2025-26 Gamethread #3: New Jersey Devils at Columbus Blue Jackets

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The Matchup: The New Jersey Devils (1-1-0) at the Columbus Blue Jackets (1-1-0). Jackets blog: The Cannon

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

The Time: 7:00 PM ET

The Song of the Day: I found myself enjoying local Columbus band A-Go-Go in my search of what their local music scene sounds like. They don’t have much on YouTube, but they do have a couple live performances on there. I found myself liking one of their newer songs, Burnt Sky, on their Soundcloud page (also on Spotify, but I imagine it’s more accessible on the former). The vibe of this one is pretty laid back — they certainly go for the more classic guitar sounds, with almost a bit of a Stones-y approach to the vocals too.

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...-3-new-jersey-devils-at-columbus-blue-jackets
 
New Jersey Devils Prospect Update: Kevan leads Sun Devils in Ice Breaker Tournament

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Ben Kevan has started strong with his first two collegiate goals. This post covers his effort and other promising news as the NCAA and AHL drop puck on their seasons

Kevan Starts Strong​


The NCAA season is upon us and with it some encouraging starts from Devils collegiate prospects. 2025 draftee forward Ben Kevan scored two goals in a 5-3 win over Notre Dame on Friday night. His Sun Devils hosted the annual Ice Breaker tournament to kick off the Division I season of men’s hockey. Here is a look at his goals and other highlights from the victory.

HIGHLIGHTS: Ben Kevan's first 2 career goals help @SunDevilHockey skate past Notre Dame, 5-3, in Ice Breaker Tournament

🎥: FOX 10 // https://t.co/ZyUdpPaF0J#theNational // #BeTheTradition pic.twitter.com/VOmoAwKJlv

— The NCHC (@TheNCHC) October 11, 2025

Around the Pool:​

  • The NCAA kicked off with every Devils collegiate prospect other than Cole Brown finding the scoresheet early. This includes Boston University Center Conrad Fondrk, who recorded an assist after missing the opener and returning from injury. Oddly, other than Kevan, the point leaders out of the gate amongst the Devils NCAA prospect pool are defensemen Charlie Leddy and Chase Cheslock, both with two assists.
  • After a slow start winger David Rozsival is starting to find the scoresheet with a goal and two assists this past week and now sits at 3 points in 8 games for the Green Bay Gamblers of the USHL.
  • The Utica Comets dropped their first two games in a home and home with the Cleveland Monsters, 1-0 and 3-2. The second loss was in OT leading to the Comets first point of the season. Nico Daws was fantastic in the opener stopping 26 of 27. In the second game, goaltender Jakub Malek made his Comets debut, earning the OT loss. Veterans Xavier Parent and Brian Halonen scored for the Comets. Prospect center Matyas Melovsky scored his first professional point assisting on Parent’s goal. Parent also earned an assist along with defenseman Ethan Edwards on Halonen’s tally.
  • Center Gustav Hillstrom has been recalled to Brynas IF of the SHL after dominating the U20 Nationell with 13 points in 7 games. While the promotion is encouraging, Hillstrom has been platooning in and out of the lineup on the main club and, according to Flashscore, only skated 6:56 in his last SHL game.
  • Promising forward prospect Cam Squires has been assigned to the Adirondack Thunder in the ECHL. The move is a bit of a baffling one as Squires excelled in limited action in Utica at the end of last season. Hopefully, it is a temporary measure.
  • Goaltender Trenten Bennett has continued his hot start platooning the net for the Owen Sound Attack in the OHL and is now 3-0 with a 1.99 GAA and .943 SV%. Not to be outdone, phenom Mikhail Yegorov continues to impress for Boston University in the NCAA with a 2-0-1 record, 1.95 GAA and .933 SV%.

Your Take​


Tell us what you think below.

Source: https://www.allaboutthejersey.com/p...an-leads-sun-devils-in-ice-breaker-tournament
 
Devils Recall Nico Daws — Jacob Markstrom Week-to-Week, Zack MacEwen to Injured Reserve

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Monday’s 3-2 win over the Columbus Blue Jackets was a doozy. Jake Allen played the first two periods in net for the New Jersey Devils, ceding the crease while up 2-1 due to cramping. Jacob Markstrom thus played the third period, and everything was going well for the first 19 minutes and 30 seconds he played. Then, with the Columbus net empty, there was some scrambling around the net, and Markstrom ended up hurt on a play where the Blue Jackets scored to pull back within one goal.

It was not entirely clear what happened. Markstrom threw his glove and blocker off, rolling around the crease in obvious pain. He stayed in for the final seconds of the game, but gingerly rushed off the ice once the final horn blew. To this point, there is no update on Jacob Markstrom, as the Devils are practicing. Sheldon Keefe may shed some light on what happened later, though.

For the time being, we know one thing: Nico Daws has been recalled from the Utica Comets for tomorrow’s home opener. Will he start? That much is unclear. Jake Allen is present at practice today, and he could very well get the nod.

#NJDevils Nico Daws and Jake Allen are on the ice along with an EBUG. pic.twitter.com/6Yjqm4BZKM

— Kristy Flannery (@InStilettos_NHL) October 15, 2025

To make room for Daws on the active roster, the Devils have placed forward Zack MacEwen on injured reserve. The exact details of MacEwen’s injury have not been revealed, but Keefe recently indicated his injury would require him to miss time. It is listed as an upper-body issue on the Devils’ website. This is rather unfortunate for MacEwen, who intrigued onlookers with his decent skating and hard shot in his season debut.

While MacEwen is now known to be out for at least seven days from the time of the injury (from Saturday), Markstrom is still technically able to play. If he were placed on injured reserve, he would have to stay out of the lineup until the Devils play the Maple Leafs in Toronto on Tuesday, October 21. Keeping Markstrom off of injured reserve really just preserves him as an option for the Saturday contest against the Oilers, though the extent of his injury has not yet been revealed.

I think the Devils should play this safe by giving Nico Daws the home opener start. Will they? With Jake Allen back at practice, I am a little doubtful. But after Allen had to leave his first game with cramping, giving fans fears of a worse issue, I would rather he stay off the ice until Saturday. Florida, while still a very good team, has been missing two of their best offensive forces. Edmonton, meanwhile, still has all their elite scorers.

Nico Daws is a capable goaltender. He stopped 27 of 28 in a 1-0 loss in his only game for the Comets this season. He had a .939 save percentage in his six appearances (four starts) for the Devils last season. He had an up-and-down 2023-24 season with an .894 save percentage, though he was likely not at his best because of overuse in February and March of that season due to the Devils’ numerous issues in goal that year. In that season:

  • First 12 games: 6-6-0, .912 SV%
  • Next 9 games: 3-5-0, .859 SV% (.750 SV% in two games directly after his 45-save Stadium Series game)

With Markstrom out of the lineup, Keefe should resist the temptation to load up games for Allen. By continuing to work in the rotation, he can avoid overworking Daws, who has not quite shown an ability to handle a full starter’s workload (his career high in total games was 46 in the 2021-22 season, coming closest with 40 in 2024-25 after getting hip surgery in 2023). Allen, meanwhile, has not played over 40 games since 2022-23, when he had an .891 save percentage for Montreal. Keefe needs to continue rotating his goalies with the health of his veterans over the 82-game schedule in mind.

This post will be updated if more is reported on Jacob Markstrom.

1:00 PM Update:

Jacob Markstrom will be out a couple weeks, then likely week-to-week, with a lower-body injury.

Lower-body injury for Markstrom. #NJDevils https://t.co/MrI6JxH2KV

— Amanda Stein (@amandacstein) October 15, 2025

Your Thoughts​


What did you think of Markstrom’s injury on Monday? Do you think Allen or Daws should start tomorrow? What expectations are you setting for Daws if he has to play for an extended period? Leave your thoughts in the comments below, and thanks for reading.

Source: https://www.allaboutthejersey.com/d...strom-injured-zack-macewen-to-injured-reserve
 
Arseny Gritsyuk is Doing Just Fine Where He is Right Now

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Three games into the 2025-26 season, one of the more pleasant developments for the New Jersey Devils has been the play of Arseny Gritsyuk.

Gritsyuk has followed up a strong preseason with three assists in three games despite relatively limited ice time. Perhaps none of those helpers has been more impressive than the one from Monday’s win over Columbus in the closing seconds of a power play, where Gritsyuk and Dawson Mercer caught Blue Jackets defenseman Denton Mateychuk in a 2-on-1 situation. Gritsyuk made a cross-ice pass that Mateychuk actually did a good job to get a stick on, but there was enough sauce on that pass for Mercer to make an equally impressive play and rifle a bouncing puck past Columbus netminder Jet Greaves for a 2-1 lead, giving Gritsyuk a well-deserved primary assist.

Aside from his playmaking ability though, where Gritsyuk has really impressed me in a short time is with his decision making with the puck. Even though his NHL experience is rather limited, you can tell that he has played a lot of hockey and has plenty of experience at a professional level. He knows where he needs to be on the ice. He’s done a good job knowing what to do with the puck and knowing where to put it on the ice if he isn’t in a position to make a play. That particular skill set is a much-welcomed addition to a Devils bottom six that lacked that type of player one year ago. It might just be little flashes that Gritsyuk has shown here and there in a relatively small sample size of three NHL games, but you can tell from watching the games that there’s something there.

Of course, it’s easy to see all that and be tempted. It’s tempting to want to pencil Gritsyuk into that LW1 spot once occupied by Evgenii Dadonov, currently occupied by Ondrej Palat and put him alongside Jack Hughes and Jesper Bratt. And I’m sure the longer we go where Gritsyuk looks promising while Palat simultaneously is just kind of there, those calls will get louder.

I suspect there will be a time where putting Gritsyuk in that spot is the right play and the Devils will be a better team because of it. For the time being though? The Devils are better suited leaving the Top Nine as is and not messing around with the lineup.

As promising as Gritsyuk’s good start is, at the end of the day, its still three games. There’s still an adjustment period after coming over from the KHL, and he probably hasn’t had his “Welcome to the NHL” moment yet that he’d sooner rather forget. I don’t write this to be negative or pour cold water on the hype train, but its something that happens to every player and I doubt Gritsyuk will be exempt from a rough stretch of play once there is more tape on him and word gets out around the league.

As easy as it would be to yell “move Gritsyuk up the lineup”, I credit Sheldon Keefe for finding a way to protect him during the three game road trip. The Devils had three tough matchups on the road against three playoff-caliber teams. If there’s an obvious forward to pick on in the Devils lineup in terms of trying to exploit matchups when you have last change, its probably the 24 year old “rookie” in Gritsyuk. Gritsyuk has played well in a limited role, and is already in the process of gaining the trust of the coaching staff with more and more ice time with each subsequent game. I think Keefe has been smart not to put too much on his plate out of the gate and to rely on his more experienced forwards who have more experience in his system to play the tougher minutes. Perhaps that changes as Gritsyuk gets more experience. Perhaps that changes once the Devils start playing home games and they can dictate the matchups that they want via last change. Perhaps that changes once the schedule flips to November and the schedule is easier to navigate in general.

For now though? The Devils don’t need to force it. And a big part of the reason why they don’t need to force it is because through three games, scoring goals hasn’t been a problem. They have 11 goals in three games. Seven of those goals have come at 5-on-5, two on the power play, one shorthanded, and one in an empty net situation.

The one “yeah, but” to that is that the Jack Hughes line hasn’t really gotten going yet, and with Palat’s reinsertion onto the top line, I get why some might think that putting Gritsyuk in that spot would be the spark they could use. But it’s also easy to forget that the Palat-Hughes-Bratt trio was one of the best lines in the NHL last season. Of all lines that played 500+ minutes together, they were Top 7 in xGoals%, xGoals For, xGoals per 60, Goals for per 60, and CF% (according to MoneyPuck). They were tied-9th in goals.

It would stand to reason that Hughes and Bratt are the straws that stir the proverbial drink on that line and Palat was just along for the ride, so there’s room for growth. I would agree with that assessment. But it would also stand to reason that that trio knows how to play together and knows how to play off of each other. Jack and Bratt are going to figure this out….they’re too talented not to…..and once they do, they’ll put up points in bunches and the Devils will win hockey games as a result. I don’t mean this as a slight, but they don’t need an Arseny Gritsyuk to “get going”. They’re more than capable of figuring it out.

With no other obvious spot to try to shoehorn Gritsyuk into in the Top Six, the best spot for him in this Devils lineup is the one he currently occupies on their third line with Connor Brown and Cody Glass.

Brown has been as advertised when it comes to 5-on-5 offense, and he’s also impressed me in the early portion of the season with the little things with his game. His skating ability, his decision making, his hockey IQ. All of that. You can see why he played a prominent role on a team that went t0 back-to-back Stanley Cup Finals. I think its fair to question whether or not Cody Glass is productive enough offensively to be a 3C on a team with playoff aspirations, but that’s a Cody Glass problem more than it is a Gritsyuk problem. But we’re also talking about a Gritsyuk-Glass-Brown line that’s played a grand total of just under 16 minutes together over two games. The jury is still very much out on whether they’re a long-term fit, but if we like what the players bring to the table from an individual standpoint, it’s worth giving it some time to see if they can form a functional third line. And that last part to me is key.

The Devils did not have a functional third line last year. They did not have a functional fourth line either, for that matter. It’s the reason why they revamped their bottom six this summer in the first place.

What if the Devils have a good third line and Gritsyuk being slotted where he is is a big part of the reason why? What if Gritsyuk can be the offensive catalyst behind that line and elevate his linemates in the process?

It’s too early to say with certainty that he is going to be that or do that, or that the Devils will definitely have a good third line. But its one of those things where if they do, all of a sudden this team looks so much better than it did coming into the season. Having a third line that can push the pace of play and is capable of scoring makes the Devils all that much more dangerous.

Look no further than Florida who just won a Cup with a third line of Eetu Luostarinen, Anton Lundell, and Brad Marchand. On most teams, that would be a first or second line. But on a team like Florida that is insanely deep, that’s a third line. I’m not saying the Brown-Glass-Grisyuk line will be what Florida’s third line was, but when you have that type of depth where anyone on your top three lines can score at any given time, you can get away with having an Evan Rodrigues and the 32 points he provided during the regular season last year as your top line winger. It makes you that much tougher to play against when the opposition can’t focus on just stopping one line, or even two lines.

Only time will tell what Arseny Gritsyuk winds up becoming in terms of his NHL career. I don’t doubt that he has a Top Six skill set, or that he will be a fixture on the Devils top line at some point. But for now, he’s doing just fine in the role he’s being asked to play by Sheldon Keefe and the coaching staff. Rather than rushing to toss him into the deep end of the pool and seeing if he can indeed swim, the Devils are probably better suited letting him continue to get his feet wet in the shallow end as he learns the NHL. The top six is still deep enough where they shouldn’t have issues scoring goals, and if they’re patient by playing the long-game with Gritsyuk, him being a potential catalyst on a really good third line would all of a sudden make the Devils all that much more of a threat.

Source: https://www.allaboutthejersey.com/d...syuk-is-doing-just-fine-where-he-is-right-now
 
Injuries Are Increasing the Early Season Adversity for the New Jersey Devils

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Three games in to 2025-26 and there is a lot going right for the New Jersey Devils. They’re 2-1-0 and despite some imperfections in their games, there’s a good number of positives to highlight. Timo Meier has chipped in a couple early goals. Jesper Bratt has picked up roughly from where he left off last season. The defense as a whole has looked pretty good. Newcomers Connor Brown and Arseny Gritsyuk have chipped in and helped produce offense. There’s definitely a few other performances and highlights that you could point out, but today we’re here to talk about a prominent lowlight instead: injuries.

Injuries are a part of the game, we all know that. Missing Johnny Kovacevic was known, since he was projected to miss this much time when his injury occurred during the playoffs. However the Devils have already lost a number of other players. Throughout summer training and the preseason, Stefan Noesen and Seamus Casey both suffered injuries, as did depth forward Marc McLaughlin. With a bit less to work with before even playing a game, the Devils still entered the season with a competitive roster that looked mostly like what was predicted prior to the season starting. One of the articles that I wrote late in the summer was how the Devils would need to play well in October to have a successful season. There’s still a lot of difficult October games to come, and the first three games have increased the difficulty.

Game one saw Evgenii Dadonov go down with what would later be diagnosed as a fractured hand. This led to Ondrej Palat being moved back up to the top line reuniting Jack Hughes and Jesper Bratt with Tom Fitzgerald’s favorite boat anchor. Zack MacEwen, acquired during the preseason for Kurtis MacDermid, entered the lineup after Dadonov was hurt, and against Tampa Bay would get injured himself. The upper body injury for him means we won’t be seeing him anytime soon according to Sheldon Keefe. Jake Allen then decided to give us a scare in game three when he didn’t return for the third period against Columbus. The team would announce that he was just cramping, but as Jacob Markstrom came in to relieve him, he would suffer an injury in the final minute that now has him slated to miss a couple of weeks.

While the Jake Allen news is a good sign (he looked fantastic in the two periods he played in Columbus) the Devils are also sadly averaging one injury per game right now. Obviously that pace isn’t going to continue, but missing a goalie, a Top 6 forward and a grit guy (who actually looked decent in his team debut) is going to affect the team’s performance. Markstrom was not good in his first two games, but Nico Daws has had some struggles in his time with Utica. The team can ride Allen when he’s not cramping, but this team right now is one potential goaltending injury away from being in the 2023-24 boat again. Dadonov and MacEwen going down is a bit less impactful, but if another forward or two suffers an injury prior to Noesen being ready to return, the Devils might have to be calling up guys who are not yet NHL ready, and there’s the possibility they drop a few key October games as a result.

Let’s not end on a down note though. Like I said, the injuries can’t keep up at this pace, and right now the team is playing well, even with the forwards they’re missing. More encouraging still is the performance they put in against Columbus (minus the final 30 seconds or so) along with Jake Allen rocking a .958 save percentage while stopping 23 of 24 shots though two periods. If the Devils can keep playing the way they are and Allen drinks a ton of extra water to keep from cramping, there’s a great chance they still come out of October with a good record and in good position in the Metropolitan Division.

Now I’d like to hear your thoughts on the injuries and the impact they may have on the remainder of October. Are you worried how about how many players have gone down? Are you more concerned about it affecting the team’s performance and record? Can the Devils continue to play well even if another guy or two goes down? Do you think the team should be placing Jake Allen in bubble wrap between games? Leave any and all comments below and thanks as always for reading!

Source: https://www.allaboutthejersey.com/d...ly-season-adversity-for-the-new-jersey-devils
 
Gritty Devils Outlast Florida 3-1 in Home Opener as Stars Shine

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This one had all the makings of a trap game.

The New Jersey Devils were coming home for the first time this season after winning two of three on the road.

The opponent – the back-to-back defending Stanley Cup Champion Florida Panthers – was shorthanded, short on rest, and starting a back-up goalie with an .850 save percentage. But despite falling behind early in the first, New Jersey kept its composure, wore down the Panthers, and sent the sellout crowd of 16,514 home happy with a 3-1 win on Thursday night at Prudential Center.

Timo Meier, not known for his October heroics since joining the Devils, continued to look good in the season’s first week with an assist on Jack Hughes’ tying goal early in the second, before scoring the winner at 6 minutes, 23 seconds of the third.

Nico Hischier added an insurance goal midway through the final period to round out the scoring.

The Good


The big names continued to produce for the Devils. Meier had a goal for the third straight game, tipping Simon Nemec’s point shot past Panthers’ goalie Daniil Tarasov from the bottom of the right wing circle to give the Devils a 2-1 lead. Earlier in the night, he started the play that lead to Jack Hughes breaking his three-game goal drought and notching his first of the year.

Hughes took a pass from his brother, Luke, cut in from the left wing circle, and beat Tarasov from a sharp angle by snapping a shot off Tarasov’s shoulder up and under the crossbar. Until that point, Tarasov, who was making his second start for Florida after coming over from Columbus this summer, had looked near unbeatable.

Tarasov stopped a Luke Hughes’ slap shot on a breakaway, Meier down low, and Jack Hughes on a 2-0n-1 break in the first. Luke Glendening also just missed on a short break after a nifty little saucer pass from Brian Halonen early in the second.

Meanwhile, the Panthers were holding a 1-0 lead, scoring less than two minutes into the game when Evan Rodrigues chipped the rebound of a Brad Marchand past Jake Allen, who got the start despite leaving Monday’s games with cramps.

Another positive: for the first time this season, New Jersey didn’t lose anyone to injury. Or, it didn’t look that way, anyway.

The Bad (was there any?)


Nothing to really complain about tonight, except maybe the officiating. There were some pretty questionable calls including a holding against Luke Hughes and an interference on Jesper Bratt. But the Devils penalty kill was strong, killing off all five Panthers power plays.

And the officials did get the biggest call of the game right, waiving off Sam Reinhart’s goal with 1:17 to go because Anton Lundell made contact with Allen in the crease. Paul Maurice challenged the call and lost on review.

Overall


This is the kind of game the Devils would have lost in previous years: a home game after a long road trip. The Panthers were missing Sasha Barkov, Matt Tkachuk, and Dmitry Kulikov to injury. Florida had lost Wednesday night in Detroit with Sergei Bobrovsky in net and started their backup.

The Panthers came out hard and carried play through most of the first, but New Jersey never panicked, let them wear themselves down, and then counterpunched in the second and third and took advantage of fresher legs to hold on late to get the win.

The Highlights​


Please see the full highlights below:

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

Up Next


The Devils are back home Saturday afternoon for a 3:30 pm game with the two-time Stanley Cup runners-up, the Edmonton Oilers. It’ll be interesting to see if Sheldon Keefe sticks with Allen a third straight game. He’s been light’s out so far with a 1.20 goals against average and .957 save percentage in five periods of play.

Your Take


What did you make of tonight’s game? Who stood out to you the most? Who are you concerned about? What do you expect against the Oilers this weekend? Hard not to be enjoying these games. Season is off to a promising start.

Source: https://www.allaboutthejersey.com/d...ast-florida-3-1-in-home-opener-as-stars-shine
 
Devils in the Details – 10/17/25: Home Opener Edition

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Here are your links for today:

Devils Links​


Against the defending champs on Thursday night, the Devils came back from a 1-0 deficit to take a 3-1 win. Jack Hughes, Timo Meier and Nico Hischier scored for the Devils. [Devils NHL]

Home opener!

Let me just make this statement loud and clear – Jersey’s here. #NJDevils | @PruCenter | @BMWUSA pic.twitter.com/fVbaVbbeY0

— New Jersey Devils (@NJDevils) October 16, 2025
Best-dressed team in the league, don’t @ us.#NJDevils | @BMWUSA pic.twitter.com/mFxA5E8PpG

— New Jersey Devils (@NJDevils) October 16, 2025

A couple additions to the broadcast:

Industry sources tell me that Mike Rupp and Cory Schneider are joining the #NJDevils broadcast on MSG Network.

They'll be on the pre and postgame shows.https://t.co/i8KFNUc5VC

— Ryan Novozinsky (@ryannovoNHL) October 16, 2025

*large sigh*

Per Sheldon Keefe, Jacob Markstrom will miss a couple of weeks.

— New Jersey Devils (@NJDevils) October 15, 2025

On a contract extension with Jacob Markstrom: “They’ve had recent discussions on what an extension might look like. I’m told that the talks have been healthy and they’ll resume negotiations in the very near future. There is a mutual interest between the veteran goaltender and the New Jersey Devils to get something done. I’m told the Devils absolutely love Jacob Markstrom, he’s great in the room. But there is a negotiation that still has to take place here and with everything there’s always a gap. So until that gap closes, the deal isn’t done.” [TSN]

“While he hasn’t scored a goal yet, that will come in time. But Gritsyuk has done plenty of the little things coaches want to see from young players in the NHL. His hockey sense is much better than I thought it would be, and he looks like one of the team’s better skaters.” [Devils on the Rush ($)]

“Dawson Mercer has gotten a bad rap over the last couple of seasons, but is rebounding nicely to begin the 2025-26 season.” [Devils’ Advocates]

Hockey Links​


Carter Hart signs in Vegas:

Official statement from the Vegas Golden Knights on Carter Hart.

More: https://t.co/7jWN6i0tzr#VegasBorn pic.twitter.com/kzvbA2uSlv

— Vegas Golden Knights (@GoldenKnights) October 16, 2025

A look at red flags around the league in the early going of this season: “This year’s schedule is even more condensed than usual due to the fact the NHL will take a two-week hiatus when players are competing at the Winter Olympics in Italy in February. The flurry of games doesn’t pair well with slumping teams, or goal scorers who lose their puck touch for an extended period of time. The results can turn into teams chasing playoff spots from the back of the pack and uneven efforts from struggling playmakers, defenders, and goaltenders alike. The ‘red flags’ I’m about to present range from teams lacking execution and detail, to singular players who flat out have to play better hockey given their elevated role on their team.” [Sportsnet]

“NHL commissioner Gary Bettman expressed concern Wednesday over delays in the construction of the Milano Santagiulia arena, the intended main hockey site for the Milan Olympics. Speaking after the NHL Board of Governors meeting, Bettman was reacting to a report earlier that day from the Associated Press that a test event that was scheduled for December at the 16,000-seat main Olympic hockey arena will no longer be held there amid construction delays.” [The Athletic ($)]

“Schools are also trying to balance how much of their pot they give to highly recruited freshmen and how much they assign for returning players, as well as how it’s rolled out (for most, in monthly payments which started in July and August to discourage players from spending it all at once and encourage them to save for their tax obligations at the end of the year).” A look at how college hockey is handling the new world of NIL and revenue sharing: [The Athletic ($)]

Feel free to discuss these and any other hockey-related stories in the comments below.

Source: https://www.allaboutthejersey.com/d...s-in-the-details-10-17-25-home-opener-edition
 
2025-26 Gamethread #4: New Jersey Devils vs. Florida Panthers

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The Matchup: The New Jersey Devils (2-1-0) versus the Florida Panthers (3-2-0)

The Time: 7:00 PM ET

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

The Game Preview: Matt wrote one for this morning.

The Song of the Day: Today is the day of the New Jersey Devils home opener. So I had to think of who to put on as the song of the day. I don’t want to be cliche and throw a Springsteen song on here. Devils fans are already well acquainted with The Gaslight Anthem. And I’m not a pop punker, so you probably won’t see me putting those usual suspects here very often (more likely newer acts in that genre). I’ll turn to something more devilish in Overkill’s Scorched, off their recent album of the same name. I like the blend of sounds on this song, as it takes a little while for Overkill to settle into their usual thrash. But for a new season and a new chance for the Devils to prove themselves, this one goes well today.

A Note: Since today is the home opener, I am opening up the gamethread extra early. With the fan activities starting around The Rock at 4:00 PM today, I want to give everyone a chance to check into the gamethread early in case they are enjoying the game in person. Have fun if you’re there!

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...hread-4-new-jersey-devils-vs-florida-panthers
 
2025-26 Gamethread #5: New Jersey Devils vs. Edmonton Oilers

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The Matchup: The New Jersey Devils (3-1-0) versus the Edmonton Oilers (2-1-1).

The Time: 3:30 PM ET

The Broadcast: TV – MSGSN, Radio – Devils Hockey Network

The Game Preview: Check out Jackson’s preview before the game today.

The Song of the Day: I am not entirely sure why, but I always find myself listening to jazz most in the autumn and early winter. That said, the New Jersey Devils have gotten themselves into a bit of a roll over their last three games, so I am going to turn to Ella Fitzgerald for the Jersey Bounce. Keep the good times coming.

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...thread-5-new-jersey-devils-vs-edmonton-oilers
 
The Next Alternate Jersey Should Be a Road One, and Thoughts on the Fourth Line

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Happy Sunday, Devils fans.

In the final year of the “Jersey Jersey,” the New Jersey Devils are slated to wear their alternate 11 times. The Devils just returned from their season-opening road trip back on Thursday, and I already cannot imagine them wearing anything other than their red jerseys. With a 4-1-0 record on the season, a 2-0-0 record at home, and their first four-game winning streak in nearly three years, I wish the Devils could keep their red identity a little more consistent throughout the season.

NHL teams only get 41 regular season home games, though they’ll soon get 42 when the schedule expands. Having an alternate home jersey means that there’s only a three in four chance that a randomly-selected home game will feature the team’s permanent jersey. After the Devils go on Christmas break on December 23, the Devils will wear their Jersey Jersey in five out of nine games between their return to play and the pause for the Olympic Games, including the final two home games before that break.

Do I really want to see a stretch like that at any point of the season? No, not really. I understand that today’s NHL wants teams to push these jerseys so their fans can buy them and make the league and Fanatics lots of money, but I think most people are just happy to get their hands on one jersey that is well-made and will last them for years. And when I go to see the New Jersey Devils, I like to see them wear something that really identifies them as the New Jersey Devils — not whatever this is:

The Kings will face New Jersey's black "Jersey" jersey for the 2nd consecutive year. It will be the final meeting between these uniforms.#GoKingsGo https://t.co/atUDHUWggF pic.twitter.com/qka6xZYi9P

— LAKingsUniformHistory (@KingsUniHistory) September 22, 2025

So I have considered this workaround to the pitfall of overusing alternate jerseys: a white-based, road-wearable alternate. The Devils have not had such a jersey since they had their Kansas City Scouts and Colorado Rockies-inspired Reverse Retro in 2022-23. So, it’s been a few years! The Devils have had their Jersey Jersey, they have had their Stadium Series alternate. They should think about a way to spruce up their road look with an alternate jersey. Just look below at what the Edmonton Oilers did for this season:

Built to work. Built to win. 💪

Presenting the new #Oilers alternate jersey, now available for pre-order at https://t.co/HvU1K1KYly! pic.twitter.com/L5Ta1gO0Aq

— Edmonton Oilers (@EdmontonOilers) September 20, 2025

The current Devils road jersey is still not really my favorite. The absence of the black stripe still bothers me, as it looks too boring as it is now. There’s just a little more gravitas to the old look. The post-2017 look is too clean and too simple: the torso of the jersey looks far too long in white, and there’s nothing to take the eye away from the empty space beneath the logo. I, for one, think Nico Hischier, Jesper Bratt, Jack Hughes, and Timo Meier would look a lot better on the road scoring goals while wearing a road jersey like this:

But this is about alternate jerseys. The Devils may yet make a good decision by bringing those classic roads back, similar to how the Minnesota Wild brought their classic home jerseys back into the rotation, as they will be wearing their old white-based home jerseys four time during this season. Wouldn’t something like that be great for a well-designed road alternate? The great thing about making a white alternate jersey is that it could be worn on the road and at home. Many hockey fans still remember the days of white home jerseys, and many Devils fans still wear white jerseys that were home jerseys when they bought them. A good road alternate will not stop fans from buying it. On top of that, the alternate jersey would not have to eat up a whole quarter or more of the home game schedule. Eleven non-red home games can turn to four or five while they wear their alternate as much as they want to on the road.

What do you think the next alternate jersey should look like?

Other Thoughts: The Return of Noesen​


One guy who plays the game like many Devils forwards did when they were good in those classic white jerseys is Stefan Noesen. I am rather looking forward to him getting back into game action over the next week. Since Evgenii Dadonov and Zack MacEwen went down with injuries, Brian Halonen has not shown very much in his three games on the fourth line. He is now pointless in seven career NHL games, and he only has one shot on goal this season. To be fair to Halonen, the fourth line is not amazing as currently constructed. Paul Cotter has great wheels and hands, but he runs into a lot of trouble from his decisions with the puck, and Luke Glendening is here to play defense, win faceoffs, and kill penalties. There is no driving force to that fourth line as it is right now.

So Halonen might have fared better in more of a third-line situation. He does, after all, play a goal-scorer’s game in Utica. But with Arseny Gritsyuk and Connor Brown clicking with Cody Glass, there is no spot for him there. And now that Jack Hughes is producing with Ondrej Palat on his wing, Halonen would not even be able to catch a break from Palat being used on the fourth line.

Stefan Noesen, by comparison, is more familiar with that level of play. I do not think that the fourth line is the best place for him, but I imagine he will start there with the other lines clicking. Last year, Noesen played a career-high average of 15:56 per game, scoring 22 goals. Most importantly, Noesen played his best hockey away from the fourth line, and the team had no success trying to pair him and Paul Cotter. In the regular season, this is how they split:

  • Cotter with Noesen: 284:55 TOI, 48.10 CF%, 9 GF-12 GA (42.86 GF%), 44.91 xGF%
  • Cotter without Noesen: 682:18 TOI, 50.92 CF%, 18 GF-31 GA (36.73 GF%), 50.30 xGF%
  • Noesen without Cotter: 693:52 TOI, 54.30 CF%, 30 GF-28 GA (51.72 GF%), 56.25 xGF%

In the playoffs, the quality and quantity of possession worsened with Cotter on the ice.

  • Cotter with Noesen: 39:28 TOI, 33.33 CF%, 1 GF-1 GA (50 GF%), 27.22 xGF%
  • Cotter without Noesen: 30:39 TOI, 33.33 CF%, 0 GF-1 GA (0 GF%), 26.00 xGF%
  • Noesen without Cotter: 20:04 TOI, 56.10 CF%, 1 GF-0 GA (100 GF%), 49.99 xGF%

The importance of bottom six forwards during the season and playoffs is very real, so I think this is something to keep an eye on when Noesen does return to the lineup. Does the fourth line finally start producing, or do Paul Cotter and company continue to have problems with defensive breakdowns and missed opportunities? What happens when the fourth line is on the ice when the Devils ice the puck against teams like the Oilers, allowing players like Connor McDavid to have offensive zone faceoffs against them? I was holding my breath when this happened yesterday afternoon. Thankfully, the fourth line only allowed three shots to the top Edmonton line before Jake Allen froze the puck after the Devils were unable to make good of Luke Glendening’s defensive zone faceoff win (and what was Paul Cotter doing throwing late hits at the blueline instead of helping out down low with Edmonton in possession?).

I will not say anything about Glendening’s performance yet, as the penalty kill is running at 95% efficiency through five games, and he was not on the ice for that goal against. He did inadvertently set up Connor Brown’s breakaway goal on the penalty kill yesterday. As far as I am concerned, he is doing his job there, and he is on track for over 200 penalty killing minutes at the rate he is currently playing.

Paul Cotter needs to be better, though. His last regular season assist was 50 games ago. He has plenty of skill in his hands, so I would like to see the 16-goal scoring version of Paul Cotter diversify a little bit and become a serious threat on the fourth line. He needs to be able to do more than hit and shoot, as teams know to just close down on him since he does not make passing plays. When Juho Lammikko is back from injury, is Cotter’s lineup spot guaranteed? He is going to need to play better defense and make plays with the puck with more consistency. Glendening brings something on the penalty kill and in the dot. Noesen will be improving the netfront work on the power play. Cotter needs to bring something big or round out his game.

The top six looks fantastic right now. The third line is promising. But the fourth line currently looks like it’s going to leave a lot of the burden on them, and I am not sure if Stefan Noesen can drag both of Paul Cotter and Luke Glendening to even strength adequacy.

Your Thoughts​


What do you think the next Devils alternate jersey should be? What would you think of a road alternate? How do you feel about the fourth line so far this season? How do you think Stefan Noesen’s return will impact the team? Leave your thoughts in the comments below and thanks for reading.

Source: https://www.allaboutthejersey.com/d...be-a-road-one-and-thoughts-on-the-fourth-line
 
Jack Hughes Scores Twice In New Jersey Devils’ 5-3 Win Over Edmonton Oilers

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Sometimes when a game isn’t going your way, you just need your gamebreakers to break a game. The best of the best are capable of this, they can completely change their squad’s fortunes with a single shift, a single play, a single shot. Jack Hughes is one of these gamebreakers. Through 28 minutes of this afternoon’s battle between the New Jersey Devils and the Edmonton Oilers, the Devils just hadn’t been able to get anything going. They had isolated bursts of possession here and there, but for the most part the game was being controlled by the defending Western Conference champions. But then Jack Hughes broke the game, sparking a run that led to New Jersey securing a big 5-3 win over one of the best teams in the league.

This was one of those games where the Devils got stronger as time went on. The first period was pretty bad, as they got outshot 9-4 and posted a 5-on-5 Expected Goals For% just south of 30%. I would not say this was due to a lack of effort, I actually thought New Jersey had their legs today. I just thought their execution was way off early on. Every pass was either misfired or mishandled. Every read was just a shade off. Every shot attempt was flubbed. To my eyes, the Devils looked like a team that was battling themselves as much as the opposition. But again, I thought the effort was there, as evidenced by how well they defended Connor McDavid, Leon Draisaitl, and a high-flying Oilers attack. New Jersey might not have gotten anything going offensively in the opening frame, but they kept Edmonton off the board as well. That was a small win in and of itself.

But after the first intermission, the execution started to come. And it culminated in Hughes’ ice-breaker about eight minutes into the middle frame. Brett Pesce made a terrific play to catch an airborne puck in the neutral zone, get it down to his stick lightning fast, and slip a lead pass to Hughes right in stride. Hughes did the rest, knifing through three Oilers to get to the net before wiring a shot off the far post and in. And after weathering the storm, it was 1-0, Devils.

Later in the second, Jesper Bratt scored on a power play. The score came immediately following the faceoff, and it was a sweet play where Bratt completely fooled Edmonton goalie Calvin Pickard by faking to the forehand before pulling to the backhand and saucing an easy shot into a wide open net. Credit to Bratt for making it happen, but who had the primary assist on that goal? That would be Jack Hughes, who made a great pass through traffic to find an open Bratt in front of the net. Another superstar play.

Then late in the third, Hughes struck again. As the Oilers were trying to exit their zone, Bratt collected a turnover on the far wall and fed Hughes who was all alone behind the Edmonton defense. He skated in alone on Pickard, dangled him out of his pads, and tucked it home for his second of the day. That goal turned out to be the game-winner for New Jersey.

There are precious few players in the NHL that can flip a game on its head when everything is going against their team. The Devils are lucky to have one of those players on their side. Jack Hughes didn’t do it alone this afternoon, but he was by far the number one reason why New Jersey skated away with their fourth straight victory today.

Jack Hughes is a superstar.

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

The Game Highlights: Courtesy of NHL.com

The Supporting Cast​


Referring to the rest of the standouts today as “the supporting cast” might seem a little insulting, but I promise I mean no disrespect. It’s just that when Jack Hughes shines as brightly as he does, he is of course going to get most of the attention.

But there were plenty of others who deserve their flowers as well. I mentioned Bratt a few times, but it bears repeating how good he was today. He had a goal and an assist, and just generally looked dangerous whenever the puck was on his stick.

Meanwhile, Connor Brown was playing against his former team this afternoon, and he made sure it was a memorable game. In the middle stages of the third period, with New Jersey clinging to a 2-1 lead, the Devils went to the penalty kill (more on that below). It was a huge moment in the game, and Brown stepped up in a major way. Luke Glendening fought hard to muscle a puck out of the zone, past Evan Bouchard, and right to Brown, who suddenly found himself on a breakaway with more than half the ice in front of him. He moved in on Pickard, went backhand-forehand, then whistled a shot over Pickard’s glove for a massive shorthanded goal, giving New Jersey some much-needed insurance. Needless to say, Brown was pumped up to score against his former employer.

The other goal scorer I haven’t mentioned yet is Dawson Mercer. He potted an empty-netter that made it 5-2 Devils, Mercer’s third goal of the season. Aside from the goal, Mercer also continued to look good overall. Lousy first period aside (which, again, afflicted the entire team), Mercer controlled play well, ending with a 5-on-5 xGF% just under 60%. It was a very strong game for the Dawg.

I also thought Pesce was excellent today. He had that terrific assist on the opening goal, and whenever he was on the ice, New Jersey usually had the puck on their sticks, finishing with an xGF% 72.16%.

And finally, I want to highlight Jake Allen. His final numbers might not look amazing, but I thought he played a very strong game. He stopped 27 of 30 shots for a nice and tidy .900 sv%. According to Natural Stat Trick, he basically broke even in Goals Saved Above Expected, allowing the three goals he allowed on 2.86 Expected Goals according to NST’s model. Really, the only reason his numbers look as mediocre as they did was because of old friend Curtis Lazar’s goal with literally less than three seconds on the clock. It was the garbage time goal of all garbage time goals, and while it counts, the game was already decided by then. While the game was still in the balance, Allen played quite well. That has to be encouraging to see as New Jersey continues to rely on him until Jacob Markstrom returns.

Penalty Kill Killing It​


Even without Connor Brown’s shorthanded goal, the Devils penalty kill continues to be a huge source of strength for this team. New Jersey went a perfect 3-for-3 on the penalty kill this afternoon, and in fact outscored the Oilers 1-0 on those kills thanks to Brown’s marker. It is extremely hard to outscore a power play that features Connor McDavid, Leon Draisaitl, and Evan Bouchard, yet somehow the Devils managed to do it.

Thanks to their 3-for-3 today, the Devils have now killed 16 straight penalties. They have already scored two shorthanded goals on the young season. I really wish New Jersey would stop taking so many penalties (Mercer took a high sticking penalty less than two minutes into the game, which might have contributed to New Jersey starting so slowly), but if they’re going to keep committing infractions, it’s nice to know the penalty killing unit is there to pick the team up.

Another Pelt On The Wall​


I feel like I write about the line of Timo Meier, Nico Hischier, and Dawson Mercer every day. But they’ve been so impressive early on this season that I can’t help it, and today was no exception.

According to Natural Stat Trick, in 10:25 of 5-on-5 ice time together, the Hischier line posted a stellar xGF% of 62.99%. That is impressive enough, but remember, the Hischier line always gets the toughest matchup. And there is no tougher matchup than Connor McDavid.

Meier, Hischier, and Mercer got hard-matched against McDavid’s line with Ryan Nugent-Hopkins and a rotation of Andrew Mangiapane and David Tomasek. And just for good measure, the Hischier line was also force-fed Edmonton’s super-elite top pairing of Evan Bouchard and Mattias Ekholm. According to NST, Meier and Mercer finished with an xGF% north of 50% against every single one of those six players. Hischier finished in the black against five of the six, with the only exception being McDavid, who Hischier finished with an xGF% of 45.53% against.

I cannot stress enough how impressive this is. Keefe continues to treat Meier, Hischier, and Mercer as the Devils’ sacrificial lambs, throwing them at elite competition on a nightly basis. And time after time, that trio not only survives their matchups, they thrive. We are only five games into the season, and this line will certainly have their off nights. But for now, the unit of Meier, Hischier, and Mercer continues to erase elite competition every single game. What a massive advantage it is to have a line like this.

The Rotation Continues​


Before the season, Keefe told us that his top power play unit will change on a game-by-game basis depending on the matchup. Jack Hughes, Nico Hischier, and Jesper Bratt are the three constants on that first grouping, but Dougie Hamilton and Luke Hughes have taken turns quarterbacking, while Dawson Mercer and Timo Meier have rotated with each other as the fifth wheel.

Today, we saw Hamilton and Mercer back with PP1. The first opportunity they got was pretty darn ugly, but their second opportunity did yield a goal. They didn’t score on their third try, but it wasn’t a complete disaster like the first man advantage. Sometimes it can be hard to develop chemistry and get into a rhythm when you don’t have consistency, but I have to say, I do like this adaptability that the Devils are showing. The power play has not fully clicked yet, but they did score today, so perhaps the breakout is coming.

A Fun Little Nugget​


The Devils just beat the two Stanley Cup finalists from the previous season over their last two games. According to the MSG broadcast, this was the first time the franchise has beaten the two Cup finalists from the previous season in consecutive games since the 1987-88 season when they defeated the Flyers and Oilers in back-to-back contests. That’s a nice little feather in this team’s cap.

Our Long National Nightmare Is Over​


They finally did it. It took almost three full years, but those lunatics actually, finally did it.

The New Jersey Devils have a four-game winning streak.

The Devils have not had a winning streak of more than three games since January of 2023 when they rattled off a five-game heater. Since that time, they’ve had 13 three-game winning streaks (14 if you count their three straight wins in the first round of the playoffs in 2023). And every single time, the Devils have lost. 0-for-13 (or 14 if you include the postseason). An unbelievable streak of futility.

At long last, we can put this ignonimous stat to rest. The New Jersey Devils have finally won more than three games in a row. Take a breath Devils fans, our suffering is over.

Now let’s see if they can make it five in a row.

Next Time Out​


The Devils are back in action Tuesday, when they travel north of the border to battle the Maple Leafs. Puck drop from Toronto is scheduled for 7:00pm.

Your Take​


What did you make of today’s game? Who impressed you the most? How good does it feel to finally witness a four-game winning streak again? What changes do you expect for next game? As always, thanks for reading!

Source: https://www.allaboutthejersey.com/d...ew-jersey-devils-5-3-win-over-edmonton-oilers
 
Nico Hischier, Timo Meier, and Dawson Mercer Vs. Elite Competition: A Look At The Numbers

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Nico Hischier, Timo Meier, and Dawson Mercer spent a lot of time together last season. According to Natural Stat Trick, in 264 minutes together at 5-on-5, that trio posted an Expected Goals For% of 50.90%. They out-attempted (51.08% Corsi For%) and outshot (51.14%) their opponents in their minutes, and they won the Scoring Chances For (53.01%) and High Danger Corsi For (53.27%) battles as well. And for good measure, they outscored their opponents 9-4. They won in the run of play, and they won on the actual scoreboard.

And keep in mind, head coach Sheldon Keefe always gave the Hischier line the most difficult matchups. It’s impressive enough that this trio won their minutes last season, but doing so against elite competition night in and night out? Only the best lines in the league can do that.

So since this line had success in 2024-25, it made sense that Keefe would want to keep it together entering this season. The addition of Cody Glass for a full campaign opened the door to the Hischier line logging less brutal minutes, but I guess Keefe figured that if it ain’t broke, he shouldn’t fix it. Through five games this season, Hischier and pals continue to log some of the most hellacious minutes in the league.

So how has the Hischier line been doing in the face of such difficult assignments? At a macro level, they’ve been dominating. Per NST, this trio has been together for 48:31 of 5-on-5 time this season, and they’ve posted a stellar xGF% of 60.87%. They have also outscored their opponents 4-1 in their minutes, once again winning both on the spreadsheets and on the scoreboards. And these are just the Natural Stat Trick numbers. If you listen to Moneypuck, this line is even better than what NST would have you believe. Moneypuck has the trio of Meier-Hischier-Mercer at a 5-on-5 xGF% of 67.3%. Pure dominance.

But what about at the micro level? Those numbers above do not isolate for specific matchups, so while it looks like the Hischier line is dominating top competition, we can’t say for certain just looking at raw xGF%. Fortunately, Natural Stat Trick allows one to isolate how a player does against every other player individually. So for example if you want to see what Hischier’s xGF% numbers were against Sebastian Aho, you could do that.

So with that in mind, I wanted to see not only who the Hischier line was getting matched up against through the season’s first five games, I wanted to find out just how the line performed against their primary matchup. I went through the game logs at Natural Stat Trick and compiled the numbers, and while NST’s model isn’t the be-all end-all, it should give us a general indication of how Hischier and Co. have performed against elite competition.

Let’s dive in:

October 9 @ Carolina


The season opener wasn’t a good one, and at the time of this writing is the only loss on the season for New Jersey. But the Hischier line did their job. In 10:45 together, they posted a 65.84% xGF%, a stellar mark against an elite team like Carolina.

What makes this even more impressive is that Hurricanes head coach Rod Brind’Amour, using his last change privileges, threw the Jordan Staal line at Meier-Hischier-Mercer. Staal has been one of the premier shutdown centers in the NHL for a long time now, and with Jordan Martinook and William Carrier as his wingers, they’ve combined to suffocated opponents.

But they didn’t slow down the Hischier line at all:

MatchupTOIXGF%
Hischier vs. Staal9:3073.84
Hischier vs. Martinook8:4674.27
Hischier vs. Carrier8:0070.18
Meier vs. Staal11:3068.51
Meier vs. Martinook10:2268.59
Meier vs. Carrier9:2471.80
Mercer vs. Staal10:4374.91
Mercer vs. Martinook9:5875.35
Mercer vs. Carrier8:5871.80

It was a clean sweep. Hischier, Meier, and Mercer won every single matchup handily. The Hurricanes have developed a reputation of being extremely difficult to play against in Carolina. Brind’Amour uses last change so effectively, he’s a master of getting the matchups he wants. Well his preferred matchup not only did not win their minutes, they got completely obliterated by the Hischier line. The rest of the game went pretty poorly, but when the Hischier line was on the ice, the puck was in Carolina’s end.

October 11 @ Tampa Bay


New Jersey got their season on track in Tampa Bay, posting a 5-3 victory. This was a much better effort overall from the Devils, they controlled play from basically the word “Go” and never looked back. In this contest, the Hischier line played 9:19 together, registering an xGF% of 61.87%.

Lightning head coach Jon Cooper decided to sic his defensive ace, Anthony Cirelli, on Meier-Hischier-Mercer in this game. Cirelli has three top-five finishes in Selke Trophy voting in his career, including his first nod as a finalist a season ago, finishing third in the voting. The rest of his line consisted of Jake Guentzel, one of the best wingers in the NHL, and Yanni Gourde, a player in the twilight of his career but who can still bring it on the defensive end. Cooper also used Victor Hedman against the Hischier line. It’s true that Hedman is not the player he once was, but he’s still an imposing force.

Here’s how the Hischier line fared individually:

MatchupTOIXGF%
Hischier vs. Cirelli7:2448.67
Hischier vs. Guentzel6:0333.27
Hischier vs. Gourde2:5711.14
Hischier vs. Hedman7:0649.50
Meier vs. Cirelli8:4344.51
Meier vs. Guentzel7:3122.95
Meier vs. Gourde3:0011.14
Meier vs. Hedman6:5427.52
Mercer vs. Cirelli7:5245.57
Mercer vs. Guentzel6:5523.85
Mercer vs. Gourde3:1011.14
Mercer vs. Hedman7:0627.52

This one was not a win for the Hischier line. They weren’t totally awful against Cirelli (and Hischier handled Hedman reasonably well), but Guentzel and Gourde were an issue for the Hischier unit.

The good news is that while they lost their primary matchup, they absolutely feasted on everybody else Tampa Bay threw at them. That’s how they got to that terrific 61.87% xGF% overall during this game.

October 13 @ Columbus


This game was notable for both of New Jersey’s goaltenders suffering injuries, Allen with cramps, Markstrom with a lower-body injury that he is still recovering from. It was also notable for this being the game the Devils’ power play finally got going, finding the back of the net twice in a 3-2 victory. They certainly needed the power play to come through, as the team got buried in the run of play, posting a team-wide 39.21 xGF%. In fact, New Jersey did not score a 5-on-5 goal in this contest, as their third tally was an empty-netter that proved to be the game-winner.

But even though the team as a whole struggled, the Hischier line did not. In 9:13 of ice time, the trio posted a 72.48% xGF%. Columbus decided to use the unit of Dmitri Voronkov-Sean Monahan-Kirill Marchenko against the Hischier line. Here’s how it went:

MatchupTOIXGF%
Hischier vs. Monahan8:2137.03
Hischier vs. Voronkov7:4945.16
Hischier vs. Marchenko8:1537.03
Meier vs. Monahan7:3163.62
Meier vs. Voronkov6:4364.70
Meier vs. Marchenko7:3364.66
Mercer vs. Manahan9:0136.74
Mercer vs. Voronkov8:1343.61
Mercer vs. Marchenko8:4036.74

As you can see, Hischier and Mercer didn’t do too well (though not egregiously so compared to the rest of the team), but Meier dominated the Monahan line. So this one was not as big of a loss as the Tampa Bay game thanks to Meier, but it’s another game where the Hischier line did not control the run of play overall.

So how did their overall numbers looks so good despite their lack of success against the Monahan line? Because whenever they were on the ice against anybody else, they thrived. You would like to see the Hischier line control play against a line like Voronkov-Monahan-Marchenko, but at the very least it was nice to see them post huge numbers against everyone else.

October 16 vs. Florida


At long last, the Devils were able to utilize last change themselves. In their home opener, a game they won 3-1, the Hischier line played 8:46 together and registered an xGF% of 54.86%.

Florida was without Aleksander Barkov and Matt Tkachuk in this game, but the Panthers are still a dangerous team. In this game, Keefe decided to hard-match the Hischier unit against Florida’s top line: Carter Verhaeghe-Anton Lundell-Sam Reinhart. Injuries aside, that is still a potent line to have to deal with. And for good measure, there was also a healthy dose of Brad Marchand and reigning Conn Smythe winner Sam Bennett mixed in, so I’ll include them as well.

Here’s how it went:

MatchupTOIXGF%
Hischier vs. Lundell3:5285.15
Hischier vs. Reinhart4:3792.19
Hischier vs. Verhaeghe5:0185.15
Hischier vs. Bennett4:2148.59
Hischier vs. Marchand3:0452.23
Meier vs. Lundell4:0985.15
Meier vs. Reinhart5:0024.67
Meier vs. Verhaeghe5:1024.67
Meier vs. Bennett4:0123.94
Meier vs. Marchand2:4341.19
Mercer vs. Lundell5:2275.55
Mercer vs. Reinhart6:1923.80
Mercer vs. Verhaeghe6:4223.80
Mercer vs. Bennett4:3123.94
Mercer vs. Marchand3:1041.19

Everybody owned Lundell, but Meier and Mercer struggled against Florida’s other four top forwards. Hischier, on the other hand, consumed everyone in his path. He obliterated the entire Lundell line, and while he basically broke even against Bennett and Marchand, he did outscore them 2-0 while they were all on the ice together. That goes for Meier and Mercer as well, so while they didn’t win that matchup in the run of play, they certainly did on the actual scoreboard. Another mixed bag overall, but considering Hischier’s individual brilliance, plus this line producing a pair of goals against this deployment, I would say it was a matchup that the Devils got the better of.

October 18 vs. Edmonton


On Saturday, the Devils welcomed Connor McDavid and the Edmonton Oilers to town. It was another slow start, but New Jersey eventually found their game in a 5-3 win. Meier-Hischier-Mercer played 10:25 together, posting a 62.58% xGF%.

As you probably guessed, Keefe called Hischier’s number for the McDavid assignment. Not only that, but Keefe fed the Hischier line a steady diet of Edmonton’s top pairing of Evan Bouchard and Mattias Ekholm. We’ll include those three players, plus the wingers on McDavid’s line: Ryan Nugent-Hopkins on one side, and a rotation of Andrew Mangiapane and David Tomasek on the other:

MatchupTOIXGF%
Hischier vs. McDavid9:2549.98
Hischier vs. Nugent-Hopkins7:3753.99
Hischier vs. Mangiapane4:2271.33
Hischier vs. Tomasek4:0454.14
Hischier vs. Bouchard7:0752.96
Hischier vs. Ekholm6:5461.70
Meier vs. McDavid10:0658.79
Meier vs. Nugent-Hopkins7:2563.51
Meier vs. Mangiapane5:2183.46
Meier vs. Tomasek3:4954.14
Meier vs. Bouchard7:1874.00
Meier vs. Ekholm7:0759.62
Mercer vs. McDavid9:1260.03
Mercer vs. Nugent-Hopkins7:0665.04
Mercer vs. Mangiapane4:3374.73
Mercer vs. Tomasek3:3754.14
Mercer vs. Bouchard7:2753.19
Mercer vs. Ekholm7:2853.93

Aside from Hischier losing the xGF% battle to McDavid by an absolutely microscopic margin, it was a wall-to-wall victory. Against Edmonton’s top line and defense pair, including the best player in the world, Meier-Hischier-Mercer stepped up in a huge way.

Final Thoughts And Your Take​


So in the end, what does this data tell us? It tells us that the line of Meier-Hischier-Mercer is still getting the toughest matchups night in and night out. It also tells us that through five games, this line has two decisive wins (Carolina, Edmonton), one bad game (Tampa Bay), and two mixed bags (Columbus, Florida). So not total domination. But keep in mind, that’s only if we’re looking at their primary matchups. As mentioned at the top, according to Natural Stat Trick, this trio has combined for an xGF% of just under 61% (while outscoring opponents 4-1) in 48:31 together this season. Meanwhile, Moneypuck’s model is even more complimentary to this unit, tabbing them at a 67.3% xGF%. They may not be dominating against their primary assignments every night, but they’re holding their own, and when they skate against anything less than elite competition, they are utterly unstoppable. It makes me wonder just what they could do if they weren’t tasked with absorbing brutal deployment every game.

But that’s the benefit of having a line like this. Because the Hischier line can take care of elite competition, it frees up the rest of the roster to do some serious damage to other teams’ depth. This is less possible on the road of course, but as we’ve seen from the numbers, other teams throw their best players at the Hischier line when they have last change anyway. That’s how highly regarded the Meier-Hischier-Mercer unit has become.

So expect the Hischier line to continue logging the most difficult minutes on the team. And expect them to come out on top more often than not.

What do you think of the Hischier line’s performance thus far? Do you want them to continue getting the hardest assignments, or would you want another line to take on that role? Do you expect this line to continue their success, or are you concerned they’ll stumble down the road? As always, thanks for reading!

Source: https://www.allaboutthejersey.com/d...er-vs-elite-competition-a-look-at-the-numbers
 
New Jersey Devils Prospect Update: Melovsky Bright Spot as Comets Flounder Out of the Gate

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After blowing a two goal lead with three unanswered goals against on Sunday, the Utica Comets fall to 0-3-1 to start the season.

Falling Comets​


So far my prediction that the Comets would be much improved this season is not looking so great even with the low bar of last place in the North Division last year. After strong preseasons, promising prospects Shane LaChance and Lenni Hameenaho are still looking for their first points of the season. Goaltender Jakob Malek, who has excelled everywhere he has played until now is still adjusting to North American ice and is 0-2 after surrendering seven unanswered goals in a 7-4 loss on Friday night.

Amidst all the bad, one bright spot is emerging amongst the prospect class. Center Matyas Melovsky sits second in the Comets in points behind veteran Xavier Parent with a goal and three assists in the young season. Here is a look at his first professional goal.

🚨 Matyáš MELOVSKÝ vstřelil svůj premiérový gól v #AHL! Přidal k němu ještě jednu asistenci. Nastupuje na centru třetí formace a dostává prostor i ma přesilovkách ✊🏻pic.twitter.com/gl6DUEAK79

— Eliška (@eliska_tweetuje) October 18, 2025

No Time for Doomers​


The season is young. The Comets started poorly last year before finding some legs, but it was never enough to make up for the initial losing streak. Will that happen again? It’s too early to say. I fully expect Hameenaho and LaChance to up their games and Malek to find his form. All three prospects are too talented for it to not happen. In the meantime, I am encouraged by Melovsky, who plays a position of depth need for the Devils. Hopefully, he keeps thriving.

Around the Pool:​

  • Center Samu Salminen has started his senior year hot for the University of Denver with two goals and an assist in four games, including this beautiful feed.
Sweet feed on the rush by Samu Salminen last night.pic.twitter.com/4i2dk5Ydj4

— Devils Insiders (@DevilsInsiders) October 18, 2025
  • Center Mason Moe scored his first collegiate goal for the University of Minnesota with this snipe.
2025 3rd rounder Mason Moe opens his NCAA account.
pic.twitter.com/lK92AJLyJb

— Devils Insiders (@DevilsInsiders) October 18, 2025
  • Defenseman Chase Cheslock, who is wearing an “A” for St. Thomas, continues to thrive this season in the NCAA and now has five assists in five games. Cheslock has been an under the radar prospect for the Devils, but that should change as Cheslock is playing top-pairing minutes this season.

Your Take​


Post your comments below.

Source: https://www.allaboutthejersey.com/u...right-spot-as-comets-flounder-out-of-the-gate
 
Jack Hughes’ Hat Trick Keys New Jersey Devils’ 5-2 Win Over Toronto Maple Leafs

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After being held without a goal through the first three games of the season, Jack Hughes is officially on a tear. He scored his first of the year in the home opener against the Florida Panthers, twice on Saturday against the Edmonton Oilers, and he followed that up with a hat trick tonight, as the New Jersey Devils beat the Maple Leafs, 5-2, up in Toronto. The Devils have now won five games in a row, their longest streak in almost three years.

This was a game that New Jersey controlled all night long. It was refreshing to see after the team had made a habit of getting out to slow starts this season. Prior to tonight, only the Lightning game in the opening week of the season stands out to me as one in which the Devils came out of the gates well. Even in their last game, a big win over the Oilers, New Jersey didn’t register a shot on goal until about 10 minutes into the contest. But tonight was different, as the Devils jumped on the Maple Leafs and seemed to get stronger as each of the 60 minutes ticked off the clock.

You wouldn’t know it by looking at the scoreboard after the first period, though. That’s because New Jersey native Anthony Stolarz was putting on a goaltending clinic. Keep in mind, this was the same Anthony Stolarz who robbed the Devils of a win last season at The Rock, stopping 38 of 39 shots to lead the Maple Leafs to a 2-1 overtime victory on December 10th. And through 20 minutes, he was doing it again. New Jersey was thoroughly controlling play, but Stolarz’ magic and a John Tavares goal that he batted out of the air and into the net conspired to put the Devils down 1-0 entering the second period.

And that’s when Jack Hughes and the Devils went to work.

Hughes and Jesper Bratt were absolutely flying tonight. They started their high wire act in the first period, but didn’t have any goals to show for it. The breakthrough came in the middle frame, as Hughes wired a wrister from the slot past Stolarz and in to tie the game. The marker came off a sweet feed from Bratt, and the Devils caught a break when Toronto head coach Craig Berube decided to challenge for goaltender interference. This was, quite simply, a bad challenge, as while Ondrej Palat was battling in front with Chris Tanev, Palat very clearly did not interfere with Stolarz. This unsuccessful challenge sent New Jersey to the power play, where they scored again. In the dying seconds of the man advantage, Timo Meier whipped a one-timer toward the net that was going wide. But it banked off a skate in front and right to Cody Glass, who buried the loose puck to give the Devils their first lead of the night.

The Devils were rolling, and they wouldn’t stop there. A few minutes later, Brenden Dillon took a nice pass from Luke Glendening and rifled a shot past Stolarz to finish off a 4-on-1 rush and extend New Jersey’s lead to 3-1. Please note, none of what you just read was a typo. That really happened, with that exact combination of players, under those circumstances. Really.

After Toronto got a goal back to cut New Jersey’s lead to 3-2, Simon Nemec (more on him later) made a nice play to force a turnover off the rush. Bratt scooped up the loose puck and made a killer stretch pass to Jack Hughes, who had a step on the Leafs defense and skated down the left wing on Stolarz. For the first time in what seems like generations, Hughes wound up and ripped a slap shot that beat Stolarz near-side, restoring the Devils’ two-goal lead.

When Brenden Dillon is finishing off 4-on-1’s and Jack Hughes is unleashing clappers, you know it’s your night.

And with that, the Devils took a 4-2 edge into the third period. The final frame was pretty uneventful, as New Jersey did a pretty good job of keeping their collective boot on the neck of the Maple Leafs, not allowing them any room to make a comeback. Then in the final minutes of the game, with the Toronto net empty, Bratt collected a puck in the neutral zone and made a pass across the ice to Hughes, who shot a puck that was partially deflected into the yawning cage to complete the hat trick, Hughes’ third of his career. The game would end on that 5-2 final score.

This was a great night for the Devils. Hughes was obviously the superstar, but just about every other player on the team contributed in some way. Hughes had the hat trick, Bratt assisted on all three of those goals, and eight other Devils collected points this evening. All while playing really good team defense and absolutely locking the game down in the third period.

The New Jersey Devils have won five straight games, and are officially rolling.

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

The Game Highlights: Courtesy of NHL.com

Allen Continues To Shine​


While Jack Hughes, Jesper Bratt, and the skaters put together a fantastic team effort, Jake Allen once again gave his team a quality start. Allen stopped 23 of 25 shots, good for a .920 sv%. According to Natural Stat Trick, he saved 1.07 Goals Above Expected. And he saved the best for last, absolutely robbing Morgan Rielly in the final minutes of the game. Keep in mind, that save came before Hughes’ empty-netter sealed it, so a goal there would have made the score 4-3 with enough time for the Maple Leafs to push for the tying goal. It was an absolutely monstrous save.

With Jacob Markstrom injured, Allen has been forced to take on a larger role than we all thought he would have at this point. But thus far, he has absolutely exceeded expectations. Things can change quickly in this league, especially with goaltenders, but between Allen’s terrific 2024-25 season and now his fantastic start to this campaign, it might be time to start taking about Allen as one of the higher-end goaltenders in the league.

Putting The “Special” In Special Teams​


The Devils continued to excel on special teams tonight. New Jersey’s penalty kill entered this contest having successfully killed off 16 straight man disadvantages. Well make it 18 in a row, as they killed both of Toronto’s power plays this evening. In fact, New Jersey was the team that almost scored during the first chance, as not only did the Leafs not register a shot on goal, but Nico Hischier almost buried one himself on a shorthanded 2-on-1. The only reason the Devils didn’t tally yet another shorthanded goal was because Stolarz made an incredible save. He gave up four goals tonight, but Stolarz had one of the best four-goals-against games I’ve seen in a while.

As for the power play, that unit went 1-for-2 tonight, with Glass’ marker in the second period proving to be crucial. Keefe continues to rotate his power play units, opting for Hamilton and Mercer in this game to go along with the staple forwards of Hughes, Hischier, and Bratt. It was his second unit that got on the board tonight though.

New Jersey relied on elite special teams to make it to the postseason a year ago, and early on in 2025-26, the Devils are proving that those units can be relied on again. The power play and penalty kill continue to be gamebreakers for New Jersey.

Palat’s Injury Scare​


Early in the first period, Ondrej Palat left the bench, leaving Hughes and Bratt to skate mostly with Paul Cotter until the opening frame ended. Palat did return at the beginning of the second and managed to finish the game, so he appears no worse for wear, which is nice to see.

At the time of this writing, I have not seen any indication why Palat left. I (and the MSG broadcast) only speculate that it was injury related. Maybe it was an equipment issue, who knows. Assuming it was some sort of health-related absence, it was nice to see him return. As much as a lot of us get on Palat, this team really cannot afford many more injuries.

Nemec’s Worst Game​


I thought Simon Nemec had a really bad game tonight. He did some noticeably good things, including creating the turnover that directly led to Hughes’ slap shot goal. He was also on the ice for the 4-on-1 that the Devils generated in the second period that resulted in Dillon’s goal.

But he was also the main character in the opening marker tonight, first icing the puck, then failing to box out Tavares in front, letting him bat the puck in to give the Maple Leafs an early lead. He was also the primary reason why Toronto scored their other goal tonight, stepping up on Tavares at the Devils’ blue line and failing to disrupt the play. This led to an odd-man rush and a tap-in goal for Matias Maccelli. According to Natural Stat Trick, Nemec posted a subterranean 5-on-5 Expected Goals For% of 15.59%. Per Hockey Stat Cards, Nemec was the worst Devil by GameScore this evening. My own personal eye test and multiple analytics models agree: Nemec was awful tonight.

At this point, I think Nemec has not forced head coach Sheldon Keefe to keep him in the lineup once Johnny Kovacevic returns. All the small sample size caveats apply, but while I do think Nemec has had his moments and has had a couple good games, he’s also struggled a little more than I would have liked on the young season. He’s getting mostly cushy deployment on the third pair with Brenden Dillon, and he’s still losing his minutes more than you’d want to see.

Again, it’s early and I still believe in Nemec long term. Heck, I believe in him short term too, as I think he is more than capable of rattling off a bunch of great games in a row. But at least through six games this season, Nemec has clearly been the sixth-best defenseman on the team in my opinion. And tonight was his worst game yet.

Keefe Finally Gets His Revenge​


Let’s end on a positive. Congrats to Sheldon Keefe for his first win over his new team. New Jersey lost all three games to Toronto last season, and they’ve struggled mightily against them in general in recent years, losing 14 of the last 17 meetings between the clubs.

But the win tonight finally gets the monkey off Keefe’s back. I have no idea if Keefe holds a lot of reverence or a lot of disdain for the Maple Leafs organization, or something in between. I’m not in the man’s head. But I do feel pretty safe in assuming that he really wanted to beat his old employer tonight after going 0-for-3 in 2024-25. Kudos to Keefe for that feather in his cap.

Next Time Out​


Tonight was the beginning of New Jersey’s first back-to-back this season. The Devils will return to The Rock to host the Minnesota Wild tomorrow night. Puck drop is slated for 7:00pm.

Your Take​


What did you make of tonight’s game? Aside from Jack Hughes, who impressed you the most? Do you agree that this was Nemec’s worst game of the season? Are you concerned at all with him? How encouraged are you by Allen’s start to the season? As always, thanks for reading!

Source: https://www.allaboutthejersey.com/d...ersey-devils-5-2-win-over-toronto-maple-leafs
 
2025-26 Gamethread #7: New Jersey Devils vs. Minnesota Wild

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The Matchup: The New Jersey Devils (5-1-0) at the Minnesota Wild (3-3-1).

The Time: 7:00 PM ET

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

The Game Preview: Matt wrote the preview this morning.

The Song of the Day: The New Jersey Devils are on a five-game winning streak, taking a win back from Toronto. Now, they play the Minnesota Wild at the Prudential Center in Newark. I couldn’t think of any Minnesota bands with a New Jersey connection off the top of my head, but the Devils are gathering wins at what you could call a supersonic pace. So, today’s song of the day is Supersonic by Soul Asylum, one of Minneapolis’s long-running music acts.

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...ethread-7-new-jersey-devils-vs-minnesota-wild
 
The Good and the Bad for the New Jersey Devils After 7 Games

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The New Jersey Devils completed their seventh game of the 2025-26 season last night, picking up a 4-1 win over Minnesota to improve themselves to 6-1-0 on the young season. They currently sit atop the Metropolitan Division and find themselves on the team’s first six game win streak in a long while. The odds of them winning the next 75 in a row are low, but right now there’s a lot going right for this Devils team. Today, we look at what’s been good through the first seven games, what could be better, and then finish it up with an optimistic outlook based on how the team has done so far.

The Good​

The Big Names are Delivering​


Jesper Bratt is leading the way with 11 points after adding an empty net goal last night. Jack Hughes has nine points, Timo Meier has seven, and Nico Hischier has six. Perhaps most surprising is that Dawson Mercer (who may or may not be a big name depending upon your definition) is well ahead of last season’s pace as he also has seven points right now as well. Maybe they all do not keep up their current pace, but seeing the leaders lead right out of the gate has been the start that the Devils have needed.

Meier and Mercer are especially encouraging. Timo has always been a streaky player, so to see him start a season healthy and have a strong streak right out of the gate is a good sign for a Devils team that needs its premier players to be putting pucks in the net. Ditto for Mercer who has drawn the ire of lot of fans for not really showing any growth after his sophomore season. If he stays relatively consistent with his pace going forward, we could be looking at 50-60 point Mercer again, rather than 30-35 point Mercer that we’ve seen for the past couple of seasons.

As per the big three, Hischier might have the fewest points so far of any player mentioned, but he’s still playing strong, creating a lot of chances and denying opposing players. Basically, Nico is being Nico, and if he were to score at his current pace across 82 games, he’d still finish with 70 points. Bratt and Jack meanwhile are on pace for 129 and 105 points respectively. Likely? Probably not, but let’s hope both stay hot and we get to see the first and maybe second 100 point season(s) in Devils history.

Jake Allen is Playing Exceptionally Well​


Allen has been somewhat forced into playing more games than maybe we would have expected him to at this point due to something I will talk about when I get to the bad, yet Jake has risen to the occasion. While he finally got a chance to rest last night, through his four appearances he’s sixth in the NHL with a .931 save percentage and seventh in the league with a 1.91 goals against average. He has also to this point saved 2.92 goals above average while also sporting a 4.33 goals saved above expected. Now, it is only four games after all, but Allen has played very well in front of the team, and he’s been giving them key/timely saves when needed.

Obviously, Allen is playing well above his career averages here, and one bad game at this point could send his stats plummeting, but having someone stabilizing the back end is always a plus. While the Devils defending has been pretty good overall, having a goalie not let in softies and bail out the team when they do make mistakes has largely contributed to their record so far. No matter who is in net on any given night, the whole team needs to play well, but again having someone to make the big saves when needed like Jake is doing now is a huge confidence boost.

The Penalty Kill​


Special teams early in the season can sometimes be misleading due to small sample sizes. For the Devils penalty kill, I would argue that being shorthanded 25 times across the first seven contests might be a decent enough sample. While it does mean the team needs to cut down on the amount of penalties they’re taking, the PK has been more than up to the task. Last night’s broadcast made mention that the team has killed 21 straight penalties, all across their last six contests, and have killed 24 of 25 overall. Yet somehow right now, a 96% kill rate is only good enough for third in the NHL! I’m aware Winnipeg and Buffalo are only .3% and .2% above them, but the absurdity of it still stands. Regardless of that, if the kill continues to remain a strength of the team, it should continue to lead to wins more often than not.

The Bad​

Jacob Markstrom: Hurt and Ineffective​


Markstrom currently finds himself on the injured list after a strange game which saw Allen depart after the second with cramps and Markstrom get bumped in the final minute resulting in him now missing time. What’s more concerning than being down one of the team’s main goaltending options for a couple of weeks is Marky’s play prior. Through seven periods of hockey, he’s only sporting a .845 save percentage, well below his career average. His goals against average is also almost at a 4 and he’s had a few bad goals go past him. Two and a third games isn’t a whole lot to go off if, but with the team’s tandem closer to the ends of their careers than the starts, it’s worrying to see Markstrom post such awful stats. If he doesn’t turn it around upon his return, the Devils might want to start looking into internal options to replace him rather than extending him.

Top Six Ondrej Palat​


Man, one injury and Sheldon Keefe just couldn’t help himself. After losing Evgenii Dadonov in game one, the team wasted little time putting Ondrej Palat back on the line with Jack Hughes and Jesper Bratt. While the broadcasters have been complementary of Palat’s play, I just don’t see it. I don’t think he’s doing any of the little things on the ice that they say he is any better than any other player like a Paul Cotter could do. Additionally, while Jack and Bratt have combined for 20 points, Palat has just one point, and it was a secondary assist as part of the second power play unit. He has contributed practically nothing while on the ice with his even strength line mates. Right not, this combination isn’t hurting the team (as evidenced by the six straight wins) but it’s more because Jack and Bratt are playing so well in spite of Palat.

Final Thoughts and Your Take​


Honestly, with a 6-1-0 record, there’s not a whole lot of negative to be upset about. The first issue is something to be dealt with down the road once Markstrom returns, and the second might resolve itself once Dadonov is healthy. As long as the good from that section continues, and the Devils keep winning more often than not, then the small issues won’t compound and should wind up being of little to no consequence.

What are your thoughts on the good and bad happening with the Devils right now; do you agree with my highlights and lowlights? Is there something I missed that you think deserves to be spotlighted? Anything you have worries about as the young season continues? Leave any and all comments below and thanks as always for reading!

Source: https://www.allaboutthejersey.com/d...e-bad-for-the-new-jersey-devils-after-7-games
 
Arseny Gritsyuk Scores First Career Goal As New Jersey Devils Defeat Minnesota Wild, 4-1

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Way back in 2019, the late, great Ray Shero selected Arseny Gritsyuk in the fifth round of the NHL entry draft, 129th overall. Over the years, he developed from an intriguing dart throw in the late rounds to legit scoring winger prospect. However, as much as the Devils would have wanted him to contribute to their own lineup, Gritsyuk remained in his native Russia to continue lighting lamps in the KHL. But more than half a decade since Ray Shero called his name, Gritsyuk finally made the jump to North America to begin the 2025-26 season. And tonight, in his seventh career NHL game in front of a lively home crowd, Gritsyuk scored the first goal of his career in a 4-1 victory over the Minnesota Wild.

Ever since he was drafted, we’ve been told that Gritsyuk’s shot would be his best asset in the NHL. He hasn’t been able to get his shot off as much as we all might have liked through the first six games of the season, but when he did unleash it, we saw how dangerous it was. So it’s fitting that his first career tally came off a terrific shot where he just overpowered Wild goalie Filip Gustavsson for a power play goal. It came immediately off a faceoff win, and Gritsyuk put every pound of his bodyweight behind his shot for the score. It was an incredible moment for everyone’s favorite Telegram star.

It was also fitting that Gritsyuk scored tonight, considering this was his debut in the top six. Cody Glass did not play in this game (the club called it an upper-body injury, and after the game head coach Sheldon Keefe said he doesn’t anticipate it being a long term thing), so Dawson Mercer slid down to center the third line, and Gritsyuk took his place on the wing with Nico Hischier and Timo Meier. Although he hadn’t scored, Gritsyuk certainly earned the promotion to the top six. He collected a bunch of assists in the early going, he showed he can keep pace with the speed of the NHL game, and he proved he can effectively battle along the wall and in the defensive zone. Gritsyuk has showed a more well-rounded game than I think a lot of us expected, and head coach Sheldon Keefe rewarded him with a bump up to the Hischier line. Against a tough matchup of the Kirill Kaprizov line, I thought Gritsyuk performed well. And although it didn’t come at even strength, he was rewarded for his efforts with that first career goal.

Congratulations to Arseny. Here’s to many, many more goals to come.

Aside from Gritsyuk, tonight was a fantastic team effort all around. New Jersey outshot the Wild 35-30, with much of the damage Minnesota did coming when the Devils had a multi-goal advantage. In other words, score effects played a big role in making that shot count look as close as it was. The overall game was much closer to the 4-1 final score than the 35-30 shot count (New Jersey outshot Minnesota 14-8 in the first period, just to prove the point). Perhaps the best indication that the Devils outplayed the Wild this evening is that Kaprizov, Minnesota’s best player and one of the best players on the planet (as well as the highest-paid) was held without a shot in 21:35 of ice time. When the team is suffocating a world-class talent like him, you know it was a good night.

The new-look third line of Mercer, Connor Brown, and Paul Cotter was the best trio on the ice tonight in my opinion. Cotter got the scoring started in the first period, burying a slick feed from Brown off a nice cycle. In just over nine minutes of 5-on-5 ice time tonight, the line out-attempted their opponents 16-10, outshot their opponents 8-4, and outscored their opponents 2-0. That second goal came off the stick of Brenden “Bobby Orr” Dillon, who has now scored in consecutive games. He buried a long, seeing-eye shot from the point that found its way through traffic and into the back of the net. That goal doesn’t happen without some great work by the Mercer line, and while Keefe has not wanted to play Mercer at center this season, Mercer showed that he can at least hold his own centering a third line. Credit where it’s due: Mercer had a great game. He looked strong down the middle, he was responsible defensively, and he collected a pair of assists. I assume Mercer will return to the wing once Glass returns, but if tonight is any indication, New Jersey is in good hands with Mercer as their 3C.

The offense as a whole looked connected and cohesive, the defense looked tough to play against and structured, and the overall energy level was strong, especially for the second half of a back-to-back (more on that below). To me at least, there was not much doubt who the better team tonight was. New Jersey took care of business in front of their home crowd.

And now, they’re really rolling. Tonight’s win was New Jersey’s sixth straight victory. After going almost three full seasons without a winning streak of more than three games, the Devils have doubled that meager output seven games into this campaign. This six-game bender is the longest the franchise has produced since that now legendary 13-game winning streak from October to November of 2022. And it’s not like they’ve been picking on the dregs of the league either. After losing their season opener, New Jersey has beaten Tampa Bay, Columbus, Florida, Edmonton, Toronto, and now Minnesota. Aside from Columbus, those are all playoff teams from a season ago, including both Stanley Cup finalists. The Devils are looking unstoppable against some of the best teams in the league. And keep in mind, this has been done while absorbing a slew of injuries to prominent players. They’re getting healthier now, but they still aren’t at full strength, with Glass being another addition to the injury report.

The vibes are sky high around this Devils squad. Things can change quickly in this league, but early on, this team is showing just how dangerous they can be. Arseny Gritsyuk and the New Jersey Devils have officially put the league on notice.

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

The Game Highlights: Courtesy of NHL.com

The Debut Of Daws​


With Jacob Markstrom out, the Devils have been rolling with Jake Allen since Markstrom went to IR. They called Nico Daws up from Utica to replace Markstrom, but he hadn’t gotten into a game until tonight. Against a tough opponent on the second half of a back-to-back, Daws wasn’t exactly eased back into the NHL this evening.

And yet, Daws was terrific. He turned aside 29 of 30 shots, good for a .967 sv%. According to Natural Stat Trick, he stopped a remarkable 3.18 Goals Above Expected. I thought he looked poised and calm when he needed to be, as well as quick and energetic when he needed to be. The skaters in front of him supported him well, but Daws really brought his A-game in his season debut.

New Jersey has been getting incredible goaltending over this winning streak. Allen has been sensational, and now Daws has stepped in and not missed a beat. We can’t expect the goaltending to remain this hot all season long, but for now it’s been one of the most important factors in the team putting together a six-game winning streak.

Another Season Debut​


Aside from Daws, there was another Devil making his season debut tonight: Stefan Noesen. The veteran winger missed the early part of the schedule due to a groin injury that he aggravated in the offseason, but he was finally healthy enough to return to the lineup this evening.

In his season debut, Noesen played a modest 8:14, skating on the fourth line with Luke Glendening and Brian Halonen. He didn’t register a point or a shot on net, but he did throw two hits, so he was reasonably engaged based on the stats. Going by my own personal eye test, I honestly didn’t notice him much out there, which is both a good and bad thing.

We’ll see how long it takes for Noesen to get back up to speed. For now, it was nice to see him back.

Special Teams Continue To Dominate​


Another night, another killer outing from both special teams units.

Let’s start with the penalty kill. New Jersey entered tonight’s contest having killed off 18 consecutive penalties. Well they went 3-for-3 against the Wild, so the streak is now up to 21. This is even more impressive when you consider that Minnesota began the night with the league’s top-ranked power play, converting on almost 35% of their man advantages. And New Jersey found a way to shut down that high-flying unit. The Devils are just not allowing opponents anything on the penalty kill, and in the rare instances when a team does get a look at the net, Markstrom, Allen or Daws have been there to shut the door every time. It cannot be overstated just how much the penalty kill has contributed to the current win streak.

Meanwhile, the power play converted yet again thanks to Gritsyuk’s marker. Overall the power play went 1-for-2, and is now third-best in the league (30.0%) behind only Minnesota and the Vegas Golden Knights. Special teams carried New Jersey to the playoffs a season ago, and while the Devils are playing well enough at 5-on-5 to not have to rely on elite special teams, they have elite special teams to fall back on nonetheless. The Devils are firing on all cylinders in every aspect of the game right now.

Overpowering​


Last season, we would occasionally see Sheldon Keefe put Jack Hughes, Nico Hischier, and Jesper Bratt out for a shift. Usually this would happen late in a period or when a TV timeout was imminent. I thought it was a smart move to try and load up on a line when a break in the action was close.

Tonight, we saw Keefe do this with Timo Meier in Bratt’s place. Hughes-Hischier-Meier got a shift with about 6:30 left in the first period and had a terrific shift where they created tons of chances. Then they got another one with about 13:30 left in the second period off of a Wild icing. It’s a small thing in the grand scheme of things, but I did want to point it out. I really like Keefe loading up on offensive firepower when he smells blood in the water.

Back-To-Back Tracker​


The New Jersey Devils have struggled with the second half of back-t0-backs over the past two campaigns. It’s been such an issue, I even did a deeper dive on it over the summer. In 2023-24, New Jersey went 3-11-2 in the second half of back-to-backs, and last season, they went 3-8-1. Completely unacceptable numbers.

Tonight was the first of these scenarios in 2025-26, and at least for one game, the Devils have figured out how to play with zero days of rest. They have 15 total back-to-backs this season, so they still have plenty of these left to go. But at least for one night, it was so nice to see them actually figure out how to win the second half of a back-to-back. Here’s hoping they can do it more often.

Yet Another Debut​


In addition to Nico Daws and Stefan Noesen, there was someone else making their season debut tonight:

Cory Schneider on Devils broadcasts.

Schneider had been doing analysis for New York Islanders games recently, and now he (and Mike Rupp, who we will see soon I imagine) have joined Devils telecasts on MSG for 2025-26. Tonight was his first foray into Devils hockey on TV. Overall, I thought he was solid. He didn’t wow me, but he certainly didn’t make me want to mute the television either. I wish I had more high-level analysis for you than that, but that’s how I truly felt about his debut.

In any case, Schneider was a great Devil that came to the organization at the exact wrong time. He was an elite goaltender for a few years when the team around him needed to rebuild, and when the Devils started to get good again, Schneider’s game (and health) started to fade, and he soon retired. It’s a shame, as I think Schneider deserved a much better fate in a Devils uniform, and I appreciated him during his time in the red and black. It’s nice to see him with the organization in some capacity again.

Next Time Out​


The Devils are back in action on Friday when they welcome the San Jose Sharks to New Jersey. Puck drop is slated for 7:00pm.

Your Take​


What did you make of tonight’s game? What did you think of Gritsyuk’s first goal and debut in the top six? What did you think of Daws and Noesen in their season debuts? What did you think of Schneider on the MSG broadcast? What are you expecting next time out against a young, rebuilding Sharks team? As always, thanks for reading!

Source: https://www.allaboutthejersey.com/d...s-new-jersey-devils-defeat-minnesota-wild-4-1
 
Game Preview #8: New Jersey Devils vs. San Jose Sharks

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The Matchup: The New Jersey Devils (6-1-0) vs. San Jose Sharks (1-4-2)

The Time: 7:00pm ET

The Broadcast: MSGSN, Devils Hockey Radio

Last Devils Game​


On Wednesday, the Devils played the second half of a back-to-back against the Minnesota Wild at The Rock. Arseny Gritsyuk scored his first career goal, Nico Daws made his season debut, and New Jersey pushed their winning streak to six with a 4-1 victory.

Last Sharks Game​


San Jose visited Madison Square Garden last night to battle the Rangers. In an absolute barnburner, Macklin Celebrini scored a hat trick and produced five total points as the Sharks defeated the Rangers in overtime, 6-5. It was the Sharks’ first win of their season.

Bratt’s Point Streak​


Everything is coming up Devils lately, so I feel as though this has flown under the radar. I have to raise my hand on this as well, as I haven’t mentioned it until now either, but I can no longer ignore the great Jesper Bratt. Through New Jersey’s first seven games, Bratt has registered a point in every single one of them. He’s been a model of consistency for New Jersey over the past few seasons, and he continues to be one early on in 2025-26.

In case you’re wondering, the Devils record for point streak to start a season is 11…in 2022-23…by Jesper Bratt.

Can Bratt catch his own record? We have four games to go until he gets there. In the meantime, Bratt is up to 11 points (four goals, seven assists) through seven games. He is on pace for about 129 points. As much as I love Bratt, I seriously doubt he will reach that lofty number. But for now, Bratt has been as important as anybody in carrying the offense through New Jersey’s winning streak.

Glass’ Status​


Cody Glass did not play in Wednesday’s game. According to head coach Sheldon Keefe in his postgame presser, Glass suffered an upper-body injury in Tuesday’s game in Toronto, and while he grinded through it to finish that contest, he couldn’t go on Wednesday. New Jersey did not practice yesterday, nor did Keefe address the media, so we didn’t get any indication on Glass’ status for tonight.

I hope it was just a matter of being cautious during the second half of a back-to-back. It’s not like Glass has been amazing to start the season, but he’s been good, and has certainly done his part in shutting down depth competition on a nightly basis. If Glass can’t play this evening, expect Dawson Mercer to once again center the third line. Mercer did very well as the 3C against Minnesota, finishing with two assists while centering Paul Cotter and Connor Brown. Even if Mercer can hold down the third line in Glass’ absence, I would still love to see Glass return sooner rather than later.

Hischier’s Case For The Selke (Or Hart)​


On Monday, I took a look at the line of Nico Hischier, Timo Meier, and Dawson Mercer and their deployment and results against elite competition. It was a fun exercise to do, and maybe I’ll keep track of this through the season as a little pet project. With the Florida Panthers’ Aleksander Barkov out for the season, the race for the Selke Trophy is wide open, and Hischier has emerged as an early favorite to claim the award in Barkov’s absence. If Hischier and his line continue to get fed brutal competition on a nightly basis, and more importantly, if they continue to win those brutal matchups, Hischier should be in great shape to win the Selke. There won’t be many in the national media pounding the table for Hischier and the Devils, so we might have to start pushing the Hischier agenda here!

Anyway, since I wrote that piece on Monday, New Jersey has played two more games. On Tuesday in Toronto, Hischier drew the dreaded Auston Matthews assignment. Matthews centered the Maple Leafs’ top line of Matthew Knies and Max Domi, and the numbers, quite frankly, are silly. At 5-on-5, Meier-Hischier-Mercer played 10:16 together. They won the shot attempts battle 10-4, and the Expected Goals battle by posting a ludicrous 94.74% xGF%. Hischier played 6:31 against Matthews specifically, and in that time, Hischier’s xGF% was 95.00%. In fact, Hischier posted an xGF% of at least 88% against Matthews, Knies, Domi, John Tavares, and William Nylander. That is a mind-bending level of domination against some of the toughest deployment a player can be saddled with.

Wednesday, on the other hand, did not go as well. Back home against Kirill Kaprizov (and Matt Boldy and Joel Eriksson Ek), the Hischier line (this time with Gritsyuk in for Mercer) posted an xGF% of 28.49% in 11:34 of 5-on-5 ice time. In 10:18 against Kaprizov specifically, Hischier did a little better, registering an xGF% of 40.33%. So this was certainly a loss for Hischier and pals. Perhaps playing against a rested Wild team while skating in the second half of a back-to-back in which you had to travel between games played a part. Either way, Hischier has had one amazing game and one bad game so far this week.

Expect Hischier and his line to get hard-matched against the Sharks’ wunderkind Macklin Celebrini tonight. That should be a fun matchup.

Celebrini And The Young Guns​


When discussing the San Jose Sharks, the conversation must begin with Macklin Celebrini. The first overall pick in last year’s draft had an incredibly promising rookie season in 2024-25, and while his team has disappointed so far this year, he has not. Celebrini entered last night’s Sharks game with six points…he exited with 11 points. A hat trick and two assists is superstar stuff, and while Celebrini might not be a superstar yet, he’s getting there.

Then again, the raw point total is masking some pretty hideous underlying numbers. According to Natural Stat Trick, at 5-on-5, Celebrini is rocking an xGF% just over 34%. The rest of his big advanced stats are in the same range. Yes, it’s very early, and yes, the team around him is terrible, but those are still jaw-droppingly bad numbers. Still, he’s outscoring his opponents at 5-on-5, and sometimes it’s better to be lucky than good. I have no doubt the process numbers will come for Celebrini.

He’s not the only young stud the Devils have to worry about though. His primary running mate, Will Smith, also had a big night at MSG on Thursday. He scored two goals (including the OT winner), added two assists, and is now up to eight points in seven games on the young season. William Eklund recorded three assists last night and enters with five points in seven games. Michael Misa, the second overall pick in this summer’s draft, made the club and has two assists in four games. Sam Dickinson didn’t play last night, but he’s looked great himself, because while he doesn’t have a point through five games, his underlying metrics are actually really good (an xGF% just above 55% will certainly play).

San Jose has a ton of talent. They’re young and raw, and they’re all learning how to win in this league together, so while they are a little less than the sum of their parts right now, it won’t be long before the Sharks are a capital “P” Problem for the rest of the league.

It’s A Trap!​


Not only is this the second half of a back-to-back for the Sharks, but their game last night went to overtime. It was an emotional game too, as they picked up their first win of the season after going winless in their first six contests. Meanwhile the Devils have the rest advantage, are riding a six-game winning streak, and now play a bad team after beating up on some of the better teams in the league. They also have a big home-and-home with another elite team, the Colorado Avalanche, coming up right after this game against the Sharks.

In other words, this is the Trappiest Trap Game that has ever Trapped.

New Jersey somehow lost both games against San Jose last season. They got absolutely goalie’d by old pal Mackenzie Blackwood at The Rock, then they failed to show up in a close loss in San Jose later in the season. I sure hope the Devils get themselves ready to play tonight. They cannot afford to treat this like a pushover game. If they do, San Jose will beat them. Plain and simple.

I’d be lying if I said I wasn’t worried about this being a classic trap game, but at the same time, I’ve reached the point where I trust this team to show up. I hope they prove me right.

Potential Lineup​


You can find how the Sharks lined up last night here. Expect much the same this evening.

Your Take​


What do you make of tonight’s game? Do you trust the Devils not to fall for the trap game? Are you excited to watch Macklin Celebrini play? Who else of the Sharks’ young guns interests you? As always, thanks for reading!

Source: https://www.allaboutthejersey.com/d...review-8-new-jersey-devils-vs-san-jose-sharks
 
Frisky Sharks Visit The Rock For Some Friday Night Hockey

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They can’t all be hanging in The Louvre. Sometimes you have to find a way to to grind them out and the Devils did just that, taking down the Sharks 3-1 tonight on the strength of 2 PP goals from Dougie and a heavy dose of shot suppression.

The word this season has been maturity, and if you haven’t read Jared’s excellent piece on it, well you should. The general narrative coming from the locker room was “respect the opponent” which was exactly what the Rangers players said they didn’t do last night. That’s a shame, anyone know what happened?

1st: Did They Respect Their Opponent?​


Well, not at first. It seems that mantra didn’t really hit home as the Devils start flat, lacked crispness and compete. The early tone was set as Nico took an early penalty on a failed clear by getting his stick tied up in Skinner’s legs. The sloppiness led to a broken zone entry and the Sharks ended the Devils impressive PK kill streak at 21 – a bad bounce made its way to Eklund who beat Allen low blocker. 1-0 them with 17:35 left in the period.

Still not entirely awake, we continued to struggle with crispness, repeatedly got tied up getting through the neutral zone – the only real 5 on 5 opportunity was from Cotter who made a nice power move to the paint where he was robbed by a nice pad save by Askarov.

The Devils started to tilt the ice mid-period, highlighted by a hook by Gaudette on yet another nice power move by Cotter through the slot. Largely sloppy, the power play contained one grade A chance for Nico who was robbed by a sprawling blocker save by Askarov. While they were unsuccessful with the man advantage, they did start stringing together some decent connected shifts, but the last 10 were largely uneventful and frankly pretty sloppy with a “get to the room” feel.

2nd: There’s The Team We All Know​


Well, good thing they did get to the room because the second was a much better, more thorough period and as has been the case, the Devils got to their game quickly. Starting on the power play certainly helps, and we cashed in care of Douglas Entertainment Hamilton who crept in from the point and sniped one past a sprawling Askarov after a scramble in front.

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Shortly after a sloppy breakdown led to a partial breakaway for Skinner, the Sharks got a rebound to bounce in and it appeared to be 2-0. But wait! Sheldon and the gang called a challenge for offsides – these tend to never be wrong and sure enough the goal was called back. In a bit of confusion, Nemec was called for a penalty on the play as he took down Skinner during the play. It seems the suits at the league thought about his exact scenario and rule 37.2 of the goal review procedures states:

“If One or more penalties (minor or major) are assessed between the time of the ‘off-side’ play and the video review that disallows the apparent goal, the offending team(s) (and responsible players(s)) will still be required to serve the penalt(ies) identified and assessed, and the time the penalt(ies) will be recorded as the time as which the play should have been stopped for the ‘off-side’ infraction.

If you aren’t in a reading mood (odd place to be if you aren’t) basically Nemec had to serve the penalty, so we dodged a bullet, but caught some shrapnel. After yet another excellent kill, Mercer drew a hook on Skinner with a nice wily veteran move, trapping his stick and not really giving Skinner a choice but to hook him. Off to the power play we go! After some outstanding puck movement and chance after chance, Jack danced around the back of the net, and found Dougie once again creeping into the slot where he blew one through Askarov.

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At 12:34 Iorio flipped a puck over the glass putting the boys back on the power play once again, and shortly after at 13:30 Desharnais decided to try kidney surgery on Noesen which sent us to a 5 on 3. After a relentless shooting gallery where nothing fell (but generated almost 2 full expected goals) the Sharks were back to evens. It did seem like the boys were feeding Dougie for the hatty on this one. This powerplay put the Devils on the front foot and for the first time all night they strung together consecutive strong shifts with significant O-Zone pressure. Between the power plays and Ozone time we were able to hold the Sharks to zero shots in the 2nd. I’m not a coach, but that seems like a good strategy.

Stop Playing With Your Food!​


Off to the 3rd with what felt like both precarious lead, but also somewhat safe. That make sense? No? Anyway, We were holding up well with a 2-1 lead, but with their talent that could’ve broken at any moment with the smallest of mistakes. More penalties didn’t help as Brown got a little too high on Wennberg’ stick and caught his hands at 1:35 of the 3rd. Once again the PK stood up and killed this one off with relative ease but 6 minutes later, we would find ourselves short AGAIN after Timo tried to remove Liljegren’s clavicle at 7:41. This time we got some puck luck for yet ANOTHER successful kill, the highlight being Jake the snake’s point blank mask save. I’m gonna go out on a limb and say that might have been a good break for us.

After being set free, Timo was a menace and had several great close chances, bullying his way to shots. He also decided to pigeon toss 6’7” Desharnais in front of Askarov – I’m assuming they were exchanging ideas about Halloween decorations and disagreed. Mad Timo is fun, he is an animal when he wants to be. The crowd seemed to enjoy it as well breaking out into a “Timo!” *clap* *clap* “Timo!” chant. Love it, nice work everyone.

The rest of the 3rd was relatively uneventful except for one minor booboo (see above about giving these guys an inch) and Jake bailed the boys out again with a great glove save on a short ice breakaway. The sexiest red head in all the land added the dagger, and we are done and dusted, 3-1. 7 in a row. Wagon season is here kiddos, next stop is a major home and away test against the Avs Sunday and Tuesday – a bit of an odd schedule quirk.

Some additional scattered thoughts​


Luke had a hilarious spaz for some reason – I assuming because he missed some chances. It gave off youngest sibling vibes. Otherwise he has been OUTSTANDING this season. His play at the offensive blue line has been exceptional, his decisions in all three zones have been sound, and he has added a physical element to his recoveries where he legit just tosses guys away.

Speaking of evolving games, Dougie is like a whole new guy. He’s using his size, has been laying some booming hits, is playing sound defense and is in a regular rotation on the PK where he has been stellar. And some of you wanted to sell him for a bag of pucks. Pepperidge Farm remembers.

Nemec had a second consecutive strong all around game after some rough moments in Toronto. More of this please Simon, he still is showing flashes of strong 2 way play, mixed with some brain farts. Reminds of someone-who-I-shall-not-name.

Dillon has also been outstanding as well so far this season – his new bionic neck seems to be working out.

Might as well mention Siegs and Pesce too – what absolute warriors. They would jump in front of a ‘75 Buick Wagon if it was on close to being on goal.

Well, now I’m going to write a longer blog about the D group so far. Look what you made me do.

We continue to get solid, if not spectacular goaltending from Jake and Daws with Marky out. Love it. I’ll go ahead and say it, I feel more comfortable with Allen in goal than Markstrom right now.

Not a lot to hate here friends, even when it’s not great, we still found a way. What did you make of tonight?

LGD

Source: https://www.allaboutthejersey.com/d...s-visit-the-rock-for-some-friday-night-hockey
 
2025-26 Gamethread #8: New Jersey Devils vs. San Jose Sharks

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The Matchup: The New Jersey Devils (6-1-0) versus the San Jose Sharks (1-4-2).

The Time: 7:00 PM ET

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

The Game Preview: Jackson 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...thread-8-new-jersey-devils-vs-san-jose-sharks
 
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