh Penguins goalie and Sportsnet broadcaster Greg Millen had suddenly passed away at the age of 67. 

Initially drafted by the Penguins in the sixth round (102nd overall) in the 1977 Amateur Draft, he would debut with the club during the 1978-79 season at 21 years old, appearing in 28 games. 

Millen spent 14 seasons in the NHL, earning a 57-56-18 record with Pittsburgh while skating with the Hartford Whalers, St. Louis Blues, Chicago Blackhawks, Quebec Nordiques, and Detroit Red Wings. 

In 604 games, Millen's record was 215-284-89 with 17 shutouts. He compiled a career 3.88 GAA and .877 SV%. Meanwhile, Millen produced a 27-29 record in the postseason and never played in the Conference Final. 

After retiring in 1992, Millen became a broadcaster with the Ottawa Senators, joining CBC and Hockey Night in Canada in 1995. Eventually, he worked exclusively for the Toronto Maple Leafs and Senators until joining Rogers in 2014 to rejoin the Hockey Night team. 

Under Rogers, Millen continued to work with the Maple Leafs before joining the Calgary Flames broadcast team, where he provided color commentary for the past few seasons.