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New Jersey Devils Prospect Update: Daws Shuts Out Senators

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This past weekend, the Utica Comets earn a shutout, then get shutout in what has become a frustrating season of non-scoring.

Everything’s Coming Up Nico​


Nico Daws made 19 saves to earn the shutout Friday night in a 3-0 victory over the Belleville Senators. Center Matyas Melovsky scored his second goal of the season in the first period, which would end up becoming the game-winner. Defensemen prospects Seamus Casey and Ethan Edwards both earned assists. Shane LaChance finally ended up on the scoresheet with a primary assist on Angus Crookshank’s fourth of the season in the 2nd period to close out the scoring. Edwards would also earn a fighting major in defense of his goaltender.

Love seeing this from Ethan Edwards. He's got the fire, leadership and overall ability you want to see from a defenseman.

If the injuries continue to build on the back end for New Jersey, Edwards should get a look in the show. #NJDevils pic.twitter.com/grRL6W9zVe

— Daniel Rebain 🇺🇲🇵🇱 (@pvtmcbain) November 8, 2025

Daws has been outstanding to start the season with a 2-2-0 record, 1.51 GAA and .942 SV%. If only the Comets could score more goals, they might slip out of the basement. Unfortunately, that’s something they failed to do on Saturday getting shutout by the Wilkes-Barre Scranton Penguins 4-0. Goaltender Jakub Malek earned the loss, his fourth, after stopping 23 of 26 shots. That is the fourth time in the first ten games the Comets have failed to score a goal, a pace of about 28 throughout the season. According to an AI search, the record for a AHL team getting shutout over the course of a season is 15 by the 1998-99 Atlantic Knights, so if the Comets do not start finding the twine with more regularity, they may make some dubious history.

Around the Pool:​

  • I somehow missed this rocket wrister by Center Mason Moe, who is off to a respectable start in his collegiate career with 2 goals and 2 assists in his first 10 games for the University of Minnesota.
Mason Moe is quick to tie things up for @GopherHockey 👀

📺: @BigTenNetwork pic.twitter.com/ubNBwYvuYP

— Big Ten Hockey (@B1GHockey) October 31, 2025
  • Only two Devils of prospect age remain pointless so far this season: Josh Filmon and Lenni Hameenaho. The latter is particularly a head-scratcher. Hameenaho missed one game this season, but has failed to register a point in his first nine. Filmon has only suited up for four contests.
  • Forward Ben Kevan found himself wide open for this power play goal, his 3rd tally of the season.
File this PP goal under things we love to see from Ben Kevan 😌#BeTheTradition pic.twitter.com/ifCbZbZ50O

— Sun Devil Hockey (@SunDevilHockey) November 1, 2025
  • Lastly, Goaltender Mikhail Yegorov was almost ejected for the lamest headbutt ever.
Play where Mikhail Yegorov was initially ejected for headbutting, reduced to 2 minutes for roughing. Seems soft to call anything, personally. pic.twitter.com/h9Zml3P2kd

— Josh (@Kinch389) November 9, 2025

Your Thoughts​


Have some thoughts? Are they hockey-related? Post them below.

Source: https://www.allaboutthejersey.com/p...evils-prospect-update-daws-shuts-out-senators
 
The NHL has a Problem Keeping Players Healthy, and They Owe It To Their Fans To Try To Do Something To Address It

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There was one line from Elliotte Friedman’s most recent 32 Thoughts column that caught my attention this week.

I don’t have an answer for this, but there is a lot of concern about all of the injuries. Maybe next year is different when the season starts earlier and the schedule isn’t so compressed. But everyone mentions the amount of injuries.

This shouldn’t surprise you, a Devils fan reading this on a Devils-centric blog, one bit. We know all too well that the Devils have been ravaged by injuries as much as anyone in the early portion of the season, seemingly losing somebody everytime they take the ice. With Dougie Hamilton going down with a lower body injury last week against the Montreal Canadiens, the Devils are essentially down their entire right side of the defense as Brett Pesce and Johnathan Kovacevic aren’t coming back anytime soon.

Evgenii Dadonov has been out since the season opener. Zack MacEwen just returned to the lineup this week after landing on LTIR after one game. Connor Brown has missed the last five games and counting. Cody Glass missed time. Stefan Noesen started late because of the groin injury he suffered last season. Jacob Markstrom missed a couple weeks.

That’s nine names I just rattled off there, which doesn’t include Seamus Casey or Marc McLaughlin starting the season on season-opening injured reserve. It also doesn’t include Shane LaChance or Lenni Hameenaho getting banged up in the Prospects Challenge and missing most of training camp. That’s a lot of injuries considering we’re not even a quarter of the way through the season at this point, and the fact the Devils are STILL among the teams with the best record in the league is a testament to the depth that Tom Fitzgerald assembled on this roster.

When it comes to injuries though, things aren’t much better across the league, as it seems like there’s star players going down everywhere you look. And there are a lot of notable names missing games who aren’t on that website I just linked. The Tkachuk brothers are out. Sasha Barkov is out. Mark Stone is on LTIR again, and as I write this late Tuesday night, I just saw that Auston Matthews and Anthony Stolarz both left the Maple Leafs game early only to not return. It doesn’t matter if you’re a grizzled veteran like Chris Tanev or an intriguing young player like Jake Neighbours. It doesn’t matter if you’re a behemoth of a man like Matt Rempe, a smaller player like Vincent Trocheck, or someone like Rickard Rakell who is somewhere in the middle when it comes to size.

There’s been a lot of injuries this year.

And here’s the thing with that…..it’s not good for the NHL.

Why Promoting Your Star Players Matters, and Why Keeping Them Healthy Matters​


The NHL has done a better job the last few years of highlighting their star players and their personalities on and off the ice. Turn on any Devils game (or any NHL game in general) and you will have seen the “Work From Home” commercial featuring Jack Eichel, Mitch Marner, Sidney Crosby, and others. I’d link the video here if the NHL’s YouTube account hadn’t recently made said video private, but you surely have seen the ad, set to “9 to 5” by Dolly Parton.

I’m not saying these “The Next Golden Era Is Now” ads are reinventing the wheel when it comes to promoting players, nor am I saying casual sports fans are flocking to the NHL in droves because Jack Eichel and Mitch Marner are goofing off in an office setting in an ad. But there’s been enough of these ads the last few years where the NHL is finally starting to get what more successful sports leagues like the NFL and NBA figured out decades ago.

Star players do a lot of cool things in games. They’re fun to watch. In many cases, they’re easy to root for.

Promote them.

The problem with that though is how are you supposed to promote them when they can’t stay on the ice?

Remember a few years ago when Jack Hughes caught some heat in hockey circles when he chirped Viktor Arvidsson by saying “people pay to watch me play” after he felt Arvidsson was taking a run at him. Jack wasn’t too far returned from a lengthy absence due to a shoulder injury, and it would be understandable that he would be sensitive and protective of his health given the circumstances. I’m not saying Jack Hughes is necessarily thinking bigger picture when it comes to promoting the league when he’s in self preservation mode. But the thing about that incident that was true at the time and is still true today is that Jack Hughes is right. People do pay to watch him play. They don’t pay to watch the Viktor Arvidssons of the world take runs at people.

Devils fans, or really fans of any NHL team, will always go to watch their team play. But it would be naive to think that Jack Hughes, who is the Devils biggest star in terms of being a box office draw, hasn’t converted some fans who weren’t necessarily fans of the Devils before he was on the team. You don’t think that the guy that Steve Valiquette infamously deemed “Instagram Hockey” might owe some of that popularity to the 606,000 people or so who follow him on Instagram?

Like it or not, Jack Hughes is a draw. Casual fans know who he is and they want to see him to Jack Hughes things. They do indeed pay to see him play. He’s a big part of the reason why fans of the other 31 teams might want to go to a Devils game as opposed to, say, the Flames, who with all due respect do not have a star player on the same level as Hughes. Fans of other teams now circle the Devils on the calendar for when the Devils come to town as much as we might circle on our calendars when Vancouver comes to town to see Quinn Hughes. Or when Edmonton comes to town to see Connor McDavid. Or when Colorado comes to town to see Nathan MacKinnon or Cale Makar. They weren’t doing that in the mid 2010s when the Devils team lacked marketable star players.

It’s important to remember that not every fan who goes to games is a season ticket holder who is going to just about every game. Just like anything else in 2025, going to an NHL game can be an expensive night out for the family. Most people might only have enough disposable income to go to one game a year, and they pick and choose their spots depending upon a variety of factors, with the opponent and what star player is coming to their city being a part of that decision making process. This stuff matters in a league where how you do at the gate has a direct impact on hockey related revenues, which ultimately affects the salary cap, and by extension, the growth of the league.

Players like the Tkachuk brothers are draws, whether its in their respective markets or around the league. We know this because every fan wishes their team was the one that traded for Matthew Tkachuk when he was available a few years ago, and every fan wishes their team can be the one to pry Brady Tkachuk out of Ottawa. If they’re not the best American-born player currently in the league, Auston Matthews probably is. He is a draw as well, and at the end of the day, people pay to see them play too.

Except we can’t see them play because they’re out hurt. This is a problem.

The Solution Isn’t As Simple as “Fire Everyone”​


Generally speaking, I think the natural inclination and response from fans is to look for someone to blame when things go poorly. And to be fair, there are instances where you can indeed blame somebody for an injury. When Matt Rempe elbows Jonas Siegenthaler in the head and then chirps afterwards, yes, Rempe deserves blame for giving Siegenthaler a concussion. He’s a hack who doesn’t belong in the NHL. When Nick Suzuki, Auston Watson, or Billy Sweezey cross-check Nico Hischier, its their fault if they injure him in the process. Especially if, in the case of Watson, its a completely unnecessary hit. Or if in the case of Sweezey, its a bunch of repeated cross checks from another hack who doesn’t belong in the NHL.

If your takeaway is “the training and conditioning staff is doing a terrible job and they need to go”, I think you’re wrong. I’d argue that not only do you have no clue what you’re talking about, but if teams reacted as haphazardly as fans do on social media, there would be 32 job listings for head trainers next week for each club. Nobody would be satisfied with the job their team is doing.

I’m not trying to carry water for the Devils medical staff. I’m old enough to remember when Taylor Hall was day-to-day for months only to undergo season ending knee surgery in 2019. I don’t think the Devils are the most forthcoming NHL organization when it comes to divulging injury information publicly, and I didn’t like Sheldon Keefe’s flippant response the other day when pressed about Dougie Hamilton’s injury and if it was a lower-body injury. Considering that Hamilton missed significant time last season with a lower-body injury, he’s missed time just about every year he’s been in New Jersey, and the fact that there was nothing apparent that stood out from rewatching the tape, its a fair question to ask.

That said, the Devils are as data-driven and analytics-driven as any other professional sports team. They have a whole legion of people on their staff who work directly with the players and know their bodies and what they’re dealing with. They’ve only continued to add to that list this past offseason specifically for this reason. Given the investments ownership has made with this team, on and off the ice, it would be in their best interests to figure out a way to keep their players healthy. The Devils aren’t unique with this either as other teams have made significant investments in this area.

At the end of the day though, having dozens of the best and brightest minds you can put on payroll isn’t going to prevent Jack Hughes from losing an edge and crashing full speed into the boards shoulder first. Just like how it won’t prevent Watson from throwing an unnecessary cross check on Hischier like he did several seasons ago. Or it won’t prevent Rempe from elbowing Siegenthaler in the head.

You can take all the proper precautions in the world to ensure peak performance and have the best plans in place for recovery, but there’s only so much one can do that is preventative. You could be the safest driver in the world and take every precaution, but if somebody T-bones you because they ran a red light, you’re probably going to get seriously hurt, if not killed. It just is what it is.

Hockey is a physical sport. It’s probably second only to football in terms of sheer physicality, and its a small miracle that players can even make it through a season unscathed.

These are regular season games that are being missed. We all know the stories about what the players play through in the playoffs to try to win a Stanley Cup. You can only imagine how bad things actually have to be if a player is not playing a playoff game. We learned after the Devils were eliminated by the Hurricanes last year just how significant the injuries to Luke Hughes, Johnathan Kovacevic, and Brenden Dillon actually were. But we can’t even get to that point if players are still beat up from postseason runs of year’s past. It’s not a surprise that so many players from Carey Price, to Shea Weber, to maybe Alex Pietrangelo, see their careers end in unceremonious fashion because their bodies simply can’t take it anymore.

So, What’s the Solution? Is There Even a Solution?​


We know what the problem is. Unfortunately, like Friedman, I don’t know what the solution is. I’m not sure anybody does. People a lot smarter than you and me can’t seem to figure it out. I understand that I literally just wrote that adding more people to the Devils braintrust is only going to do some much. Perhaps the same could be said for some of the potential ideas or solutions that I can come up….even if they are the types of things that probably need to be collectively bargained. But I at least have a few thoughts on ways to potentially address this issue.

Expand NHL rosters to 26 players​


Frankly, I think expanding NHL rosters is long overdue anyways. If I were NHL commissioner, one of my first acts would be to require teams to carry a third goaltender. It’s a very good idea that I’ve floated in the past, especially if you’re one of the many teams that doesn’t have a bonafide superstar between the pipes.

But let’s go back to the Columbus game for a tangible example. Jake Allen started the game but left after two periods due to cramps. Jacob Markstrom was supposed to have the night off, but was forced to come in and play the third period. Markstrom played well coming in cold off the bench, but he got injured when other players collided into him and he wound up missing a few weeks.

There’s no way to know whether or not the same thing happens if its Nico Daws in that spot instead of Markstrom. Daws is much younger, so maybe he “manages” the collision better where he isn’t injured. Or maybe its unavoidable regardless of who is in net. But if you’re carrying a third goaltender, the Devils could have given Markstrom, a player they just committed a fairly significant investment in for two more years and $6M AAV, the full night off. They could have made Daws the backup on that night, and Markstrom could’ve avoided missing a few weeks altogether.

NHL teams currently carry three extras, but I think something we’ve seen with the Devils being a cap team the last few years is they’re really just carrying 1 healthy extra player or so at any given time. Teams use those spots to scratch injured players, like what the Devils are doing with Dougie Hamilton at the moment, and they only put the player on IR or LTIR if its absolutely necessary. And when would it be absolutely necessary? When you don’t have any more healthy bodies in reserve to dress and you have to go to Utica or the waiver wire to find one.

By expanding the rosters though, one could have someone in reserve when needed. You also now have that option of potentially sitting a bottom six forward who is playing through something rather than risking making a pre-existing injury worse by continuing to play a player who might be physically compromised.

I want to be careful and say that while this sounds awfully close to “Load Management”, that’s not necessarily what I’m advocating for. I think the NBA’s “Load Management” has been terrible for a variety of reasons, is as fan-unfriendly as it gets, and is ruining that sport, and its all going on in a league with 1/20th of the physicality of the NHL. With that said though, the Devils staff knows what players are battling and grinding through it.

Hockey players are tough. They’re going to want to play if they’re physically able to do so. That is commendable. But sometimes, you do need to save the player from themselves. Giving the team an option to give a guy a rest isn’t necessarily the worst thing.

Expand The Schedule So It Isn’t As Condensed​


I preface this by acknowledging that this is an Olympic year and the reason why the schedule is what it is has to do with that.

But strictly looking at the schedule from a Devils perspective, is there any reason why the Devils had to start two days later than the season-opening tripleheader? Is there any reason why the Devils had to have a stretch where they played eight games in thirteen days, with half of those coming on a long road trip? Is there a reason why we have to have so many back-t0-backs? Is there a logistical reason why we can’t start the entire process a week earlier and build more off days into the schedule to give the players a chance to recover?

I get that the Devils consistently having more back-to-backs than the average team is likely a trade off for the advantage they have having some of the best travel in the league. Most road trips for the Devils are relatively short flights with so many teams located somewhere near the I-95 corridor. But we’ve also seen plenty of back-to-backs over the years where the team on the back end of them doesn’t have their legs and the quality of the product isn’t nearly as good as it could be with a fresher team in that spot. A quick look at the Devils schedule shows some gaps of more than 2 days off in a row where they could’ve stuck a game in there instead of scheduling a back-to-back, say, immediately out of the Olympic break.

When I’m talking about expanding the schedule though, I’m not talking about expanding the schedule to 84 games, which is something that was collective bargained despite it being a terrible idea. I’m talking about expanding it over a longer period of time so they’re getting those 82 games in over a span of, say, 200 days instead of the 187 it currently is this season. I do think opening training camps earlier and ultimately starting the season in that final week of September instead of the second week of October could help. The fact that Elliotte Friedman alluded to the schedule itself being an issue tells me that that’s what people around the league are probably telling him when it comes to assigning blame for this issue.

Re-think the Protective Equipment Players Are Wearing​


We’re getting into the area where there might be some pushback from players but its probably worth taking a look at the protective equipment players are wearing in the first place.

Is there enough padding when it comes to shoulder pads and chest protection? Would another half inch of padding help? Are there too many exposed areas of the body that are unprotected? Is there enough padding in the gloves? Should the gloves be another couple inches longer to protect the wrists? Or should players be wearing wrist guards to protect an area of the body that is easily exposed? Is there enough padding with the helmets to protect from concussions? Is it time to introduce guardian caps? Would any of this even make a difference?

Admittedly, I don’t know enough about hockey equipment and the technology surrounding it as to whether or not there is room for improvements there, and whether or not it would even make a difference. I also know that players have historically fought against mandating equipment changes, and I would expect some pushback even with this being in the name of player safety. Helmets were made mandatory for new players in 1979-80 with players having debuted before that grandfathered in. Neck guards to protect against being cut by a skate blade will be mandatory for new players in 2026-27 thanks in part to the push that Devils GM Tom Fitzgerald made for this issue. Players who debuted before than are grandfathered in to not have to wear them.

I would expect some pushback from some players who prefer lighter equipment in a game where speed kills. I’m not a player but I can understand if they feel extra equipment is weighing them down and making them slower. I think there’s also players who are content knowing what the risks are and accept the risks that come with playing.

I do think its worth asking the questions though and seeing if more can be done in this area.

Make The Officials Call Penalties For Unnecessary Physicality, and Have the Department of Player Safety Actually Care About Player Safety​


We all know hockey is physical and a lot of injuries are ultimately unpreventable. And that’s fine. There is a reasonable level of risk that is accepted by the players when they step out on the ice.

Can we at least do something about the unnecessary physicality?

We’ve all watched hockey long enough to see enough post-whistle scraps, for lack of a better term, where someone throws a late punch or cross check or otherwise unnecessary cheap shot. Does there really need to be a conference whenever a goaltender makes a save that results in pushing and shoving in front of the crease during the stoppage in play?

Now, most players aren’t getting hurt in these scrums, and I get that. But we’ve also seen plenty of instances where a player DOES get hurt on a late hit. We’ve seen instances where a player goes 15-20 feet out of the way to deliver a hit. They may say they’re finishing their check, but we know they’re sending a message, or they’re responding to a hit they took exception to earlier in the game, or in the case of some players, they’re simply taking advantage of a player in a vulnerable position.

I’m not saying I don’t want physicality in hockey. Far from it. I like the physicality in hockey. I don’t think wanting better protections for vulnerable players has hurt, say, the NFL or college football in terms of popularity. The NFL has infractions in place for unnecessary roughness and rules designed to try to protect the quarterbacks, and while some might feel those go to far, the reality of the situation is that there’s not enough good quarterbacks in the NFL to go around. College football has rules against “targeting” and while it seems like that’s their version of “is this goaltender interference”, they’re at least making an effort to protect vulnerable players who can’t protect themselves.

I don’t necessarily think we need new rules. Penalties exist for charging (side note: when’s the last time “charging” was called in a game), boarding, elbowing, and roughing, among others. But I do think the current rules need to be better enforced, and I think the officials need to worry less about making sure the penalties are even for both sides and take it seriously when shenanigans are taking place. Err on the side of player safety and call more penalties if you have to so there’s actually a deterrent for committing an infraction.

This is where I’ll get on my soapbox in regards to the NHL’s Department of Player Safety and whether or not they actually care about player safety at all.

It doesn’t make sense to me that the NHL has a former enforcer in George Parros run that department, and I believe the league in general is too soft and too inconsistent when it comes to actually handing out discipline. Just take a look at their Twitter account and they’ve gotten the cookie cutter format down to a tee. All they have to do is change the names and infractions and click ‘send’.

As a player, you might have to toe the line a little bit if you’re someone with a history of dirty play like Tom Wilson, Ryan Hartman, or Matt Rempe, but for the most part, players will get a fine for the “maximum allowable under the CBA” on the lighter side, or a game or two suspension at most. There simply isn’t enough of a deterrent for players to not take liberties, and the only thing the DoPS is consistent with is their protection of the perpetrator instead of the victim.

I’m not saying that most injuries in the NHL are the result of dirty play. Most aren’t, and most of the ones I’ve cited in this article aren’t. But some are, and more often than not, the DoPS has a history of coming up soft when it comes to holding players accountable for their actions. More often than not, the punishment is simply a slap on the wrist.

Final Thoughts​


There’s a lot of randomness and dumb luck when it comes to injuries in the NHL. But the sheer amount of injuries that we have already seen this season should be a cause for concern. We haven’t even reached Thanksgiving yet and there’s a bunch of teams missing a half dozen players or more.

I’m not sure what the cause of this is. I suspect there are a variety of mitigating factors, several of which I already pointed out. I also suspect that the NHL is a copycat league, Florida is the reigning and defending Stanley Cup champion, and they’ve made a name for themselves with their physical brand of hockey, so there might be more physicality than normal this time of year as teams try to emulate Florida in that respect. But at the end of the day, its ultimately not good for the league if star players can’t get on the ice. It’s not good for the individual teams that are relying on these players to stay healthy and play well. It’s a league-wide problem and there’s no easy solution to fix it.

Perhaps some of the ideas I came up with could make a little bit of a difference, but its tough to say. If a player gets hit the wrong way, or takes a puck to the wrong area of the body, does it matter if he got hurt in Game #14 with days off on both sides, or Game #62 on the second half of a back-to-back? And even if the officials do call the game with a stricter whistle, you can’t exactly put the toothpaste back in the tube if a guy delivers a dirty hit late. What’s done is done, the league will hand out their suspension, and they’ll wash their hands of the situation.

What I do know is that this ultimately makes for a worse product. And considering the league wants fans like you and me to pay to go to the games, pay for the streaming services to watch, and buy merchandise, there should be incentive on their side to find a solution to this issue.

Source: https://www.allaboutthejersey.com/d...eir-fans-to-try-to-do-something-to-address-it
 
2025-26 Gamethread #17: New Jersey Devils at Chicago Blackhawks

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The Matchup: New Jersey Devils (11-4-1) @ Chicago Blackhawks (8-5-3)

The Time: 9:30pm EST

The Broadcast: TV — TNT, Radio — Devils Hockey Radio

The Game Preview: Matt wrote the game preview today.

The Song of the Day: Have you heard of the man who sold his soul to the Devil at the crossroads to play guitar? I mean, how can you not go to Robert Johnson when making a song of the day for the New Jersey Devils, when doing so is an option? Today’s song of the day is Johnson’s “Sweet Home Chicago.” Johnson’s tragically short life left masterful gems behind, and this one fits the setting tonight.

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...ad-17-new-jersey-devils-at-chicago-blackhawks
 
Simon Nemec Puts On A Show With Hat Trick and Game-Winner In 4-3 Win Over Chicago Blackhawks

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First Period​


The first five to six minutes of the game featured a decent amount of offensive zone time for the Devils, but not much in the way of quality chances. that changed when Jesper Bratt took a stretch pass off the left wing and got a step on the Chicago defense. He went in on Blackhawks goalie Spencer Knight alone, deked forehand before going backhand, but he couldn’t beat Knight. It was the first premium chance for either side.

With 10:33 left in the period, the third line was in the midst of a terrific shift in which they forechecked and cycled Chicago to death. They didn’t get any high-quality chances at net, but they did get a couple looks. But the shift ended thanks to Ondrej Palat taking a hooking penalty when trying to force a takeaway for the first penalty of the game.

On the kill, Bratt and Nico Hischier actually rushed down the ice on a 2-on-1 thanks to a bad turnover by the Blackhawks, but Hischier whiffed on what appeared to be an attempted pass and only generated a low-danger shot on net on the chance. It was a bit of a missed opportunity. The Blackhawks did put up four shots on goal on the power play, but New Jersey held them off the board.

Shortly after the power play ended, Zack MacEwen took a hard hit behind Chicago’s net from Connor Murphy. MacEwen appeared to be hurt on the play and he went down the tunnel.

With 3:14 left, Luke Hughes got tangled up with Connor Bedard trying to chase a puck down in the neutral zone, getting tagged for a tripping call in the process. Then a mere 32 seconds into the Chicago power play, Brenden Dillon was called for a two-minute boarding penalty when going for a hit on Tyler Bertuzzi. New Jersey was handling 5-on-5 play pretty well to this point, but Chicago was staying in the game thanks to the Devils committing penalties. If I’m being honest, I didn’t think any of the penalties the Devils committed were particularly egregious. Especially Hughes’ and Dillon’s infractions, which were a little unlucky.

In any case, Chicago had a lengthy 5-on-3. After the Hawks hit a couple posts and Jacob Markstrom made a couple nice saves, Markstrom inexplicably started flopping around in the slot. I’m not kidding, while tracking the puck, he seemed to just loose his feet and desperately tried to flail his body in the general direction of the puck. It didn’t work, leaving the net completely vacant aside from Jonas Siegenthaler trying to shield the net himself. He couldn’t do it on a Bedard one-timer, and the Blackhawks’ wunderkind scored to give Chicago a 1-0 lead.

Seriously, go watch the replay. I have no idea what possessed Markstrom to do what he did.

After the goal, New Jersey killed the rest of the other penalty, which was the good news. The bad news was that with about 10 seconds left in the period, Cody Glass went hard into the boards and appeared to injury his arm. We’ve talked about it to death, but it really is out of control how many injuries the Devils have endured in the early going. Just in this first period alone, MacEwen and Glass suffered apparent injuries. The situation is becoming untenable for New Jersey.

The period ended shortly thereafter. It was a good period at 5-on-5 for the Devils, but the problem was New Jersey really shot themselves in the foot with penalties in the opening frame.

Second Period​


To begin the second period, MacEwen did not return to the bench, but Glass did. So good news/bad news to start the middle frame.

But on Glass’ first shift of the period, he appeared to end his shift early, waving to the bench as he left the ice. And sure enough, the next time the third line was deployed, Paul Cotter was in the middle of Palat and Stefan Noesen. So unless Glass had a miraculous comeback up his sleeve, the Devils would have to play basically 40 minutes with only 10 forwards.

With just under 13 minutes left in the period, Jack Hughes drew a hooking call to send New Jersey to their first power play of the game. The Devils sustained some good zone time and collected three shots, but did not score on the man advantage.

A few minutes after the power play, the ice really opened up. New Jersey was getting a few rush chances while limiting the chances the other way. At one point, Jack Hughes and Hischier were both sprung on breakaways in quick succession, but Knight made the save both times. That felt like a turning point, as New Jersey was getting their chances but simply could not solve Knight at all.

But then, out of nowhere, a breakthrough. In the final minute of the period, the Devils fought off the Blackhawks forecheck and started up the ice. Hischier gained the zone up the middle and dropped a pass to an activating Simon Nemec. Nemec deliberately weaved his way through the slot and eventually to the right of Knight. Nemec whipped a backhand shot on net, and it somehow beat Knight over the pad and under the blocker to tie the game with about 14 seconds remaining in the middle frame. After all the chances, all the breakaways, the fact that this was the chance that beat Knight was pretty crazy. Not that it was a bad shot from Nemec at all, just that New Jersey generated way more dangerous opportunities with nothing to show for it. I guess it all evens out in the end.

The period ended seconds later. This was an excellent period for the Devils. Not only did they stay out of the box, but they thoroughly dominated play. New Jersey outshot Chicago 14-4, and they posted a 5-on-5 Expected Goals For% of around 77%. The fact that they did that on the road while playing with 10 forwards for essentially the entire period was impressive.

Third Period​


The period began with New Jersey continuing to keep their foot on the gas, but no goals to show for it. Then with 16:55 left in the frame, Chicago broke through again. Luke Hughes made a nice play to steal a puck away in the defensive zone, but turned the puck over immediately after gaining possession. The puck was worked to the point where Louis Crevier ripped a shot toward the net. The puck hit Landon Slaggert and it redirected perfectly past Markstrom and in for a 2-1 Chicago edge.

After the goal, New Jersey continued to press. The Devils put together a couple good shifts, and at one point Jack set Luke up for a great one-time chance, but Luke couldn’t put the puck on net. The youngest Hughes has been doing a much better job of actually putting his shots on net recently, but that one hurt.

Then with 9:47 left, the Devils tied the game again. The Hughes line put together another great shift, and it culminated with Hughes threading a killer cross-ice pass to Dawson Mercer on the backdoor. Mercer one-timed it home to knot the score at 2-2. Credit to Hughes for making a terrific pass, and credit to Mercer for blasting a shot that was not easy to get off. He had to adjust his body a little bit to get all of it, and he did.

The Devils continued to control play after tying the game, but a few minutes later, Sam Lafferty went in on the forecheck against Luke Hughes. Lafferty won the puck, and toe-dragged around both Hughes and Markstrom for a highlight reel goal to give the Blackhawks the lead once more. Hughes didn’t exactly drape himself in glory on the play, but once again Markstrom just flailed around and was helpless as he watched Lafferty dance around him. The Devils were doing their best to idiot-proof the game for their struggling goalie, but Markstrom was unable to hold up his end of the bargain.

But the Devils thankfully had a quick response. A pretty passing play off the rush from Jack Hughes to Noesen to Nemec on the backdoor yielded yet another goal for Nemec, his first career multi-goal game. It barely crossed the line, as it was a little bit of a misfire from Nemec, but maybe it was just him being extra careful not to miss the net, who knows. Either way, Nemec scored a huge goal with about five minutes left.

The rest of regulation melted away, and for the fourth consecutive game, the Devils would play overtime.

Overtime​


For the first few minutes of overtime, the frame unfolded how the rest of the game was going: With New Jersey dominating play. Chicago got a couple of looks at net, but nothing truly dangerous. Meanwhile Jack Hughes drove the net for a good look and should have drawn a penalty, but the officials had to manage the game. Luke Hughes, Mercer, and Meier all took their turns with quality looks, but none could crack Knight.

Then, Luke Hughes played a puck all the way back from the offensive zone to Markstrom to help keep possession. The Devils made a change, and Markstrom stretched a pass to Nemec, who was waiting at the offensive blue line. Nemec broke in, and just before a Chicago defender could get to him, he wired a shot from the near circle. Nemec’s wrister beat Knight far-side top shelf, and incredibly, Nemec finished off both the game and a hat trick, giving his team a 4-3 overtime victory.

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

The Game Highlights: Courtesy of NHL.com

Quick Hits​

  • Tonight’s game was already scheduled to be a weird start time since it was a nationally-televised contest. It was advertised as a 9:30pm start, which we all know really means about eight minutes after that (and 9:30 Eastern time is already oddly late for a game in Chicago). But because the first game of TNT’s doubleheader (Rangers at Lightning) dragged on a little bit despite not reaching overtime, the Devils didn’t get started until 9:52pm ET…for a game in the Central Time Zone. I can’t speak for everyone, but I feel confident that I speak for the vast majority of Devils fans when I say I don’t appreciate the NHL turning a game in Chicago into a quasi-west coast start time. Brutal.
  • Now to the game. It goes without saying, but I’ll say it anyway: What an unbelievable game from Nemec. It wasn’t just the hat trick, although obviously that’s the headline. It was the fact that he controlled play (At 5-on-5 he had an 81% xGF mark, and the Devils outscored the Blackhawks 3-0 with Nemec on the ice). It was also the fact that he logged absolutely huge minutes too, playing 26:27 tonight, second on the team behind only Luke Hughes’ 26:48. It has been a rocky beginning to the season, and one game does not fix everything, but Nemec is starting to stack good games lately. And tonight was his crown jewel.
  • According to the TNT broadcast, Nemec was only the third Devils defenseman in franchise history to register a hat trick (and only the second since the franchise moved to New Jersey). I wish I could tell you who the others are, but I either missed it on the broadcast or they did not mention it. And as I write this, it is past midnight and I have work in the morning so I won’t be hunting that answer down this evening (technically morning). My apologies.
  • Sheldon Keefe juggled his forward lines tonight, putting together a unit of Jack Hughes, Dawson Mercer, and Arseni Gritsyuk. Simply put, that line absolutely needs to stay together for at least one more game. At 5-on-5, that trio played 15:18 together, and they completely boatraced the Blackhawks in their minutes. The Hughes line out-attempted Chicago 29-5(!), outshot them 10-1(!), and only allowed a microscopic 0.04 xGA while registering a 96.18 xGF%. A complete wipeout. More of that, please.
  • I was also encouraged by Hischier’s game tonight. Hischier has been struggling lately, not controlling play or putting up points like we’re accustomed to seeing. I don’t think we can blame the brutal competition he’s been getting matched up with, because he’s been getting that deployment for a few seasons now and he has still managed to produce. Maybe he’s nursing an injury, maybe he’s just slumping, who knows. But the point is, Hischier hasn’t looked like himself over the past few weeks, so it was nice to see him put up a good effort tonight. At 5-on-5 he posted a 56.37 xGF%, and his line with Meier and Bratt registered a collective xGF% around 69%. Hopefully the captain can keep it going next game.
  • It was another bad game for Jacob Markstrom. Yes he redeemed himself with the terrific pass to Nemec for the game-winner in overtime, but of the three goals he allowed tonight, two of them were pretty bad. The first one goes without saying, I still cannot comprehend what he was doing flopping around in the slot. The second goal was a bad luck redirection, so I won’t blame him for that. But the third one, in which him and Luke Hughes were posterized by Sam Lafferty, was also one Markstrom could have stopped. He generated no lateral movement, and allowed Lafferty to just glide right by him for an easy score. Markstrom actually looked like he might have hurt himself on the play, but he stayed in the game. That doesn’t mean he’s not hurt though, so his situation bears monitoring. Either way, it was yet another clunker from Markstrom, who really needs to right the ship in a hurry.
  • Speaking of injuries, the Devils suffered a few more tonight. We’ll see about Markstrom, but MacEwen and Glass both leaving early on really hurt. Since MacEwen returned to the lineup, he’s really helped stabilize the fourth line, which was in desperate need of stabilization. Meanwhile Glass helped the third line get back on track himself, even adding some scoring touch in his first game back last week. We’ll see how much time they might miss, but hopefully it’s nothing serious for either player.
  • Seriously, please make it stop. The injuries are completely out of control at this point. I don’t know which deity I need to pray to, but I would gladly worship at the alter of any being that can make the injuries stop. I can’t take it anymore.

Next Time Out​


The Devils travel back east, but not home. New Jersey gets two days off before visiting Washington to take on the Capitals on Saturday. Puck drop is slated for 7:00pm.

Your Take​


What did you make of tonight’s game? Did you actually stay up for it? How impressed were you with Nemec? Who else on the team impressed you? What are you expecting next time out? As always, thanks for reading!

Source: https://www.allaboutthejersey.com/d...ame-winner-in-4-3-win-over-chicago-blackhawks
 
Should the New Jersey Devils Consider Temporarily Decreasing Luke Hughes’ Responsibilities?

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Luke Hughes was one of the focal point players of the New Jersey Devils this past summer. The young star defender entered restricted free agency with minimal leverage, despite a 47 point rookie season and 44 point sophomore season where he missed 11 contests. It took a while before he and the team settled on October 1st to a seven year, $63 million dollar deal. With this new deal coming so late into training camp/the preseason, it meant Luke would not dress for a single game prior to the start of the regular season. Sometimes in cases of holdouts, it takes a bit for players to adjust.

Right now, it appears that’s where Luke is living; while he has managed to contribute nine points, none of them have been goals. For a $9 million offense first defender, usually you’d like to see a goal or two (or more) after the first fifth of the season has concluded. Perhaps not having the full camp/preseason experience could’ve explained some of his early struggles, but with the number of games played by now, surely he should’ve settled in, right? Well, there’s one major component that could be messing with that data.

If you guessed “injuries” you’re right on the money.

The Devils are down essentially their entire right side at this current interval; Dougie Hamilton is out for a short period while Brett Pesce has joined Johnny Kovacevic on injured reserve. The team’s coaching staff has thusly decided that Luke should be on his the one shifting to his off side (prior to Dougie going down and now having five left handed defenders) playing with Brenden Dillon on the team’s middle pair. Now, to be fair, that was the side he was accustomed to playing in college, so perhaps with four lefties on the roster, moving him made the most sense. Yet it seems as though it isn’t really paying off, neither for him nor for the Devils as a whole.

I started writing this prior to last night’s game and was mainly going to cite his rough outing against the Islanders as a need for a quick reset of sorts. After last night’s game though, I think it’s almost a necessity to reduce his workload for a bit. Not only were there periods where he was out of place or looked gassed, but he made a spinning blind pass (again) that got picked off (again) leading to a goal against (again) shortly thereafter. He’s also not producing goals at the moment, while there is one defender who certainly stepped up and produced in the last pair of games, so maybe a little less power play ice or just a couple fewer shifts would benefit Luke.

The question though is can you really reduce his ice time? Nemec isn’t going to be able to pick up much more, if any, as he and Luke each logged over 26 minutes last night, and even without overtime both had probably played 25. Jonas Siegenthaler could maybe take a minute or two more, but he’s already carrying a lot of responsibility as well. Then we get to the Dillons, Dennis Cholowskis and Colton Whites of the world. Dillon is already playing more than most of us are comfortable with and I feel as if I were to advocate for Cholowski and/or White to receive more minutes, I would be looked at as crazy. Fortunately, I’m already wary enough of Cholowski and White playing the 12 or so minutes they’re getting each game anyway, so I will not be wanting them to get more ice. Luke having a bit less responsibility to make fewer errors would be great, but with so many injured players right now, it just seems like it isn’t a possibility. Devils teams of the past have sat young defenders for less, but right now, there’s just not really an option that allows Luke to take a reduced role.

I also want to clarify that this isn’t a “rag on Luke Hughes” article or comment thread, because he honestly hasn’t been bad this season. He’s still light years ahead of either defender currently on the bottom pairing, and is still chipping in points. It might be weird secondary assists on passes back to a goalie before a huge outlet pass leading to a partial breakaway, but points nonetheless! He’s also been really solid in most games, it’s just that the struggles amounting from the increased ice time seem to be compounded by some boneheaded decisions which all adds up to frustration with a defender who is making $9 million not playing up to that cap number.

I just wish there was a way to give him a little less responsibility and a bit more perspective right now, as I think with a little reset, he could go back to being more of the player he was the last two years than what’s he’s been to start this season. Getting the team healthy should also help, as it will mean less over-relying on him Nemec and to an extent Siegenthaler as well. Luke is still a big talent, and a huge piece of this team’s future; between coaching, temporary reduction of responsibilities, more games and improved team health, he should hopefully get back to the dynamic Luke we know and want to see.

What are your thoughts on Luke Hughes as of late; do you think he would benefit from reduced minutes, be it now or when at least one injured defenseman returns? Any concern over his lack of goal scoring so far this season? Do you think the coaching staff is more responsible and needs to tell him to knock it off with the spin-o-rama? Are his struggles being overblown by fans and possibly even myself based off of his last few performances? Leave any and all comments down below and thanks as always for reading!

Source: https://www.allaboutthejersey.com/d...arily-decreasing-luke-hughes-responsibilities
 
Game Preview #17: New Jersey Devils @ Chicago Blackhawks

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It can’t be Hughes and Bratt every night leading the offense…maybe Noesen will lead the way tonight. | Photo by Rich Graessle/NHL via Getty Images

  • The Matchup: New Jersey Devils (11-4-1) @ Chicago Blackhawks (8-5-3)
  • The Time: 9:30pm EST
  • The Broadcast: TNT, Devils Hockey Radio

Last Devils Game​


On Monday night, the Devils lost to the New York Islanders, 3-2. The loss wrapped up a 3 game home stand where on the positive side, they grabbed 5 out of a possible 6 points. Before the home stand, I had commented that it was important to get a few wins/points before heading out on the road for a 5 game road trip. The Devils and Islanders were tied late into the 3rd, before the Islanders scored a power play goal with less than 3 minutes to go in the period. Thanks to Simon Nemec and his 6 on 5 goal with less than 5 seconds before the buzzer, the Devils tied it up to send the game to OT and secure at least 1 point before losing in OT. It was a game where the Devils deserved at least a point. However, it was the 3rd game in a row for the Devils to be decided in OT, and while they won the last 2, fate was not on their side for a 3rd consecutive OT. By a minor miracle, no one got hurt (as far as I know). That’s a win on its own.

Last Blackhawks Game​


On Sunday, the Blackhawks defeated the Detroit Red Wings, 5-1 in Detroit. The game wrapped up their 6 game road trip and was their 3rd consecutive win in a row. The Blackhawks have scored 14 goals in their last 3 games while only surrendering 3. This team can score, and play defense. While they are not back to the same level of their Kane and Toews glory days yet, this current version of the team is also no longer at the same level, as they have been in recent seasons, where they were frequent league basement dwellers either. Tonight’s game against the Devils is the 1st of a 4 game home stand for the Hawks.

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


Over their last 7 games, the Devils have alternated starting goalies every other game. Assuming the trend continues, I would expect Jake Allen to start tonight against Chicago. I would also expect the trend to continue over the 5 game road trip, as there are no back to back games either. Personally, I prefer Allen over Markstrom at the moment. Markstrom had GAA of 3.08 and a SV% of .875 against the Islanders. He’s going to be here for a while with his new contract, but his season (so far) stats of a whopping 3.82 GAA and .872 SV% just do not inspire confidence at the moment, at least for me.

The Devils did not practice on Tuesday, as it was a travel day. As of this writing, there was no official announcement about the lineup for the game tonight. I don’t expect any changes outside of Allen possibly starting in net and maybe Connor Brown returning to the lineup. That’s only a guess at this point, since he was supposedly due to return as early as last week, since he was involved in practice. I would expect some updates today from Amanda Stein or the team regarding the lineup. However, I wouldn’t expect any major changes from the lineup on Monday night.

I don’t expect any changes tonight to the power play, but I would like to see them mix it up a little with their personnel on each PP unit. Luke Hughes may be able to move the puck well, when quarterbacking the PP, but his shot is absolutely not a threat, at all, right now. It’s a mixed bag of “do you keep him on PP1 and let him figure it out” or do you “put someone else there that might be a better option?” Personally, if it was up to me, I’d like to see Simon Nemec on the 1st PP unit and move Luke for now to PP2. Is that going to happen? Probably not. But then again, I’m not an NHL head coach, so what do I know?

Grimace’s Prediction and 2025-2026 Record Tracker​


Fear not Devils Nation, Grimace is both back in the win column with his last prediction AND predicting a win tonight against the Blackhawks. In his words, Chicago is due for a loss after 3 wins in a row, and the Devils…well, are always due for a win.

Grimace’s 2025-2026 Season Prediction record currently stands at 6-2-0.

Your Take​


It’s not really fair to complain when your team is tied for 2nd in the NHL (as of this writing). A lot has gone wrong this season, as far as injuries. However, I think everyone on here would have signed up at the beginning of the season for having a record of 11-4-1 and sitting in 2nd place in the league in mid November. Feel free to leave your thoughts and comments below and thanks for reading!

Source: https://www.allaboutthejersey.com/d...eview-17-new-jersey-devils-chicago-blackhawks
 
Banking Points Matters Most, But Improved Play Is Needed Soon

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Take a look at the NHL Standings page. You will notice that the New Jersey Devils begin the week tied atop the Eastern Conference with 22 points. At 11-4-0, the Devils have begun their season about as well as any of us could have possibly imagined. We all looked at how brutally difficult their early schedule was on paper and dreaded this team getting buried in the standings right out of the gate. Instead, New Jersey ripped off an early eight-game winning streak to propel them to the best record in the East here in the second week of November. Couple that with the fact that they’re currently riding a two-game winning streak and are a perfect 7-0-0 at home, and things are going well.

There is a problem that has begun to emerge, however: The Devils have generally been getting outplayed most nights.

Over the past two weeks, New Jersey has won four of their seven games played. Not world-beating stuff, but certainly good enough over a couple-week stretch. The problem is, it is easy to make the case that the Devils were lucky to even collect those modest results. Points are points, and you don’t have to give them back, but if New Jersey wants to keep collecting points, it would behoove them to find their game again.

Today we’ll take a closer look at New Jersey’s performances over the past two weeks, why the process does not match the results, why it matters, and what can be done about it.

Let’s begin.

Why Complain?​


First, let’s address why process not matching results can matter in the first place.

Year after year in the analytics era, we have seen that the best predictor of results is a good underlying process. Winning the shots battle, Expected Goals For battle, and various other analytics battles generally leads to a rise up the standings page. Sure there is a team or two every year that gets to the playoffs despite poor underlying numbers. They usually ride good shooting luck and/or terrific goaltending to the postseason. But they are the exceptions, not the rule, and even if a team is lucky enough to make it past the regular season with a poor analytics profile, they almost never make it all that far in the dance.

In the Devils’ case, no one is saying they should feel guilty about getting wins despite getting outplayed. And no one is saying they can’t start winning the analytics battle going forward. But why this matters is that the way New Jersey has been winning lately is usually unsustainable. They might be able to count on consistently good goaltending from Jacob Markstrom and Jake Allen this season, but we’ve already seen both goalies put up multiple clunkers through 15 games, so I wouldn’t count on season-long stellar play.

Meanwhile the Devils are shooting 11.92% as a team. For context, that would have been good for 3rd-best in the league in both 2024-25 and 2023-24, 1st in the league in 2022-23, and 2nd in the league in 2021-22. Granted they are only 8th in the league right now, but you can attribute that to early-season small sample noise. Once we get deeper in the campaign, shooting percentages should level out. But as you can see, since the Covid-shortened seasons, the Devils are shooting at a rate that would put them in outlier territory. Some teams can replicate shooting performances like that year after year, but New Jersey does not have the proven snipers up and down their roster that would give us confidence they can sustain this. The good shooting luck will end, maybe beginning with tonight. So when that happens, the Devils need to start winning the puck possession battle again.

So What Do The Numbers Actually Say?​


Now that we’ve discussed why it matters to talk about poor process even if the results are good, the next question would be…is the process actually poor? After all, New Jersey continues to rack up wins, so how bad could their performances possibly be? To answer this question, we’ll take a look at a couple different analytics outlets. Before we do, I feel compelled to give all the usual caveats, though:

I believe in public analytics, but no individual model is the be-all end-all. Each has their own limitations that need to be taken into account. That said, public models can be a very useful tool when trying to evaluate a team, and even if they’re limited, they capture a lot of things the traditional box score or one’s personal eye test often miss.

So with all that in mind, let’s start with Natural Stat Trick. Over the last two weeks, NST has not been impressed with the performance of New Jersey’s skaters:

DateOpponentDevils 5-on-5 xGF%
10/26Colorado Avalanche47.04
10/28Colorado Avalanche45.92
10/30San Jose Sharks49.51
11/01Los Angeles Kings27.25
11/02Anaheim Ducks52.57
11/06Montreal Canadiens40.46
11/08Pittsburgh Penguins49.76

According to Natural Stat Trick, the Devils lost in the run of play in six of their last seven games. They’ve only had one truly dismal game though, the 11/01 game in Los Angeles, ironically a win. Still, six of seven losses is six of seven losses.

Next, let’s take a look at Moneypuck’s infamous “Deserve To Win O’Meter” for each game during this stretch:

DateOpponentDid The Devils “Deserve To Win”?
10/26Colorado AvalancheNo
10/28Colorado AvalancheNo
10/30San Jose SharksYes
11/01Los Angeles KingsNo
11/02Anaheim DucksNo
11/06Montreal CanadiensNo
11/08Pittsburgh PenguinsYes

Moneypuck is a tiny bit more complimentary to New Jersey, giving them two analytical “wins” instead of one. But only winning the puck possession battle in two of seven contests is still nothing to brag about.

Again, these are only two models, and each has their limitations. But at the same time, Natural Stat Trick and Moneypuck are two of the more well-known, well-respected analytics models in the public sphere. Even if you don’t 100% agree with their numbers (and I’m one of those people who does not believe everything they put out), they are both worth paying attention to. And what they’re saying is that the Devils have been getting thoroughly outplayed over the past couple of weeks.

The Obvious Extenuating Circumstances​


Ok so there is a very important detail that needs to be mentioned when it comes to the Devils not looking so sharp over their most recent two weeks of action:

The absurd amount of injuries.

New Jersey has not enjoyed the services of Evgenii Dadonov since opening day. Brett Pesce got hurt in the first game against the Avalanche and we haven’t seen him since. Cody Glass only recently came back from a seven-game injury absence of his own, returning for the Montreal game. Dougie Hamilton suffered an injury against the Canadiens, missed the second half of that contest, and did not suit up against Pittsburgh. Not to mention the continued absence of Johnny Kovacevic.

Needless to say, this is a ridiculous amount of injuries for a team to endure.

Thus far, the Pesce injury appears to be the most impactful one. New Jersey was keeping its collective head above water defensively with Pesce in the lineup, but once he hit the shelf the defense started to crater. It would be nice if New Jersey’s defense wasn’t reliant on a single player, but you have to assume that as more time goes on, the Devils will learn to play without Pesce. Not to mention that his injury is not believed to be season-ending, so we will see him again at some point.

But the rest of the injuries have been impactful as well, even if New Jersey has been fortunate enough to avoid injury to most of their key players. But even if the injured players aren’t the inner-circle core of this team, they are still important players. And additionally, when starting-caliber players go down, you have to replace them with by-definition non-starting caliber players. That might be acceptable if you only have to dig one or two players deep into your depth. But once you reach five or six players down, it gets to a point where a team just cannot overcome the injuries. Case in point, On Saturday the Devils had to play Dennis Cholowski and Colton White on defense. Head coach Sheldon Keefe clearly had no trust in either player, giving White a mere 9:55 of ice time, and Cholowski only 13:15. And it’s not like they lit it up in their minutes either, with White producing a 5-on-5 xGF% of 31.78, and Cholowski coming in even worse at 19.90. The Devils coaching staff sheltered White and Cholowski as much as they possibly could, and they still got run over by their competition.

You have to figure that New Jersey will look a lot better once they are at full health (if that day ever comes).

The other factor to mention is that this stretch has featured tough competition and a west coast road trip, which is never easy. Yes the California teams aren’t supposed to be particularly good, but the Sharks have been a lot better since losing their first six games of their season, and the Ducks are shockingly second overall in the league in points. Meanwhile the Kings are still solid, and the Avalanche are arguably the best team in the league thus far. Add in games against a good Montreal team and a Penguins team that is bewilderingly high up the standings, and the schedule has not done New Jersey any favors over the last two weeks. We talked about how the very start of the season looked tough on paper, but the tough slate of games really has continued well into November.

So in the end, losing the run of play against mostly quality teams while suffering a raft of injuries is not the end of the world. You’d prefer to see the Devils dominate puck possession of course, but given the circumstances, things could be worse.

Final Thoughts and Your Take​


So in the end, the Devils continue to rack up wins despite usually not being the better team by the end of the night. As mentioned, you have to be happy with all the points they’ve banked despite the injuries and the harrowing schedule. In fact, one might look at the results and credit the Devils for “finding ways to win”. I have to admit, I’m not one of those people. I don’t exactly believe New Jersey is finding ways to win, I think it more comes down to the team having a fair bit of good luck on their side lately. That luck won’t last forever, and when the Devils finally start rolling snake eyes, it would help if they could replace their good luck with good process.

So be happy with the points they’ve banked, and be compassionate given the injuries and schedule. But understand that there is a very real possibility that New Jersey will start losing a lot of games if they don’t get their act together as far as the process goes. We all know they have what it takes to start winning the puck possession battle. Now they have to show it before the wins dry up.

What do you think of the Devils’ play lately? Do you think I’m being too hard on them, or do you agree with what the metrics say? Do you think a simple return to full health at a team level will remedy this, or is there something deeper going on? As always, thanks for reading!

Source: https://www.allaboutthejersey.com/d...top-priority-but-improved-play-is-needed-soon
 
Game Preview #18: New Jersey Devils @ Washington Capitals

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Luke Hughes stares at the puck while thinking “I would really appreciate it if you could hit the back of the net tonight for me. Or at any point this season actually.” | Photo by Rich Graessle/NHL via Getty Images

  • The Matchup: New Jersey Devils (12-4-1) @ Washington Capitals (8-8-1)
  • The Time: 7:00pm EST
  • The Broadcast: MSGSN, Devils Hockey Radio

Last Devils Game​


On Wednesday night..and I do mean NIGHT, the Devils defeated the Chicago Blackhawks 4-3 in OT. The game got off to a late start (close to 10pm EST), but it didn’t disappoint. I did not watch the full game (only the 1st period), but I was not exactly pleased to see Jacob “I flop around like a fish for no reason” Markstrom start the game over Allen. Credit where credit is due, he had a massive assist on the game winning goal in OT, but the man is just not playing in a way that inspires a ton of confidence at the moment.

The real story of the game would be Simon “Gamer” Nemec. If you watched the game, you know the story. For those of you unable to stay up until almost 1am to watch the full game, I’ll fill you in. Nemec scored 2 goals in regulation. You might be thinking “That’s pretty impressive, but not amazing.” Nemec heard you and said “hold my beer” and went on to score the game winner on a beautiful feed from Markstrom, getting a hat trick in the process. An exciting end to the game and a great way to start their road trip.

In totally surprising news (that’s sarcasm, in case you’re not sure), the Devils added more players to their daily injury list. Zack MacEwen and Cody Glass both left the game with injuries. All you can do at this point is shake your head. Makrstrom also appeared to possibly hurt something on the 3rd Chicago goal, but he did stay in the net to finish the game, so we’ll see if anything comes from that over the next few days.

Last Capitals Game​


On Thursday night, the Capitals lost 6-3 to the Florida Panthers. The game was the final game of a 4 game road trip for Washington. It was not a successful road trip as Washington lost 3 out of 4 games. To make matters worse for the Capitals, they have now lost 7 times in their last 9 games. There is a long way to go still in the season, and things can change, but right now Washington is struggling. This is the team that many people expected to see last season, before Washington surprised almost everyone by finishing with 51 wins last year. The game tonight against the Devils kicks off a run of 7 out of their next 8 games being played at home.

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


The one item which no one saw coming was that apparently Jack Hughes doesn’t know how to use basic eating utensils or I don’t know, not to put your full body weight on a glass will not be playing tonight, as he cut himself at a team dinner. No. I’m not joking. I have no words to express how much I wish that I WAS joking here. At this point though, shame on us, as fans for not seeing this coming. We all thought last year was the “how much worse can it get/it HAS to get better, right?” turning point. This year so far has laughed in our faces. It did a full on spit take laugh and said “you have no idea what’s coming!” before laughing and walking away.

#NEWS: Jack Hughes is out with a non-hockey, hand injury. He is being evaluated and we will provide an update as available. pic.twitter.com/4bfOT3tDtH

— New Jersey Devils (@NJDevils) November 14, 2025

To fill in for Jack, the Devils have called up Shane Lachance (while also placing Connor Brown on injured reserve). According to the link, the Devils will have a morning skate today at 12:30, so I would expect to hear about the lineup (including Cody Glass), the starting goalie and which player pulled their back out lacing up their skates today at some point this afternoon.

In one last final bit of “why does it even matter at this point this team is cursed and 5 more players will get hurt today anyway” injury news, Zack MacEwen was injured in the last game against the Blackhawks and per the NJ Devils, he will not be playing tonight against Washington. Taking his place will be Nathan Legare, who was called up from Utica on Wednesday.

#NEWS: We’ve placed F Zack MacEwen (lower body) on Injured Reserve and recalled F Nathan Légaré from Utica (AHL). He will meet the team in Chicago.https://t.co/z172iiKmG2

— New Jersey Devils (@NJDevils) November 13, 2025

Grimace’s Prediction and 2025-2026 Record Tracker​


Grimace asked me to preface his prediction for tonight. Originally this entire section was written up to say that he thought the Devils would win tonight. However, Grimace, after a night of heavy drinking and self loathing, has changed his prediction to state that he believes the Devils will now lose tonight. Something about “why can’t we have anything nice!?”….before falling face down to the floor.

Grimace’s 2025-2026 Season Prediction record currently stands at 7-2-0.

Your Take​


The Devils have played 17 games so far this season. They have won 12 of them. They have 25 points. On one hand, it’s hard to be upset with their record and where they stand in the league at the moment. On the other hand, this year, I sincerely thought “there is no way the injury issue could be worse than last year.” I was wrong. I would really like to see the Devils win without Jack tonight, but my genuine bigger concern is “will anyone make it out of the game in one piece tonight?” at this point. Feel free to leave your thoughts and comments below and thanks for reading!

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

YouTube

Apple Podcast

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Source: https://www.allaboutthejersey.com/d...view-18-new-jersey-devils-washington-capitals
 
2025-26 Gamethread #18: New Jersey Devils at Washington Capitals

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The Matchup: New Jersey Devils (12-4-1) @ Washington Capitals (8-8-1)

The Time: 7:00pm EST

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

The Game Preview: Matt wrote the game preview today.

The Song of the Day: Johnny Cash. Hurt. Self-explanatory. Or listen to the Nine Inch Nails version if you are so inclined.

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...d-18-new-jersey-devils-at-washington-capitals
 
No Jack, No Problem

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That title is probably a bit hyperbolic and not gonna lie, the vibes were pretty bleak coming into his game, and I think collectively we really had no idea what direction it was going to go. But the boys showed poise and maturity, collecting 2 points against the Washington Capitals and have now gotten 9 out of a possible 10 in their last 5 games.

Luke Hughes led the way with a goal and an assist, Nemo and Bratt tallied the Shootout winners, Jake Allen stood tall in a mostly strong game against our divisional rivals form he Nation’s Capital.

Weird First Period​


The Caps took 3 penalties within the first 8 minutes to really disrupt any semblance of getting into a 5 on 5 flow – and frankly it was a huge boon for the Devils getting into the game on the front foot. Of all the potential ways this game could’ve gone, I didn’t have 3 power plays in 8 minutes on my bingo card, but we take those. The Power play itself was a little disjointed, but it really settled in during the third PP where our burgeoning star Grits unleashed a preposterous rocket that Thompson never even saw. Luke fed it to him on a nice little platter and it’s 1-0 good guys.

View Link

LOOK AT THAT THING! LOOK AT IT!

The play calmed down somewhat and settle into solid but unspectacular lock down hockey. I’d imagine it would’ve looked a little different if we played the whole period at 5v5 but we didn’t so we do not care.

On a somewhat weird sequence, Ovechkin laid a questionable hit on Bratt and with the players seemingly expecting a whistle, Luke just casually strolled in and wired one top shelf. First, quick question for the ref that was standing right there: Did you not notice that? Second, Luke has been pressing for a goal, so it was good to see him get on the board – albeit on a weird series of events, and looked like he said something like “dagnabbit” about Bratt, and you could really tell the injuries piling up are pressing not these guys. And finally, Lukey boy is on the board, he really needed that one.

View Link

They got to room up 2-0 in a very thorough, professional period over all.

Late 90s Devils’ Hockey​


If you’re a yougin’ you hear all of us olds talk about the 90s Devils with mythical reverence. And you got a taste of what it was like during that 2nd period – pure suffocation. We gave them NOTHING, killed zone exits, closed gaps, even the Caps broadcasters were getting audibly frustrated with how little space there was for them to maneuver. Good, we don’t like you either. What shots did eventually get to Allen, he swallowed, kicked out and we swept away out of danger. The closest the Caps came was on their lone power play, with Allen making a nice pad save on a netfront rebound.

The best chance in the 2nd for the good guys came after Bratt dog walked Chycrun, went hard to the net and Nico got a great rebound that Thompson got a leg on. Sidebar: Canada would be NUTS if they don’t bring that guy to Italy.

Got to the room, still up 2-0 and cruising.

SHUT IT DOWN​


Narrator voice: They did not shut it down as the Caps came alive in the 3rd with several good chances including a breakaway from Wilson. Devils were on their heels and just totally unsettled relative to the first two periods – the caps passed the Devils in xGF at about the 7 minute mark. We really didn’t generate much of anything – just a few cycle chances that died and a couple of rush chances that also died.

The Caps got on the board early in the third on a broken play that started with a failed clear along the right wing boards. The puck came back below the Devils goal and Ovi made a nice power move – with Allen swimming and Luke caught in no mans land – he found a clean McMichael in front with a gaping cage.

You could feel their second of the night coming and sure enough at 8:29 of the third Ovechkin cashed in. Using his girth, cultivated over years by Subway and Doritos, he got a feed in the slot, boxed out Luke and spun sneaking one under Allen’s pad and we are tied. That man is a tank, and not much you can do about it.

Off to OT We Go​


Coming into this game, I would’ve taken the point all day. But mid second I got greedy and a said to myself “Did we give up when the Germans bombed Pearl Harbor??!” I WANTED this win, needed it for the vibe shift.

It was a somewhat low event OT, the Caps got next to nothing, and the best chance we got was snuffed out by Thompson on Nemo for a rebound. Paging team Canada again.

Since we are suddenly shootout gods, why not. The usually reliable Paul Cotter decided to shoot, Bratt scored on a disgusting filthy preposterous move and our new hero Nemec finished them off. Allen was rock solid stopping two of three including the greatest goals scorer to ever live.

We got the two points. They don’t ask how, they ask how many. We are on to Florida with a pitstop at home to hopefully pick up Dougie and Brown.

Some Scattered Thoughts​


-It’d be super cool if we could do one of these in regulation – Luke played 29 minutes AGAIN

-We may see some blendering (it’s a word) as we go here to find the right combos. None of the lines were particularly standout

-I’ve completely lost the plot on where we stand in terms of IR/Cap space. Might need to bring in NASA

-I have been VERY impressed with the simplicity in White/Cholo pair. Steady, off the glass, dump in and stand your ground hockey.

-We are going to need more from several guys, Cotter stands out the most to me.

-Nico is clearly nursing something, his game does not look crisp at all.

That’s it gang, we got the W – keep stacking wins, what’d you think of the game tonight?

LGD

Source: https://www.allaboutthejersey.com/devils-game-recaps/63082/no-jack-no-problem
 
UPDATED: Jack Hughes Out Eight Weeks After Hand Surgery — Sheldon Keefe Press Conference Open Post

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I was just getting inside yesterday when I opened my phone and read:

#NEWS: Jack Hughes is out with a non-hockey, hand injury. He is being evaluated…

After that, I pretty much stopped reading for a moment. Evaluation can mean quite a range of injury timelines, but the next thing I saw made me even more afraid (from The Athletic’s Peter Baugh):

A league source stressed that this was a freak accident. Hughes is still being evaluated.

Because of course, calling it a “freak accident” is sure to make fans avoid thinking the worst. It’s not like nearly half of Devils fans once opened their phones to find out one of their team’s most beloved football players blew half his hand off with fireworks.

Thankfully, though, some of the news began to trickle out early on Jack. A couple hours after Elliotte Friedman shared that the accident happened at a team dinner in Chicago (a dinner where the team happened to take a picture with Frank the Tank, who was at the same restaurant, later on), Kristy Flannery reported that it was not a knife cut that caused the injury, but glass. Glass injuries can be somewhat unpredictable, but they make much more of an impact at the surface level, while a knife can literally take off pieces of fingers. Still, the possibility of a more serious injury that keeps him out until February or later remains.

Timeline can be quite variable. If just superficial then will be out roughly 1 week to let the wound heal for Hughes

If any tendons are cut then will require surgery and 3+ months out like Charles Alexis Legault

Unlikely any significant blood vessel or nerve injury https://t.co/necovT9Od5

— Dr. Harjas Grewal (@Harjas_Grewal) November 15, 2025

Like I said, that’s quite a range of possibilities. I imagine that, since it was a glass injury, it may have taken awhile for hospital staff to stop his bleeding so he could be evaluated. I would have a hard time thinking they don’t have a timeline by this morning, though.

What the Devils Did in the Aftermath​


In response to the injury, the New Jersey Devils placed Connor Brown on injured reserve to recall Shane LaChance from the AHL. Brown, who has already been out for more than the minimum required time on IR, can be reactivated at any time. LaChance has just one assist in 11 games for the Utica Comets, who have been one of the worst teams in the AHL in Ryan Parent’s first full season as head coach after taking over on an interim basis for the majority of last year. These moves followed Thursday’s placement of Zack MacEwen back on IR, recalling Nathan Legare.

What I Would Like to See Down the Middle​


The wild card here is whether Cody Glass is missing time for the Devils. He was seen at team dinner for the Devils, and the team has made no comment on his status after leaving last game with an apparent shoulder injury. In fact, none of the team’s reporters even commented on the fact that the Devils had a short practice in Chicago yesterday, when they could have reported on whether Jack Hughes or Cody Glass were on the ice.

If Cody Glass is in for the Devils, that would make life a lot easier for the Devils, who would be able to use Mercer and Glass as the second and third-line centers. If Glass is not in for the Devils, I would rather see Paul Cotter play third-line center than Juho Lammikko. Why? Cotter played in that role for parts of the second and third periods last night, splitting some time with Luke Glendening, after Glass went down the tunnel a second time. In over five minutes with Noesen on the third line, Cotter had a 77.78 CF% and 87.43 xGF% on Wednesday night, winning two of his three draws.

Paul Cotter as a center is more along the lines of emergency usage rather than a permanent solution to any long-term need, but I think it’s worth considering if Jack’s injury turns out to be a short-term one. He has won 53.9 percent of his 89 draws with the Devils over the last two seasons, and he played center in limited situations for the team last year. If it tames his decisions to go out and throw extra hits, it might make him a better defensive player, anyway.

The Press Conference​


The Devils originally told reporters that Sheldon Keefe would be made available to the media at noon today. That was pushed back to 4:45, perhaps in conjunction with the Devils not having a morning skate because of a college basketball game. Assuming that a link for livestreaming this press conference becomes available later today, I will embed it below. If the team does not put it out as a livestream on YouTube or NHL.com, I would be inclined to think it’s news they don’t really want us hearing.

Check back later (I’m hoping around 3:00 or 3:30) to see if there is a livestream link for the press conference. Then, we can all comment on it here, hoping for good news on Jack Hughes and Cody Glass.

5:45 PM Update: Please see the embedded video for Keefe’s conference. The news was not outstanding.

1:20 PM Update: Jack Hughes Out Eight Weeks After Hand Surgery​


It ended up being (ostensibly) between the best and worst-case scenarios.

The New Jersey Devils have provided the following medical update:

“New Jersey Devils C Jack Hughes underwent successful surgery on his finger.
The procedure was performed by Dr. Robert Hotchkiss at the Hospital for Special Surgery in New York City.
The expected return to play… pic.twitter.com/wVkPNZwe0Y

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

Jack Hughes is rather irreplaceable in the lineup, and I am not sure the Devils will actually be able to make any additions to alleviate his absence due to the new LTIR rules in place this season. Since this is a medium-term injury (he will miss around 27 games, if eight weeks ends up being the right timeline), the Devils would be hard-pressed to fit any additional players under the cap ceiling once Jack is returned from his injury.

The good news is that Jack seems to have avoided any career-altering injury. This was the expectation of the previously quoted Dr. Grewal, who posted on Twitter that an injury caused by glass would be incredibly unlikely to cause that extensive damage. The Devils will still have to make it work in the meantime, though, and we will see what this team is really made of.

Source: https://www.allaboutthejersey.com/d...vils-sheldon-keefe-press-conference-open-post
 
Devils in the Details – 11/17/25: Glassgate Edition

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Here are your links for today:

Devils Links​


Everything is great really:

The New Jersey Devils have provided the following medical update:

“New Jersey Devils C Jack Hughes underwent successful surgery on his finger.
The procedure was performed by Dr. Robert Hotchkiss at the Hospital for Special Surgery in New York City.
The expected return to play… pic.twitter.com/wVkPNZwe0Y

— New Jersey Devils (@NJDevils) November 15, 2025
Everyone stated that it was a freak accident that caused #NJDevils Jack Hughes’ hand injury. I’m being told he accidentally leaned on a glass, and it broke, causing the cut that Elliotte Friedman referenced in his report.

— Kristy Flannery (@InStilettos_NHL) November 14, 2025
Know there's been a lot of speculation/theories about Jack Hughes. I drove down to DC to find out the details.

Fact is, per multiple sources: He slipped and fell on a broken piece of glass.

So, yeah, “freak accident” indeed. Just a shame.#NJDevilshttps://t.co/2sKQdOoebk

— Ryan Novozinsky (@ryannovoNHL) November 16, 2025

“It’s an incredibly unfortunate story, but word came Friday that Jack Hughes suffered a hand injury while at a team dinner Thursday night. Exact details are unknown at this time, but it’s believed he slipped and cut his hand, in what multiple sources are calling a ‘fluke accident.’” [Sportsnet]

Another one:

#NEWS: Head coach Sheldon Keefe says Cody Glass is out week-to-week with an upper-body injury. pic.twitter.com/WPxTLWeOSd

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

Some good news:

Dougie Hamilton and Connor Brown are expected to join #NJDevils at practice on Monday.

— Amanda Stein (@amandacstein) November 15, 2025

In Saturday’s game against the Capitals, the Devils blew a 2-0 lead but Simon Nemec finished Washington off in the shootout and delivered New Jersey a 3-2 win. [Devils NHL]

“On the heels of signing a seven-year contract extension worth $9 million per year, Luke Hughes has not yet played like a $9 million defenseman. This was supposed to be his breakout season. It still could be, but it hasn’t played out that way through 17 games.” [Devils on the Rush ($)]

Hockey Links​


Adrian Kempe gets an eight-year deal:

Adrian Kempe and LA have agreed on an 8 year extension at an AAV of $10.625M

— Elliotte Friedman (@FriedgeHNIC) November 16, 2025

A look around the Metropolitan Division at rookies making early marks for their teams: [NHL.com]

“With some NHLers already officially on teams, and other roster spots seemingly starting to be finalized behind the scenes, which players are making their cases to crack an Olympic roster with their early performances this season?” [The Athletic ($)]

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

Source: https://www.allaboutthejersey.com/d...ils-in-the-details-11-17-25-glassgate-edition
 
So Now What?

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Over the first month-plus of the 2025-26 season, the New Jersey Devils have been ravaged by injuries. I know I’m stating the obvious here, but it really can’t be understated how much injuries have affected the Devils’ season. The team has suffered so many injuries that the group of players that wears the uniform has started to resemble the Utica Comets more than the New Jersey Devils. Yet somehow, the NHL’s Ship of Theseus has overcome all these injuries to begin their season 13-4-1. This team deserves immense credit for pulling off such a feat, but I’d be lying if I said I wasn’t concerned that the bottom will drop out any day now.

The one silver lining here is that the injury bug had not yet come for the team’s most important players, namely Jack Hughes, Nico Hischier, Jesper Bratt, and Timo Meier. Sure Brett Pesce is arguably New Jersey’s best defenseman at this moment in time, and his injury has been difficult to absorb. But at least the Devils had some semblance of depth on the right side of their defense to cover his loss for a bit.

But over the weekend, the injury bug finally bit one of New Jersey’s indispensable players.

Jack Hughes will be out for around two months after suffering a “freak” injury at a team dinner in Chicago. He is the Devils’ best player, and unlike at right-side defense, New Jersey does not have depth to spare at the center position. Simply put, New Jersey will be a far worse team with Hughes out of the lineup, they cannot function as well without him.

At the very least, this is not a season-ending injury. If he really does return in approximately two months, that means we can expect to see him back in the lineup in mid-January. Assuming no more injuries (I know, big assumption), that would give Hughes plenty of time to get back up to speed for the playoffs if the Devils manage to qualify.

But it’s that “manage to qualify” part that has me a bit concerned. Two months isn’t season-ending, but it’s a significant amount of time. So how can the Devils survive life without their best player for two months and manage to still be in a playoff spot upon his return? Let’s go through some thoughts on the current state of the team and address some ways they might attack life without Jack Hughes.

The Other Players Need To Get Healthy​


So aside from Hughes, what is the current status of New Jersey’s other injured players? The good news is several of them should (emphasis on should) be back before Hughes hits the ice again.

Perhaps the most important of them all is Pesce. He suffered his injury on October 26th against the Colorado Avalanche. After that game, head coach Sheldon Keefe said Pesce would be expected to miss “at least a month”. I’m going to put on my detective hat for a second and say that if Pesce was expected to miss two-plus months like Hughes, Keefe would have said that. “At least a month” implies to me that Pesce is expected to miss anywhere from one month to slightly less than two months. If that’s the case, we can probably expect to see Pesce back in the next 2-3 weeks. Not ideal, but we won’t have to wait for too much longer.

Elsewhere on the right side of the blueline, Dougie Hamilton should return within the next week or so, though we won’t see Johnny Kovacevic for a while, most likely not until 2026.

As far as other New Jersey centers go, we won’t be seeing Cody Glass for a couple weeks at least after he was injured against Chicago last week. Thankfully it’s not a “month-to-month” injury so I would expect Glass back before Christmas. I mentioned that Pesce might be the most significant injury loss, but I could also make the case for Glass. He has his limitations of course, but he can be a steady presence in the middle six, and this season he’s shown a pleasantly surprising goal-scoring ability. If Glass can return soon, that would go a long way toward stabilizing the center ice position.

As for Evgenii Dadonov and Connor Brown, I honestly have no idea at this point. Dadonov has been out since midway through Opening Day, and Brown’s injury on the west coast trip didn’t seem all that serious, but he’s been out a while now with no concrete updates. Meanwhile I really feel for Zack MacEwen, who solidified the fourth line once he was inserted into the lineup, got hurt and missed time, came back and clicked on the fourth line again, then was injured in Chicago and is now out again. I don’t know when to expect him back either.

Add it all up and we see a lot of players who should start returning over the next few weeks. In fact I expect just about every one of these players to return before Jack Hughes does. We can only hope they don’t suffer anymore injury setbacks, as getting these players back would go a long way towards mitigating the loss of Hughes.

Hischier Needs To Return To Form​


You know what would really help the Devils absorb Hughes’ absence? Nico Hischier finding his game again.

I hate to speculate, but I wouldn’t be surprised if Hischier is nursing some sort of injury himself. He got off to a great start to the season, so much so that I wrote about it back in October. Since then, Hischier has looked like a shell of himself. He’s not producing points anymore, he’s not shutting down elite competition anymore, and he’s not driving play even against depth players anymore. No getting around it, he’s been bad:

G50NFHCXIAAmODs.png

That is absolutely shocking to see from a player of Hischier’s caliber. Whether he needs to get healthy from an undisclosed injury or he’s perfectly healthy and just slumping, the captain really needs to get it going again.

If I wanted to look at the glass being half-full, I’d say that I do have confidence that he will, in fact, figure it out. Hischier is too talented a player to be held down for long. If it’s an injury, then I expect him to regain his health relatively soon since this is an injury that’s not serious enough to keep him out. And if it’s not an injury, even better, as that would mean I anticipate a bounce back any day now. The Devils absolutely need Hischier to be the stud 1C he’s always been in Hughes’ absence.

Nemec Needs To Keep It Up For A Little While Longer​


The past couple of weeks have been very encouraging for Simon Nemec. He’s still got his flaws as a player, some of them being serious flaws, but he’s got unmistakable strengths as well. After a rocky start to the campaign, Nemec has put together some of his strongest showings lately, culminating in his magnum opus in Chicago in which he scored a hat trick that included the game-winner in overtime. He obviously won’t be doing that every game, but on a team decimated by injuries, New Jersey needs as many players to step up as possible.

Nemec followed up his tour de force against the Blackhawks by netting the game-winner in the shootout in Washington on Saturday. It actually wasn’t a particularly good game for Nemec, but I’m willing to forgive him considering the current state of the Devils. And scoring the shootout winner goes a long way toward salvaging a game anyway.

Nemec is still an incomplete player, and he continues to make you scratch your head watching some of the plays he makes. But he also is capable of driving offense to a huge degree from the back end, and with Hughes on the shelf for a while, New Jersey is all of a sudden starved for offensive play-drivers. If Nemec can continue to produce offense from the blue line, that would be a huge boost.

Special Teams Need To Keep Being A Difference-Maker​


Through all the injuries, the Devils’ special teams have never faltered. In fact you could argue that New Jersey boasts the best special teams in the entire NHL:

Special Teams – November 16 pic.twitter.com/eKP9XAmJ36

— JFresh (@JFreshHockey) November 16, 2025

This needs to continue. Yes I understand not having Hughes is going to hurt the power play a lot. That being said, New Jersey still has top offensive players that should help that unit tread water while Hughes recovers. Hischier, Bratt, Meier, Nemec, Luke Hughes, Dawson Mercer, Stefan Noesen, Arseny Gritsyuk…these are all players that should be able to produce on the man-advantage even without Jack Hughes’ help. They don’t need to be the top PP unit in the NHL, but they do need to be above-average, and probably around top-10. It will be a challenge, but I think the current group is capable of it.

On the other side, the penalty kill has been splendid as well, coming in at around 85% efficiency entering today. That’s top-5 in the league, which is roughly where they should stay, especially as they continue to return to full strength on the blue line.

Losing Hughes will hurt the team’s production at 5-on-5. But if the power play can pick up the slack, and if the penalty kill can continue to hum, that would cover Hughes’ absence in a big way.

The Coaching Staff Needs To Figure Out The Best Tactics​


Here’s one that I’ll be curious about. In 2024-25, the Devils’ first season under Sheldon Keefe, New Jersey went away from the run and gun system implemented by Lindy Ruff and become much more of a defensive team. A big emphasis was less rush offense, more dump and chase, and a heavy focus on defensive structure and responsibility. The Devils were a fantastic defensive team in the 2024 part of 2024-25, and while they faded after that, they were still solid defensively until the very end.

But that team obviously had its limitations. Circa January or February of last season, it became clear that Fitzgerald overcorrected on bringing in grit and physicality. The players tasked with providing sandpaper just could not score at all, and the offense cratered. The team still made the playoffs, and while I still think the Devils would’ve at the very least taken that first round series to seven games (if not outright won it) if they were fully healthy, they still didn’t have the offensive juice to go all the way.

Then after the season ended, Fitzgerald seemed to understand he overcorrected on grit, and injected some much needed speed and skill back into the lineup. Dadonov and Brown were signed in free agency, Gritsyuk came over from Russia, Glass was brought back, and all of a sudden the Devils returned to being more rush-oriented in their offensive approach. Not to the level they were at under Ruff, but New Jersey was playing much faster to begin this season.

With Hughes now out for a while, I wonder if this is the straw that breaks the camel’s back in terms of forcing the coaching staff to shift their approach. The team had lost players like Hamilton, Brown, and Dadonov, who all brought something to the table as far as rush offense and transition play goes. But they remained more focused on rush and transition tactics because they still had players who could do it. Without Hughes now, I wonder if Keefe decides to revert back to trying to grind out slow, methodical 2-1 victories again.

I’m not even saying I necessarily endorse that approach. But it’s something I’m curious about, and I can see the merits to it. If New Jersey does not have the personnel to execute high-level rush offense and transition play right now, perhaps a slower, more defensive approach is best until the Devils get healthier.

Tom Fitzgerald Needs To Figure Out Some External Additions​


Now we get to the fun(?) part: speculating about trades.

There are really two popular names out there right now, so we’ll focus on them today: Nashville’s Ryan O’Reilly and St. Louis’ Jordan Kyrou. O’Reilly has two years left on his deal at a $4.5m AAV. Not bad at all for a player that, while in his mid-30’s, still seems to have plenty of juice left. And because his contract is up at the end of next season, this would be a move for now AND a move for later. Remember, the Devils might be asking O’Reilly to step into a top-six role now, but once Hughes returns then O’Reilly becomes an overqualified 3C, which would in turn make a (healthy) Cody Glass an overqualified 4C. All of a sudden a team weakness, center depth, becomes a major strength on paper.

Kyrou on the other hand would not help the center depth since he’s a winger, but he’s one heck of a winger. If a trade for O’Reilly is a move for now and later, a move for Kyrou would take that to the next level. The 27-year old has a whopping six years left on his deal after this season, with an AAV of $8.125m. It’s a big cap hit, but he’s worth it, especially in a rising cap environment. Over the last four seasons, Kyrou has averaged about 33 goals and 71 points per season, excellent numbers indeed. Imagine him on a line with Hughes and Bratt. That might be the most fun line in the league.

The downside, of course, is that a move for either of these players will cost a lot. Even O’Reilly, who theoretically shouldn’t cost that much considering his age, modest point production, and contract, will not come cheap. Teams know how desperate New Jersey is to fill holes in their roster. You can just see the vultures circling overhead, trying to extort Tom Fitzgerald for huge returns. The onus will be on Fitz and the rest of the Devils’ braintrust to thread the needle between adding talent while not overpaying too much.

I know I’m being a bit unreasonable here, but I would absolutely love to see the Devils make one of these moves. As mentioned, each player would help in different ways, but they would both help nonetheless. New Jersey is right in the middle of their contention window, and in a season in which there does not appear to be a super-team set to dominate the East, the Devils should go all-in to win a wide-open conference. I would be fine slightly overpaying for a player like O’Reilly or Kyrou.

Final Thoughts And Your Take​


These are just a few ways New Jersey can help cover the loss of Hughes for the next two months. This is not an exhaustive list, as an exhaustive list would basically be book-length. But at the very least, I wanted to cover some of the most important ways the Devils could survive without their superstar center in the lineup.

What do you think the Devils should do now that Hughes is set to miss time? Aside from Hischier, is there anyone else you want to see improve their form? Aside from Nemec, is there anyone else you want to see sustain big gains? What other external options might you want to see New Jersey pursue? As always, thanks for reading!

Source: https://www.allaboutthejersey.com/devils-issues-views-and-ge/63128/so-now-what
 
Game Preview #19: New Jersey Devils @ Tampa Bay Lightning

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I’m hoping to see a similar picture tonight after the game, minus seeing Markstrom in goal. | Photo by Rich Graessle/NHL via Getty Images

  • The Matchup: New Jersey Devils (13-4-1) @ Tampa Bay Lightning (9-7-2)
  • The Time: 7:00pm EST
  • The Broadcast: MSGSN, Devils Hockey Radio

Last Devils Game​


On Saturday, the Devils found a way, yet again, to get a win, defeating the Washington Capitals 3-2 in the shootout. There was a mixture of good and bad this game. However, they did get the win, and that’s all that matters. The Devils did take a 2-0 lead in the first period before letting up 2 goals 7:29 apart in the 3rd period to send the game to OT (and an eventual shoot out). I would have been happy to get at least 1 point, but the Devils dug deep to get the 2 points.

The Capitals and Ovechkin decided a 99% innocent play by Bratt warranted putting a bounty on his head, culminating with a hit in the first period where Bratt ended up down on the ice during Luke’s 1st goal of the season (finally!). I’m sure those of you watching were about to walk out of the room and vomit like I was, but Bratt got up and was able to finish the game. Not only did Bratt finish the game, but he made an absolutely filthy move in the shootout to get the Devils on the board in round 2.

Heading into round 4 of the shootout, Alex “headhunter” Ovechkin missed on his attempt (karma) setting the stage for the Devils to win. In what at this point, should seem obvious, Keefe decided to send out Simon “en fuego” Nemec to attempt to win the game. Of course, he scored. What else is there to say about Nemec recently? From the late, game tying goal against the Islanders (saving a point), to his hat trick against Chicago (including the game winner in OT) and his shootout winning goal against Washington, the kid, for the moment, is absolutely unstoppable. Please hockey gods. Let his play continue like this forever.

Last Lightning Game​


On Sunday night, Tampa Bay lost to the Vancouver Canucks by a score of 6-2. It was game number one of a three game home stand. Overall, the Lightning are in the middle of a run where they play 4 of their next 5 games at home, with the only road game being a short trip to Washington on Saturday.

Tampa Bay had a 2-0 lead early in the 2nd period on Sunday, before letting up a goal to end the period still ahead 2-1. After that, the game went completely off the rails in the 3rd period. Vancouver scored 5 goals in the 3rd period, including 3 of those goals in a less than 2 minute span. For some reason, Tampa Bay decided to pull their goalie while down 5-2, allowing Vancouver to “seal” the win with an ENG. Tampa Bay should have plenty of motivation to come out ready to play tonight. Besides collapsing in the 3rd period of their last game, they also lost the last game they played against the Devils, back on October 11th, which now seems like 3 years ago.

The biggest difference between that game and tonight, is both teams had relatively healthy rosters back in October. Tampa Bay, like the Devils, has had its share of injuries this season too. As of today, Tampa is missing Victor “I like to spear Nico in the groin” Hedman, Anthony Cirelli, Pontus Holmberg, Ryan McDonagh and Nick Paul. Obviously this could always change before tonight, but at least the Devils aren’t the only team missing significant players to injury.

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


After the joyous recent news about Jack Hughes, I am pleased to inform you all that there might be some actual good news today. Per Amanda Stein from practice yesterday, it appears Dougie Hamilton, Connor Brown and Evgenii Dadonov WILL travel with the team on the rest of the road trip. It’s not certain who, if any of the 3 will play or when on the road trip, but the fact that they all practiced with the team and are going on the trip is a good sign. Basically, they may not all be back tonight, but they should all be back sooner rather than later.

In other roster news, the Devils have placed Cody Glass on injured reserve retro to 11/12/2025 and recalled Ethan Edwards from Utica.

#NEWS: We have placed F Cody Glass (upper body) on injured reserve, retro to 11/12/25.
We have recalled D Ethan Edwards from Utica (AHL). He will join the club for today's practice. pic.twitter.com/EcJ5EIkDaw

— New Jersey Devils (@NJDevils) November 17, 2025

Grimace’s Prediction and 2025-2026 Record Tracker​


Grimace and I got into a recent spat over his last game prediction. He originally said they were going to win against Washington. After Jack Hughes got hurt, I made him change his prediction to say they would lose. We sorted it all out, and I agreed to let him make his own predictions from here out. Grimace believes the Devils will find a way again to win tonight!

Grimace’s 2025-2026 Season Prediction record currently stands at 7-3-0.

Your Take​


The Devils right now, continue finding ways to both win and put points up on the board. With the injuries the team has been facing, it would be easy to fold, but the team refuses to quit, and I for one, love to see it. The only “complaint” that I have for tonight is, for the sake of my nerves, can the Devils not have their 6th straight OT game tonight? Sure, they won 4 out of those 5 games, but it’s too much stress! Feel free to leave your thoughts and comments below and thanks for reading!

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

YouTube

Apple Podcast

Spotify

Source: https://www.allaboutthejersey.com/d...view-18-new-jersey-devils-tampa-bay-lightning
 
Depleted Devils Struck by Lightning

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It’s not like New Jersey hasn’t been here before.

Surviving long stretches of the season without their top center and franchise player has basically become a rite of winter for the Devils, who surely hoped the return of three regulars from injury to it’s lineup would give a boost to what was starting to look like the Utica Comets South. But even with Dougie Hamilton, Evgenii Dadonov, and Connor Brown back it was painfully obvious how badly the Devils are going to miss Jack Hughes.

New Jersey peppered Lightning goalie Andrei Vasilevskiy with 32 shots – most of those, and probably the best of them, in the first two periods – but never truly solved the big Russian. Meanwhile, Jake Guentzel had a hat trick and Nikita Kucherov added a goal and an assist as the Jack Hughes-less Devils fell 5-1 to the Lightning at Benchmark International Arena on Tuesday night in Tampa, Fl.

New Jersey lost for the first time on the current five-game road trip (2-1) and the Devils dropped to 13-5-1 and fell into second in both the Metropolitan Division and the Eastern Conference.

The game was scoreless midway through the first when Dawson Mercer turned the puck over to Guentzel at the Lightning blue line. Guentzel raced down the right wing and snapped a shot past Devils goalie Jacob Markstrom along the ice to make it 1-0 at 11:40.

Jake Guentzel activates DRS mode to open the scoring! 💨 pic.twitter.com/4ez9Po6i2K

— NHL (@NHL) November 19, 2025

It was looking as if the Devils would escape the period down just a goal, but with just 22 seconds to go in the frame, Luke Hughes turned the puck over to Anthony Cirelli and Cirelli found Kucherov in the slot to make it 2-0.

A Luke Hughes’ hooking call would lead to a Guentzel power-play goal midway through the second and what looked at the time like an insurmountable 3-0 lead, but a fortunate bounce off Nico Hischier’s skate was gloved into the net by the Lightning’s J.J. Moser to snap Vasileskiy’s shutout with 2:13 left in the period.

Nico's gonna find a way. pic.twitter.com/0u20gSJnAX

— New Jersey Devils (@NJDevils) November 19, 2025

The Devils didn’t seem to get much of a momentum swing from the Hischier goal however. They gave up two in a three-minute span before the third was eight minutes old and were outshot 12-5 by a Tampa team that was playing a “get right” game after being embarrassed by Vancouver at home on Sunday.

“Familiar” Faces​


Some of the returning regulars are anything but.

Dadonov, signed in the offseason to fill out the top six, made just his second appearance as a Devil after missing 17 straight following a hand injury sustained in the season opener against Carolina on Oct. 9. Meanwhile, Connor Brown played his 12th game of the of year but his first since Oct. 30 at San Jose – a stretch of 12 games. Each player had a shot on goal and Brown was a minus-2 on the night.

Dougie Hamilton, who’d missed the last four games, had three shots and logged nearly 20 minutes in his return.

Markstrom’s Struggles​


Another game, another adventure for Jacob Markstrom. Markstrom stopped 24 of the 29 shots he faced for an .828 save percentage. Sure, you can’t really blame him when Luke Hughes turns the puck over and Cirelli finds ones of the game’s great shooters in the slot all alone, but at some point he needs to make a save he has no business making. He’s had one game all season with a save percentage above .900 and he’s surrendered some seriously questionable goals. That first Guentzel goal when the game’s scoreless. It’s a breakaway. It’s also not a great shot and it’s along the ice. He didn’t exactly cover himself in glory on the Darren Raddysh goal that all but ended the game at 4:49 of the third.

Up Next​


The Devils five game road trip continues at 7 pm, Thursday night when they head south to Sunrise to take on the defending Stanley Cup Champion Panthers, who are also missing a bunch of key players.

Your Thoughts​


So what did you think? You have to give them credit. They’d piled up a bunch of points before tonight under very trying circumstances and the Lightning are good and have traditionally had New Jersey’s number. The Lightning were missing some key guys on D (Viktor Hedman, Erik Cernak) but the Devils offense still looked cluless for most of the game.

Source: https://www.allaboutthejersey.com/devils-game-recaps/63239/depleted-devils-struck-by-lightning
 
A Breakdown of Every Trade Tom Fitzgerald Has Made Since Becoming Devils General Manager

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There’s a saying that imitation is the sincerest form of flattery.

There’s also another saying that there are no original ideas anymore, or that good ideas are borrowed, but great ideas are stolen.

I say all that to preface my article this week, as I was scrolling through Twitter over the weekend and saw a tweet from Noah Strang, who wrote a lengthy article on his substack over the weekend. With the Vancouver Canucks somewhere in the mushy middle of the NHL standings and more and more people criticizing Patrik Allvin and Jim Rutherford, Noah broke down every trade the Canucks have made since they took over the decision making process for that organization.

It’s a lengthy read that I think is worth checking out as a hockey fan, and while he ultimately did not pass final judgment on the Rutherford/Allvin era, I think its easy for fans to see the body of work as a collective whole and draw their own conclusions.

With Tom Fitzgerald being on the job even longer than them, I decided to ‘borrow’ an idea from Strang and give you the Devils version, breaking down and grading every trade Fitzgerald has made since stepping into the big chair. After all, it’s Tom Fitzgerald’s job to make moves to make the Devils a better hockey team, and its not like there haven’t been certain non-hockey events recently that may or may not necessitate going out and doing something to address the rash of injuries the team has endured. The Devils currently sit at the top of the standings in the Metropolitan Division, and teams in this position typically make moves to improve.

I’ll probably eventually do a similar article in the summer recapping and grading every free agent signing in the Fitzgerald era, but those moves won’t be included here. We don’t need to talk about how bad the Ondrej Palat signing was for the billionth time. What we can talk about in the comments is the job Fitzgerald has done making trades since he took over as interim general manager on January 12th, 2020 after the Devils fired the late Ray Shero. The primary source for this will be PuckPedia.

Devils Trade Their Captain to the Islanders​


Islanders Acquire: D Andy Greene

Devils Acquire: D David Quenneville & a 2021 2nd round draft pick (later traded to Colorado for D Ryan Graves)

Date: February 16th, 2020


For context, the Devils were in the middle of a disastrous season in 2019-20. Ray Shero and John Hynes were fired months earlier, and the Devils had already traded Taylor Hall to the Arizona Coyotes when it was apparent that he would not re-sign in New Jersey. With the trade deadline approaching, the fire sale was underway.

Greene, the Devils captain, was a 37-year old pending UFA at the time, so it made sense trading him at the deadline, and while Quenneville wound up not doing much in the Devils organization before moving on to the Swedish League, the Devils wound up parlaying that 2nd round pick into two seasons of Ryan Graves. A solid first deal for Fitzgerald.

Grade: B

Devils Fire Sale Continues With a Fan Favorite​


Lightning Acquire: C/W Blake Coleman

Devils Acquire: W Nolan Foote and a 2020 1st round pick (D Shakir Mukhamadullin)

Date: February 16th, 2020


Blake Coleman had one of the best contracts in the league at the time. He was in Year 2 of a 3-year pact making $1.8M AAV, which was excellent value for a very good third line winger. The demands for his services at the trade deadline were high, and the Tampa Bay Lightning ultimately got what wound up being a key role player for two championship teams. I would think they would do that deal all over again if they could.

But would the Devils? I’d say so, even if it didn’t work out quite as expected.

Nolan Foote wound up playing parts of five NHL seasons with the Devils, but was ultimately unable to establish himself as an NHL regular and the Devils moved on this past offseason. But he was a recent first round pick of the Lightning at the time and a well-regarded prospect where he made prospect rankings lists. It made sense for a team that was still thin with their prospect pool to target a player like Foote. They also did get a first round pick for a bottom six player, which is good value. The Devils wound up taking defenseman Shakir Mukhamadullin with that pick, who ultimately became the centerpiece of a deal we’ll talk about later.

Grade: B+

Sell, Sell, Sell At the Trade Deadline​


Sabres acquire: W Wayne Simmonds

Devils acquire: 2021 5th round pick
(D Topias Vilen)

Date: February 24th, 2020


Did you remember that long-time Flyer Wayne Simmonds was briefly a Devil? I did. But I can forgive you if you didn’t.

The Devils retained half of Simmonds’ $5M AAV to pick up a future 5th round pick, which wound up becoming Topias Vilen. It was a worthwhile move to add another prospect to the pool, although I’m skeptical that Vilen will ever become anything more than he is right now.

Grade: B-

A Goaltender Swap, Because Why Not​


Canucks acquire: G Louis Domingue

Devils acquire: G Zane McIntyre

Date: February 24th, 2020


I assume the Canucks were in the market for an organizational depth goaltender as a “just in case” for a playoff push, hence this deal. And it made sense for them, as Domingue has appeared in 144 NHL games versus 8 for McIntyre. Money probably wasn’t a primary motivating factor here, but the Devils did wound up saving about $400k with this deal, which probably made an accountant at HBSE happy. Otherwise, this trade is mostly irrelevant.

Grade: D

Devils Sell Off Another Pending Free Agent​


Hurricanes acquire: D Sami Vatanen

Devils acquire: C/W Janne Kuokkanen, D Fredrik Claesson, and a 2020 3rd round pick (G Nico Daws)

Date: February 24th, 2020


The Devils acquired Vatanen a few years earlier when they traded Adam Henrique to the Ducks, but with him being another pending UFA on a team going nowhere, it made sense to move on and get what you could from him. And again, I thought Fitzgerald got solid value, even if the pieces didn’t entirely work out.

Janne Kuokkanen played parts of three seasons in New Jersey and at one time looked like part of what could’ve been a fun line alongside Jack Hughes and Yegor Sharangovich. But he ultimately fell out of favor before the Devils bought out his contract. Kuokkanen has bounced between with Swiss and Swedish leagues since leaving the NHL. Claesson got into a few games for the Devils down the stretch of that season and bounced around the league a few more years before taking his talents to the KHL.

As it turns out, the ‘get’ in this deal was the draft pick used to select Nico Daws. The jury is still out whether or not Daws has a future in New Jersey, especially after the Devils re-signed both Jacob Markstrom and Jake Allen. But he’s a solid organizational depth goaltender and he’ll probably get another opportunity for the big club at some point.

Grade: B+

A Draft Pick Swap​


Coyotes Acquire: 2020 7th round pick (W Elliot Ekefjard)

Devils Acquire: 2021 7th round pick (C Zakhar Bardakov)

Date: October 7th, 2020


I’m sure this is the last time Bardakov’s name will come up in this article. Right?

Grade: B

Devils Take a Flier On a Veteran Defenseman​


Devils Acquire: D Ryan Murray

Blue Jackets Acquire: 2021 5th round pick (D Nikolai Makarov)

Date: October 8th, 2020


It’s important to remember that the Devils teams between 2014 and 2022 or so didn’t exactly have a ton of talent up and down the roster. But they did have cap space and they did have the time to take a flier on projects while they got their own house in order.

Ryan Murray, the former 2nd overall pick way back in 2012, fell out of favor after seven seasons in Ohio’s capital. But with one year left to go on his contract, he was a prime trade candidate and I don’t blame the Devils for taking a chance on a player with a high draft pedigree attached to him.

Murray was mostly ok in his only season in NJ, with 14 assists in 48 games (of the 56 game season). Murray wound up playing a couple more seasons in the league after leaving the Devils in free agency. Hindsight being 20/20, one might argue they’re better off with the pick, but its not like they really missed out on anything.

Grade: B-

Devils Take On Another Salary Cap Dump​


Devils Acquire: W Andreas Johnsson

Maple Leafs Acquire: W Joey Anderson

Date: October 10, 2020


The Devils continued to use their abundance of cap space by taking a chance on guys who could play in the NHL for them at the time. Johnsson struggled in his first season in Jersey with 11 points in 50 games. He was better in Year 2 with 13 goals and 22 assists, so maybe one can point to the weirdness with the COVID-shortened season and blame that. All in all, he played in 123 games for the Devils before becoming a salary cap dump throw-in for the Devils in the Timo Meier trade. He’s played the last three years in the Swedish league.

Meanwhile, Anderson bounced between the Leafs and the Marlies for a few seasons before being dealt to the Chicago Blackhawks and going through the same song and dance there. His most notable NHL season was in 2023-23 where he registered 5 goals and 12 assists for Chicago, but I think it’s safe to call this deal a wash at best.

Grade: C+

Lou Makes Another Deal With The Devil(s)​


Devils Acquire: C Mason Jobst, W A.J. Greer, a 2021 first round pick (W Chase Stillman), and a 2022 4th round pick (D Daniil Orlov)

Islanders Acquire: W Kyle Palmieri and C Travis Zajac

Date: April 7th, 2021


One year after striking a deal with his former team, Lou Lamoriello struck again.

The Devils were still in sell-mode with two big pending UFAs in Kyle Palmieri and longtime center Travis Zajac. The Isles were in the midst of pushing their chips in to try to win a Stanley Cup that they’d never quite reach. So on the surface, the deal makes sense for both sides. Zajac got one last opportunity to compete for a Cup before retiring, and Palmieri is still on the Isles roster to this day.

Hindsight being 20/20 though, the Devils return, which appeared to be fine at the time, is kind of underwhelming.

The Devils wound up retaining salary on both Palmieri and Zajac to facilitate the deal. But Mason Jobst wound up not lasting long in the Devils organization. Greer has wound up carving out an NHL role for himself as a 4th line grinder, but most of that work has come since he left New Jersey. We’ll see if Orlov ever becomes anything, and the Stillman pick was panned at the time and he’s also gone from the organization.

But value wise, I think the value was fair. They got a first round pick back. They got an additional pick back. They got what wound up being a useful NHL player back. The Devils might have bungled what they got back for their two outgoing veteran players but its tough to argue they didn’t get value back.

Grade: B

One of the Longshots Paid Off​


Capitals receive: 2021 3rd round pick (pick was later traded to the Rangers, who selected C Ryder Korczak)

Devils receive: D Jonas Siegenthaler

Date: April 11th, 2021


Having received this draft selection previously from the Arizona Coyotes as part of the return for Taylor Hall, the Devils opted to take a stab on a little known Swiss defender who was buried on the Capitals depth chart at the time.

Safe to say, that longshot stab in the dark paid off in a big way.

Siegenthaler has been a fixture as a Top 4 defenseman for the Devils basically since he arrived in New Jersey, averaging just under 20 minutes a night in the 287 games and counting he’s played for the Devils. He’s a reliable stay-at-home defender who has been a fixture on their penalty kill unit. Fitzgerald rewarded him with a team friendly five-year extension paying him $3.4M AAV through the end of the 2027-28 season. To land a player like that and get all of his prime years under contract at a more than reasonable AAV, and all it cost was a third round pick? That’s excellent GM’ing by Fitzgerald and a credit to whoever in their pro scouting department who saw Siegenthaler as a potential top pairing defenseman. This is probably the best trade Fitz has made as Devils GM.

Grade: A+

Shifting Back to Seller Mode​


Oilers receive: D Dmitry Kulikov

Devils receive: 2022 4th round draft pick (D Charlie Leddy)

Date: April 12th, 2021


One day after “buying” at the deadline by making the Siegenthaler deal, the Devils shifted back to selling mode by moving another pending UFA in Dmitry Kulikov.

Kulikov was already a well-traveled veteran defenseman, with stops in Florida, Buffalo, and Winnipeg before arriving in New Jersey. Kulikov was more than adequate in his only season in Newark, but with him being a pending UFA and the Devils going nowhere, it made sense to get what they could for him in a lost season. Edmonton thought that Kulikov could be a nice depth piece on a championship caliber team, and they were right. The problem for them was that Kulikov won those championships in Florida against the Edmonton Oilers.

Leddy played two seasons at Boston College and is in the middle of his second season at Quinnipiac, so we’ll see if the Devils wind up signing him once his collegiate career comes to an end. That said, I suppose he has just as much of a shot as anyone else of making it, which is all you can ask for four and a half years after the trade.

Grade: B

Taking Advantage Of The Expansion Draft Rules​


Avalanche receive: C Mikhail Maltsev and a 2021 2nd round pick (acquired from the Islanders in the Andy Greene trade)

Devils receive: D Ryan Graves

Date: July 15th, 2021


The Devils were in a unique position heading into the Seattle expansion draft where several of their top prospects weren’t eligible. Because of this, they didn’t have a ton of players who were worthy of protection in the draft. They tried to take advantage of this a few years earlier when they acquired Mirco Mueller from a Sharks team that had a deep blueline at the time, but that deal didn’t really work out.

This time around, the Devils did a better job.

For the reasonable price of a 2nd round pick and a prospect in Mikhail Maltsev, the Devils were able to pry away a Top Four defenseman from another deep team in the Colorado Avalanche and acquire Ryan Graves. They were then able to protect both Graves and the recently-acquired Siegenthaler from the Kraken in the expansion draft. Graves stepped onto a pairing with Damon Severson that overall did a good job during their two years together in Jersey.

The Devils ultimately allowed Graves to leave in free agency after the 2022-23 season, and that turned out to also be a wise decision by Tom Fitzgerald. The Penguins signed him to a six-year deal worth $4.5M AAV that has ultimately been a disaster for them, as Graves has spent most of this season at the AHL level. Meanwhile, Maltsev bounced back and forth between the Avs and the Colorado Eagles of the AHL before departing for the KHL after the 2023-24 season.

Grade: A-

A Classic Change of Scenery Deal That Didn’t Really Work Out For Either Side​


Devils acquire: D Christian Jaros

Sharks acquire: W Nicholas Merkley

Date: July 26th, 2021


The Devils continued to take stabs on young defensemen who might be able to play at the NHL level, but here’s a deal that didn’t really work out for anyone involved.

Nicholas Merkley, who was part of the return from the Coyotes for Taylor Hall, didn’t really have a lane for playing time at the NHL level with what the Devils had in place. So the Devils flipped him straight up for Christian Jaros, who had some NHL experience but ultimately fell out of favor in both Ottawa and San Jose before winding up in New Jersey.

Jaros played in 11 mostly uneventful games for the Devils while Merkley played in 9 games for the Sharks post-trade. Jaros left after that season and bounced around the KHL until attempting an NHL comeback this season with the Columbus Blue Jackets that didn’t pan out. Merkley also went the KHL route after the 2021-22 season ended and is currently with the Shanghai Dragons.

I don’t blame Fitzgerald for trying here, but this deal is a whole lot of ‘meh’

Grade: C-

The End of the Will Butcher Era​


Sabres acquire: D Will Butcher and a 2022 5th round draft pick (used on D Vsevolod Komarov)

Devils acquire…..cap space? Future considerations.

Date: July 28th, 2021


The 2017-18 Devils were known for a lot of things…..returning to the postseason for the first time since 2012, the NHL debuts of Nico Hischier and Jesper Bratt, and Taylor Hall’s Hart Trophy season.

Add “Will Butcher’s rookie season” to the list as well.

The Devils won the Will Butcher sweepstakes as they landed the coveted college free agent out of the University of Denver after a Hobey Baker Award season. Butcher made an immediate impact, with 44 points in 81 games and finishing 9th in the Calder voting. He took a bit of a step back in his second season, but still managed 30 points in 78 games. Then-GM Ray Shero rewarded Butcher with a three-year extension worth $3.73M AAV.

Unfortunately for the Devils, Butcher’s deficiencies as a player never really improved. He was never really the greatest skater to begin with, his defensive game never came around, and his offense continued to plummet. After two injury-plagued disappointing seasons with the Devils, they decided to move on in what was a pure salary cap dump, attaching a 5th round draft pick to entice the Buffalo Sabres to take on the final year of his deal. Butcher played out his NHL contract in Buffalo, and has bounced around the AHL and KHL since.

The good news for Butcher is this wasn’t the most significant transaction involving a Devils defenseman on this day. When you’re spending the kind of money you’re spending on Dougie Hamilton, there’s only so much room for offensive defensemen. Unfortunately, the Devils had to attach a pick to Butcher to get someone to take him, which knocks the trade grade down a few pegs.

Grade: D+

The One Where the Team That Got Nothing Won the Deal Going Away​


Blues receive: Future considerations

Devils receive: G Jon Gillies

Date: December 15th, 2021


Most people have tried to forget the disaster that was the 2021-22 season, but here’s a quick refresher.

The Devils went into the season with Jonathan Bernier and Mackenzie Blackwood as their goaltending duo, which is fine on paper. Except Bernier, who was hampered in training camp that year with a hip injury from the previous season, suffered a career-ending hip injury after 10 games with the Devils. And when Blackwood wasn’t ineffective on the ice, he was injured off the ice.

Blackwood missed time early that season with an injury. The Devils organizational #3 goaltender that year was Scott Wedgewood, with two relatively unproven options behind him in Nico Daws and Akira Schmid in their first pro seasons. So when Blackwood was ready to return, Wedgewood went on waivers, where he was ultimately claimed by the Arizona Coyotes.

It didn’t take long for Bernier to go down for good and for Blackwood to get hurt again and/or be ineffective again. With Wedgewood no longer in the organization, the Devils acquired Gillies to try to take some of the load off of Daws and Schmid. Unfortunately, Gillies was brutal and many words were written on this website about Devils goaltending that season while Wedgewood proved to be solid elsewhere. But hey, at least the Devils protected Mason Geertsen from going back on waivers, because you gotta have your priorities in order when you know you have two injured NHL goaltenders to protect a goon who isn’t good at being a goon or anything for that matter.

This is the rare deal where the Devils gave up nothing and they lost the trade by a mile. This deal and the following deal were organizational failures, from poor roster construction to poor roster management to poor performance by the players involved. Not only does the trade get a failing grade but so does the process surrounding it. And no, I don’t care that the Devils bottoming out led to them getting the #2 pick to draft Simon Nemec. That does not make the deal good after the fact.

Grade: F-

Another Failed Goaltender Trade​


Devils acquire: G Andrew Hammond

Canadiens acquire: C Nate Schnarr

Date: March 21st, 2022


Everything I just wrote about the Gillies trade goes for Andrew Hammond as well. The only difference is I do recall hearing how much Tom Fitzgerald was an idiot at the time for giving up on Nate Schnarr. So I’ll take this time to point out that after playing one more AHL season for Laval and Ontario, he’s been playing professionally overseas.

The good news is that the Devils missed out on nothing by trading Schnarr. The bad news is that they got Andrew Hammond, who was also not good.

Grade: F

A Different Type Of Goaltender Trade​


Devils acquire: G Vitek Vanecek and a 2022 2nd round pick (D Seamus Casey)

Capitals acquire: a 2022 2nd round pick (D Ryan Chesley) and a 2022 3rd round pick (W Alexander Suzdalev)

Date: July 8th, 2022


With it apparent that Jonathan Bernier was not going to be an option going forward, the Devils were once again in the goaltender business to find a veteran to pair with Mackenzie Blackwood. So for the relatively low price of a 3rd round pick and moving back 11 slots in round 2 of the NHL Draft, the Devils acquired Vitek Vanecek from the Capitals.

Vanecek ultimately had a good first season in New Jersey, helping the Devils set a franchise record in points for a season. He has struggled since then to regain his form and the Devils ultimately moved on from him the following season.

Grade: B

Moving On From a High Lottery Pick​


Devils acquire: C/LW Erik Haula

Bruins acquire: C Pavel Zacha

Date: July 13th, 2022


I actually wrote about this trade when it happened, and while Zacha wound up increasing his point total output since going to Boston, I stand by my takeaway that this deal was exactly what the Devils needed at the time. Zacha’s development had plateaued by the time of this trade and his fit on the team going forward was unclear.

Haula’s first Devils season was more productive than any Zacha season he ever had in New Jersey and he was a big part of the team’s success that season. His production dropped off a bit the following two seasons as injuries struck and he wound up becoming a salary cap casualty this past summer, but I don’t think Tom Fitzgerald regrets this deal one bit. He shouldn’t.

Grade: A-

Moving On From Another Former First Round Pick​


Penguins acquire: D Ty Smith and a 2023 3rd round pick (pick was eventually traded to the Rangers, who selected D Drew Fortescue)

Devils acquire: D John Marino

Date: July 16, 2022


Ty Smith, the Devils first round draft pick in 2018, was an intriguing prospect when he was selected. He projected to be a puck-moving offensive defenseman at the NHL level. While he did have some offensive skills, his poor skating and poor defensive play limited his upside and his offense wasn’t quite good enough to overcome it.

Fitzgerald packaged Smith with a 3rd round pick to get a cost-controlled RHD in John Marino from a Penguins team looking to shed salary. At the time, the deal was a breath of fresh air, as Marino made an instant impact.

Marino got hurt in Year 2 as a Devil and struggled before he was ultimately traded, but this was a smart move by Fitzgerald to get a more consistent NHL defenseman. Meanwhile, Smith bounced back and forth between with the AHL and NHL with the Penguins and then the Hurricanes before signing in the KHL this season. As with other deals on this list, Fitzgerald did well to get value for a declining asset before the wheels completely fell off.

Grade: A-

The ‘Win Now’ Trade​


Sharks acquire: W Andreas Johnsson, W Fabian Zetterlund, D Nikita Okhotiuk, D Shakir Mukhamadullin, a 2023 1st round pick (W Quentin Musty), a 2024 2nd round pick (traded to Buffalo, who selected D Adam Kleber), and a 2024 7th round pick (traded to Detroit, who selected W Austin Baker)

Devils acquire: W Timo Meier, D Santeri Hatakka, W Timur Ibragimov, G Zachary Emond, D Scott Harrington, and a 2024 5th round pick (later traded in the deal that sent John Marino to Utah)

Date: February 26, 2023


I wrote about the Timo Meier trade as it happened and there were two main takeaways from this deal.

First, I deemed this a quantity over quality type of return and I think time has proven that to be correct, as the only assets that remain in the Sharks organization from this deal are Mukhamadullin (who has yet to establish himself as an NHL regular) and Musty, the Sharks 1st round pick from the deal. The Sharks already moved on from Johnsson, Okhotiuk, and Zetterlund with only the latter remaining in the NHL at this time, and they wound up trading the other draft picks the Devils gave them for other things.

Secondly, for the Devils, I declared this a win now move, and while Meier has been somewhat productive, its not quite productive enough for a player the Devils ultimately made the highest paid forward on the team. And the Devils haven’t “won now” either.

I can’t call this trade a failure though. Meier is a legitimate top six NHL winger and the Devils got him for a late first round pick, a prospect in Mukhamadullin who may or may not make it, and a whole bunch of spare parts. The Devils also signed him long term and he’s having a good start to this season. It’s a trade that should be made 10 times out of 10.

Grade: A-

Loading Up At the Trade Deadline​


Devils acquire: W Curtis Lazar

Canucks acquire: 2024 4th round pick (later traded to the Flyers, who selected C Heikki Ruohonen)

Date: March 3, 2023


After making the Meier deal, Fitzgerald made one more move acquiring fourth line winger (not a center) and ultimate vibes guy Curtis Lazar from the Canucks.

Lazar was signed to a multi-year deal at a low AAV so he wasn’t a pure rental, and he wound up having a productive first full season in NJ. Injuries slowed him down in his final year in Jersey and the Devils insisted on playing him at center at times when he’s a far better winger. Overall though, I think Lazar did a fine job for the player he is.

Grade: B+

The “Wait, What?” Trade​


Devils acquire: W Jayce Hawryluk

Senators acquire: Future considerations

Date: March 10th, 2023


I have no idea who this is.

Grade: D

A Minor, Minor League Swap​


Devils acquire: D Zack Hayes

Hurricanes acquire: W Jonathan Dugan

Date: March 10th, 2023


I swear that I’m not trying to be disrespectful, but I have no idea who these players are.

Grade: D

The Rare NHL ‘Sign-And-Trade’ Trade​


Devils Acquire: 2023 3rd round pick (Calgary’s original pick that wound up being traded back to them in the Tyler Toffoli deal)

Blue Jackets Acquire: D Damon Severson

Date: June 8th, 2023


Sign and trades are fairly common in the NBA, but the aren’t all that common in the NHL. There’s been a few of them, with Matthew Tkachuk going to the Panthers and Mitch Marner going to the Golden Knights being two prominent examples, but another example is the Damon Severson deal to Columbus.

Severson is a useful, but flawed, player who was slated to hit UFA. The Devils decided he wasn’t worth retaining at his price, so they found a team that was willing to pay him what his market value was. Because the Devils were his incumbent team, only they could offer the eighth year on a long-term deal. By doing a sign-and-trade, Severson was able to get the extra security of the eighth year, while Columbus got their guy.

I think this by far is Fitzgerald’s most creative deal. Most playoff teams would just let an impending UFA leave. Fitzgerald found a way to turn a player he wasn’t going to keep into an asset, one that he wound up later flipping in another deal. Meanwhile, Columbus is already having buyer’s remorse as Severson was a healthy scratch at times last year, so Fitzgerald avoided another disaster contract in the process.

Grade: A+

Another Classic Minor League Change of Scenery Deal​


Devils acquire: C Shane Bowers

Bruins acquire: D Reilly Walsh

Date: June 26th, 2023


The Devils, at the time, didn’t have a lot of center depth at the AHL level (they still dont have center depth, by the way), but they have defensemen. The Bruins needed another defenseman. So the two teams connected on a fairly minor deal.

Grade: C

Moving On From Mac​


Sharks acquire: G Mackenzie Blackwood

Devils acquire: 2023 6th round pick (W Cole Brown)

Date: June 27th, 2023


After three injury plagued and underperforming seasons, it was time for the Devils and Mackenzie Blackwood to part ways. The Devils needed to improve in net to take the next step as a contending team and Blackwood was too inconsistent to be relied upon.

No, I don’t care that Blackwood played brilliantly every time the Devils faced him. Nor do I care that he had a good year last year. Blackwood has been injured and not very good again this year, which proves the point that he’s too inconsistent and injured to be counted on. I suspect Colorado will learn that lesson the hard way after handing him a 5-year deal worth $5.25M AAV.

We’ll see if Cole Brown ever becomes an NHL player, as he’s in his first collegiate season at Notre Dame.

Grade: B+

Trading One Goal Scoring Winger For Another​


Devils Acquire: W Tyler Toffoli

Flames Acquire: W Yegor Sharangovich and a 2023 3rd round pick (previously acquired in the Damon Severson trade)

Date: June 27th, 2023


This is a deal where I loved the process for the Devils.

They wanted to add a more consistent goal scoring threat on the wing coming off of a playoff appearance. Tyler Toffoli is a goal scoring winger who has scored a lot of goals in his career. Yegor Sharangovich is a fine player with a lethal shot, but he’s not as consistent. And in fairness to Toffoli, he came as advertised. He scored for the Devils.

Unfortunately, the Devils season was sunk by poor goaltending, poor defense, and poor coaching, and rather than sign the pending UFA Toffoli to a contract extension (which was probably the right move), Fitzgerald wound up flipping Toffoli months later in a deal we’ll talk about later to recoup some of those assets he surrendered.

Interestingly enough, there were some loud critics who ripped Fitzgerald for trading a guy who wound up scoring 31 goals for the Flames that season while shooting 17.3%. No word on how those people feel now that Sharangovich is in Year 1 of a 5-year deal paying him $5.75M AAV and having his second bad season in a row.

Grade: A-

David Poile’s Final Deal​


Predators acquire: 2023 7th round pick (W Aiden Fink)

Devils acquire: 2024 7th round pick (traded to Colorado in the Kurtis MacDermid trade)

Date: June 29th, 2023


This was a minor late draft day trade that is most notable for being the final deal that retiring Predators GM David Poile made. The fact that he got to make this deal in Nashville, where the draft was held that year, and to do it with former Predators captain Tom Fitzgerald made for a feel good moment.

Grade: A

Adding Some Depth on the Blueline​


Devils acquire: D Colin Miller

Stars acquire: 2025 5th round pick (C Atte Joki)

Date: July 1st, 2023


The Devils needed a little more depth on the blueline. Rather than pay UFA prices, they sent a late pick to the Stars for Miller.

Miller was fine. This deal was fine.

Grade: B

Another Minor League Swap​


Devils acquire: W Arnaud Durandeau

Islanders acquire: W Tyce Thompson

Date: November 26th, 2023


Once upon a time, Thompson appeared to be an intriguing prospect on the verge of maybe carving out an NHL role, but injuries and inconsistencies derailed his career. Thompson played out his contract before moving on to the KHL while Durandeau has bounced around various AHL and KHL stops.

Grade: C

A Three-Team Deal With the Devils Being the Third Party​


Devils acquire: 2026 4th round pick

Stars acquire: D Chris Tanev

Flames acquire: G Cole Brady, W Artyom Grushnikov, 2024 2nd round pick, conditional 2026 3rd round pick


Date: February 28th, 2024

The Stars wanted Chris Tanev. The Stars did not have enough cap space for Chris Tanev, so they needed to find a third partner to acquire him.

The Devils had cap space, as they were utilizing LTIR at the time in a season that was going nowhere. So they moved on from a goaltender prospect in Cole Brady that probably doesn’t have much of an NHL future and in exchange for retaining 25% of Tanev’s salary, they pick up an extra fourth round pick for their troubles.

The deal itself is fine, as they essentially used their extra cap space to buy an extra draft pick.

Grade: B

The Kurtis MacDermid Trade​


Devils acquire: W/D Kurtis MacDermid

Avalanche acquire: C Zakhar Bardakov and a 2024 7th round pick (previously acquired from Nashville)

Date: March 1, 2024


The Devils were a soft team that had just gotten punked and embarrassed yet again. It was bad enough that in a season where it was apparent the Devils needed to sell, they felt the need to go out and add MacDermid.

I wasn’t as critical of the deal as John was at the time, as I get why Fitzgerald made that move. But to me, the bigger issue is that it was an indictment of Fitzgerald’s team building process that he assembled a group that allowed themselves to be as easily pushed around as they were. It’s bad that the team was so soft that they just HAD to have MacDermid to change things. Had the Devils JUST traded a 7th for him, I would’ve chalked that up to being fine.

The added wrinkle to this is the Devils also gave up Bardakov, who made the Avs Opening Night roster and scored his first NHL goal against the Devils because of course he would. For a team that doesn’t have a ton of quality center options in the pipeline, giving up Bardakov stings.

Now, we don’t know what we don’t know. I don’t know if Bardakov’s camp suggested behind the scenes that he wouldn’t sign in New Jersey. I don’t know if the Devils were under the impression that Bardakov wouldn’t sign. But I do know that had he signed, he’s probably on the Devils roster right now instead of Juho Lammikko or Luke Glendening. Or at least, he’s an option.

Grade: F

Once Again, We’re Deadline Sellers​


Jets acquire: W Tyler Toffoli

Devils acquire: 2025 2nd round pick (later traded to the Ducks for D Brian Dumoulin), 2024 3rd round pick (W Herman Traff)

Date: March 8th, 2024


No need to rehash this, as I’ve already mentioned the Devils that season were going nowhere and had to sell on Toffoli. I wrote about the trade at the time and I think Toffoli’s value was what it was. Fitzgerald got what he needed to get for Toffoli and this was better than letting him walk out the door as a free agent and getting nothing.

Grade: B

The Devils Move On From Another Veteran Pending UFA​


Jets acquire: D Colin Miller

Devils acquire: 2026 4th round pick

Date: March 8th, 2024


The Devils essentially turned a 2025 5th into a 2026 4th, with Miller spending half a season in New Jersey while they were sans draft pick. This is fine.

Grade: B+

The Devils Finally Add a Goaltender​


Devils acquire: G Jake Allen

Canadiens acquire: 2025 3rd round pick (G Arseni Radkov)

Date: March 8th, 2024


The goaltending trio Vitek Vanecek, Nico Daws, and Akira Schmid wasn’t going to cut it. The Devils needed an upgrade, and upgrade they did.

Allen has been really good since coming over from the Habs, and the Devils now have him signed to a deal that will probably keep him in New Jersey for the rest of his career.

All I ask from our goaltenders is to give us a chance to win, and more often than not, Allen does that whenever he takes the crease.

Grade: A

Why Add One Goaltender When You Can Add Two​


Devils acquire: G Kaapo Kahkonen

Sharks acquire: G Vitek Vanecek and a 2025 7th round pick (W Richard Gallant)

Date: March 8th, 2024


The Devils didn’t want to play Daws or Schmid at the NHL level anymore. They also didn’t want to play Vanecek anymore. All of this was understandable at the time. So they attached a 7th round pick to get the Sharks to take on the final year of Vanecek’s contract while also picking up Kahkonen, who was no longer in the Sharks plans.

I’m still not sure why the Devils didn’t seem to like Kahkonen, who was solid overall when he was here. But I do know getting out of that last year of the Vanecek deal alone is a win, giving this trade an A grade.

Grade: A

Maybe the Devils Found a Useful Fourth Liner​


Canadiens acquire: W Arnaud Durandeau

Devils acquire: W Nathan Legare

Date: March 11, 2024


Legare recently made his NHL season debut and he looked okay. He was sent back to Utica prior to last night’s game, but maybe the Devils have something there in an otherwise minor deal.

Grade: B+

The Devils Go Big-Game Hunting And Land Their Goaltender​


Devils acquire: G Jacob Markstrom

Flames acquire: D Kevin Bahl and a 2025 1st round pick (C Cole Reschny)

Date: June 19th, 2024


The Devils had coveted Markstrom for awhile and finally got their guy. So how has he been thus far?

Eh.

Markstrom was fine in his first year as a Devil, posting a .900 save percentage and 3.4 goals saved above expected. But he’s had a slow start to this season with an .870 and -3.1 goals saved above expected. He missed a few weeks with an injury, and I’m still not sure why the Devils felt the need to rush to get him signed to a contract extension. He’s had one really good start since returning from injury, and his propensity to let in soft goals has become a thing every game where you say to yourself “he’s gotta have that one”.

Markstrom is very much a rhythm goaltender, so we’ll see if he gets into a rhythm as the season goes along and he strings together a few good starts in a row. There’s time for Markstrom to change the narrative, but he has to go and do it. For the most part this season, he has not.

Grade: C+

Minor League Deck Chairs Rearranged​


Wild receive: W Graeme Clarke

Devils receive: W Adam Beckman

Date: June 21st, 2024


Two players that were swapped for one another in your classic “This guy can’t break through for us but maybe he’d be better with you” type of deal. Two players who didn’t really do much of anything with their new teams and have already moved on to another organization. At the end of the day, its a harmless deal that doesn’t move the needle one way or another.

Grade: C

Farewell, John Marino​


Utah Hockey Club receives: D John Marino and a 2024 5th round draft pick (D Ales Cech)

Devils receive: 2024 2nd round pick (G Mikhail Yegorov) and a 2025 2nd round pick (W Ben Kevan)

Date: June 29th, 2024


John Marino really struggled in his final season in New Jersey, to the point where the Devils decided to look towards the free agency market for a player that might be a better fit. The Devils were linked to Brett Pesce in the days leading up to the free agency and there was simply no room for the both of them. So despite Marino’s struggles, Tom Fitzgerald was able to flip Marino (along with a 5th) for two second round picks, opening up the cap space to sign Pesce in the process.

This deal is a reminder of two things….first, right handed defensemen will be coveted in this league, even if they struggle. Second, if you’re going to trade a veteran to a team, trade him to the team that has done nothing but stockpile draft picks because they might just give you picks.

Not only was Fitzgerald able to move Marino’s salary and easily be able to afford to sign Pesce, he might have also gotten the Devils goaltender of the future out of this deal. Plus Ben Kevan as well. Can’t forget about him.

Grade: A+

A Couple Draft Day Trade Downs​


Capitals acquire: A 2024 3rd round pick (#75 overall – W Ilya Protas)

Devils acquire: A 2024 3rd round pick (#82 overall) and a 2024 5th round pick (G Veeti Louhivaara)

Sharks acquire: A 2024 3rd round pick (#82 overall – W Carson Wetsch)

Devils acquire: A 2024 3rd round pick (#85 overall – W Kasper Pikkarainen) and a 2025 6th round pick (W David Rozsival)

Date: June 29th, 2024


The risk with trading back in the draft is that if you’re eyeing someone, you risk losing said player if you move back too far or if someone else you weren’t expecting really likes the player.

Generally speaking though, we don’t know what the Devils draft board looks like. I assume Pikkarainen was always their guy, they dropped back a couple times to pick up some extra draft picks, and they got their guy anyways. I have no idea if anybody here will be anything, but generally, I’m a fan of getting as many darts as you can to throw at the dart board. I like the process, but time will tell us if it pays off.

Grade: A-

Saying Goodbye To Another Failed Lottery Pick​


Devils acquire: W Paul Cotter and a 2025 3rd round pick (C Mason Moe)

Golden Knights acquire: W Alexander Holtz and G Akira Schmid

Date: June 29th, 2024


I get why Alexander Holtz is a former 7th overall pick, but at the end of the day, it just didn’t work out. Holtz was billed as a potential sniper in his draft class, and while his shot might’ve been NHL-ready, the other aspects of his game weren’t. He’s not a good skater, he doesn’t do much in the two-way game, and he couldn’t escape Lindy Ruff’s doghouse while he was here. Meanwhile, Akira Schmid was never really able to recapture the magic from his incredible playoff performance against the New York Rangers and needed a change of scenery himself.

Getting it wrong with such a high lottery pick stings. The expectation is that you’re drafting a potential NHL superstar there, and at worst, you’re getting a player who can play in your lineup for a long time. I can’t give Fitzgerald a good grade knowing this since he ultimately signed off on making the Holtz pick (while Ty Smith, for example, was selected by his predecessor)….but what I can do is again point out that at least he knew when it was time to cut your losses and move on before any value went completely in the toilet and that’s what he did here by acquiring a bottom six winger in Paul Cotter and a future third round pick. Getting 40 cents on the dollar when they did is probably better than getting 10 cents on the dollar a year from then.

If its any consolation, Holtz hasn’t really done a whole lot with the Vegas Golden Knights either and he’s looking like a player who will be playing professionally in Europe sooner rather than later. Akira Schmid has looked a little better in a limited role, but they also have Adin Hill signed long-term and they went out and signed Carter Hart to a multi-year deal, so I don’t know what that says about what they think about Schmid long-term.

Grade: C+

I’m Still Not Sure Why Montreal Did This​


Devils acquire: D Johnathan Kovacevic

Canadiens acquire: 2026 4th round pick

Date: June 30th, 2024


I don’t quite get why the Habs had no use for a big, right-handed defensive defenseman in Johnathan Kovacevic on a minimal salary contract, but I’m fine taking him off of Montreal’s hands.

Kovacevic was very good throughout most of his debut season in New Jersey. Good enough that Tom Fitzgerald felt the need to sign him to a 5-year deal worth $4M AAV to avoid hitting UFA. Unfortunately, he suffered a lower-body injury in the playoffs and is on LTIR, waiting to make his 2025-26 season debut.

Anytime you can get a defenseman who can kill penalties and play upwards of 20 minutes a night for a mid round pick two years from now, you should probably consider doing it.

Grade: A+

Another Three-Team Trade​


Oilers receive: W Trent Frederic, W Petr Hauser, F Max Jones

Devils receive: C/W Shane LaChance

Bruins receive: D Maximus Wanner, a 2025 2nd round pick (C William Moore), and a 2026 4th round pick

Date: March 4th, 2025


The long and short of this from a Devils perspective is that the Bruins wanted to trade Trent Frederic to the Oilers, but the Oilers needed to loop in a third team to retain another 25% of the salary to fit him in.

Having lost Jack Hughes to LTIR days earlier, the Devils used some of that newfound cap space to be a facilitator in this deal, picking up the rights to Shane Lachance for their troubles. Lachance wound up signing his ELC with the Devils and made his NHL debut this past weekend in DC.

Grade: A

Devils Add a Rental Defenseman For the Playoff Push​


Devils acquire: D Brian Dumoulin

Ducks acquire: W Herman Traff, a 2025 2nd round pick (previously acquired from Winnipeg in the Tyler Toffoli trade)

Date: March 6th, 2025


I did the writeup on the Brian Dumoulin trade when it happened and while I liked the player and I get that the Devils had literally just lost Jonas Siegenthaler and Dougie Hamilton to injury, a Devils team that was struggling to score didn’t use excess draft capital to go get someone who could.

Dumoulin was actually pretty good for the Devils, to the point where I’m not sure if they make the playoffs without him, nor do I think they win the one playoff game they did win without him. So in that respect, the trade was fine. But its also a 2nd round pick for a rental defenseman that they were realistically never going to keep on a team that probably wasn’t competing for a championship due to the Jack Hughes injury. Not to mention moving on from a very recent draft pick in Traff.

Grade: B-

Devils Add a Bottom Six Center​


Devils acquire: C Cody Glass and W Jonathan Gruden

Penguins acquire: W Chase Stillman, C Max Graham, and a 2027 3rd round pick

Date: March 7th, 2025


The Devils needed center help regardless of the Hughes injury at the time and they got a guy who appears to be a pretty good fit in Sheldon Keefe’s system in Cody Glass, with one caveat.

Glass appears to be made of glass because he’s been banged up a lot.

It’s a shame too, as he has appeared to gel with his linemates regardless of who they are. He is solid in the faceoff circle, and he has a sneaky lethal shot. But he missed time late last season, missed time earlier this season, and will miss more time now as he’s week-to-week.

Grade: B

A Flurry Of Minor Moves At the Trade Deadline​


Devils acquire: D Dennis Cholowski

Islanders acquire: W Adam Beckman

Devils acquire: W Daniel Sprong

Kraken acquire: a 2026 7th round pick

Devils acquire: C Marc McLaughlin

Bruins acquire: D Daniil Misyul

Date: March 7th, 2025


In addition to the Dumoulin and Glass moves, Fitzgerald made a series of minor moves to try to give the Devils a little more depth while they played out the season. I lump them all together though as they were more or less inconsequential at the time and didn’t move the needle a ton.

The Devils ultimately re-signed Cholowski and McLaughlin. But the moves in general at this deadline felt a whole lot like Fitzgerald simultaneously trying to clean up the organizational depth chart and move out guys who don’t fit while also giving the Devils a 1% better chance of winning. Unsurprisingly, it didn’t really work.

Grade: C

Who?​


Devils acquire: D Tory Dello

Red Wings acquire: Future Considerations

Date: March 14th, 2025


Once again, I have no idea this trade was even a thing or who this player is.

Grade: D

A Salary Cap Dump on the Eve of Free Agency​


Devils acquire: D Jeremy Hanzel and a 2025 4th round pick (G Trenten Bennett)

Predators acquire: C/W Erik Haula

Date: June 18th, 2025


The Devils needed to move some salary heading into 2025 free agency, and while one could argue they didn’t go far enough in that direction (glares in Ondrej Palat’s direction), they did take a step in that direction by moving off the final year of Erik Haula’s contract. Getting two prospects out of the deal when I would’ve been content taking the “future considerations” and moving on is really good work by Fitzgerald.

Grade: A

One More Minor League Swap For the Road​


Sharks acquire: C Shane Bowers

Devils acquire: C/W Thomas Bordeleau

Date: July 2nd, 2025


Bowers didn’t really do a whole lot in his two years in the Devils organization. He did make it into 12 NHL games for New Jersey, but he’s really more of an AHL-lifer type than a AAAA player.

Bordeleau, on the other hand, has shown a bit of a scoring touch at the AHL level the last few seasons. He might be another guy who tops out as a callup player in case of injury, but in terms of change of scenery trades, I like this one more than most of the ones Fitzgerald has made.

Grade: B

Swapping One Face Puncher For Another​


Devils acquire: W Zach MacEwen

Senators acquire: W/D Kurtis MacDermid

Date: October 3rd, 2025


After MacEwen looked bad in a preseason fight, the Senators apparently decided they needed to get even tougher. Meanwhile, the Devils had just signed Luke Hughes a few days earlier and with the Devils already utilizing LTIR, could stand to save a couple bucks.

Unfortunately for MacEwen, he’s been bitten by the injury bug and will miss some time (again) for the Devils. Supposedly, he’s better at the basic fundamentals of hockey than MacDermid but I’ll have to take everyone’s word for that since we can’t see him play. The only reason this trade gets an A is because Fitzgerald managed to dump MacDermid’s silly contract (that Fitzgerald gave him) off the books for next season as well.

Grade: A-

Final Thoughts​


If I count the three-team trades as one deal, Fitzgerald has made 54 trades as Devils general manager.

The good news is that there is no Martin Erat for Filip Forsberg type of trade there that will haunt Devils fans for the next two decades. The closest thing to that MIGHT be giving up Kevin Bahl as part of the Jacob Markstrom trade, but defensemen are graded differently than scoring wingers are and its not like the Devils don’t have a deep blue line without Bahl. For as much as I was told at the time that Fitzgerald made some fatal error giving up all sorts of players from Yegor Sharangovich to Nikita Okhotiuk to Nate Schnarr, that really hasn’t been the case. Sorry, but I’m not going to lose a ton of sleep giving up on fourth-line types like A.J. Greer or Zakhar Bardakov. You shouldn’t either.

I’d also say that for the most part, Fitzgerald has done well in most of these deals in terms of value. There might be some minor quibbles here and there but I think he generally has a good grasp on what the market is. I also think some of Fitzgerald’s best work has been when they’ve gotten creative. Doing a sign-and-trade with Damon Severson who they weren’t keeping anyways. Getting a prospect in Shane Lachance back for being a facilitator instead of a 4th round pick. Finding teams in a tricky spot with the expansion draft and using that to your advantage, which they arguably did with both Siegenthaler and Graves. These are examples of good GM’ing.

The one recurring negative theme that I’ve picked up on compiling this list is that it sure seems like an awful lot of these deals are cleaning up previous mistakes that he and his braintrust have made. The goalies I’ve acquired previously stink and can’t play so we need to go get another one (or two). The players we drafted stink and can’t play so I need to move on from them before the rest of the league also figures out that they can’t play. The contract I handed out has one more year on it that I really need to get out of so I can turn around and hand that money to somebody else. The cycle continues repeating. No general manager is going to bat 1.000 with personnel moves, but one also wonders that if Fitzgerald weren’t spending so much time fixing previous mistakes, could they be making more deals like the Timo Meier one where they’re pushing their chips in the middle and going for it?

I say all that to say keep this all in mind as the season plays out. The Devils are operating in LTIR and will likely do so all season. Despite all of the injuries and setbacks this team has had thus far, they’re near the top of the Eastern Conference in points. They’ve played well enough where they deserve to be rewarded at the deadline should they remain in contention, and as far as we know, none of the injuries they’ve suffered to this point are of the season-ending variety (knocks on wood because it has been THAT type of year so far).

Fitzgerald has shown some creativity in the past when making trades, and I’m generally ok with him making the call on who to pursue. Hopefully, the team continues to do their part while they navigate a rough patch in terms of health and gives him a reason to go for it this spring.

Source: https://www.allaboutthejersey.com/d...d-trade-since-becoming-devils-general-manager
 
Devils in the Details – 11/19/25: The Mummies Edition

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Here are your links for today:

Devils Links​


Another rough outing for Jacob Markstrom in Tuesday’s game against the Lightning. The Bolts took a 5-1 win. [Devils NHL]

This seems bad:

Jacob Markstrom has given up at least three goals in seven of eight starts this season. #NJDevils

— Todd Cordell (@ToddCordell) November 19, 2025

Roster moves:

#NEWS: We've placed F Jack Hughes (finger) on injured reserve, retro to 11/13.

We've assigned F Nathan Legare to Utica (AHL).

Forwards Connor Brown and Evgenii Dadonov have been activated off injured reserve.https://t.co/FzcHFMDIkY

— New Jersey Devils (@NJDevils) November 18, 2025

“Not only is Hughes out, but Cody Glass is also week-to-week with an upper-body injury. The Devils’ centers in their 3-2 shootout win over the Washington Capitals were Nico Hischier, Dawson Mercer, Juho Lammikko, and Luke Glendening. The obvious name to fill the void is Ryan O’Reilly, who has already found himself in the rumor mill to begin this season. With the Nashville Predators beginning to fade in the standings, the Devils need to put their chips in to acquire the veteran center.” [Devils on the Rush ($)]

Asking the important questions:

Are the mummies buried underneath the Prudential Center to blame for #NJDevils’ bad injury luck?

I asked the archeologist who discovered them.https://t.co/8GvvuRQBhM

— Ryan Novozinsky (@ryannovoNHL) November 18, 2025

Hockey Links​


This goal!

WILLIAM NYLANDER SCORES AN ABSOLUTE BEAUTY FOR THE OT WINNER 🔥 pic.twitter.com/5XPAK4W4OM

— TSN (@TSN_Sports) November 19, 2025

In light of Jack’s unusual injury, a look at some other NHL players who missed time because of strange off-ice incidents: [The Hockey News]

On life for Lou these days: “But for a man who has run a team ever since taking over the New Jersey Devils in 1987 — and also was busy every fall after becoming head coach of the Providence College hockey team in the late ’60s — this is indeed a new feeling. And it’s absolutely fine. ‘It’s totally different and unique,’ Lamoriello, 83, told The Athletic on Monday morning. ‘There are more nights you sleep much better.’” [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-11-19-25-the-mummies-edition
 
The New Jersey Devils Need a Consistent Goaltender…Now

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It’s unbelievably frustrating to be writing another piece about the New Jersey Devils’ goaltending, but after this past Tuesday’s game against Tampa Bay, it’s the prominent topic at the front of my mind. This is the second season now of the Devils running a Jacob Markstrom/Jake Allen tandem after bringing Allen back just before he hit free agency this summer. And this is also the second season in a row where one of the two has been maddeningly inconsistent to the point where it is actively harming the Devils. The Devils need to do something to ensure this is not another season that falls short of expectations.

I’ll admit, I was very critical of Jake Allen last season; while he was good after coming over at the trade deadline the season prior, he had his struggles in 2024-25. There were games he would start off looking great, then would let in one goal (good or bad) and he would absolutely fall apart from there. He did have some good games, but 13 wins across 29 starts isn’t good enough in today’s NHL. Neither was his .908 save percentage; it was in line with his career average, but certainly not good enough to really even be a 1B tandem option. I was surprised when the Devils brought him back, but after seeing the free agent market and with the team not really seeming to have confidence in Nico Daws, bringing Jake back made sense.

And so far, that re-signing has paid dividends. Allen has started 10 of the Devils’ 19 games to this point, and has put up wins in seven of those contests. Across all 10 appearances, he’s posted a respectable .916 save percentage. The best part? He hasn’t looked shaky like he did at times last season. While he’s had a couple not so great games, he’s been above .900 in seven of his appearances, including when he cramped up and did not receive a decision against Columbus. I don’t think Jake should be receiving more than half of the team’s starts because I think overworking him will lead to inconsistency and poor performances. Allen is at least looking like a true half of a platoon goaltending tandem this season, which is better than what we saw last season even early on from him.

Now on to the problem: Jacob Markstrom. Markstrom was a controversial acquisition when the Devils brought him in and his recent play is probably only going to make him more controversial. While he had some strong games last season, his save percentage was worse than Allen’s at an even .900. In 49 starts, he did manage to win 26 games, but I don’t think he has a shot at getting close to that this season. He was also one of the few Devils who actually delivered come playoff time, as he turned in four quality starts across five contests, giving the team a chance to win each night with the obvious exception of game four.

But I don’t know if that Markstrom exists anymore.

Right now, in eight starts, Marky has five victories, but many of those are in spite of his performances. Take a deep dive into his numbers: in his nine total appearances, he’s had a save percentage above .900 ONCE. Even if you take out the Columbus game where he can in for the third period and only allowed one goal on nine shots, his stats are awful. Of all goalies to appear in at least five contests this season, Markstrom ranks 59th out of 63 in save percentage. Heck, Vitek Vanecek (who we couldn’t wait to be done with after he fell apart) is rocking a better save percentage than him right now!

Jared has discussed Markstrom a couple of times recently and he continues to come up in conversation here at AAtJ pretty regularly. I’m legitimately worried about the fact that he seems to be falling off a cliff, especially with the Devils recently committing to him for two more seasons. While the increased cap will offset the minimal increase in Marky’s cap hit, I am worried about having a $6 million goalie as the primary option if he’s visibly declining. We’ve seen Father Time go undefeated against other Devils in the past and we could be looking at another instance of that. I can’t imagine Markstrom looking worse than he has this season, but two more season is a lot of time and anything is possible; the Devils, however, cannot keep icing a goalie who is regularly letting in multiple bad goals on a consistent basis.

While Allen has performed admirably so far as discussed above, the Devils need a player who can deliver quality performances on a regular basis. I’m not flush with solutions for how they go about that right now; they have a number of prospects at different stages of their development, but I’m not sure any of them are realistic possibilities for this season, or even next. I don’t know how realistic the trade market is right now, as I don’t see the Devils sending the goalie who is actually performing the other way in exchange and I don’t think anyone wants the goalie who’s not performing and signed for two more seasons. Maybe they bring in a third if things trend downward and either keep one (read: Markstrom) as a healthy scratch or waive one (read: Markstrom) in an attempt to rehabilitate them in Utica…and with how things are going in Utica, I don’t think that’s going to work either.

One way or another, Tom Fitzgerald needs to figure out his team’s goaltending. There’s too many seasons already that have been wasted due to other factors; goaltending cannot be what sinks this campaign after bolstering the team’s depth this past summer. Fitz needs to find a goalie on a team that doesn’t look like a contender, see if they’re available and a fit, and make an offer using non-NHL assets to try and acquire them. If this team is serious about competing, they need to take a big swing and land a piece that makes them dangerous on an every game basis.

What are your thoughts on the Devils goaltending situation; do you think the Devils need to go out and get a consistent tender? Do you think it’s even a possibility for them to do so? Are you worried by just how badly Jacob Markstrom has looked while playing this season? Should Jake Allen be getting more than just every other game right now? If you do think the Devils need a different goalie, who do you think they could realistically target? Leave any and all comments below and thanks as always for reading!

Source: https://www.allaboutthejersey.com/d...jersey-devils-need-a-consistent-goaltendernow
 
Punchless Devils Blanked by Panthers

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It’s going to be a very long two months.

Just a week after losing Jack Hughes to a freak injury at a team dinner, the Devils are finding out just how much they’re going to miss their leading scorer and franchise player. And, it’s a lot.

Sam Reinhart scored the game’s only goal and Sergei Bobrovsky stopped all 31 shots the Devils fired his way as Florida beat New Jersey 1-0 Thursday night at Amerant Bank Arena in Sunrise, Fl.

Reinhart outmaneuvered Luke Hughes and picked the corner on Jake Allen at 12 minutes, 58 seconds of the first period.

11th goal of the season for Reinhart.

Beauty. pic.twitter.com/3TQOK1vUUm

— Jameson Olive (@JamesonCoop) November 21, 2025

It was all the offense the Panthers would need to beat the Devils, whose only goal in six periods of hockey in the Sunshine State this week was one that Lightning defenseman J. J. Moser gloved into his own net on Tuesday.

New Jersey has played three games without Hughes and has three regulation goals to show for it.

The offense Thursday was non-existent.

Not only didn’t the Devils score, they didn’t even really make things interesting. Yes, they managed 31 shots on Bobrovsky, five of which were high danger per Natural Stat Trick. But they didn’t test him with many rebounds. They struggled all night to establish any type or forecheck, or cycle the puck, and spent most of their offensive zone time at the periphery. They failed to convert on either of their two power plays late in the second period and are now scoreless on their last seven power play attempts.

The big names continue to be ineffective, which had been a developing trend even before Jack Hughes went down.

Jesper Bratt, who took six of the 31 shots, has just one goal in his last 12 games. Timo Meier has two in his last 15. Hischier, who was credited with the Moser own goal on Tuesday, also has just two goals in his last 15.

Your most talented players not contributing regularly is anything but a winning recipe. Indeed, Thursday night’s loss probably would have looked as ugly as Tuesday’s if not for Allen.

Allen continued to look sharp stopping 28 of 29 Panther shots.

Up Next​


The Devils wrap up their five-game road trip when they visit the Philadelphia Flyers at 7 pm on Saturday night. The Flyers, who beat St. Louis 3-2 on Thursday are 5-3-2 in their last 10 games.

Your Thoughts​


Was it just a tough two games against two very good teams in Florida, or are the cracks are starting to show? A quarter of the way through the season they’re seven games above .50o, second in the division and the conference, and fifth in the league. But to lose your best player at the time the five other guys in your top six go stone cold. …

Source: https://www.allaboutthejersey.com/devils-game-recaps/63336/punchless-devils-blanked-by-panthers
 
Devils in the Details – 11/21/25: Best Case Scenario Edition

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Here are your links for today:

Devils Links​


The Devils came close to tying things up late but were shut out for the first time this season Thursday night as the Panthers took a 1-0 win. [Devils NHL]

A sizable concern for this season:

Do the #NJDevils have a Jacob Markstrom problem? Or is it too early to judge?

I did a deep dive of the numbers. It's hard to find a single promising stat.https://t.co/6g6b4OJxiH

— Ryan Novozinsky (@ryannovoNHL) November 20, 2025

Some encouraging news:

Jack Hughes returning by Christmas?!

ESPN's Emily Kaplan just said on The Point that's the "best case scenario." She adds that it's more likely he's back by January.

Kaplan's full comments on the #NJDevils star below⤵️https://t.co/ky9NRDMIBv

— Ryan Novozinsky (@ryannovoNHL) November 20, 2025

A defense of Tom Fitzgerald: “His drafting has been poor, with clear retrospective misses on Alex Holtz and Chase Stillman — imagine this team with Marco Rossi and Logan Stankoven instead — and it can be argued that his overreaction to being labeled as soft didn’t take advantage of the excellent core that the Devils possess to its fullest potential. Even despite those two flaws, his trade acumen and contract expertise should have him regarded as an above-average at worst GM in today’s NHL.” [Devils’ Advocates]

“With Jack Hughes out and Jacob Markström struggling, the New Jersey Devils need to lean on Jake Allen until Markström figures it out.” [Devils on the Rush]

Hockey Links​


Well that’s exciting news!

Rick Dhaliwal: Re Quinn Hughes: I do believe that they internally do think that it's better to move him this year if – capital letters if – he doesn't wanna commit to the franchise long term – Canucks Talk (11/19)

— NHL Rumour Report (@NHLRumourReport) November 20, 2025

“Neck guards will be mandatory for all hockey players at the upcoming Olympic Games in Milano-Cortana. An NHL source confirmed to ESPN on Wednesday that the International Ice Hockey Federation (IIHF) will require the protective gear be worn throughout the upcoming tournament.” [ESPN]

“The NHL Department of Player Safety has decided Dallas Stars forward Mikko Rantanen will not receive any supplemental discipline for his boarding major against the New York Islanders on Tuesday, a source told ESPN on Wednesday.” [ESPN]

NHL stat leaders at the quarter-season mark:

On the color-on-color matchup in Sunday’s New York Rangers-Detroit Red Wings game: “Normally, away teams wear white jerseys while the home club dresses in its primary color. The visiting Red Wings taking the ice in red was a surprise, but according to an NHL spokesperson, the league’s marketing department has actively encouraged teams to explore color-on-color jersey matchups. The idea has been brought up at general manager and board meetings, the spokesperson said. After all, hockey is played on a white surface, so the primary-color jersey combinations pop nicely, as they did Sunday.” [The Athletic ($)]

“Through 20 or so games for every team, New York Islanders rookie defenseman Matthew Schaefer is the clear front-runner for the top of the (Calder Trophy) ballots. However, the rookie class behind him is tightly packed.” [The Athletic ($)]

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

Source: https://www.allaboutthejersey.com/d...e-details-11-21-25-best-case-scenario-edition
 
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