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2026 IIHF World Juniors Championships: Playoffs Open Post and Gamesthread

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Good morning, Devils fans. The World Juniors Championships are now past the group stage and into the playoffs. Please see below for how the Groups A and B shook out:

The Rosters and Standings​


Please see the following hyperlinks for each roster for qualified teams. Please note that not all teams have posted their rosters on their official sites. The top four teams in each Group will advance to the Championship Playoffs, while Germany and Denmark will proceed to the Relegation game.

Group A

Team Sweden
— 4-0-0-0 (12 points)

Team USA — 3-0-0-1 (9 points)

Team Switzerland — 2-0-0-2 (6 points)

Team Slovakia — 1-0-0-3 (3 points)

Team Germany — 0-0-0-4 (0 points)

Group B

Team Canada
— 3-1-0-0 (11 points)

Team Czechia — 2-1-0-1 (8 points)

Team Finland — 2-0-1-1 (7 points)

Team Latvia — 1-0-1-2 (4 points)

Team Denmark — 0-0-0-4 (0 points)

January 2​


Relegation Playoff: Germany vs. Denmark
The Time: 12:30 PM EST
The Spot: 3M Arena in Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA
The Broadcast: TV — TSN, NHL Network, Fubo

Bracket A Quarterfinal #1: Sweden vs. Latvia
The Time: 2:00 PM EST
The Spot: Grand Casino Arena in St. Paul, Minnesota, USA
The Broadcast: TV — TSN, NHL Network, Fubo

Bracket A Quarterfinal #2: Czechia vs. Switzerland
The Time: 4:30 PM EST
The Spot: 3M Arena in Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA
The Broadcast: TV — TSN, NHL Network, Fubo

Bracket B Quarterfinal #1: USA vs. Finland
The Time: 6:00 PM EST
The Spot: Grand Casino Arena in St. Paul, Minnesota, USA
The Broadcast: TV — TSN, NHL Network, Fubo

Bracket B Quarterfinal #2: Canada vs. Slovakia
The Time: 8:30 PM EST
The Spot: 3M Arena in Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA
The Broadcast: TV — TSN, NHL Network, Fubo

As a result of USA’s loss to Sweden in the final game of the Group Stage, it became certain that only one of Team USA or Team Canada can get a silver or gold medal this year. But Finland is a tough enough game for Team USA, and they cannot take them lightly.

January 4​


January 4 will feature the Semifinals.

January 5​


January 5 will feature the Gold and Bronze Games.

Your Thoughts​


What have you thought of World Juniors this season? Have you been able to catch any games so far? Leave your thoughts in the comments below, and feel free to treat this post like a gamethread when the times come.

Source: https://www.allaboutthejersey.com/i...mpionships-playoffs-open-post-and-gamesthread
 
Game Preview #41: Utah Mammoth @ New Jersey Devils

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Dear Devils, more of this today please. Sincerely, every Devils fan. | Photo by Rich Graessle/NHL via Getty Images

  • The Matchup: Utah Mammoth (19-19-3) @ New Jersey Devils (21-17-2)
  • The Time: 3:00pm EST
  • The Broadcast: MSGSN, Devils Hockey Radio

Last Devils Game​


On New Year’s Eve, the Devils beat Columbus for their first win in 5 games. Over the first two periods, things were not looking good for the Devils, yet again. Mason Marchment scored in the 1st period for Columbus and Charlie Coyle scored in the 2nd period to send the game to the 3rd period with the Blue Jackets up 2-0. Rightfully so, there was definitely a feeling of “here we go again” heading into the 3rd period. The Devils had lost 4 games in a row prior to the game and up until then, had not yet comeback to win a game this season where they had been trailing after 2 periods. Surely, the game would be another loss and their 5th in a row.

The Devils decided that enough was enough in the 3rd period and went on to score 3 goals in the span of less than 2 minutes. Yes folks, you read that right. The Devils scored 3 goals in less than 2 minutes, after scoring 5 goals COMBINED in their last FOUR games. Nico Hischier scored a power play goal at 2:49 (remember those?) with assists from the Hughes brothers. Arseny Gritsyuk scored his 8th goal at 3:44 and Luke Hughes scored his 4th at 4:45. Fans were probably left wondering if they were watching condensed highlights of a previous game with the explosion of offense lighting up their screens.

The win against Columbus was one that the Devils really needed to stop their losing streak. Jake Allen gave the Devils a chance to win, and for the first time in a while, the offense for the Devils actually held up their end of the bargain. On the other hand, the Devils beat Columbus, a team that is performing exactly as expected this season (unlike the Devils); average, at best. A win is a win. 2 points are 2 points. I’m happy the Devils won. Sincerely. At the same time, let’s not act like all of the problems facing this team have now magically disappeared. They haven’t. I genuinely hope this win kicks off a long winning streak, but I will reserve judgment as I’ve fallen victim to this thinking many times before over the past few years. Fool me 10 times, well……you know.

Last Mammoth Game​


On New Year’s Day, Utah defeated the Islanders by a score of 7-2. Things started out even for both teams as they went scoreless in the 1st period. However, Utah would score 3 goals in the 2nd period while Calum Ritchie added 1 goal for the Islanders to end the 2nd period with a 3-1 Utah lead. Utah put the game away in the 3rd period, scoring 4 goals (including back to back power play goals less than 3 minutes apart) to only 1 for the Islanders.

Dylan Guenther had a 4 point night for Utah, including his 1st career hat trick. This is actually good news Devils fans. It means that we don’t need to worry about a player getting their first x, y, z against the Devils today. If anyone in the NHL is looking to have their first shutout, goal, hat trick, win, etc., the Devils are the team to do it against.

Karel Vejmelka was in net for the win for Utah against New York. He has played 30 games this season so far for Utah, which means he will most likely get the start today against New Jersey, though that is not yet confirmed as of this writing. This is good news, yet again Devils fans (assuming Vanecek doesn’t start). We all know, it’s a known fact of the universe that if Vitek gets the start, he will post a 61 save shutout.

Injuries, Roster for Tonight, Yada, Yada, Yada.​


There was a little bit of interesting news from Amanda Stein on Friday afternoon. Paul Cotter is coming out of the lineup today and will be replaced by Juho Lammikko. Cotter did practice on Friday as part of the 4th pair of D, so he’s healthy, and this appears to be a gameplay decision. For those of you who have been asking for some accountability or for someone to be benched, here you go.

Paul Cotter is in fact coming out of the lineup tomorrow and Lammikko is going in against Utah. #NJDevils https://t.co/S00zxmORTT

— Amanda Stein (@amandacstein) January 2, 2026

Before some of you (not all of you) get nervous, Dennis Cholowski did skate for Luke Hughes who did not practice on Friday. However, per Amanda Stein, Luke is fine and will play today.

Just a day off of the ice for Luke Hughes today, says #NJDevils HC Sheldon Keefe.

He’s fine. https://t.co/FlOEcDLZqN

— Amanda Stein (@amandacstein) January 2, 2026

Back on 12/28, per Stein “Sounds like Nemec will need some more time before a return, Keefe mentioned likely a couple more weeks until he’s ready.” There hasn’t been a recent update on Evegenii “remember me?” Dadonov either so who knows if/when he will be back in the lineup.

I would expect Jacob Markstrom to get the start today. Keefe has alternated the goalies every game for the last 8 games. Assuming the pattern continues, it’s a safe bet we will see Markstrom, though it’s not official yet. In a move that will surprise some of you readers, I’m not going to trash Markstrom here for the first time in a while. Don’t get me wrong, I’m not complimenting him, and I still think his best days are far, far behind him. However, he did have a decent December, with a 2.85 GAA and .900 SV%. He gave the team a chance to win some games last month, and that’s the bare minimum you can ask from your goalie, which he’s done recently.

Grimace’s Prediction and 2025-2026 Record Tracker​


For the first time in what feels like forever, Grimace correctly predicted two games in a row. Maybe the worst is behind him in the new year? Either way, Grimace is predicting the Devils will get the win today for their 2nd in a row and their first (of hopefully many) in 2026.

Grimace’s 2025-2026 Season Prediction record currently stands at 11-9-0.

Your Take​


Today is a matchup between basically two .500 level teams. The Devils should be a better team than Utah, both on paper and on the ice. The question, as it has been mostly this whole season, is which Devils team will show up today? If the Devils from the 3rd period against Columbus show up for the whole game today, a win shouldn’t be too difficult. If the Devils from periods 1 and 2 show up for the whole game, well, expect another loss. In the immortal words of Walter Hartwell White (and Sheldon Keefe), the Devils, quite simply, need to “grow some @#$&ing balls.” Feel free to leave your thoughts and comments below and thanks for reading!

In a shameless bit of non hockey related self promotion (approved by Chris – thanks Chris), I wanted to plug my brand new podcast on here, if any of you are interested in listening. We have a light hearted, fun discussion about any movies, music or video games mostly from the 1980s and 1990s. Please feel free to listen to us on any of the formats below and any feedback is welcome (positive and negative). Also, please follow us and subscribe, even if you think we stink. 🙂

YouTube

Apple Podcast

Spotify

Source: https://www.allaboutthejersey.com/d...ame-preview-41-utah-mammoth-new-jersey-devils
 
OH BOY here we go again with the Devils drama! Look, I gotta be honest with you guys - as a Bills and Sabres fan I know a thing or two about watching management make questionable decisions while your team underperforms. Welcome to the club, Devils fans!

That said, this Columbus comeback was something else. THREE GOALS IN UNDER TWO MINUTES after scoring FIVE in the previous FOUR GAMES?! That's the kind of bipolar hockey that makes you want to throw your remote through the TV one minute and then hug it the next.

The Fitzgerald situation is interesting though. You guys are talking about accountability and I respect that. We went through YEARS of that with the Sabres front office before things started turning around. The Palat contract aging like "rotten fish submerged in milk" made me literally laugh out loud because that's EXACTLY how some of our contracts have looked over the years.

Here's my take on the Utah game today - this is a MUST WIN. Not because Utah is some powerhouse, but because you're playing a .500 team at home and you just got some momentum from that comeback. If you can't beat the Mammoth (still a ridiculous name by the way) then all that talk about the Columbus game being a turning point is just hot air.

Also benching Cotter for Lammikko? Bold choice. We'll see if that accountability actually means anything or if it's just shuffling deck chairs.

LET'S GO DEVILS! (Can't believe I just said that but I respect the grind)
 
Devils Start the New Year Right With Convincing 4-1 Win Over Mammoth

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First Period​


The New Jersey Devils and Utah Mammoth got off to a largely slow start in Newark. Jacob Markstrom almost had to deal with a breakaway a couple minutes in after Jonas Siegenthaler fell in the neutral zone, but Daniil But lost the puck on the attempt, giving Markstrom an easier save. A bit later, Jesper Bratt got past the defense but shot from very high in the offensive zone, passing up a few strides towards the net for the quick shot, which was stopped by Karel Vejmelka.

The Devils finally broke the ice when Brett Pesce took the puck from Jack Hughes and whipped a shot wide of goal. But Jesper Bratt was quick on it, bouncing the puck off Barrett Hayton and into the net! Hayton then punched Nico Hischier in the face, but no penalty was called. Still, the Devils were happy to go up 1-0.

After the goal, Luke Glendening had Stefan Noesen on a two-on-one, but he took the shot on goal. It was pretty good, but it trickled wide. On the other end, Markstrom made a great stop on a deflected shot. After a later stoppage, Timo Meier took the puck past Sean Durzi at the blueline and snuck a shot past Vejmelka, giving the Devils a 2-0 lead!

Luke Hughes slashed the stick of Nick Schmaltz with under three minutes to play, and he was called for a penalty on it. The Devils won the faceoff and cleared to start the kill, and the Mammoth had a few chances after setting up before one of their shots rang around the boards and out of the zone. Luke Glendening had a wide-open redirection chance on the other end later in the kill, but he shanked it wide. Markstrom finished the kill by making a huge blocker save on Daniil But before diving across to save a shot from Hayton.

Second Period​


Dylan Guenther broke Dougie Hamilton’s stick with a slash halfway through the first minute of the period, sending the Devils to the power play. Jack Hughes set Stefan Noesen up by the net, but the puck bounced a little too far on the rebound to pot in the net. The Devils kept shooting, but Vejmelka made a stop on Timo Meier in the slot in the second minute to keep the Devils lead at two.

After play returned to five-on-five, the Devils did a great job of slowing play down. By halfway through the period, the Devils were outshooting the Mammoth at more than a two-to-one rate in the period. Connor Brown drew a tripping penalty from Schmaltz with under seven minutes to play after Jonas Siegenthaler got under Utah’s skin with a big hit in the neutral zone, and the Devils had another chance to let their power play work.

The Devils had a chance right off the draw when Hischier passed to Noesen in front, but Noesen was tied up and the puck bounced off his skate into Vejmelka. Halfway through the penalty, Mikhail Sergachev sailed the puck from the defensive zone all the way over the glass in the other end, taking an odd delay of game penalty.

With the two-man advantage, the Devils called timeout. Keefe and Colliton sent Jack Hughes, Nico Hischier, Timo Meier, Jesper Bratt, and Dougie Hamilton for the five-on-three. The Devils lost the draw and flubbed an easy re-entry, wasting half of the five-on-three. Hughes set up Meier after Hamitlon circled the zone, but Vejmelka got across. The Devils got another shot attempt with the two-man advantage, but it didn’t go. Then, just as Schmaltz left the box, Jack Hughes bounced the puck off Nico Hischier at the far post to get the 3-0 lead!

With over three minutes left in the period, Luke Glendening won the puck back to Dougie Hamilton. Hamilton went right down the wall to the goal line and shot from a sharp angle, scoring right under the bar, behind Vejmelka’s head! It was a perfect shot to make it 4-0.

Third Period​


The New Jersey Devils had one job in the third period: shut it down. In the opening several minutes, they did exactly that, clogging up the neutral zone and making it difficult for the Mammoth to even get past the center ice red line in possession of the puck. Were they generating offense? Not really, but play stayed crisp with just a few whistles before an offsides at the 8:50 mark sent the teams to their first TV timeout of the period, following over five minutes of uninterrupted play. The Devils continually pushed Utah back, content to dump without chases while staying in the neutral zone passing lanes.

Stefan Noesen was called for slashing with under 10 minutes to play after Liam O’Brien gave Brett Pesce some crosschecks on the ice, sending Utah to another power play. The Mammoth were pushed back a few times in the first minute and change, as the Devils continued to look like the dominant performer on special teams. The Devils killed the penalty, but Jacob Markstrom was beat right as Noesen was getting back into the play after a pass went right through Pesce’s legs to Michael Carcone, making it a 4-1 game with over seven minutes to play.

Dawson Mercer just missed on a backhanded try with over two and a half minutes to play after Ian Cole poked the shot, and Ondrej Palat later got a wide open chance to shoot on goal on the rush that he sailed high and wide. Still, the Mammoth were unable to crack Markstrom a second time, and the Devils held on for the 4-1 victory.

The Game Stats: The NHL.com Game Summary | The NHL.com Event Summary | The NHL.com Play by Play Log | The NHL.com Shot Summary | The Natural Stat Trick Game Stats

From Droughts to Opening Floodgates​


Throughout the entire month of December, the New Jersey Devils had a hard time getting goal scoring from their top players, including Nico Hischier, Jesper Bratt, Timo Meier, Dawson Mercer, and Dougie Hamilton. Hischier, of course, finally scored his first of the month on New Year’s Eve, meaning his goal today gave him a consecutive scoring streak. Hamilton, coming into today, had not scored in 26 games. Jesper Bratt has been underperforming all season, and Timo Meier had a short drought in the midst of his personal leave during December. Getting goals from four of those five (and almost getting one from Mercer) was a blueprint for how this team should be operating on a regular basis.

Moving forward, the Devils must keep putting Hamilton and Meier in situations where they can score. Meier looks like a leader on the second line with Gritsyuk and Mercer as the go-to puck carrier on the line, while Hamilton looked more comfortable after getting some power play time. There is no sugarcoating it: the Devils have needed more from the five players mentioned above, with Hamilton and Bratt needing to pick it up the most. Hopefully today is a sign of things to come.

Evening Up Ice Time​


With this being the front end of a back-to-back, Sheldon Keefe did a great job of managing minutes this evening. None of the Devils’ forwards broke 20 minutes of ice time, with Jack Hughes leading the way at 19:17. Aside from him, only Bratt (18:38) and Hischier (19:06) had more than 17:00 played. Down the lineup, Luke Glendening ate up 12:12 of ice time today, which is his seventh-highest mark of the season and the first time he broke 12 minutes since December 17 against Vegas (12:07). Keefe stuck with Glendening despite his extremely poor five-on-five impacts, with the Devils only having three shot attempts (and a goal!) during those minutes. On the other hand, I liked the puck movement between Juho Lammikko and Stefan Noesen at times, and I think it might be better if Lammikko had a chance at centering the line.

Good Win​


Sometimes, though, there is not much to complain about. The Devils got out to an early lead today and then played an incredibly responsible game down the stretch. Were there some odd defensive zone turnovers in the middle of the game? Yes, and the Devils might need to be more willing to risk icings at times where they instead turn it over to the blueline. But they played a great game today, and I don’t think Markstrom really had to “steal” all that much for them. He made solid saves, but the defense worked nearly to perfection after taking the lead.

Tomorrow will be a bigger test. Both teams playing will be coming off a game today, but the Devils will have a few hours of extra rest on the Carolina Hurricanes while also having the advantage of being the home team. If Keefe sends the same lineup out tomorrow night, I would be perfectly alright with the decision. The team’s scorers got more shifts off than usual today, so I think they should be fresh enough to repeat this gameplan against Carolina.

Jacob Markstrom’s win today also continues a good run of play for him. Since he was pulled against Tampa in early December, Markstrom is 2-3-0 with a .932 save percentage. Jake Allen will get the start tomorrow, but Devils fans should continue to be cautiously optimistic about Markstrom’s improved play over the past couple weeks. Hopefully, Allen gives us more of the same tomorrow.

Your Thoughts​


What did you think of this evening’s game? Were you able to watch? What did you think of the goal scorers? What did you think of Markstrom’s performance? Leave your thoughts in the comments below, and thanks for reading.

Source: https://www.allaboutthejersey.com/d...ar-right-with-convincing-4-1-win-over-mammoth
 
2025-26 Gamethread #41: New Jersey Devils vs. Utah Mammoth

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The Matchup: New Jersey Devils (21-17-2) versus the Utah Mammoth.

The Time: 3:00pm ET

The Broadcast: TV — MSGSN, Radio — Devils Radio Network

The Game Preview: Matt wrote the preview this morning.

The Rules: If you have been a reader here, you already know the rules. But for the rest, a reminder: please do not swear in the comment section, and keep comments relevant to the hockey game going on. Beyond that, do not attack any other commenters, and do not ask for or pass along illegal streams on this board.

LGD!

Source: https://www.allaboutthejersey.com/d...methread-41-new-jersey-devils-vs-utah-mammoth
 
Own Goals, Dry Offense, and Goalies Out of the Net Lead to Devils’ 3-1 Loss to Hurricanes

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First Period​


The Carolina Hurricanes took the lead right off the jump, as Nikolaj Ehlers tipped an early shot off of Jake Allen. It would have stayed out, but Luke Hughes redirected the puck right into the net, giving the Hurricanes a 1-0 lead.

Mark Jankowski left the game just a couple minutes into the period, as he blocked a shot by Timo Meier while being struck by the follow-through of Meier’s shot. Jankowski bled profusely and went immediately to the Hurricanes locker room. Dawson Mercer got his stick caught up in Shayne Gostisbehere’s hands not even a minute later, sending the Hurricanes to the power play.

Nico Hischier had a nice play early in the penalty kill when he banked the puck off the wall and back to himself to beat two Hurricanes for a clear after the three other Devils had gotten caught up on the other half of the defensive zone off the faceoff. Hischier later relieved the Devils with another clearing play at the end of his shift, while also coming up with a blocked shot on the kill.

The Devils nearly caught Bussi out of the net when Dawson Mercer forced him out of the net to play a potential icing play behind the net, and Timo Meier set up Arseni Gritsyuk for a one-timer that Bussi got back in time to save. The Hurricanes temporarily forced the Devils to center, but Mercer went to the front of the net and beat Bussi after Arseni Gritsyuk made a play behind the net to tie the game at 1-1!

The Hurricanes controlled the pace of play down the stretch in the first period, but Jake Allen had an excellent period. Stopping 12 of 13, Allen kept the Devils together after the 10-minute mark. The Devils seemed to lose some of the speed they were playing with in the opening minutes, continually getting hemmed in their own zone because of poor passing and excessive reversals behind the net. Still, it could have been worse.

Second Period​


The Devils did not have a good start in the second period, and Dougie Hamilton took an interference penalty for a shove by the Devils’ net when the team was under pressure. The Devils did a good job of getting the puck down the ice on this kill, doing so twice in the first minute. In the second minute, Jake Allen had to make a couple saves, while Jesper Bratt came up big later on to send the Hurricanes back one last time.

The Devils had a bad start, but things did not get better. Luke Hughes was skating back with the puck in the defensive zone, and Taylor Hall reached around him to poke the puck past Jake Allen, giving the Hurricanes a 2-1 lead.

Sean Walker took the first penalty of the game for Carolina when he was called for high sticking in the neutral zone, as Walker high sticked Jack Hughes as Hughes skated by. Luke Hughes rang a shot off the crossbar to start the power play. The first unit did not do much very well after that, though the second unit had some more life to it. The Devils would not have to play at five-on-five for long after the penalty expired, though, as Cody Glass was tripped up into the boards by Logan Stankoven. The Devils had an extended six-on-five opportunity, but Ondrej Palat was barreled over after having trouble with the puck at the blueline before the Devils could get a shot on goal.

The Devils’ second power play was terrible, with the second unit playing most of the time after Jack Hughes was hit hard into the boards by Jordan Staal. Shortly after that penalty expired, Stankoven was called again for another penalty. This time, he high sticked Nico Hischier in the neutral zone, leading to an extended freakout by Stankoven where he fired the puck down the ice before shouting at Nico Hischier. He probably could have gotten an unsportsmanlike for it, but the Devils went back to the power play.

Third Period​


Jordan Staal airmailed the puck over the glass not even three minutes into the period. On the power play, Jack Hughes sent the puck to the net, and the Devils scrambled in the crease. The net came off the moorings, but the Devils celebrated as if Stefan Noesen pushed the puck into the net. The officials did not make a call on the ice, but they went right to the video review, but they did not award the Devils a goal. To me, it looked like Sean Walker knocked the net off and the Devils would have scored a goal, but the officials ruled no goal.

The Devils had another chance to score off the next draw, as Luke Hughes had his shot deflected by Nico Hischier. Stefan Noesen batted at the puck, but the Hurricanes kept the puck out. The Devils had a decent power play, getting six shots on goal, but they failed to score, and Ondrej Palat took a hooking penalty after their opportunity expired. Thankfully, their penalty kill looked a lot better than their power play, and they were able to kill it.

The Devils were looking better until Jake Allen played the puck one too many times. His pass was broken up by Taylor Hall, who found Logan Stnakoven in front before Allen could get back and down to stop the five-hole goal. That made it 3-1.

Sheldon Keefe pulled Allen with four minutes to play. The Devils did not really up their pace, but they took a couple shots before the Hurricanes sent the puck out of play, off the glass to give them a TV timeout with three and a half minutes to play. After the break, the Devils were able to get some more chances, but the Hurricanes were tough to crack. Then, Luke Hughes was tripped down as he spun away from Andrei Svechnikov with 1:33 to play, leading to the Devils going on the power play.

Keeping the net empty with the power play, the Devils had more trouble keeping the puck in the offensive zone with Carolina able to ice the puck freely. Dawson Mercer had one big chance to pull the Devils to within one off a feed from Timo Meier, but Jalen Chatfield was on him and Bussi made the stop. The Devils then called timeout with under 30 seconds to play. But the Devils couldn’t beat Carolina, falling 3-1.

The Game Stats: The NHL.com Game Summary | The NHL.com Event Summary | The NHL.com Play by Play Log | The NHL.com Shot Summary | The Natural Stat Trick Game Stats

Poor Team Effort​


Yes, Luke Hughes had a bad game. His two plays giving the Hurricanes goals are unacceptable. But they’re just a mask for the reason the Devils lost tonight.

For just a short span of time in the first period, it looked like the Devils were actually playing to match Carolina. By halfway through the first period, I thought each of the Devils’ lines had put in a good shift. But then — right at that halfway mark through that first period, it looked like the Devils stopped playing a game, reducing themselves to scrimmage speed. The pace of their puck movement slowed. They started playing more from a standstill rather than staying in motion. They just did their best to keep the game in front of them, seeing how long they could survive without Jake Allen giving up a goal.

To Allen’s credit, he did never get beat by a clean shot in one of these extended defensive zone shifts for the Devils. But that doesn’t excuse the poor play. The Hurricanes controlled their defensive zone, as the Devils never forechecked. Then, they controlled the neutral zone for most of the game because the Devils let them build up speed to move it through, skating in unison. The Devils just sat back, back, and back, until it was all too easy for the Hurricanes to deny them counterattacks.

By the third period, the only group that looked like it could score was the top line of Nico Hischier, Jesper Bratt, and Jack Hughes, looking best on their shifts with Dougie Hamilton and Luke Hughes. But they didn’t score, and the Devils had trouble keeping the puck in the offensive zone in the third period with any other line on the ice. So, combining that with a power play that has been awful since the first couple weeks of the season, the Devils had one of their more pathetic offensive performances.

In the end, Luke Hughes’s mistakes are only the tip of the iceberg for why the Devils lost today. They could have taken the lead on their various power plays, but they have not had a good power play system this season. They could have tried generating five-on-five offense in the first 40 minutes. Instead, they stayed glued to passive, defensive, unskilled hockey for most of the game and only got pressure on Bussi by the time Carolina was free to just clog the middle of the ice.

Source: https://www.allaboutthejersey.com/d...the-net-lead-to-devils-3-1-loss-to-hurricanes
 
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