Tag Archives: Hockey

Shades of Shanahan: Tarasenko records 2nd straight 30-goal season

The St. Louis Blues have a special player in Vladimir Tarasenko.

With this snipe Tuesday in Ottawa, the 24-year-old's 30th goal of the season, Tarasenko became the youngest Blues player with back-to-back 30-goal campaigns since Brendan Shanahan in 1992-93 and 1993-94.

Shanahan reached 51 and 52 goals at ages 24 and 25, respectively, while Tarasenko's career high to date is 37. Unlike Shanahan, however, Tarasenko will likely be in St. Louis for the majority of his career.

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VIDEO: Erik Haula scores Wild’s 3rd breakaway goal of 1st period

Will the Colorado Avalanche defense please stand up?

The Minnesota Wild's third line of Nino Niederreiter, Jason Pominville, and Erik Haula stayed hot Tuesday, as all three scored on first-period breakaways.

After Haula's marker - which gave his team a 3-1 lead - he made some friends by sticking out his tongue while skating by the Avs' bench.

Interestingly for the Avalanche, their deadline-day, blue-line acquisition Eric Gelinas wasn't on the ice for any of Minnesota's early goals.

(Video courtesy: NHL.com)

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VIDEO: Hurricanes’ Derek Ryan scores in NHL debut

Derek Ryan, at 29 years old, became the oldest player to make his NHL debut in Carolina Hurricanes history Tuesday against the , and he didn't take long to make an impact at the game's highest level.

Ryan found the back of the net during a second-period power play, wristing a shot past New Jersey Devils netminder Cory Schneider, tying the game at one.

It's surely a special moment for the forward, as his father and sister flew in from Spokane, Wash. to watch him play in Newark. Ryan played for the WHL's Spokane Chiefs for three seasons where he was coached by none other than current Hurricanes coach Bill Peters.

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VIDEO: Oilers’ McDavid bulges twine 22 seconds after puck drop

They say second place is the first loser.

Connor McDavid briefly had Buffalo feeling that way, as the Edmonton Oilers rookie phenom - drafted first overall ahead of Jack Eichel - needed only 22 seconds to open the scoring against the Sabres on Tuesday.

The goal was McDavid's 11th in 28 games, while Eichel came into the night sitting at 17 through 63 contests.

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Eriksson pleased to remain with Bruins after ‘stressful’ deadline

After Boston Bruins general manager Don Sweeney decided to hold on to winger Loui Eriksson at the NHL trade deadline, the two sides are in a position - at least in theory - to negotiate a long-term agreement to keep the nine-year veteran with the organization.

Eriksson said Tuesday he's happy to still be with the Bruins and that a contract extension is certainly possible.

"It's definitely nice to be still here," Eriksson said, according to Matt Kalman of NHL.com. "It was kind of a stressful day (Monday) and not really knowing what's going to happen. I'm just happy to be here. It's a lot easier for me and my family to stay here and finish the season and try to make this team make the (Stanley Cup) playoffs and be a good team. So I'm really happy to be still here."

Added Eriksson, "Now we have some more time to negotiate and maybe get something done and like I said, all I can do now is just to play games and try to win games and help this team."

The 30-year-old is in the midst of a productive season for the Bruins, with 23 goals and 28 points through 63 games. Those numbers, however, are boosting his bid to secure a big-money contract, something the Bruins seem unwilling to commit to at this point.

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Prince to make Islanders debut on Tavares’ wing

The New York Islanders spent a third-round pick to acquire forward Shane Prince from the Ottawa Senators on deadline day, and the club isn't wasting any time throwing him into the spotlight.

The 23-year-old will make his Islanders debut on the first line alongside Dylan Strome and captain John Tavares as they face the Vancouver Canucks on Tuesday, head coach Jack Capuano told Newsday's Arthur Staple.

"(Prince) is a player we feel can rotate up and down the lineup to different lines and has some untapped potential," added general manager Garth Snow. "He can help us now and hopefully in the future."

The Rochester, N.Y. native has spent most of the season on a line with grinders Zack Smith and Chris Neil, but will finally get a chance to show if he can produce in a scoring role.

The Prince acquisition was a surprising one for the Islanders, as it was rumored the team was trying to acquire Tavares' former linemate P.A. Parenteau from the Toronto Maple Leafs, but were ultimately unwilling to give up a second-round pick.

The rookie has three goals and nine assists in 42 games.

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McDavid, Eichel shoot down apparent rivalry ahead of 1st meeting

Connor McDavid and Jack Eichel will share the same sheet of NHL ice for the first time in their professional careers Tuesday night in Buffalo.

Huge deal, yeah?

Perhaps to everyone except the first and second overall selections in last year's draft.

Naturally, McDavid and Eichel rejected the notion that Tuesday night's clash was anything more than the Buffalo Sabres hosting the Edmonton Oilers in a matchup of two clubs desperate for points.

"The media has us pegged as not liking each other or being rivals (when) we really just don't know each other," McDavid said.

Eichel was particularly dismissive in his media availability.

"I think you guys all probably want to view it that way but I think inside the room you don't look at it like that. It's a team game. There's five guys on the ice and a goalie. It's a lot more than two people playing against each other," Eichel said.

"We're playing the Oilers tonight, we're not playing Connor McDavid. Obviously he's a key component to their team, and he's a good player. Right after I get out of here I'll go pre-scout Edmonton and I will know what to do."

Though they'll have to deal with this line of questioning for at least the next several seasons, there's hope for McDavid and Eichel to escape their constant comparison eventually.

These days, the Oilers and Stars can meet without "Taylor versus Tyler" dominating the pre- and post-game chatter, and even Sidney Crosby and Alex Ovechkin's apparent distaste for one another seems to have subsided, too.

Until then.

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