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MacKinnon scored twice as Canada shutout Slovakia 7-0

NHL: 4 Nations Face Off-Championship Game

Winslow Townson-Imagn Images

Tis was a beating.

It had been over 13 years since Slovakia bested Canada in the World Championship, and the result on Saturday kept the streak alive.

Canada defeated Slovakia for the fourth straight time in a 7-0 win.

Sidney Crosby and Nathan MacKinnon combined for four of the seven goals, as each man found the net twice. Crosby also added two assists, and Macklin Celebrini added three points for Canada. Jordan Binnington collected another shutout in a 14-save outing.

The Game

Slovakia held Canada off the board until there were approximately five minutes left in the opening period. Crosby and Travis Konency worked together to feed Brandon Montour into a wide-open net to make it 1-0.

Just over a minute later, Canada doubled their lead when Tyson Foerster snapped a shot through the screen.

Slovakia had a chance on the power play, but Binnington was a stone wall. After killing off the transgression, Canada to the Tour De Goal.

Celebrini recovered a rebound in front of the net and dished a pass to Crosby, who fired it into the empty net to make it 3-0.

With two minutes left in the frame, Crosby returned the favor, which ended with Celebrini celebrating his accomplishment. And just like that, Canada was up 4-0.

MacKinnon scored the lone goal of the second period when his shot was deflected into the net by a Slovak player.

Slovakia changed goaltenders to start the third period and the new body, Adam Huska, didn’t do much better. Crosby redirected a shot from Noah Dobson to make it 6-0.

90 seconds later, MacKinnon closed the show with his second of the night with a signature move on a sweet backhander following a failed poke check by Huska to arrive at the 7-0 final.


Just Nathan MacKinnon doing Nathan MacKinnon things.

Et pourquoi pas un spécial Nathan MacKinnon? #MensWorlds | #MondialMasculinpic.twitter.com/P7mxSAjIZu

— Hockey Canada (@HockeyCanada) May 17, 2025

Next Game

Canada will receive one more day off as they gear up for the final few days of the round-robin. They take on Finland Monday at 12:20 p.m. local time.

Czechs Pounce Kazakhstan

Martin Necas and the Czech Republic scored an 8-1 win over Kazakhstan. Czech captain Roman Cervenka scored a hat trick in his 100th career World Championship game. Nečas added an assist for a total of three points in the tournament for him.

The Czechs take on the United States on Monday at 8:20 a.m local time.

Source: https://www.milehighhockey.com/2025...cores-twice-in-as-canada-shutout-slovakia-7-0
 
Morning Flurries: NHL’s Quarter-Century Team

NHL: Stanley Cup Playoffs-Colorado Avalanche at Dallas Stars

Jerome Miron-Imagn Images

Also, several Avalanche still have something to play for.

While the Colorado Avalanche are on hiatus, the accolades keep rolling in as four members of the burgundy and blue were named the NHL’s quarter-century team. It should come as no surprise that current Avalanche superstars Cale Makar and Nathan MacKinnon were selected joining Avalanche legends and Hall of Famers Joe Sakic and Patrick Roy.


Learn more about our four players who were named to the NHL’s Quarter-Century Team for their elite play over the past 25 years!

: https://t.co/q1MX7bTI0u pic.twitter.com/S2YngwEezX

— Colorado Avalanche (@Avalanche) May 12, 2025

It’s been very quiet around the team while they lick their wounds and prepare for a summer of transactions for the coming season. But one player took the time to give an interview following their ousting. Listen to Devon Toews cover a range of topics from Colorado’s elimination to Mikko Rantanen and more below.

Two Avalanche players are keeping the party going in Sweden as they participate in the World Championship. Nathan MacKinnon is leading Canada with 10 points including six goals in five games as well as Martin Nečas with four points and two goals in four contests. The round-robin portion of the tournament concludes this week with games which will impact seeding with Canada taking on Finland and Sweden, the Czech Republic will face Germany and team USA.

MHH has you covered with all game recaps including Canada’s 7-0 shutout of Slovakia HERE.


Just Nathan MacKinnon doing Nathan MacKinnon things.

Et pourquoi pas un spécial Nathan MacKinnon? #MensWorlds | #MondialMasculinpic.twitter.com/P7mxSAjIZu

— Hockey Canada (@HockeyCanada) May 17, 2025

Finally, we can’t forget the Colorado Eagles are continuing play for the Avalanche organization as they currently are in their third round (of five) AHL playoff series against the Abbotsford Canucks. It is a best-of-five this round and the first two games were played on the road. Last night the Eagles evened the series 1-1 with a 5-3 win which even saw Ivan Ivan score the game winning goal. The series will resume on Wednesday in Loveland for Game 3.


Fancy work from Ivan #EaglesCountry #TimeToFly25 pic.twitter.com/HTcGrozvJB

— y - Colorado Eagles (@ColoradoEagles) May 19, 2025

Source: https://www.milehighhockey.com/2025...alanche-morning-flurries-quarter-century-team
 
Canada suffers first loss against Finland, Czechs and Necas remain unbeaten

Germany v Czechia - 2025 IIHF Ice Hockey World Championship

Photo by Andrea Branca/Eurasia Sport Images/Getty Images

Nathan MacKinnon had a chance to deliver the overtime winner, but was denied.

Down goes Canada.

Canada suffered its first loss of the IIHF World Hockey Championship on Monday when Eeli Tolvanen scored the shootout winner to give Finland a 2-1 victory.

The Finns improved to 4-1-0-1 in the tournament, while Canada dropped to 5-0-1.

Canada dominated puck possession, but it didn’t matter in the end, as Juuse Saros was outstanding in the net, stopping 37 of 38 shots. The 30-year-old Saros is the current starting netminder for the Nashville Predators.

Marc-Andre Fleury, allegedly now retired from NHL competition, stopped 18 of 20 shots for Canada.

The Canadians entered the game at 5-0, having outscored their adversaries 28-2 in those previous games. But this time, they fought someone their own size and came out on the losing end. The Finns didn’t come into the highly-anticipated match with an unblemished record, but they had a similar success rate against other teams. Before losing to co-host Sweden, they had outscored their opposition 18-8 before squaring off against Canada.

Despite being outplayed for the first two periods and playing one score down on the scoreboard due to a Ryan O’Reilly shorthanded goal, the Finns became stronger in the third. Just over seven minutes into the frame, Patrik Puistola tipped Nikolas Matinpalo’s point shot in front of the net and whacked it by Fleury to tie the game at 1. From that point forward, Canada dictated the pace for the remainder of regulation, but were unable to score.

Overtime and Shootout

While both teams had a few chances in the overtime period, Canada had the best opportunity to put the game away when Nathan MacKinnon went on a breakaway, but he was stoned cold by Saros.

MacKinnon got another shot in the skills competition but missed and Tolvanen scored in the shootout to give the win to Finland.

Next Game

Despite the loss, Canada remains ahead of Finland in the standings. The Canadians are the No. 2-ranked team, while the Finns remain in third. Canada will take on the No.1-rated Sweden Tuesday to finish out the preliminary round. The game starts at 12:20 p.m. local time.

Necas scores two points in Czech win over Germany

The Czech Republic destroyed Germany in a 5-0 smacking to remain undefeated in the tournament. Captain Roman Cervenka, who netted a hat trick in his 100th World Championship game appearance against Kazakhstan, had two assists along with Martin Nečas. Including this slick set-up on the fifth goal from the Colorado Avalanche forward. It is also interesting to note that Nečas was playing as the second line center in the win.


GOAL! Jakub Flek 2x - Nečas assist
Czech Republic 5:0 Germany #IIHF #MensWorlds pic.twitter.com/ktg4Oo1mt6

— SAJDLIK (@Sajdlik667) May 19, 2025

The Czechs return to the ice on Tuesday against the United States. Puck drop is at 8:20 a.m. local time.

Source: https://www.milehighhockey.com/2025...inst-finland-czechs-and-necas-remain-unbeaten
 
Recap: Panthers dominate Canes in Game 1, win 5-2

Florida Panthers v Carolina Hurricanes - Game One

Photo by Jaylynn Nash/Getty Images

The Canes had 13 more shots on net, but the Panthers made them pay for every mistake.

A rematch of the 2023 Eastern Conference Finals started off just how they left off — a Florida Panthers victory.

Florida, two days removed from eliminating the Toronto Maple Leafs in their second-round series, dissected the Carolina Hurricanes in a 5-2 win in Game 1 of the Eastern Conference Finals.

Carter Verhaeghe and Aaron Ekblad scored twice in the opening period to set the tone, and Sergei Bobrovsky remained impressive between the pipes, stopping 31 of 33 shots.

It was a showcase for the Panthers’ depth. A.J. Greer, Sam Bennett, and Eetu Luostarinen punched in the final goal for Florida.

Sebastian Aho and Jackson Blake scored for Carolina. Frederik Andersen stopped 15 of 20 shots.

First Period

It was an intense game from the start.

Just over five minutes into the game, Sam Bennett was sent to the box for hooking Jaccob Slavin. While Carolina was on the power play, Aho made a smart shot from the slot that was saved by Bobrovsky. However, after the whistle, Aho got into it with Anton Lundell, who cross-checked him, but the officials caught the tail-end of the exchange when Aho attempted to grab Lundell by the helmet. Aho took the bait and ended up in the box for a two-minute roughing penalty, which incensed the crowd.

The Panthers struck first on the power play when Verhaege found the back of the net on a beautiful backhander that beat Andersen 8:30 into the game. The sequence started when Tkachuk had possession of the puck just behind the net and he passed the puck to Barkov, who fed Verhaeghe in front of the net. From there, Verhaeghe went from forehand to backhand and sent it top shelf.

Ekblad made it a 2-0 game after Jordan Staal attempted to stick handle and lost control of the puck in his own zone. Evan Rodrigues scooped up the loose puck and found Ekblad, who snapped a shot from the left circle through the screen and into the net.

Gustav Forsling was particularly impressive for the Panthers in the opening period, landing bone-crushing checks, and making excellent heads-up plays with the stick, taking away an opportunity from Shayne Gostisbehere.

Second Period

Greer scored 3:33 into the second period when Niko Mikkola set him up for a beautiful cross-crease goal to put the Panthers up 3-1.

Nearly 8:00 into the period, Carolina had a massive opportunity when Taylor Hall came through the blue paint and knocked Bobrovsky’s stick loose. Jack Roslovic teed up a shot but Bobrovsky was still able to make the save despite not having his stick.

With 8:30 left in the second, Forsling was sent to the box for cross-checking Svechnikov in the back to put the Canes on the man-advantage.

Despite a myriad of chances, Carolina was unable to convert on the power play. However, they dominated the rest of the period with nine unanswered shots on net. Unfortunately, it didn’t translate to any goals. With 40 seconds left in the frame, Walker fired a shot from the point, but Bobrovsky came up with the save.

Third Period

Entering this game, the Panthers had won 27 consecutive playoff games when leading after two periods.

A couple of failed clears by Florida allowed Carolina to crash the net early in the third. Aho had a chance to get the Canes within a goal, but Bobrovsky made the save and covered up the puck for the whistle.

Rodrigues made a beautiful effort roughly 3:30 into the period when he fired a puck toward Reinhart’s stick in the slot looking for the deflection, but the shot redirected off the blade and hit Andersen in the mask.

However, Scott Morrow gave Florida a gift when he lobbed the puck out of play from his defensive zone for a delay of game penalty.

Florida went shotless for 15 minutes, but their very next shot was a goal, when Sam Bennett snapped a sizzler from the point through traffic to beat Andersen. It was Florida’s second power play goal of the night on three attempts as the Panthers took a commanding 4-1 lead.

The Canes had only allowed two power play goals in 10 postseason games entering this matchup. However, they allowed the same amount in one game against the reigning Stanley Cup champions.

With 11:45 left in the game, Marchand and Gostisbehere dropped the gloves after Gostisbehere purposefully shot the puck at him and the two engaged in a quick tussle before Marchand took him down to the ice. The officials handed Marchand a four-minute minor for roughing and a 10-minute misconduct, and Gostisbehere was issued a two-minute minor. He spent a part of his penalty on the bench rather than the penalty box so his trainer could plug his nose up with gauze after Marchand bloodied him.

Luostarinen, a former Cane, put the game out of reach when he one-timed a pass from Tomáš Nosek, who was behind the net, from low in the left circle to make it a 5-1 game.

After Jonah Gadjovich was penalized for roughing up Morrow, Blake scored on the power play at 16:19, tapping in a pass from Seth Jarvis at the top of the crease.

Carolina pulled Andersen with 2:55 to go, but it didn’t matter either way. The game was long over in this 5-2 Panthers victory.

Takeaways

Carolina has now lost 13 consecutive games in a conference final, going back to being swept in 2009, 2019, and 2023. The last time the Hurricanes won in a conference final, head coach Rod Brind’Amour was still playing.

Carolina beat themselves in this game. They had 13 more shots on net, but still lost by three goals. As previously stated, at one point, Florida was held without a shot for 15 minutes. During that run, the Canes failed to score, but the Panthers’ next shot was a goal. They made way too many mistakes with their puck in their own zone and that led to the result we saw tonight.

Upcoming

Game 2 is back at Carolina on Thursday night. Puck drop is at 6 p.m. local time.

Source: https://www.milehighhockey.com/2025...s-in-game-1-win-5-2-eastern-conference-finals
 
NHL 25: Oilers take Game 1 5-1 over Stars in penalty fest

Edmonton Oilers v Dallas Stars

Photo by Glenn James/NHLI via Getty Images

You never know what to expect with EA.

The Edmonton Oilers will defeat the Dallas Stars in Game 1 of the Western Conference Final.

NHL 25 had a very interesting simulation to Wednesday’s night game as both squads combined for 10 power plays. The Oilers had six opportunities on the man advantage, while the Stars had four.

In the end, it was the Canadian squad that made the most of their opportunities with a resounding 5-1 win.

Connor McDavid, Leon Draisaitl, Adam Henrique, Evan Bouchard, and Jake Walman scored for the Oilers. Mikko Rantanen scored the lone goal for Dallas. Stuart Skinner stopped 37 of 38 shots and Jake Oettinger made 42 saves.

First Period

The Oilers came out strong and quick from the get-go. McDavid rang a shot from the left circle off the post in the opening few minutes. The hero from Game 5 of the Western Conference Second Round series between Vegas and Edmonton, Kasperi Kapanen also had an early impact. His snap shot from the front of the net was gloved by Oettinger.

McDavid made up for it as he would score to give Edmonton a 1-0 lead on the very next play. After winning the draw in enemy territory, Brett Kulak fed McDavid the puck and he whipped around a wrister to beat Oettinger blocker side.

Dallas had an excellent chance to score with less than six minutes to go in the first, but some bad luck prevented them from making it happen. Thomas Harley, the hero from Game 6 between Winnipeg and Dallas, teed up a howitzer from the point. Tyler Seguin redirected it in front of the net, but he deflected it into Skinner’s glove. Just imagine if he could have just angled it just a little more towards the net.

The penalty fest officially kicked off late in the period, but at the end of, Edmonton held a 1-0 lead.

Second Period

Bouchard made it a 2-0 game when he scored on the power play after he was fed a no-look pass from Ryan Nugent-Hopkins. He gathered the puck and still managed to get off a sweet wrist shot as a defender was closing in on him. On the very next play, Draisaitl scored to make it 4-0 after pouncing on a loose puck in front of the net after Zach Hyman was initially turned away by Oettinger.

Third Period

With 1:41 left in the game, the Stars finally got on the board when Granlund fed Mikko Rantanen in the slot for a backhand goal on the power play.

Dallas pulled Oettinger with less than a minute to go, but Henrique punched in the empty-net goal to close the show.

Edmonton takes the opening game of the Western Conference Final 5-1.

Takeaways

We literally went from barely having any penalties in the Florida-Carolina sim to having a Thanksgiving dinner worth of infractions.

Don’t see that happening, but Edmonton taking the first game isn’t out of the equation. Both teams are riding incredible hot streaks right now and it’s going to be one heck of a series.

Source: https://www.milehighhockey.com/2025...-game-1-5-1-over-dallas-stars-in-penalty-fest
 
Morning Flurries: Quarterfinals set at World Championship

IHOCKEY-WC-2025-MEN-SWE-CAN


Canada and Czechia still have a shot at the gold medal.

It was a busy slate of games in the last day of round-robin matches at the World Championship. First, the Czech Republic took on Team USA and fell 5-2. Colorado Avalanche forward Martin Nečas scored a power play goal but it wasn’t enough to overcome the Americans who scored four goals in the third period to take the victory. The Czechs finished third in their group and will have a very tough match against Sweden in the quarterfinals on Thursday.


GOOAL! Martin Nečas - Czech Republic 2:1 USA #IIHF #MensWorlds pic.twitter.com/odL40D5HHs

— SAJDLIK (@Sajdlik667) May 20, 2025

Elsewhere, Team Canada enjoyed the opposite result in a 5-3 win over Sweden. Avalanche superstar Nathan MacKinnon added a goals and two assists to his point totals. His 13 points trail only Czech forward David Pastrnak for the tournament lead. With the win Canada secured the top seed of their group and earned a favorable match with Denmark to begin the playoff portion of the tournament.


| Nathan MacKinnon had a goal and two assists, helping finish atop Group A at #MensWorlds with a 5-3 victory over .

| Nathan MacKinnon a trois points, et le finit au sommet du groupe A au #MondialMasculin grâce à un gain de 5-3 contre la . pic.twitter.com/yAhtNpQaUh

— Hockey Canada (@HockeyCanada) May 21, 2025

The fun kicks off on Thursday, May 22nd. Both Canada and the Czech Republic will play at 12:20 p.m. MT. Should either team advance the semifinals will happen on Saturday with the bronze and gold medal games on Sunday.


The quarter-finals are set! See you on Thursday! #MensWorlds #IIHF pic.twitter.com/2y75TwB6GW

— IIHF (@IIHFHockey) May 20, 2025

Source: https://www.milehighhockey.com/2025...ld-championship-nathan-mackinnon-martin-necas
 
NHL 25: Panthers take 2-0 series lead with 7-4 win over Canes

Florida Panthers v Carolina Hurricanes - Game One

Photo by Bruce Bennett/Getty Images

Four players each scored three points for the Panthers.

The Florida Panthers will take a 2-0 series lead over the Carolina Hurricanes in the Eastern Conference Final.

According to NHL 25, the Panthers will dominate a majority of the game and overcome a few shaky moments to defeat the Canes 7-4.

Sam Reinhart, Carter Verhaeghe, Alexander Barkov, and Sam Bennett all scored three points for Florida. Bennett and Matthew Tkachuk both scored twice for the Panthers. Depth was clearly the name of the game.

Sebastian Aho, Jesper Fast, Seth Jarvis, and Logan Stankoven scored for Carolina.

Sergei Bobrovsky made 33 saves and Frederik Andersen stopped 37 of 44 shots.

First Period

Tkachuk took an early penalty for Florida, but Carolina was unable to convert on the man-advantage. However, 3:35 into the game, it was Tkachuk who put Florida on the board first. It happened when Andrei Svechnikov lost control of the puck along the boards. It was gathered up by Carter Varhaeghe, who fed Tkachuk in the slot for a sweet backhander that beat Andersen glove side.

Svechnikov continued to get into trouble, but this time, it was for a disciplinary problem when he elbowed Seth Jones in the back of the head. The Panthers subsequently scored on the power play when Sam Reinhart scored off a Tkachuk rebound to make it 2-0.

Just over six minutes into the game, Carolina got on the board in a weird sequence. Shayne Gostisbehere attempted to clear the puck from outside the blue line and the shot bounced off Jones, who had his back turned to the play. Stankoven sprinted through the neutral zone, picked up the loose puck, and beat Bobrovsky to make it a 2-1 game.

Fluke or not, the Panthers went right back to crashing the net and poured the pressure on Andersen. After Gustav Forsling’s shot from the point bounced off one of his teammates, Bennett picked up the loose puck from along the boards and looked for an open man. He found Verhaeghe in the slot by the left circle, and he snapped a shot that beat Andersen five-hole to make it a 3-1 score.

Carolina applied intelligent aggression late, but Bobrovsky continued to come up with spectacular saves to keep them out of the net.

At the end of the first, Florida held a 3-1 lead.

Second Period

The Canes came out firing to begin the second frame, but all of that forward progression came to a halt when Jacob Slavin was whistled for holding Reinhart. And on the power play, Tkachuk scored his second goal of the game to extend their lead to three.

Bennett made it 5-1 Florida when he one-timed a pass from Verhaeghe, who found him in the slot from behind the net. The initial play started at center ice when Brad Marchand intercepted a pass from Jordan Staal and took it the other way before dishing a pass to Verhaeghe.

And of course, with how video game simulations go, sometimes you get a cold taste of Frostbite, which tends to lead you down a path of ridiculousness. Both teams took turns fouling one another as the scoreboard would transition from power play to 4-on-4 at various times. The luck of the draw finally benefitted the Canes when Aho carried the puck through the neutral zone, but had two Panther defenders closing in on him. From there, he did a drop pass to Jarvis, who subsequently played a game of chicken with the defenders. He slowed the pace down and moved the puck from the backhand to the forehand, all while Bobrovsky was trying to figure out where the puck would go. He guessed wrong, and Jarvis beat him with a wrister top shelf to make it a three-goal deficit.

Florida would score again moments later. After Bennett was rejected on the initial shot, he gained control of the loose puck and passed it to Jones, who set up Reinhart for a one-timer from the left circle, but the shot didn’t have a lot of mustard on it. However, Andersen was unable to contain the rebound and Barkov came charging in from the right side and batted in the rebound to make it a 6-2 game.

Third Period

To Carolina’s credit, they refused to give up, and Florida got a little lazy. After the Panthers took a series of silly penalties, the Canes finally capitalized when Fast scored to put them within three goals.

After Thachuk was boxed for cross-checking, Aho scored on the power play to make it 6-4. Svechnikov fed Blake from behind the net, but Bobrovsky made the save. However, the puck trickled away, and Aho was ready for it from the left slot and shot at a wide-open net and hit nothing but that.

But it was too little, too late. The Panthers added their seventh and final goal of the game, when Reinhart fed Bennett for his second of the night, and it was a beautiful snap shot that beat Andersen top shelf.

The Panthers played it safe for the final eight minutes and ran out the clock, and took a 2-0 series lead in the Eastern Conference Final.

Takeaways

We could definitely see the game playing out this way. The Panthers are the strongest and the most physical team in the NHL right now. And to boot, they have incredible depth. It’s going to be hard for Carolina to do much in this series, as they lack both the depth and the goaltending.

Source: https://www.milehighhockey.com/2025...-take-2-0-series-lead-with-7-4-win-over-canes
 
Canada eliminated by Denmark in stunning upset at World Championship

Canada v Denmark Final 4 - 2025 IIHF Ice Hockey World Championship

Photo by EyesWideOpen/Getty Images

It was Denmark’s second victory over Canada in history.

A sequel to the Miracle on Ice has been penciled in for 2025.

Nick Olesen scored with 49 seconds left in the game to help Denmark deliver one of the most monumental upsets in hockey history when they defeated Canada 2-1 in the quarterfinals of the 2025 IIHF Ice Hockey World Championship.


A win for the history books #MensWorlds @dkishockey pic.twitter.com/Dg0Z3DxPRm

— IIHF (@IIHFHockey) May 22, 2025

Despite getting outshot 30-11 through the first two periods by the opposing team before a home crowd at a sold-out Jyske Bank Boxen, Denmark dominated Canada in the third frame, outshooting them 22-10 and scoring two goals in the final 180 seconds to turn a 1-0 deficit into a 2-1 victory. Nikolaj Ehlers tied the game with 2:17 to go when he ripped a shot from the point through traffic that beat Jordan Binnington before Olesen punched Denmark’s ticket to the semifinals for the first time in history. 24-year-old Frederik Dichow was near perfect, stopping 39 of 40 shots to secure the biggest win of his career.

It was just the second time Denmark had defeated the Canadians in history, but it was also the second time in the last three years. The previous triumph was a 3-2 preliminary round matchup in 2023. Now, Denmark will play for a medal for the first time.

“I have no words, it’s unbelievable,” Olesen said after Denmark reached the last four for the first time. “The fans here were cheering for us the whole game and they helped us get the win. It’s crazy.”

When Ehlers scored, the arena erupted in roars, but that was only the tip of the iceberg. Olesen got his opportunity and outclassed one of the finest goaltenders in the world. He slowed the play down to his pace and forced Binnington to make the first move, which was the wrong one. And once the puck hit the open net, the crowd went from pure anticipation to pure jubilation.

Denmark didn’t just beat Canada, they also defeated a team that was filled to the brim with top NHL talent, but it didn’t matter. The same Denmark that needed a shootout victory over Germany just to reach the quarterfinal round defeated the clear favorite of the tournament, which had several players from its championship roster at this year’s Four Nations Face-Off, including captain Sidney Crosby, former Hart Memorial Trophy winner Nathan MacKinnon, and goaltender Jordan Binnington, who was coming off an impressive season.

While Ehlers and Olesen saved the day on the stat sheet, Denmark owes much of their historic win to Dichow, who kept his team in the game despite getting outshot 18-4 in the first period.

Canada defenceman Travis Sanheim was the only one to solve the Dichow puzzle with 5:17 left in the game. Nathan MacKinnon was held off the scoresheet and finished with 13 points in eight games. It was up to the Danes to get their revenge, and they went beyond the limits of imagination.

Dichow, who was drafted by the Montreal Canadiens in the fifth round of the 2019 NHL Entry Draft and currently plays for HV71 Jonkoping in Sweden, made 39 saves for Denmark, and Binnington made 30 saves for Canada.

The Danes will square off against Switzerland, which shutout Austria 6-0 on Thursday, in the semifinals on Saturday. The United States face Sweden in the other semifinal after scoring a 5-2 win over Finland.

This also marks the end of the tournament for the Colorado Avalanche as Sweden defeated the Czech Republic 5-2 to earn their semi-final berth. Martin Nečas added a power play assist to his point totals to finish with seven in the seven games he played.

Source: https://www.milehighhockey.com/2025...-upset-at-world-championship-nathan-mackinnon
 
Recap: Oilers shutout Stars 3-0 to even series

Edmonton Oilers v Dallas Stars - Game Two

Photo by Sam Hodde/Getty Images

There was no comeback story in this one as the Dallas Stars offense fell on deaf ears.

Tonight, the comeback kids took a nap.

The Edmonton Oilers tied their best-of-seven Western Conference Final series at one game apiece against the Dallas Stars Friday night, shutting out the home team 3-0 at American Airlines Center.

The game played out very similar to Game 1. The only thing that was missing was Dallas catching lightning a bottle and three power play goals in six minutes to snatch the victory despite getting outplayed for a majority of the game. However, it was all Oilers in Game 2.

Ryan Nugent-Hopkins put Edmonton on the board in the first period, before Brett Kulak and Connor Brown provided insurance markers in the second period. And between the pipes, Stuart Skinner was back to his winning ways. Prior to the epic meltdown that was Game 1, Skinner was coming off back-to-back shutouts and appeared on his way to another impressive victory before the Stars went on an absolute tirade. But for Skinner, this is his best stretch of hockey yet. This is his third shutout win for the Oilers in their last four games.

Now the Oilers head back home to Rogers Place, and you know the fans will be roaring from every end of the arena. The Oilers have been near perfect at home in the playoffs, and the Stars have lost four games on the road. However, two of those defeats came at the hands of the Colorado Avalanche, whom the Stars defeated in the First Round.

This performance exhibited the mental fortitude of this Oilers team. At the end of Game 1, Connor McDavid and Leon Draisaitl could only stare at each other in utter disbelief. That type of defeat would haunt most people, but McDavid is a tremendous leader and we’ve seen that time and time again, especially last year when he chose to remain in the locker room with his teammates after their loss to the Florida Panthers in Game 7 of the Stanley Cup Finals rather than go out to accept the Conn Smythe Trophy, which is an individual honor.

How It Happened

But in Game 2, there was no collapse. The only thing that was burnt to a crisp, was the mood inside American Airlines Center. Unlike the first game, the penalty kill was stout. They killed off their first infraction in the opening period. Dallas had one last dash effort to get into the game, but Darnell Nurse thwarted his intentions when he slashed Roope Hintz on the foot, sending him to the dressing room with 16 minutes left in regulation.

The Oilers benefitted from a shaky call in the first period when Mikael Granlund was sent to the box for boarding after Troy Stetcher turned his back into the hit, making it look a lot worse than it actually was. Edmonton subsequently scored just 17 seconds into the power play to give them the lead.

Skinner is a lot like former heavyweight boxing champion Deontay Wilder but as a goalie. He’s very unorthodox, but when he’s locked in, he’s one of the best goaltenders in the NHL. Outdueling Jake Oettinger in the regular season, let alone in the playoffs is not an easy task. Both goaltenders were great tonight. Skinner made 25 saves while Oettinger saved 22 of the 25 shots he faced.

Upcoming

We go to Game 3 at Rogers Place in Edmonton on Sunday, but this time it’s an early game. Puck drop is at 1 p.m. local time.

Source: https://www.milehighhockey.com/2025...hutout-dallas-stars-3-0-to-even-series-game-2
 
NHL 25: Panthers one win away from Stanley Cup Final berth, sweep of Canes

NHL: Stanley Cup Playoffs-Florida Panthers at Carolina Hurricanes

James Guillory-Imagn Images

The Canes continue to get outclassed.

The Florida Panthers will push the Carolina Hurricanes to the brink of elimination Saturday night on home ice.

According to NHL 25, the reigning Stanley Cup Champions will have another easy night in the office. The simulation predicts Florida will win 4-1 over the Canes.

Matthew Tkachuk scored twice for the Panthers. Carter Verhaeghe and Mackie Samoskevich also scored for Florida. Sergei Bobrovsky stopped 24 shots.

Jesper Fast scored the lone goal for the Hurricanes. Frederik Andersen made 37 saves in net for Carolina.

First Period

Reminiscent of the first two games, Florida took control from the opening draw. Six of the game’s first seven shots belonged to the Panthers.

Five minutes into the game, Florida went on their first power play when Jordan Martinook was whistled for holding Seth Jones against the boards.

After the Canes killed off the penalty, Evan Rodrigues was boxed for cross-checking, which gave them the opportunity with the man advantage. However, Carolina did the opposite of what you’re supposed to do on the power play, allow a goal.

Tkachuk scored a shorthanded goal to put Florida 1-0 with just over 12 minutes left to go in the first period. It all happened after the Panthers cleared the puck out of their own zone. Tomas Nosek sprinted all the way down the ice, beat two Carolina defensemen to the puck, and found Tkachuk in the slot for a sweet goal.

Following a defensive zone turnover by Brent Burns, Verhaeghe scooped up the puck and crashed the crease. After a quick pad save from Andersen, Verhaege quickly went to Plan B, picked up the loose rebound, and fired it into the goal from the left side of the net. It’s safe to say that Burns got burned.

With 3:58 remaining in the first, Tkachuk scored his second goal of the night to give the Panthers a 3-0 lead. Sam Reinhart found Tkachuk unprotected on the left circle, an area where he’s had success all game and didn’t miss. It was a beautiful snap shot that beat Andersen’s blocker and added another to their growing lead.

At the end of one, the Panthers held a 3-0 lead and outshot Carolina 17-8.

Second Period

The second frame was more competitive. Florida was still clearly the better squad, but Carolina continued to push forward. Burns unloaded a scintillating shot from the right circle, but it was stoned cold by Bobrovsky.

A defensive zone turnover by the Panthers opened up a huge opportunity for the Canes when Sebastian Aho fed Seth Jarvis a one-timer, but Bobrovsky made an unbelievable glove save.

On the next play, Carolina finally got on the board when Fast deflected a point shot from Sean Walker into the net. The timing couldn’t have been more impeccable as Fast took a big hit from Gustav Forsling just after making the shot.

Third Period

Disaster nearly struck to begin the third period when Bobrovsky exited the net to play the puck. He passed it to Dmitry Kulikov, but he mishandled it. Taylor Hall jumped on the chance and fired a quick wrist shot from the right circle, but Bobrovsky got back into the crease to make the save just in the nick of time.

The depth of the Panthers was on display yet again in the third when Samoskevich scored off a feed from Eetu Luostarinen in the slot to give his team a commanding 4-1 advantage. It was an impressive play from Luostarinen as he was being doubled-teamed and passed the puck to the only viable option. It paid off for both parties.

Takeaways

If the Canes get swept again in the Eastern Conference Finals, Rod Brind’Amour’s job has to be on the line, right? They have been utterly outclassed all series and it doesn’t seem like it’s going to get any better.

But hey, we’ll see if they can give real life a run for their money.

Puck drop is at 6 p.m. local time.

Source: https://www.milehighhockey.com/2025...y-from-stanley-cup-final-berth-sweep-of-canes
 
Recap: Oilers thump Stars 6-1 to take 2-1 series lead in Western Conference Final

Edmonton Oilers v Dallas Stars - Game Two

Photo by Sam Hodde/Getty Images

The Oilers had less shots, but they made theirs count.

If you hadn’t looked at the final score, you could have guessed that the Dallas Stars defeated the Edmonton Oilers Sunday night at Rogers Place, but you would have guessed wrong.

Despite getting outshot 36-24, the Oilers destroyed Dallas in a 6-1 thrashing on home ice in Game 3 of the Western Conference Final.

Connor McDavid and Zach Hyman scored twice for Edmonton. Ryan Nugent-Hopkins also had three assists and nearly scored two goals of his own, but hit the post twice. Evander Kane also posted two assists for the Oilers. Stuart Skinner made 35 saves.

Jason Robertson scored the lone goal for Dallas. Lian Bichsel was initially credited with the goal, but after an extended review, the officials ruled that Robertson tipped his shot. Jake Oettinger had an uncharacteristically rough outing and made just 18 stops.

The Oilers take a 2-1 series lead in their best-of-seven series into Game 4.

First Period

About six-and-a-half minutes into the opening frame, Nugent Hopkins accepted a cross-ice feed and drove the puck through the neutral zone before firing a blistering wrist shot from the left circle. Oettinger didn’t make the save with his blocker but with his arm. With that said, it was a scintillating arm save from the Stars’ netminder. Draisaitl took the puck around the net on the next play and attempted to score on the wraparound, but his backhanded shot went wide.

With 5:58 remaining in the first, the Oilers got away with a holding penalty moments before Nugent-Hopkins completed a drop pass to Evan Bouchard before he unloaded a slap shot from the point that went off the post and in to put Edmonton up 1-0.

36 seconds later, Nugent-Hopkins was at the forefront again, feeding McDavid a one-timer in the slot to make it a 2-0 game.

With 2.6 seconds remaining in the period, Kasperi Kapanen was called for high-sticking. The replay showed Kapanen lifting Mikko Rantanen’s stick, but when he did that, Rantanen’s own stick came up and hit him in the face. Despite a review by the officials, they still deemed Kapanen responsible for the incident.

Second Period

Rantanen destroyed a one-timer to start the third period, but it rang off the post. Sam Steel also attempted to punch one in from the slot, but the calm and poise of Stuart Skinner was not to be denied, as he turned away both the initial shot and the rebound that followed.

Edmonton went the other way on the following play, and Nugent-Hopkins rang one off the post after taking a cross-ice feed. After nearly missing on a goal, Nugent-Hopkins lost an edge and crashed into the boards with some help from Lian Bichsel, but he got up and continued on.

10:36 into the period, Bichsel found himself in trouble after tripping Corey Perry to put the Oilers on the power play. However, Edmonton couldn’t get anything initially. With 18 seconds to go on the power play, Steel tripped Draisaitl to put the Oilers on a brief 5-on-3 man advantage. The Dallas penalty kill, known for being one of the best in the NHL, killed off both penalties. After doing away with the infractions, the Stars made it a one-goal game after Bichsel initially scored his first career postseason goal after blasting a shot from the point off a feed from Rantanen that beat Skinner five-hole. The goal came after Skinner turned away multiple shots, but his defense could not clear the puck, which allowed Rantanen to reset and look for options behind the net, which he did successfully. Before the start of the third period, the officials would reverse the original call and rule that Robertson tipped the shot on the way in. As a result, Bichsel would have to wait a bit longer to score his first playoff goal.

McDavid scored his second of the game with 19 seconds remaining in the period. After the officials missed a hooking call on Cody Ceci, McDavid reset and sniped one from the right circle by Oettinger to give Edmonton a two-goal lead.

Earlier in the period, Connor Brown took a massive shoulder check from Alex Petrovic right on the chin. He went to the dressing room and was ruled out for the remainder of the game.

Third Period

3:25 into the period, Hyman went on a breakaway after taking a long lead pass from Nugent-Hopkins and beat Oettinger to make it a 4-1 lead. For Nugent-Hopkins, it was his third assist in the game. He also hit the post twice himself at this point. And if those shots had just been a few inches the other way, the Oilers could have been talking about a 6-1 lead.

Hyman scored his second of the game when he tapped in a pass from Kane that flew over the stick of a diving Lindell. It was the third unanswered goal for the Oilers and the second in a row from Hyman.

With just under five minutes left in regulation, Vasiliy Podkolzin was sent to the box for tripping Thomas Harley, but it was more of a slash. Harley was subsequently penalized for unsportsmanlike conduct after he checked Hyman into the boards after a whistle. This resulted in some 4-4 play before Edmonton went on the power play. As soon as that happened, Klingberg made it 6-1 when he fired a wrist shot through a screen to continue the bleeding.

Takeaways

Dallas will need to figure out a way to score goals or this series is effectively over. From an aesthetic standpoint and a hockey perspective, this was their best performance of the series, and they still got destroyed. That’s not going to give your team a lot of confidence.

Game 4 takes place Tuesday night. Puck drop is at 6 p.m. local time.

Source: https://www.milehighhockey.com/2025...e-2-1-series-lead-in-western-conference-final
 
U.S. men’s hockey team wins first standalone world championship in 92 years

Switzerland v USA - 2025 IIHF Ice Hockey World Championship

Photo by Andrea Branca/Eurasia Sport Images/Getty Images

The U.S. is on top for the first time defeating Canada 2-1 on February 6, 1933, in the former Czechoslovakia.

USA ALL THE WAY!

The U.S. men’s hockey team secured its first standalone world championship since 1933, beating Switzerland 1-0 in overtime in Sunday’s final in Stockholm, Sweden.

Tage Thompson scored in overtime to give the U.S. its first major tournament title since the 1996 World Cup. The last Olympic gold came in 1980 with the Miracle on Ice.

Jeremy Swayman, who plays for the Boston Bruins, made 25 saves.

The head coach of the U.S. team is Ryan Warsofsky, who currently serves in the same position with the San Jose Sharks.

For a brief time, the Olympics also counted as world champions, so technically speaking, the U.S. gold medal from the 1960 Olympic Games, is also a world championship medal. However, unlike the IIHF World Championship, it is not a standalone event.

The U.S. suffered a defeat in the quarterfinal round of last year’s event and failed to medal in 2022 and 2023. Prior to their defeat over Sweden on Saturday, the U.S. had lost 12 semifinals in a row. However, the depth of Team USA was the difference. Goals from six different players helped propel the U.S. to a 6-2 triumph against Sweden, which advanced them to their first gold medal game since 1934.

The U.S. team featured two players from February’s 4 Nations Face-Off: Swayman and star defenseman Zach Werenski, who led the tournament with six points. Canada scored the win in the event, which was their fourth consecutive best-on-best international tournament. Connor McDavid scored in overtime to secure the 3-2 win and the gold medal for his native homeland, while the Americans had to settle for silver.

The U.S. has already qualified for the 2026 Milan Cortina Olympics, where NHL players can participate for the first time of the 2014 Sochi Games in Russia.

Two-time Stanley Cup-winning head coach Mike Sullivan will serve as head coach of the U.S. Olympic team.

Source: https://www.milehighhockey.com/2025...rst-standalone-world-championship-in-92-years
 
NHL 25: Oilers shut out Dallas 1-0 in classic defensive showcase

Dallas Stars v Edmonton Oilers

Photo by Leila Devlin/Getty Images

With a win, the Oilers will take a 2-1 series lead with more home cooking en route.

A defensive masterpiece.

The Edmonton Oilers will win Game 3 of the Western Conference Final this afternoon against the Dallas Stars per NHL 25.

The reigning Stanley Cup Final runner-ups defeated the Stars 1-0 on the simulation.

Connor McDavid had one goal and an assist, and Ryan Nugent-Hopkins lit the lamp for the Oilers. Zach Hyman also had two assists. Stuart Skinner made 20 saves in the win.

Matt Duchene and Miro Heiskanen each had three shots on goal for Dallas, but none hit the net. Jake Oettinger made 30 saves.

We assumed Roope Hintz would be out of the lineup, so we replaced him with Colin Blackwell, the hero from Game 2 of the Western Conference First Round series between Dallas and the Colorado Avalanche.

First Period

Through the first 9:08 of play, it was razor-thin between both teams. The Oilers held a 7-4 advantage in shots on goal. Mattias Janmark teed up a slap shot from the point and Oettinger made a beautiful glove save. On the following play, Skinner turned away Stars’ Lian Bichsel with the blocker when he snapped a wrister from the slot.

At the end of 20 minutes, not only was it scoreless, but both teams also nearly had identical shot totals. The Stars held a 9-8 lead in that category.

Second Period

3:11 into the second period, Edmonton went on their first power play when Heiskanen was sent to the penalty box for slashing McDavid on the hands. It turned out to be one of the most critical plays of the game. McDavid caught Heiskanen napping and took a pass unguarded by the left wing and had a clear lane to make a charge at Oettinger. Sensing this could be trouble, Heiskanen made a desperate lunge with his stick, but he ended up catching McDavid, and the refs were on it immediately. 79779

With 31 seconds left on the penalty kill, Edmonton benefitted off a lucky bounce that ended up bouncing towards the stick of their best player. Hyman fired a shot from the left circle that bounced off a Stars defenseman, and the puck recoiled to the right circle, where McDavid was ready for it. His eyes lit up, that killer instinct kicked in, and McDavid hammered it by Oettinger to give the Oilers a 1-0 lead. And that would end up being the game-winner. You get so many of these bounces during a game and a split second to capitalize on it, and leave it to McDavid to get it done for Edmonton.

Dallas had plenty of scoring chances, but they had a very difficult time getting around a brick wall, and it wasn’t just Skinner. Mikko Rantanen carried the puck through the neutral zone with about 10 minutes to go in the period and dished a cross-ice feed to Esa Lindell, but Troy Stecher blocked the shot, and the puck went back the other way.

Dallas put some pressure on Skinner down the stretch of the period, but they got turned away in every instance.

The second period ended with Edmonton leading 1-0 and leading 21-15 in shots on goal.

Third Period

A turnover nearly gave Edmonton another goal, but Oettinger saved the day. It started when Duchene coughed up the puck in the Oilers defensive zone. Hyman recovered it and drove it down the ice before dropping a pass to McDavid, who sizzled one from the point. Oettinger made a pad save, but left a juicy rebound up for grabs before he dove across the crease to cover it up.

Dallas attempted to crash the net early in the period, but Skinner was just incredible between the pipes. He gloved a shot from Sam Steel and, on the subsequent play, gloved another shot from Cody Ceci that didn’t have as much mustard behind it.

The Stars pulled Oettinger with roughly 47 seconds left in the game, but they turned the puck over almost immediately after and nearly allowed an empty-netter. They recovered to give themselves another fighting chance, but Skinner denied Jamie Benn’s attempt to provide the equalizer with approximately 28 seconds remaining in regulation.

Nugent-Hopkins put the game away with an empty-net goal with 6.9 seconds left to end it.

If it plays out this way, the Oilers will take a 2-1 series lead into Game 4 and that’s huge because they still have the home cooking advantage at Rogers Place.

As for real life, puck drop for today’s game is at 1 p.m. local time.

Source: https://www.milehighhockey.com/2025...-out-dallas-1-0-in-classic-defensive-showcase
 
Mile High Pollster: Fans say the Avalanche likely can’t and won’t trade for Bo Byram

Dallas Stars v Colorado Avalanche

Photo by Ashley Potts/NHLI via Getty Images

Bo Byram has earned himself a payday but it probably won’t come from Colorado.

It's time for another Mile High Hockey pollster as we dive into some offseason topics and take a look at what's left of the conference finals between Edmonton, Dallas, Florida, and Carolina. We will also discuss the likelihood (or unlikelihood) of the Avalanche returning the services of Bo Byram.

Bo Goes


The young man drafted fourth overall by the Avalanche back in 2019 has spent time away from Colorado, and during that time, he has likely earned himself an advantageous contract. It's not beyond reason to think that Byram can ask for as much as 9M AAV on his next deal, and with that, the ever-selling Buffalo Sabres are entertaining offers from other squads.


Can/should the Avalanche trade for Bo Byram? #GoAvsGo

— Adrian Hernandez (@AdoHernandez27) May 22, 2025

It's late May, and the Avalanche aren't playing hockey anymore, so it's the time of year to ask roster questions and begin to formulate the 2025-26 lineup. I think it's safe to say Bo Byram won't be a part of Colorado's opening night roster. It would be nice to establish the competitive advantage on the back end, but the 9M AAV doesn't feel like something the Avalanche can afford without swapping a defender. It seems that the majority of Avs fans agree.

Trending Up?


A lot will unfold between now and the end of the 2025-26 season, but it's never too early to make predictions. I asked fans if they thought next season's version of the Avalanche would win more games than this year's team did. The vote went to 'yes' by a pretty substantial margin, so it's nice to know that Avalanche fans remain optimistic.


Will the 2025-26 Avalanche win more games than the 2024-25 team did? #GoAvsGo

— Adrian Hernandez (@AdoHernandez27) May 22, 2025

Do You Believe In Miracles?


Last night, the Carolina Hurricanes finally won an Eastern Conference Finals game after dropping 15 straight while vying for a conference title. It felt like 0-16 was destined to be a reality, but the Hurricanes gutted it out in game four and, at a minimum, forced a game five back in the Sunshine State.


Will Carolina comeback and win the East against Florida?#GoAvsGo

— Adrian Hernandez (@AdoHernandez27) May 27, 2025

Could Carolina possibly stem the tide and come roaring back in the series? I'm sure the money will land in Florida, securing a chance at back-to-back titles, but fans in Carolina can dream! The vote is still live, so don't forget to cast yours today! Early results suggest that most fans believe Florida will advance.

Sevens in the West


There have been two game sevens from the western side of this NHL playoff bracket, but both of them came in round one. Will we see another in this seemingly back-and-forth Western Conference Final between Edmonton and Dallas?


Will the Dallas and Edmonton series feature a game seven?#NHL

— Adrian Hernandez (@AdoHernandez27) May 27, 2025

I hope so, because there's nothing like a game seven, and one that earns a trip to the Stanley Cup Final is almost as good as it gets.

Source: https://www.milehighhockey.com/2025...anche-likely-cant-and-wont-trade-for-bo-byram
 
Recap: Oilers lose Hyman, defeat Stars 4-1 to move one win away from another Cup berth

Dallas Stars v Edmonton Oilers - Game Four

Photo by Codie McLachlan/Getty Images

Despite all of the injuries, the Oilers continue to toy with the Stars.

Defense wins championships.

The Edmonton Oilers lost Zach Hyman in the first period after taking a hit from Mason Marchment. However, the Oilers still managed to dominate the Dallas Stars in Game 4 of the Western Conference Final on Tuesday night at Rogers Place.

With the victory, Edmonton takes a 3-1 series lead and puts Dallas on the brink of elimination for the third consecutive season in the WCF.

Leon Draisaitl and Corey Perry each had a goal and an assist, Ryan Nugent-Hopkins and Connor McDavid had two assists apiece, and Stuart Skinner made 28 saves in a 4-1 Oilers victory over the Stars.

Jason Robertson scored the lone goal for Dallas, and Jake Oettinger stopped 31 of 33 shots.

First Period

Just over four minutes into the period, Dallas went on their first power play when John Klingberg was called for holding by wrapping his hands around Matt Duchene. The Stars, though, were unable to convert on the man advantage.

Nearly eight minutes into the period, Mikael Granlund broke free, charged down the right wing and fired a wrist shot, but Skinner denied it with the blocker.

Dallas tried to get something going on about a minute later, but when Seguin tried to set up a feed in the slot, Duchene missed the pass.

Edmonton went on the power play with just under 10 minutes to go in the first when Jamie Benn tripped Klingberg. The Oilers took a 1-0 lead when Draisaitl one-timed a shot from Nugent-Hopkins from the right circle.

With about 3:10 remaining in the period, McDavid turned over the puck when Cody Ceci poke-checked the puck away and managed to fire a shot on Skinner, but he made the save. Skinner initially didn’t know where the puck was, but his teammates prevented anyone from trying anything cute.

The Oilers went on the penalty kill with 7.6 seconds remaining in the period. After Jake Walman’s wrister was gloved by Oettinger, Vasily Podkolzin traded some blows with Esa Lindell along the boards. However, Podkolzin was the only one penalized.

Earlier in the period, Mason Marchment collided with winger Zach Hyman in center ice. The Oilers star immediately dropped his stick and appeared to favor his wrist. He was ruled out for the remainder of the game.

Second Period

After some entertaining back-and-forth hockey, Dallas went on the power play nearly six minutes into the period when Corey Perry was whistled for interference on Mikko Rantanen, which appeared to be a questionable call.

Dallas took advantage of it and tied the game at one when Robertson sniped one over Skinner’s blocker from the slot. However, Edmonton caught their own break when Marchment cleaned out Adam Henrique to earn himself an interference call. Nugent-Hopkins subsequently set up Perry for a back-door tap-in to give the Oilers a 2-1 lead.

The Stars went back on the power play when Mattias Janmark tripped Roope Hintz and sent him crashing into the boards. Edmonton managed to fend off Dallas’s electric power play. With 6:25 left in the frame, Dallas held a 25-20 edge in shots on net but were still down a goal.

Kapanen made an incredible sliding play to disrupt Dallas’ offensive attack with less than three minutes remaining on the board. Edmonton attempted to add an insurance marker but fanned on the opportunity.

Although Dallas remained down in the game, a key element to their success was in the faceoff circle. With a minute left in the frame, Dallas had won 24 of 32 draws.

Edmonton suffered a scare loss late in the period when Evander Kane appeared to be injured. His trainer appeared to be working on his neck on the bench. The forward has had an injury-plagued season. He had surgery to repair two torn hip adductor muscles, two hernias, and two torn lower abdominal muscles in September. He also had knee surgery on January, so one could understand why there would be some concern. Thankfully for Kane, he eventually returned to the bench.

Third Period

It was a neck-and-neck battle to begin the final period as both teams struggled to gain the upper hand. Edmonton’s Brett Kulak attempted to get something for Edmonton. He found a hole, drove the puck through the neutral zone, and tried a no-look pass in the slot, but the puck was deflected and went wide. Perry also had a chance to get his second goal of the game when he gained control of the puck near the left circle, but his shot missed wide right.

Despite the injury to Hyman, the Oilers’ most prolific hitter, Edmonton continued to be the physically stronger team. With 10 minutes to go in the period, the Oilers had a significant advantage in hits (43-18).

Edmonton went on the man advantage with five minutes left to go in the game when Mikael Granlund tripped Draisaitl. McDavid attempted to set up Perry down low, but the redirect went just wide of the net.

Dallas successfully killed off the penalty and subsequently pulled Oettinger from the net with 2:40 left in the game. Moments later, the puck went out of play. Eight seconds later, the Oilers scored on the empty net when Draisaitl won the draw in their defensive zone, and Kulak lobbed the puck out to center-ice, where Kapanen got control of the puck and tapped it in to make it 3-1. Adam Henrique added another empty-netter to seal the deal, a 4-1 victory.

“We knew they were going to be desperate,” Draisaitl said after the game. “I thought we handled the (adversity) okay.”

Takeaways

Losing Hyman could be a big hit for the Oilers, but if they can continue to play great defensive hockey like we’ve seen in these playoffs and down the stretch of the regular season, there’s a good chance, should they rematch the Florida Panthers, that they’ll emerge victorious. Of course, the Panthers are also dealing with a myriad of injuries, and they didn’t look so hot in Game 4 against Carolina without the likes of Sean Reinhart, Niko Mikkola, and A.J. Greer. Perhaps they were a little tired. The Oilers also had another injury scare earlier in the game with Kane.

Next Game

Can Edmonton clinch another berth to the Stanley Cup Final by knocking out their rivals on the road? We’ll find out when they square off against the Stars for potentially the final time this season on Thursday at American Airlines Center. Puck drop is at 6 p.m. local time.

Source: https://www.milehighhockey.com/2025...1-to-move-one-win-away-from-another-cup-berth
 
2024-2025 Colorado Avalanche Grades: Defenseman

Dallas Stars v Colorado Avalanche - Game Six

Photo by Michael Martin/NHLI via Getty Images

Taking a look at the regular season performances of all the Colorado Avalanche defenseman.

In honor of finals week wrapping up at my university a couple of weeks ago, I wanted to look back at the individual performances of each Colorado Avalanche player and “grade” their regular season performances, starting with the defenseman. For the sake of making my life a lot easier, we’re going to be looking at all the forwards that were on the team post-trade deadline, and we’re looking at their regular season performances in particular because we’ve dissected a lot of the playoffs already. That all being said, let’s jump right into it!

Samuel Girard (GP: 73 G: 3 A: 21 P: 24)


Honestly, I might be alone in this opinion, but Girard had a pretty nice season overall. While he’s certainly not a prolific goalscorer, nor has he ever been, for that matter. But you don’t need him to be that for you. He’s proven himself to be a steady distributor consistently year after year, and this season was no different for him. Not to mention that he was a monster on the penalty kill throughout this season for the Avs as well. Sure, he still might have his moments that aren’t pretty, but that’s why he’s utilized in a lesser role than on the top pairing. For all the good he did for Colorado this season, I’d give his regular-season performance a solid B+, personally.

Erik Johnson (GP: 14 G: 1 A: 1 P: 2)


While Johnson’s point total might be considered insignificant in the grand scheme of things, there is no denying the positive emotional lift that him coming back to Colorado had on the fanbase. Given where he is at this point in his career, the few games he did play in Colorado weren’t incredibly horrible by any stretch of the imagination. Between him still being able to contribute in an incredibly limited role and the emotional impact he had in his return to Colorado, I’d give his season with the Avs a B+ as well. Sometimes the impact a player can have on a team isn’t always visible on the scoresheet, and Johnson is a perfect example of that, in my opinion.

Ryan Lindgren (GP: 18 G: 2 A: 1 P: 3)


I liked what Lindgren brought to this Avs team when he was brought over from the New York Rangers. There’s no denying that Lindgren had a bit of a rough time in New York, but that was a lot due to his improper utilization on the top pairing with Adam Fox. In Colorado, he was put in a much more appropriate role, in my opinion, and played pretty well overall. I’d give his season a B-, as his regular season wasn’t anything special by any means, but he was perfectly fine in the role he was asked to play for the Avs.

Cale Makar (GP: 80 G: 30 A: 62 P: 92)


What else is there to say about Makar that hasn’t been said already? The guy is just on an entirely different planet. Year in and year out, he’s continuously proven that he’s one of the best defenseman in the NHL, if not the best defenseman in the NHL, and this season was no different. Not only did he set a new single-season career high in points with 92 in the regular season, but he also became the first defenseman to score 30 goals in a season since Mike Green did during the 2008-2009 season. I don’t know how you can give Makar’s regular season anything other than an A+, he continues to do everything that’s asked of him and more in an incredibly impressive fashion.

Sam Malinski (GP: 76 G: 5 A: 10 P: 15)


Malinski’s sophomore season in the NHL went very well, in my opinion. He’s proven to be a steady, reliable NHL-caliber defenseman who can eat up minutes for you night in and night out. He’s pretty consistently a steady defender with the ability to contribute offensively as well, which is exactly what we saw from him this year. Overall, I’d give his season a B+.

Josh Manson (GP: 48 G: 1 A: 14 P: 15)


Manson’s season was a bit of a different story compared to some of the other defenseman, since he was injured for a good chunk of the regular season. When he did play, he certainly had good moments, but the lows were also really low, or that’s what it felt like at times anyway. I still believe that he’s someone who can contribute valuable minutes to this team, but this season was just a bit of an odd one, given his injury and whatnot, and for that, I have to give his regular season a C.

Keaton Middleton (GP: 41 G: 0 A: 2 P: 2)


There isn’t a lot to talk about on the offensive side of Middleton’s season, since he only had two assists, but offensive production isn’t what you primarily expect out of him. You expect him to be reliable defensively and have more of an impact in that regard, which I thought he did this season. For that, I’m giving him a B, as he usually played just fine in the role that you asked him to play for this Colorado team.

Devon Toews (GP: 76 G: 10 A: 34 P: 44)


And last but not least, we have Toews, who I thought had a really solid year. He’s been a perfect defensive pairing partner for Makar, and continues to be that year in and year out. He’s always reliable and someone who’s proven that he can eat up big minutes for the team as well. I’d give his regular season an A personally, given how consistent he was, how consistent he continues to be, and just how well he fits into this team overall.

Source: https://www.milehighhockey.com/2025/5/28/24436629/2024-2025-colorado-avalanche-grades-defenseman
 
Recap: Canes shut out Panthers to stave off elimination, end 15-game ECF losing streak

Carolina Hurricanes v Florida Panthers - Game Four

Photo by Bruce Bennett/Getty Images

It’s finally over, but there’s still three more games to win for the Hurricanes.

The Carolina Hurricanes have finally won an Eastern Conference Final game.

The triumph ended the Hurricanes' 15-game Eastern Conference Final losing streak, which dated back to 2009.

Carolina's last win in the ECF came on June 1, 2006, in Game 7 against the Buffalo Sabres when then-captain Rod Brind'Amour scored the game-winner to send the Hurricanes to the Stanley Cup Final, which they won over the Edmonton Oilers.

The Hurricanes were swept in three consecutive trips to the conference finals - by the Penguins in 2009, the Bruins in 2019, and the Panthers in 2023 - before losing the first three games against Florida this year.

But when it was announced that the Panthers would miss three key players from the lineup Monday night, many thought it was the best chance for the Canes to end this dreaded curse.

And indeed it was. The Hurricanes shut out the Panthers 3-0 to stave off elimination and postpone Florida's bid for their third straight Stanley Cup Final appearance. Logan Stankoven scored the game-winner midway through the second period. Sebastian Aho and Jordan Staal added empty-netters to close the show. And Fredrik Andersen, who was benched in Game 3 following back-to-back poor showings, came back strong with a 20-save shutout.

Sergei Bobrovsky took the loss despite stopping 25 of 26 shots for Florida.

First Period

Through the first eight minutes of play, both teams accumulated eight shots apiece. Carolina appeared to play like a team that had something to prove, which is definitely a good thing in an elimination game.

With 8:03 left in the first, Jackson Blake was given a two-minute minor for slashing Barkov. However, it didn't appear like a penalty was warranted.

Most of the period was evenly matched, but the Canes had better chances in close quarters. Logan Stankoven, in particular, had several juicy chances. However, he fumbled on both of them, turning over the puck deep in Florida's defensive zone and completely missing the net on another opportunity.

Both teams were penalized with 2 minutes and 20 seconds left in the period. Blake was admonished for slashing Nate Schmidt on the hands, but after the whistle, Schmidt shoved Blake and earned himself a roughing penalty, albeit it appeared that Blake also embellished the impact.

At the end of 20 minutes, we remained scoreless.

Second Period

The start of the second period was a war zone, more or less. Both teams delivered bone-crushing checks. Carolina's Brent Burns also ripped a shot from the point that created a rebound, but when William Carrier attempted to get his stick on it, he was taken down by Aaron Ekblad.

Just over three minutes into the period, Seth Jones was whistled for hooking Sebastian Aho to give the Canes their first power play of the game.

Immediately after killing the penalty, Jordan Staal was called for hooking Matthew Tkachuk. Still, the latter was also punished for embellishment, which also appeared to be a questionable call at best.

Stankoven gave Carolina their first lead of the series with nine 15 left in the second after Florida turned the puck over in the neutral zone. Nikishin fed Stankoven on the left wing, and he drove it in, snapped a wrister over Bobrovsky's blocker to make it a 1-0 game.

The Canes continued to control puck possession late in the period. With 3:34 to go, Orlov ripped a shot from the point that was stoned by Bobrovsky. And Carolina held a 21-11 advantage in shots on net.

Burns was sent to the box with 1:49 to go after he cross-checked Carter Verhaeghe while he was down against the boards. The penalty would extend into the third period, but only 11 seconds would remain on the power play.

Third Period

Carolina killed off the remainder of the penalty and went on the power play 20 seconds later when Dmitry Kulikov was docked for roughing up Stankoven.

Just over four minutes into the period, Brad Marchand set up Anton Lindell for an opportunity. And as Lindell closed in on Andersen, Alexander Nikishin slashed him in the arm to put Florida on a critical man advantage. 8:34 into the frame, Stankoven was sent to the box after he high-sticked Luostarinen off the draw. Carolina continued to play great defensively and killed off both penalties.

Florida pulled Bobrovsky with under three minutes left in the period, but Aho scored on the empty net to put the game away. Staal added a second empty-netter with 1:45 to go to make it 3-0 Carolina.

Takeaways

Well, hey. The simulation is on a winning streak! We kid, we kid. This is exactly what Carolina needed to do tonight, and they got the job done. Florida was missing Sean Reinhart, Niko Mikkola, and A.J. Greer, but they still produced a lot of chances. The Canes played great defensive hockey tonight.


This is what it's all about pic.twitter.com/OBNjHaBJtq

— Carolina Hurricanes (@Canes) May 27, 2025

Next Game

Game 5 comes back to Carolina on Wednesday. Puck drop is at 6 p.m. local time from the Lenovo Center.

Source: https://www.milehighhockey.com/2025...off-elimination-end-15-game-ecf-losing-streak
 
Recap: Panthers rally to advance to third straight Stanley Cup Final

Florida Panthers v Carolina Hurricanes - Game Five

Photo by Jared C. Tilton/Getty Images

The Hurricanes fought for their lives, but the Panthers chewed them up one last time to end their season in Game 5.

The third time was the charm.

Carter Verhaeghe scored the go-ahead goal off a feed from Aleksander Barkov with 7:39 left, and the reigning champion Florida Panthers advanced to their third straight Stanley Cup Final, defeating the Carolina Hurricanes 5-3 on Wednesday night in Game 5 from Lenovo Center.

Verhaeghe, who has scored 32 goals in 86 career playoff games, now has three series-clinching goals with the Panthers.

With the win, Florida also became the ninth franchise in NHL history to advance to their third straight Stanley Cup Final and the first since the Tampa Bay Lightning in 2022. However, unlike the Lightning, the Panthers plan on winning it again.

Florida will take on the winner of the Western Conference Final between Dallas and Edmonton, with the Oilers up 3-1 in that best-of-seven series to put them within a win of a rematch against the Panthers from last year’s championship. Should the Oilers win, it will be the first time the same two teams from the previous Stanley Cup Final met again the following season. This last happened in 2009, when the Pittsburgh Penguins got revenge over the Detroit Red Wings in seven games in a classic battle that came down to the final whistle.

Sam Bennett added an empty-net goal with 54 seconds left in a wild sequence to silence the crowd and send them to the golf course.

Sergei Bobrovsky made 20 saves in a game that changed momentum at several points in the game.

Sebastian Aho scored twice for Carolina, and Seth Jarvis also found the net. Frederik Andersen made 17 saves.

First Period

Carolina crashed the net from the start and put heavy pressure on their opposition. It paid off just 4:39 into the game when Sebastian Aho forced a turnover and, went on a breakaway and scored when his wrist shot bounced off the bottom portion of Bobrovsky’s glove and into the net to give the Canes a 1-0 lead.

Brad Marchand attempted to get the equalizer for the Panthers, but he was robbed by an Andersen glove save.

Things got testy with 11:29 left in the period when a brouhaha erupted by the Carolina goal. Alexander Nikishin took Nate Schmidt’s helmet off in their little tussle, which earned him a roughing penalty. Canes’ coach, Rod Brind’Amour, was not happy about the call and angrily called out the refs from the bench.

Florida went back on the power play with 8:39 to go when William Carrier cross-checked Eetu Luostarinen up high and broke his stick during the process. Upon looking at the replay, it appeared to be a complete accident, albeit still a penalty. Both players were about to collide, and Carrier raised his stick to protect himself but ended up catching Luostarinen in the face. Accident or not, it’s still a penalty. Florida failed to convert on both power plays and failed to record a shot on the second opportunity.

Old friend A.J. Greer went to the box for interference with 4:56 left in the first when he checked Andrei Svechnikov from behind after taking exception to some of the latter’s tactics. However, the officials only noticed Greer hitting a man without the puck. As a result, an interference call was made.

With about 13 seconds left on the initial power play, Svechnikov and Aaron Ekblad exchanged slashes after the whistle. Both men were penalized, although Ekblad was sent to the sin bin for roughing. Svechnikov’s slash to the back of Ekblad’s leg sent him down, which was enough to earn him a trip to the box.

With nearly a minute remaining in the period, Niko Mikkola turned over the puck in the neutral zone, and Aho scooped up the loose puck and fired it under Bobrovsky’s right blocker to give Carolina a two-goal lead.

Second Period

Both teams jockeyed for position to start the second frame, but the Canes still appeared to be the fresher team. Just over five minutes into the period, Seth Jones was sent to the box for holding Jarvis while he was penetrating the defensive zone. When Jones committed the hold, Jarvis dropped his shoulder and went down, sending him crashing into Bobrovsky. Everyone emerged from the collision unscathed.

The Canes continued to pressure Bobrovsky when Burns one-timed a shot from the point that was saved. Moments later, Kotkaniemi was sent to the box when he bear-hugged Evan Rodrigues near the boards and proceeded to spin him around. The official call was holding. Florida scored on the power play when Ekblad snapped a shot from the slot through traffic that Matthew Tkachuk deflected in front of the net. The Panthers tied the game on the next play when Bennett fed Rodrigues in the slot for a beautiful re-direct that beat Andersen five-hole. And just like that, a two-goal deficit was erased in 30 seconds.

With 8:01 left in the second, it was deja vu against in front of the net. Carolina lost the draw, Aho lost sight of the puck, and Florida capitalized on the opportunity. Marchand threw the puck in front of the net, and Lundell tipped it from the slot to give Florida a 3-2 lead.

Florida got a penalty off the next draw when Carrier lunged into Dmitry Kulikov and got hit, but Kulikov was given an interference call. Carolina failed to convert on the power play and made just one shot on net.

Rodrigues put Carolina on the power play with 2:26 left in the period when he wrapped his arms around Dmitry Orlov and brought him down near the boards.

Third Period

The Panthers entered the final period with history on their side, having won 29 consecutive games when leading after the 2nd period.

Carrier put Florida on another power play when Carrier decided to audition for the WWE and, grabbed Lundell from behind and threw him down to the ice. The Canes, however, managed to kill off the penalty.

Carolina tied the game at three apiece when Florida turned over the puck in their defensive zone. The puck ended up in the hands of Jarvis, who snuck a shot by Bobrovsky from the right slot to nod the game up.

Verhaeghe scored the go-ahead goal when Barkov fed him a brilliant pass to the slot on the right edge of the net. Verhaeghe had to be perfect, and he hit nothing but net to give his team a 4-3 lead.

Bennett was penalized late for holding, but despite a furious charge from Carolina, Florida fended off the attack and dumped the puck just as Bennett exited the box. At the same time, the Canes had already pulled Andersen. Bennett scooped up the puck and put it into the empty net to make it 5-3.

Takeaways

The Panthers overcame some shaky moments to win it all again, and with one win in 17 Eastern Conference Final games, the Carolina Hurricanes will have to decide if they want to see “mour” of the same.

Bring on the rematch.

Source: https://www.milehighhockey.com/2025...o-advance-to-third-straight-stanley-cup-final
 
Oilers eliminate Stars again, head back to Stanley Cup Final

NHL: Stanley Cup Playoffs-Edmonton Oilers at Dallas Stars

Jerome Miron-Imagn Images

The path to redemption begins now.

For the first time in 16 years, there will be a Stanley Cup Final rematch.

The Edmonton Oilers defeated the Dallas Stars 6-3 to advance to the Stanley Cup Final. Edmonton struck early and often, and while Dallas fought back to try and avoid elimination, it wasn’t enough to prevent the series-clinching win for the Oilers.

The last Cup rematch took place in 2009, when the Pittsburgh Penguins defeated the Detroit Red Wings in seven games to win the championship. The Wings took home the prized trophy in 2008.

How It Happened

Connor McDavid had an impact from the drop of the puck. Not only did he assist on Corey Perry’s opening goal of the game, but he also scored the game-winner in the second period. The first goal happened just 2:31 into the game when McDavid set up Perry with a beautiful pass on the power play.

Mattias Janmark made it a 2-0 game before Stars head coach Pete DeBoer shockingly yanked Jake Oettinger for Casey DeSmith. It made no difference as he allowed a goal to Jeff Skinner on just the fourth shot he faced to make it a three-goal deficit.

Jason Robertson and Roope Hintz ganged up on Stuart Skinner to cut the deficit to one. However, McDavid turned on his V8 and schooled Hintz before taking off on a breakaway to put the Oilers up 4-2.

To open the third period Robertson would get his second goal of the game to get Dallas within one again, but that’s as close as they got. Evander Kane responded shortly thereafter with a goal that bounced off the skate of Dallas defenseman Esa Lindell to restore the two-goal lead.

From there, the Oilers had to be game managers, which they did with precision. They shut down Dallas’ offense by holding them to just four shots on goal in the third period. It was a statement performance by a complete team. Kasperi Kapanen added an empty-net goal to seal the Stars’ third straight Western Conference Final defeat in a 6-3 final score.

The 26-year-old Skinner, made 14 saves on the night as he led the Oilers to another victory behind a solid performance between the pipes.

Now, the Oilers will square off against the Panthers in what could be one of the greatest Stanley Cup Finals of all-time. If the Oilers win, it will be their first Stanley Cup title since 1990.

Upcoming

The path to Lord Stanley for the Oilers starts at home. Game 1 is nearly a week away on Wednesday, June 4, at Rogers Place. Puck drop is at 6 p.m. local time.

Source: https://www.milehighhockey.com/2025...as-stars-again-head-back-to-stanley-cup-final
 
MHH Roundtable: Attacking the Offseason

Colorado Avalanche v Edmonton Oilers

Photo by Andy Devlin/NHLI via Getty Images

Transactions to shape the 2025-26 roster will happen soon.

Now a month into the early summer, it’s time turn the page from the disappointments of the 2024-25 season and begin plans for the 2025-26 campaign, which will be here before we know it. Therefore here are our thoughts on how the Colorado Avalanche front office should proceed this summer.

What can the Avalanche learn from the teams remaining?​


Ryan: We can learn a thing or about who we need on our team. If the Avalanche can get their hands on Sam Bennett, I would be happy with that. He’s not only a guy who can score, but he’s also a bit of a throwback and has good body checking ability. It drove me nuts throughout Round One watching our guys get cross-checked in the face and we would do absolutely nothing about it. Bennett is the type of player who wouldn’t put up with it, and the same goes with another potential unrestricted free agent in Brad Marchand. You love to play with him and you hate to play against him. However, I believe Brad will stay in Florida, but one could hope.

We need more than just guys who can score goals. We need leadership and individuals who know how to stir the pot. Colorado needs a little bit more of that old-school swagger back in the lineup.

Jackie: Scoring depth is important as well as having the luxury and confidence in them to spread out even strength time on ice. I know depth has been an organizational buzz word recently but this means building real roster depth, not imaginary depth provided from AHLers and temporary rentals. The importance of a young impact forward should be a lesson as well. Florida’s Anton Lundell, Dallas’ Wyatt Johnston, Carolina’s Jackson Blake and even Edmonton’s reclamation of Vasili Podkolzin as 23-and-under forwards producing and making a difference for who were the final four teams.

Adrian: I second Jackie’s point about scoring depth and its sourcing, emphasizing the long-term aspect of acquiring depth. It's safe to say that leveraging draft capital and prospect talent for rental players isn’t a successful enough strategy to continue deploying. The three remaining teams have built their squads over time and made splashy moves that have panned out and will likely result in long-term signings. Rantanen is already a Star for eight more years, and I bet Marchand stays in Florida.

Which free agent would you like to see return?​


Jackie: Jonathan Drouin is truly the only upcoming unrestricted free agent I hope to see return. Whatever happened in the playoffs was a disaster but the left winger was a good fit and provided near point-per-game production for two seasons. Price will be a big factor but hopefully there’s still common ground between the two parties to continue in Colorado. Replacing Drouin really isn’t a luxury the Avalanche have.

Jess: I’m with Jackie, I would absolutely love to see Jonathan Drouin return. Whether or not that happens is obviously a different conversation, because I’d have to think that the possibility of him arguably taking a discount two years in a row is a low-probability outcome, but that doesn’t mean it won’t happen. Yes, his playoff performances aren’t pretty by any means, but he’s been a great fit in the regular season regardless. If there’s mutual interest in him being an Av, I don’t see any reason why they wouldn’t at least try to get something done, because, like Jackie also said, replacing him isn’t exactly a luxury they have right now. I could see them being very interested in keeping him around for that reason alone.

Adrian: I’ll be the first to admit that Jonathan Drouin didn’t have an ideal post-season and wasn't available nearly enough. That said, I think his services can be secured yet again, but he can be retained on an affordable basis. Paying the league minimum for an optional first liner is the savings this team has to take advantage of. Jo needs to stay healthy and find a different element to his game.

Which free agent would you like to see depart?​


Ryan: Brock Nelson. It blows my mind that we gave up multiple draft picks, including our top prospect, and a solid defenseman in Oliver Kylington for Nelson. He wasn’t worth it and that $6 million hit could be better used elsewhere.

Jonathan Drouin. The time has come. He simply is not a good fit with this team.

Ryan Lindgren. Nothing against him. I actually think he’s a solid player, albeit he got burned really badly on the Mikko Rantanen goal in Game 7. My issue is that he doesn’t have good enough offensive numbers to merit $4.5 million a season. Again, this was another player that we acquired late in the season in exchange for a pair of draft picks and Calvin de Haan.

Jess: I wouldn’t like to see anyone depart, but the one that I think is the most likely to depart is Brock Nelson. Beyond anything else, I think he’s the most likely to depart due to contract reasons. If we’re to believe what was reported right around the trade deadline, that the Islanders made a contract offer to Nelson with around a $7.5 million AAV and he rejected that, I have an insanely hard time believing Colorado’s going to be chomping at the bit to match or one-up that price tag. If they do that, then that means they’d have to do some insane surgery elsewhere on the roster to make him fit, and that’s far easier said than done, especially in the period of a little over a month before July 1 hits.

Jackie: Can I say all except for Drouin? Nelson has already been mentioned in detail so I’ll say I really hope the Avalanche resist temptation to bring back Joel Kiviranta. He was overused by Bednar and that crutch needs to get taken away. Let some other team pay for the 16 goals which were scored on the back of a 19.05% shooting. We know Kiviranta is streaky (remember the bubble playoffs, anyone?) but it’s a red flag if anyone actually expected production from him. The front office can start off the summer on the right foot by resisting temptation.

Adrian: I don’t think the Avalanche should spend money to feel better about trading Cal Ritchie and a first for Brock Nelson. Chris MacFarland whiffed on that trade; he’s not a fit, and he's likely headed off to Minny. I beg the Avalanche not to overpay and hit the open market for a better fit at 2C.

What would you like to see from the front office this offseason?​


Ryan: This is far-fetched and likely will never happen, but I would like to see the front office take some responsibility. That would be my starting point. This team has become addicted to the idea of bringing in mercenaries and rentals late in the year. They seem to have forgotten why the 2022 Stanley Cup team was so special. You had an actual team. There was brotherhood, chemistry, and everyone played a role. The depth of that club was absolutely incredible. Every line was a threat. We couldn’t say that about this team. It was two lines if we were lucky.

I know that some fans want to jump on the Mitch Marner train, but let’s ask ourselves this question. Are we in a position to sign him? Yes, the salary cap is going up, but that’s still going to be at least a $10 million hit, if not more. I would suspect we would have to trade Nichushkin, but what team is going to eat that contract? I would argue that we should go after a defenseman this offseason, perhaps Matt Grzelcyk. He’s the best available D-man this offseason and he puts up respectable numbers.

Jess: Honestly, I don’t know fully, that kind of depends on who all leaves immediately on July 1. I said it in my answer to the first question, but Drouin is the guy that I’d love for them to find a way to keep right off the bat. Aside from that, I’m not entirely sure who’s a reasonable target for them on the free agent market, admittedly, or who’s projected to be a reasonable target. I’ve had finals and then training for my summer job these past few weeks, so I admittedly haven’t looked too hard into who’s an upcoming UFA quite yet! That’ll change, though, as we get closer to July 1, and I’m sure there will be plenty of good potential targets once free agency starts.

Jackie: I would like to see evidence of some responsibility as Ryan mentions and self-reflection to focus more on building a team rather than patching holes. I want a real team that’s ready to go for training camp and not a temporary group with the intention of changing things with trades and rentals during the season. This means addressing their shortcomings at center and defense now to the best of their ability and not waiting for the perfect fix. Instant gratification should be off the table and a focus on the best team possible through MacKinnon and Makar’s primes. Building the resources that were lost is going to take time but the team needs to reset the foundation and build back an identity of Avalanche hockey.

Adrian: I’d like to see some accountability from this front office for not making a decision on the assistants sooner. The powerplay has been an issue too consistently for it to have taken this long to change its approach. It got stale. You traded Mikko, and it worked again for a month, then it went stale again. That sort of hot-and-cold attribute can’t exist in a power play. Consistency is key. The Avalanche made decisions that they can’t go back from that, probably should have been preceded by a change of assistants. With that,, they have to sleep in the bed they have made and come about their depth the old--fashioned way.

Source: https://www.milehighhockey.com/2025...le-attacking-the-colorado-avalanche-offseason
 
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