Category Archives: Hockey News

Game 7s to remember: Flyers roar back in Beantown

The NHL should be deep into postseason action, but with the start of 2019-20 playoffs delayed, theScore's hockey editors are picking their favorite Game 7s from years past.

On Wednesday, we look back at the deciding contest of the Philadelphia Flyers' unprecedented comeback against the Boston Bruins in the 2010 Eastern Conference semifinals.

The setup

With several teams jockeying for playoff berths through the final weeks of the 2009-10 regular season, Boston closed out the campaign with three straight wins to comfortably secure the Eastern Conference's sixth seed. The Flyers' season, on the other hand, culminated in a win-and-you're-in contest against the New York Rangers on the final day of the campaign, a game Philadelphia won in one of the most memorable shootouts in NHL history.

The Bruins and Flyers both pulled off upsets in the opening round of the postseason. Riding the momentum of its late-season playoff push, Philadelphia steamrolled the second-seeded New Jersey Devils in five games. Boston, meanwhile, knocked off the third-seeded Buffalo Sabres in six.

The series

The Bruins took a pair of one-goal contests on home ice, including a 5-4 overtime thriller in Game 1, before pushing the Flyers to the brink with a dominant 4-1 win in Philadelphia.

Down 3-0 in the series, the Flyers faced sudden-death elimination as Game 4 went to overtime. Philly wouldn't lay down, though, as star forward Simon Gagne delivered the game-winner in the extra frame to catalyze a comeback for the ages.

Philadelphia's convincing 4-0 win in Game 5 came at a hefty cost when starting netminder Brian Boucher was forced from the tilt with a leg injury, further dampening his team's comeback chances. But in Game 6, backup Michael Leighton made 30 saves in his first career playoff start to lead the Flyers to a 2-1 victory and set up a seventh and decisive contest.

Brian Babineau / National Hockey League / Getty

The game

It appeared the Flyers' miraculous comeback would fall short after the Bruins leapt out to a 3-0 first-period lead in front of a raucous Boston crowd. But Philadelphia's fight in the contest matched its resilience in the series: The Bruins let another 3-0 lead slip away as the Flyers stormed back to win 4-3. Philadelphia became just the third team in NHL history to win a playoff series after trailing 3 games to none, and the first to do so after facing a multi-goal deficit in Game 7.

The stars: The Flyers' game-breakers were there when the team needed them most. Despite registering just one assist between them, Chris Pronger and Mike Richards were dominant all over the ice in Game 7. Pronger led all players with 31:42 of ice time, including a 1:43 shift to end the game, while Richards paced all forwards by playing 22:21, primarily against the Bruins' top unit.

Philadelphia's line of Daniel Briere, Scott Hartnell, and Ville Leino was sensational, combining for six points in the second and third periods. Briere, undoubtedly the Flyer's most valuable player of the series with five goals and 10 points, notched the game-tying tally in Game 7.

The hero, once again, was played by Gagne. After missing Games 1-3 due to injury, Gagne potted his second game-winning goal of the series as the Flyers improved to 4-0 with him in their postseason lineup.

Brian Babineau / National Hockey League / Getty

The X-factor: After allowing three goals on the first 13 shots he faced, Leighton locked things down to give the Flyers a chance. The backup netminder made 12 straight stops to end the game, highlighted by a point-blank save on Marc Savard with 3:50 remaining in the third period. Making just his second career postseason start, Leighton never wavered following a rocky first period.

The key moment: With nine minutes left in the third frame and the score tied 3-3, Bruins forward Milan Lucic came inches from putting Boston back on top when he clanked a heavy wrist shot off the post. Not only did the score remain even, but the Bruins were caught with too many men on the ice just 15 seconds later. With all the momentum tilted in Philadelphia's favor, that costly near-miss and subsequent error proved the difference.

The highlight

On the ensuing power play, Gagne found twine with a perfect shot over the shoulder of Tuukka Rask to put the Flyers ahead 4-3 with seven minutes left in regulation. The rest is history.

The fallout

The Flyers continued their Cinderella run, knocking off a red-hot Jaroslav Halak and the Montreal Canadiens in the third round to reach their first Stanley Cup Final since 1996-97. Unfortunately, the club's miracle season was halted by a juggernaut Chicago Blackhawks team that defeated Philadelphia in six games for the first of its three Stanley Cups of the decade.

The Bruins took their embarrassing collapse personally and came back stronger because of it. After establishing another 3-0 series lead over the Flyers in the second round of the 2011 playoffs, Boston completed the sweep with conviction, outscoring the Flyers 20-7 in the series. The Bruins rode that momentum to a third-round knockout of the Tampa Bay Lightning before upsetting the Presidents' Trophy-winning Vancouver Canucks in seven games to capture their first Stanley Cup since 1972.

Want to relive all the action? Catch the full game here.

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NWHL announces expansion to Toronto

The National Women's Hockey League is officially expanding to Toronto for the 2020-21 season, the league announced Wednesday.

Toronto will be the league's first Canadian team and sixth franchise overall, joining the Boston Pride, Metropolitan Riveters, Buffalo Beauts, Minnesota Whitecaps, and Connecticut Whale.

"Launching our first team in Canada is a pivotal and proud moment for the NWHL," league commissioner Dani Rylan said. "Everyone in the Toronto hockey community can be sure that this first-class team of professionals will make bold strides for the women’s game."

Former Brown University coach Digit Murphy has been named team president and will oversee hiring a general manager and head coach. Johanna Neilson Boynton, a former captain at Harvard, and Tyler Tumminia, will serve as owner and chairman, respectively.

"We aspire to build a perennial Isobel Cup contender for Toronto," said Boynton. "This will be an organization with strong fan, community, and corporate support, outstanding coaching, training, and player development, and a club dedicated to promoting hockey as a game for everyone."

Signing, hirings, and venues for the team will be announced at a later date, but fans can immediately begin submitting ideas for a team nickname, colors, and logos here.

The 2020-21 NWHL season is expected to begin in November.

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Watch: Hilarity ensues as 2011 Bruins reunite for Game 7 replay

Warning: Some videos contain coarse language

The Boston Bruins got most of their 2011 championship-winning squad back together to watch a rebroadcast of Game 7 against the Vancouver Canucks on Tuesday night, and more than the result of the game was predictable.

It didn't take long for things to get entertaining during the Zoom call, albeit occasionally vulgar.

Brad Marchand couldn't resist taking a shot at Patrice Bergeron.

In an unexpected turn, Milan Lucic made a Corsi reference.

Lucic didn't hold back one bit when Ryan Kesler was shown during the broadcast.

If one thing's clear from all this, it's that the NHL and its teams should organize way more of these.

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NHL considers holding June draft before season resumes

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The NHL could conduct the draft in the month it normally takes place even if the season remains on pause.

The league has discussed possibly holding the event in June before the resumption of the current campaign, though that's one of many potential plans, deputy commissioner Bill Daly told TSN's Pierre LeBrun on Tuesday.

It would be held virtually rather than at an arena, but nothing has been decided yet, adds LeBrun.

As he notes, this idea presents several issues, including the draft order and conditional picks, which the final regular-season standings and playoff results typically determine, respectively.

Such a scenario would also make draft-day trades - arguably the most entertaining part of the event - impossible, as ESPN's Greg Wyshynski points out.

The league postponed the upcoming draft, the combine, and the annual awards show amid the coronavirus pandemic in late March. Montreal was scheduled to host the 2020 draft, and the NHL later reassured the Canadiens they would get the chance to host one in the future.

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Report: NHLers in North America irked by players returning to ice in Sweden

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Vancouver Canucks forward Elias Pettersson and many other players in Sweden have been granted permission by local authorities to return to the ice, something their peers overseas are not pleased about, TSN's Darren Dreger reported on Tuesday's edition of "Insider Trading."

Some players in North America "do not like the idea" of the Swedes being allowed to skate due to the "competitive edge" it could offer if the league returns, according to Dreger.

Having players return to the ice is a recommendation - but not a directive - from the league, Dreger adds. Due to the coronavirus pandemic, arenas and training facilities remain closed in North America to all players unless they are rehabbing an injury.

Last week, the league extended its self-quarantine recommendation for players and staff for the third time, pushing back the date to April 30.

NHL commissioner Gary Bettman said players will need a two-to-three week training camp if the NHL resumes its season, which was suspended March 12.

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Report: Devils interview Gallant for head coaching job

The New Jersey Devils are taking a proactive approach while the NHL remains on hiatus.

Devils interim general manager Tom Fitzgerald has spoken with former Vegas Golden Knights bench boss Gerard Gallant about New Jersey's head coaching position, TSN's Pierre LeBrun reported on Tuesday's edition of "Insider Trading."

"Gerard Gallant, according to our sources, (was) interviewed last week," LeBrun said, before adding that the conversation with Fitzgerald took place virtually rather than face to face.

Fitzgerald has spoken to several candidates, according to LeBrun, who wrote shortly thereafter on The Athletic that Devils interim head coach Alain Nasreddine is a legitimate candidate to keep the job.

The Golden Knights fired Gallant, replacing him with Peter DeBoer in a surprise move back in January. Vegas was 24-19-6 at the time, and the team sat only three points back of first place in the Pacific Division despite being on the outside of the playoff picture.

Gallant won the Jack Adams Award as the NHL's top head coach for 2017-18 after guiding the Golden Knights to a playoff berth and a run to the Stanley Cup Final in their inaugural season. He spent parts of three campaigns with Vegas after tenures of similar lengths with the Florida Panthers and Columbus Blue Jackets.

Nasreddine took over behind the Devils' bench on an interim basis after the dismissal of John Hynes in early December. Under Nasreddine, the Devils have gone 19-16-8.

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Spezza: ‘Nowhere else I’d rather be’ next season than Toronto

Toronto Maple Leafs forward Jason Spezza had the chance to play for his hometown team this season, and he's hoping he can continue to do so.

"I definitely feel I have game left," the veteran said, according to Sportsnet's Luke Fox. "And there's nowhere else I'd rather be than play another year here in Toronto."

The Mississauga, Ontario, native signed a one-year, $700,000 deal with the Maple Leafs last summer and is set to become an unrestricted free agent this offseason.

Spezza will turn 37 in June. He's filled a bottom-six role nicely for Toronto, recording nine goals and 16 assists in 58 games while averaging 10:50 minutes of ice time.

He has skated in 1,123 career games, racking up 341 goals and 599 assists.

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