Red Wings game in Carolina rescheduled for March 27

The Carolina Hurricanes and the Detroit Red Wings have circled March 27 as the makeup date for December's postponed game.

The Hurricanes and Red Wings were originally scheduled to play Dec. 19 at the PNC Arena in Raleigh, N.C., but an issue with the arena's ice cooling system ultimately postponed the game.

The two teams met earlier this season, with the Red Wings winning the Oct. 25 game by a 4-2 score. Thomas Vanek, Andreas Athanasiou, and a pair of goals by Dylan Larkin pushed the Red Wings to victory.

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Doan to become 6th player to reach 1,500 games with single team

Captain Coyote is about to join an exclusive group.

When the Arizona Coyotes and their leader Shane Doan take on the Toronto Maple Leafs on Friday, it will mark the 1,500th game of Doan's long-tenured career, one in which he has spent entirely with the same franchise.

With the feat, Doan will become just the sixth player in NHL history to play as many games with one organization:

Player Team Games
Gordie Howe Detroit 1687
Nicklas Lidstrom Detroit 1564
Alex Delvecchio Detroit 1549
Ray Bourque Boston 1518
Steve Yzerman Detroit 1514
Shane Doan Arizona 1500

Doan also becomes just the 17th player to reach 1,500 games all together.

It won't be the only mark that Doan could hit Friday. The wily veteran sits one goal shy of 400 for his career, and has the chance to achieve the feat versus Arizona-born Auston Matthews.

"Anyone that gets to 400, I've definitely taken the longest," a humble Doan told reporters. "Anyone that's played this long should have had 400 a long time ago."

Drafted seventh overall by the original Winnipeg Jets in 1995, Doan stayed with the club when it left the Manitoba capital for Phoenix the following year.

Ever since, he's claimed every record in franchise history, as Doan holds the top slot in the team's all-time goals, assists, and points categories, scoring 954 points over the course of his career.

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Moving a core player the only way forward for Avalanche

Things have never been lower in the Mile High City.

Indeed, it's been a rocky season for the Colorado Avalanche. Following Thursday's 6-0 stomping by the Toronto Maple Leafs in front of their home fans, the Avalanche fell to 11-20-1 on the season, further cementing their place in the NHL's basement.

The loss comes less than two weeks after the Avs lost by more than a touchdown to the Montreal Canadiens, on the wrong end of an ugly 10-1 score. Things weren't much better against Toronto, where Colorado failed to tally on two separate 5-on-3 man advantages, leaving the Denver faithful - who have witnessed just four home wins on the season - wanting more.

It's been a nightmare month for the Avalanche, who have come away with just two wins through 11 games in December. That stretch has seen the Avs shutout three times, and out scored 42 to 18.

Those aren't the results expected from a roster that boasts the likes of Nathan MacKinnon, Gabriel Landeskog, and Matt Duchene.

It's a roster that once included Paul Stastny, who left in free agency, and Ryan O'Reilly, who was sent to Buffalo for a package of players including Mikhail Grigorenko and Nikita Zadorov, neither of which has had much impact through two seasons in Denver.

But for all of their offensive options, the Avalanche can't seem to score. And they surely can't defend with so little depth on the back end.

That problem was further compounded following the loss of top blue-liner Erik Johnson, sidelined with a broken leg and not expected back on the ice until February. The Avalanche are 2-7 in his absence. That's left Tyson Barrie and veteran Francois Beauchemin to hold down the fort in the meantime. Really? 50 more games of this?

Season GP Record Points
2016-17 32 11-20-1 23
2015-16 82 39-39-4 82
2014-15 82 39-31-12 90
2013-14 82 52-22-8 112

Things were supposed to get better once Patrick Roy left his coaching post. After all, it was supposedly his system and his style that was holding back the Avalanche. But new coach Jared Bednar, fresh off a Calder Cup win in the AHL, hasn't been swept up with offense of his own. Still, as a first-year on the job, he's safe for now.

And short of a world where the Avalanche can cut loose general manager Joe Sakic, the most prolific player in franchise history, that means change must come elsewhere.

Poor drafting

It starts at the draft table, where the Avalanche have scored with their higher picks. MacKinnon, Landeskog, and Duchene were all taken within the top three, and are now big pieces of the Colorado core. Meanwhile, the likes of Tyson Jost and Mikko Rantanen, both 10th overall picks in the past two drafts, have delivered impressive early returns.

But the team hasn't had nearly as much luck on the second day of the draft, where clubs make their picks in rounds two through seven. Go back a decade and the results just aren't there. Outside of the opening round, only five picks have seen 100 games in the NHL - Barrie, O'Reilly, Kevin Shattenkirk, who was flipped to the St. Louis Blues for Johnson, plus T.J. Galiardi, now in the KHL, and the ever-obscure Bradley Malone.

So what's the answer for the one-time dominant franchise that made the postseason every year in its first 10 after uprooting from Quebec, a stretch which included two Stanley Cups and four other trips to the Conference Finals?

It's a distant past for the Avalanche, winners of a single playoff series since 2007 and just a three-time postseason participant in that time.

Blueline repair

A team that once featured the likes of star blue-liners Rob Blake and Adam Foote, former teammates of Sakic, surely knows the value of defense. After all, it wins championships.

Owners of the league's worst goals against, the Avalanche allow 3.25 goals per game. And at minus-40, their goal differential is a full 10 points worse than the second-last club, and 20 worse than the third-lowest.

That's led to many long nights for goaltenders Calvin Pickard and Semyon Varlamov, who both own save percentages in the .900s, despite standing behind a porous defense. Varlamov, after all, is just two years removed as a Vezina nominee. Surely the 28-year-old's game hasn't fallen off that quickly.

Change is needed. Let the Edmonton Oilers serve as a model for the Avalanche. Like Colorado, Edmonton had collected years of scoring talent at the draft table, only to be continuously mired in losses and poor play. That ended last offseason, when the Oilers flipped former first-overall pick Taylor Hall to the New Jersey Devils for defenseman Adam Larsson, who has played a major role in reshaping Edmonton's defensive game.

Today, the Oilers sit fifth in the West, 18 points ahead of the Avalanche, and poised to make their first playoff appearance since 2006.

That is the path forward for the Avalanche, who have the opportunity to repair their ailing blueline, with just three defenders - Johnson, Barrie, and Beauchemin - signed through 2017-18. Depth is badly needed, and perhaps an entire second pairing all together.

That means one of MacKinnon, Landeskog, or Duchene should be on the outs. As captain, Landeskog is likely safe, and the same for MacKinnon, a dynamic talent and former Calder Trophy winner. That makes Duchene the likely candidate.

It's now up to Sakic to find the right trade partner, to not only strengthen his team's blue-line, but return the Avalanche to respectability and the glory days with which he is familiar.

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Oilers’ Pitlick out for season with torn ACL

The Edmonton Oilers will be without forward Tyler Pitlick for the remainder of the season with a torn ACL in his left knee, the team announced Friday.

Pitlick suffered the injury in Monday's overtime win against the St. Louis Blues.

The oft-injured winger was beginning to prove himself to be a valuable part of the future in Edmonton, but will now have to overcome another setback to truly make his mark.

Pitlick suffered a lacerated spleen two years ago, and other injuries contributed to him dressing in just 37 games - all in the minor leagues - last season.

This season he scored eight goals and amassed 11 points, seeing some time on Connor McDavid's wing, before suffering the injury.

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Blue Jackets surprise again – this time for the better

Throw out what it is you know about the Columbus Blue Jackets.

Who predicted that after finally "arriving" while nose-to-nose with the Pittsburgh Penguins in the 2014 Stanley Cup Playoffs that they would go belly up in the season that followed - and rank 25th in the standings when they hosted the All-Star Game? Or when they healed up late that season and finished on a 15-1-1 run, who was it that had them pegged to lose seven straight out the shoot upon return, replace Todd Richards with John Tortorella, and morph into something truly beyond futile?

Surely there wasn't a soul who predicted they'd be the top team in the NHL at the holiday break, this season.

Except delusion has sorta become Columbus' thing.

The Blue Jackets thrashed the defending Stanley Cup champion Penguins on Thursday (a statement win whether they want to admit it), and finally sit alone atop the overall standings as winners of 11 straight games and a team that has avoided a regulation loss across six weeks.

Tortorella's side have scored 108 goals relative to a league-low 64 pulled out of their own net, for a goal differential 11 points better than the next most efficient team. The power play has been outrageous, firing at 27 percent for the season, and at 81.8 percent, its penalty kill is proficient enough to maintain the league's second-best combined special teams. And while their PDO suggests they will have to come down a touch, strong possession metrics indicate the crash won't be too hard.

What's perhaps most amazing is that aside from bolstering a previously shoddy defensive corps with star rookie defender Zach Werenski, this is the same team that was walloped by opponents and critical media and fans alike throughout all of last season.

Brandon Saad's elevated his game to a superstar level after a strong, 30-goal debut season with Columbus. His even-strength points rate is higher than both Sidney Crosby and Connor McDavid, and he trails only the two megastars and Evgeni Malkin in primary points.

Columbus' scoring leader, though, is Cam Atkinson, owner of the NHL's fourth-best per-game scoring rate behind only Crosby, McDavid, and befallen Tampa Bay Lightning sniper Steven Stamkos. Atkinson collected his league-best 16th power-play point versus Pittsburgh, and has two shorthanded goals to further underscore his specialty teams contributions.

There are career-best projections all over the lineup, from top center Alexander Wennberg to thrifty fourth-line find Sam Gagner. And most importantly, netminder Sergei Bobrovsky has sizzling numbers that compare to his Vezina Trophy campaign in 2013 through 27 starts.

Through a third of the season, and with one game left before the holiday break, the Blue Jackets are soaring at a 129-point pace - which would smash the club record by 36 points.

In the ultra competitive Metropolitan Division, the Blue Jackets cannot afford to sink too low when they inevitably approach a valley in their season. But with the progress made so far, even the sharpest 180 may not be able to prevent this from being the greatest season in their history - even by Blue Jackets standards.

Surprise, surprise.

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Howard out 4-6 weeks with sprained knee

Detroit Red Wings goaltender Jimmy Howard has been sidelined 4-to-6 weeks with a sprained knee, general manager Ken Holland told Brendan Savage of MLive.com.

Earlier this week, the Red Wings placed Howard on the injured reserve and recalled Jared Coreau from Grand Rapids (AHL).

Howard has appeared in 17 games with the Red Wings this season, posting a 5-7-1 record, alongside a .934 save percentage.

The Red Wings sit in last place of the Atlantic Division, posting a 14-15-4 record, good for 32 points on the season.

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Squad Up Daily NHL Fantasy Dose: No place like home for surging Blue Jackets

Follow theScore's fantasy feed on Twitter (@theScoreFantasy) for the latest news, features and more. And download Squad Up, theScore's free-to-win-money sports game.

Here is a look at the Squad Up daily NHL fantasy picture for Friday, Dec. 23:

Triple Threat

  • C Alexander Wennberg (46K), LW Brandon Saad (62K) and RW Cam Atkinson (55K), Blue Jackets (vs. Canadiens): No team is playing better than the Blue Jackets, who come into this one having reeled off 11 wins in a row. Columbus is averaging four goals per game at home on the season, and look to be dodging a bullet as Al Montoya is expected to get the start in goal for Montreal rather than Carey Price.
  • C Sidney Crosby (74K), LW Conor Sheary (36K) and RW Patric Hornqvist (61K), Penguins (vs. Devils): Any time you can land Crosby for under 80K, you have to do it - especially at home, where the Penguins are a sizzling 14-2-2 and average 3.89 goals per game. Sheary is a low-cost threat playing alongside Crosby, while Hornqvist is dependable and can be had at a discount given his recent struggles.
  • C Jonathan Toews (59K), LW Artemi Panarin (65K) and D Duncan Keith (45K), Blackhawks (vs. Avalanche): As nice as it would be to roster the entire Chicago first line, Patrick Kane's 92K salary makes that impossible. Instead, opt for two-thirds of the No. 1 unit along with Keith, who plays heavy minutes and should feast on a Colorado team playing the second end of a back-to-back after getting waxed 6-0 by Toronto.

Goalie Breakdown

  • TARGET - Corey Crawford (95K), Blackhawks (vs. Avalanche): This game is by far the most one-sided on the slate, with Chicago heavily favored to hand Colorado its sixth consecutive defeat. The Avalanche rank 27th in the NHL in road goals per game (2.13), and Crawford comes in at a bit of a bargain in what will be his first game action since Dec. 1. He won't come this cheaply again, so pounce on him.
  • BARGAIN - Darcy Kemper (76K), Wild (at Rangers): It won't be an easy task for Kuemper, who draws the finale of a back-to-back after Devan Dubnyk stopped 32 shots Thursday in a win over Montreal. But Kemper has been a serviceable backup so far this season, and made 27 saves on 28 shots in a win over Arizona in his last game. Roster him confidently, as his floor is high even if he doesn't get the win.
  • FADE - Mike Smith (122K), Coyotes (vs. Maple Leafs): It doesn't matter who or where Smith is playing - he shouldn't be the highest-priced player on the Squad Up slate. The Coyotes don't do enough damage on offense to make Smith a guaranteed win candidate, and the Maple Leafs' offense has come alive of late. Look elsewhere for your starting netminder, and spend up at forward instead.

Bargain Plays

  • C Brandon Dubinsky (40K), Blue Jackets (vs. Canadiens): Dubinsky hasn't been the most prolific member of the Columbus offense this season, but he's in a favorable matchup Friday night and sees plenty of high-leverage ice time as the No. 2 center and a fixture on the second power-play unit. Save here and you can spend up elsewhere.
  • RW Michael Grabner (26K), Rangers (vs. Wild): Grabner is by no means a sure-fire play given his lack of power-play exposure, but he does see time on the second line and has 14 goals through 34 games while averaging better than 13 minutes of ice time per game. With Kuemper starting in goal for Minnesota, Grabner gets a slight boost.
  • D Zeno Chara (25K), Bruins (at Hurricanes): Chara is nowhere close to the player he used to be, but he still carries a healthy floor in Squad Up. The 6-foot-9 behemoth has 44 shots on goal, 50 hits and 57 blocked shots so far this season, making him a valuable minimum-salary play even though he has just eight points through 29 games.

Top Fades

  • C Joe Pavelski (86K), Sharks (vs. Oilers): It isn't that Pavelski is a bad choice, with Edmonton likely a bit tired as it wraps up a three-game pre-Christmas road trip. But the Oilers have surrendered just 2.79 goals per game on the road this season - 12th-fewest in the NHL - and with so many other great center options available, you can fade Pavelski here.
  • RW Patrick Kane (92K), Blackhawks (vs. Avalanche): The matchup couldn't be better for Kane, who could absolutely tee off against the lowly Avalanche. But Kane simply hasn't been the dominant offensive force he was in 2015-16, and at 28K more than the next-highest RW, you're better off opting for a player with similar skills at a lower cost.
  • D Shea Weber (53K), Canadiens (at Blue Jackets): Weber is one of the most reliable defensemen in daily fantasy, but he'll likely have his hands full against a Columbus team allowing just 2.13 goals per game at home, the sixth-best rate in hockey. Weber could still do enough to warrant selection without scoring, but so could a host of cheaper defensemen.

Contrarian Options

  • C Jack Eichel (53K), Sabres (at Islanders): Daily fantasy players have plenty of great centers to choose from on Squad Up, and the majority won't scroll down far enough to find Eichel. But the second-year star has been solid so far this season (five goals, three assists in 11 games) and will be a threat for multiple points against the lowly Islanders.
  • LW Chris Kunitz (35K), Penguins (vs. Devils): There's an inclination to select Sheary ahead of Kunitz because the former plays alongside Crosby on the top line. But Kunitz represents bigger upside most nights, toiling alongside Evgeni Malkin on the second line while drawing some exposure on the second power-play unit. He's a great play Friday.
  • RW Radim Vrbata (62K), Coyotes (vs. Maple Leafs): Vrbata is the third highest-priced right winger of the night, and hasn't done much to warrant the sky-high salary. But with 11 points in 15 home games so far this season - and with Toronto starting unproven goaltender Antoine Bibeau - the matchup doesn't get much better for Arizona's top winger.

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On the Fly: 4 players who are absolutely killing our fantasy teams

We're airing some grievances in this week's edition of "On the Fly," theScore's Friday NHL roundtable series. Below are four players taking an axe to our respective fantasy teams, and we're not pleased about it. Oh, and Happy Holidays.

Patrice Bergeron

Ian McLaren: Hopes were high in regards to Patrice Bergeron this season, and for good reason.

From 2013-14 through 2015-16, the versatile Boston Bruins center averaged 29 goals and 62 points, marking some of the most offensively productive seasons of his career.

Through 32 games this season, however, Bergeron is well off that pace, having recorded only five goals and five assists. His shooting percentage is well below his career average, meaning the puck is bound to start going in at some point. But what's most baffling is the fact he's playing with Brad Marchand and David Pastrnak, who are both posting solid numbers. So where are the assists?

At this rate, he'll be good for 12 goals and 25 points, which is flat-out unacceptable for a player drafted in higher rounds.

Bergeron did score Thursday against Florida, and hopefully that's a sign of things to come.

Evgeny Kuznetsov

Craig Hagerman: If you're unfortunate enough to have Evgeny Kuznetsov on your fantasy team, you're likely less than impressed with his production this season. If you used a spot in a keeper league on Kuznetsov and can no longer drop him, then you're really ailing - trust me, I know.

After a career-high 20 goals and 77 points in 82 games last season, when he led the Capitals in scoring, Kuznetsov's limped through the first three months of 2016-17.

He's got just three goals and 17 points through 31 games, putting him on pace to net only seven goals and 44 points - 33 fewer than last season. He has just four power-play points, no game-winning goals, and is also on pace to record nearly 50 fewer shots than last season.

Making matters worse, his trade value isn't very high at the moment, while the concept of giving him away for nothing is hard to justify, with the ever-possible chance the 24-year-old turns things around - something fantasy owners must be praying happens soon.

Kyle Palmieri

Navin Vaswani: Never put your faith in a Devil.

Kyle Palmieri was money in 2015-16. Dude scored 30 goals and led New Jersey in points with 57. And it wasn't even close. Adam Henrique's 50 was the next best on the Devils.

It was a good story, too: After back-to-back 14-goal seasons in Anaheim, the latter in only 57 games, Palmieri finally got a chance to play top-six minutes and rewarded the Devils' faith in him. A career 11.4 percent shooter, he was at 13.5 percent last year - it clearly wasn't all luck.

But, maybe it was. Palmieri's got five goals in 31 games, only three on the power play after 11 PPGs in '15-16, his shooting 8.5 percent, and his ice time's down, too. Even his Corsi's down, from 45.33 percent to 44.44 percent. It's literally all bad.

The most painful part: I drafted him in the second round of a 20-team keeper league (four per team), in which drafting successfully is paramount, ahead of Mats Zuccarello, Ryan Suter, Kyle Turris, Rick Nash, Jeff Skinner, David Pastrnak (that one really hurts), Nazem Kadri, Jakob Silfverberg, Ryan Kesler, Nikolaj Ehlers, and Marian Hossa.

The list goes on and on and on and on. I hate myself.

Dylan Larkin

Cory Wilkins: Dylan Larkin has a bad case of the sophomore slump.

The Detroit Red Wings forward has hit an offensive wall through his second pro season, coming away with just 12 points through the first 33 games of the season.

It's a major downfall from the 45-point campaign the rookie sensation put up with the Red Wings last year, when he finished at a 0.56 points per game pace.

This season, that number has hit the skids, with Larkin firing well below, at 0.36. While the goals are still there - he has 10 already, and is actually on pace for two more than last season - the helpers have been nearly non-existent, as Larkin has just a pair of assists on the year.

Whether that's on Larkin or his linemates is left to be determined, but no doubt more was expected from Larkin after he made the quick jump to the NHL as a 19-year-old.

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Devils get tough in win over Flyers

Evidently, Ray Shero has the room.

In their first game since Shero pleaded that his team compete harder, the New Jersey Devils showed the requisite tough their general manager demanded in a dominant performance over the Philadelphia Flyers Thursday night.

Three line brawls broke out in the first period alone, with the Devils responding to cheap shots in each. And after the teams racked up 80 minutes in penalties, the Devils had limited the Flyers to 16 shots in a 4-0 victory.

"You could tell the emotions, the passion, and commitment were there," Cory Schneider, who earned the shutout, told NHL.com's Mike G. Morreale.

"I think we're just tired of losing, just tired of not winning. That could manifest itself in a lot of ways and (Thursday) it was a positive."

P.A. Parenteau added, "It's nice to get back on track and play some good, hard hockey. There's no reason to believe we can't play like this more often. This was a tough stretch and no one was happy in this locker room."

Leading goal scorer Mike Cammalleri was one of the combatants for New Jersey, his third career fight underscoring the investment put forth, and precisely the response Shero wanted to counteract an opponent looking to bully its way to two points.

"Now it's one win, we haven't accomplished anything by any means. But I think we got the message," Parenteau told Andrew Gross of The Record.

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Watch: NHL legends, peers congratulate Jagr on eclipsing Messier

From former colleagues, NHL greats, peers, and teammates, adulation poured in for Jaromir Jagr, who accomplished something truly spectacular Thursday night with his 1,888th career point, becoming the NHL's second-leading scorer of all-time.

And it was Mark Messier, the legend eclipsed, who got things started.

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Remember, we are all Canucks!