Timo Meier, Jesper Bratt Power New Jersey Devils To 4-3 Overtime Win Over Montreal Canadiens

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Thursday night at The Rock was an early-season heavyweight matchup. The New Jersey Devils entered with 18 points and a .692 points percentage, both tops in the Metropolitan Division. Their opponents, the Montreal Canadiens, entered with 19 points and a .731 points percentage, both tops in the entire Eastern Conference (and second in the entire NHL behind only the Colorado Avalanche). The battle of the East’s best did not disappoint, with lots of twists, lots of turns, and eventually a Jesper Bratt breakaway goal in overtime to lift the Devils to a 4-3 victory.

Let’s rewind to the beginning, we’ll circle back around to Bratt’s heroics. The night began about as well as you could have hoped, which I’m sure made Jared happy. After missing seven games, Cody Glass returned to the lineup tonight. Just in time, too, as the Devils’ once-vaunted defense had been taking on a lot of water in recent games. Getting one of their best defensive forwards back would certainly help that. But it wasn’t Glass’ defense that made a difference early on, it was his offense. Before the game was two minutes old, Glass wired a sick shot past Canadiens’ goaltender Jakub Dobes for a very early 1-0 lead. This was especially good news considering New Jersey started the evening 6-0-0 in games in which they scored first (spoiler alert: they would make it 7-0-0). It was wonderful to see Glass back in the lineup, and even more encouraging to see him produce so soon upon returning.

But the extremely good vibes would be short-lived. One minute and six seconds later, the Canadiens would tie the game on one of the flukiest plays you will ever see. Noah Dobson collected a loose puck along the far wall and flung it in the general vicinity of the net. His shot caromed off of Kirby Dach and high in the air, so high that no one on the ice knew where the puck was. So where was it exactly? It just so happened to take the absolutely perfect bounce, fluttering up and over Jacob Markstrom and into the net. It was a magic bullet shot, and it cost New Jersey their lead.

From there, the game settled down. New Jersey was the better team for the rest of the first period and into the second, but they just couldn’t finish plays off. If the Devils had lost tonight, one of the big storylines to me would have been the large amount of golden chances they just barely missed. There were numerous times this evening where a Devils player made a pass that would have set up a teammate with a five-alarm opportunity, but the pass was in a skate or to the wrong side of a stick or straight up fumbled. Something always seemed to happen to thwart a prime New Jersey chance, and if the Devils were just a little crisper this evening, we could’ve been looking at a lopsided win. Instead, we got a nailbiter, and while those missed opportunities and unlucky breaks would not have been the entire reason they lost, it would’ve been a big part of the story. Thankfully, New Jersey made it a moot point.

Eight minutes into the second period, the Devils would finally break through. Simon Nemec activated down the right flank and fired a shot toward the net. It ricocheted back to him behind the net, and he made an Elias-ian pass to Ondrej Palat right in front, who scored to put the Devils ahead.

No, none of what you just read is inaccurate. Palat actually scored a goal. For the Devils. In a game that counted. Granted, Nemec did the heavy lifting, but give credit to Palat for finally burying one. He looked so relieved too, and I don’t blame him. It’s ironic that Palat manages to find his scoring touch after being taken off the Hughes-Bratt line. No one’s complaining though, it was a big goal.

And by the way, I’m only barely exaggerating when I describe Nemec’s assist as Elias-ian:

This is one of my favorite goals of all time. Obviously there are some differences, but Elias’ pass here bears a striking resemblance to Nemec’s feed to Palat. Now if Nemec can actually make this play in Game 1 of a Stanley Cup Final too, then we’d really having something cooking here.

The middle frame would end with the Devils up 2-1, but the Canadiens would get the first two goals of the third period. The first of those two is one that Markstrom absolutely, unquestionably, indisputably needs to save. Jake Evans floated down the wing and threw a nothing shot on net. Somehow, Markstrom let it slip under his pads and in for a backbreaking goal. The first goal of the night was not one I blame Markstrom for, as mentioned, it was a fluky play. This one, however, is completely unacceptable. The fact that it came less than a minute into the final frame made it even worse, as it completely deflated the Devils right out of the gate in the third.

Then almost exactly halfway through the period, Oliver Kapanen would give Montreal the lead. Alex Newhook fired a soft shot on Markstrom from a tough angle, and Markstrom coughed up a room service rebound right to Kapanen in front, who backhanded it home for a 3-2 Canadiens advantage. It was yet another easily avoidable goal, and while the Devils weren’t dominating play in front of Markstrom, they were certainly playing well enough to win. Instead, they fell behind thanks to a couple of softies.

From there, Montreal was content to play prevent defense. They packed the house in front of their goaltender, blocked a million shots, broke up a million passes, and sent a million dump-ins deep into the Devils zone. Time was winding down and it looked like New Jersey was heading for a very frustrating loss. But with the net empty in the final minutes of the game, Timo Meier broke through. Meier had gone nine games without scoring a goal, which we have seen far too often from him during his time in New Jersey. We know he’s capable of scoring in bunches, we’ve witnessed it, but we know he’s also capable of prolonged cold spells, and he entered tonight’s contest in the middle of one of those. But just over a minute to go, Jack Hughes flung a pass into the crease, Dawson Mercer and several Canadiens all poked away at it, and it came to Meier at the side of the cage, and he roofed it past a sprawling Dobes to knot the game at three. It was a massive goal, and it secured at least a point for the Devils.

Then in overtime, Nico Hischier won the opening faceoff and New Jersey basically never gave the puck up. Montreal did have one opportunity with possession, but that was quickly snuffed out thanks to a great defensive play by Meier. He stood up Newhook inside the Devils’ blueline, which allowed Bratt to swoop in for the takeaway and skate all alone on Dobes for a breakaway. Bratt deked to his backhand, slipped a shot five-hole, and the New Jersey Devils skated away with a big 4-3 victory in their return from their west coast road trip.

It wasn’t a perfect game, but the Devils played well enough to get a win. They faded a little in the third, but after so many opportunities passed them by, they made their final two chances count. Meier secured one point, Bratt secured the other, and the Devils will wake up tomorrow at the very top of the Eastern Conference standings.

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

Please, Make It Stop​


Another game, another injury.

As fun as this win was, it was not without a major cause for concern. Dougie Hamilton left a few minutes into the second period, and he did not return the rest of the game. According to the Natural Stat Trick shift chart, he took three shifts in the second period before exiting, his last coming about five minutes into the frame.

Head coach Sheldon Keefe did not give us an update on Hamilton after the game, aside from saying he will be evaluated tomorrow. NJ.com’s Ryan Novozinsky is saying it’s a lower-body injury though, so there’s that.

Hamilton’s time in New Jersey has unfortunately been marred by injuries since he came over in 2021. He’s only had one fully healthy season in red and black (2022-23) and I think we were all hoping 2025-26 would be his second, especially with Brett Pesce on the shelf for a while (put a pin in that for one second). Fingers crossed for good news on Hamilton tomorrow.

A Little More Clarity​


During tonight’s game, we also got this little nugget thanks to the magic of social media:

Hand/wrist injury for Pesce… https://t.co/Wjd3zhvYDA

— Ryan Novozinsky (@ryannovoNHL) November 7, 2025

So…yeah. Don’t expect Pesce back anytime soon.

Please Hit The Net​


I thought Luke Hughes had a pretty bad game tonight. He didn’t make any dynamic offensive plays, and while he was fine defensively, that’s not why the Devils just paid him $9m per season for the next seven years. Through the first 14 games of the season, Hughes is still searching for his first goal, which is concerning. I think Hughes not being able to hit the net is unfortunately starting to become A Thing:

I never caught this, but you're 100% right. pic.twitter.com/wmrRtpoB6j

— CJ Turtoro (@CJTDevil) November 3, 2025

According to Natural Stat Trick, Hughes had four shot attempts tonight. He ended with zero shots on goal. Every single one of his shots tonight was either blocked, or he missed the net.

Taking a look at his Hockey Reference page, prior to tonight’s game, Hughes had 23 shots on goal on 68 total shot attempts. Make it 23 shots on goal on 72 total attempts, meaning only 32% of his shot attempts actually make it to the goaltender. In comparison, Hamilton is up to 44% after tonight. Considering Hamilton is the player we all expect Hughes to replace in the very near future, I think this is a fair comparison.

Has Hughes always been this bad at hitting the net? In a word, yes. Hughes had 121 shots on goal on 328 attempts last season (37%), and 135 shots on goal on 401 attempts in his rookie year (34%). If Hughes really is going to ascend into the upper echelon of defensemen in the NHL, he needs to start figuring out how to avoid shin pads when he shoots the puck.

Pure Domination​


Some matchups are just inexplicably one-sided, and Devils vs. Canadiens is one of them. New Jersey entered tonight’s contest having won 16 of the last 20 meetings between these two squads. Make it 17 of 21 after tonight. Montreal must see New Jersey in their nightmares.

Home Sweet Home​


With their win tonight, the Devils remained perfect at home, having won their first six games at The Rock to start the season. They won’t go 41-0-0 in New Jersey this year, but establishing the Prudential Center as a tough place to play would go a long way toward making this a successful season for the Devils. Here’s hoping they can keep it going.

Next Time Out​


New Jersey is back in action on Saturday when they welcome the Pittsburgh Penguins to town. Set your alarms, puck drop is scheduled for 12:30pm.

Your Take​


What did you think of tonight’s game? What is your level of concern on Dougie Hamilton injury? What about Jacob Markstrom’s play? Who on the Devils impressed you the most this evening? As always, thanks for reading!

Source: https://www.allaboutthejersey.com/d...s-to-4-3-overtime-win-over-montreal-canadiens
 
2025-26 Metropolitan Division Snapshot #1: One Month Down and First to 10 Wins

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Dear readers, the Metropolitan Division Snapshot is back. Over the years, John has run these on a weekly basis, but I am spreading them out a little bit (and combining this one with a short October review). From this post, the Division Snapshot should come out every two weekends, while the traditional “Month in Review” posts will return at the end of November.

Today marks one month passing since the start of the 2025-26 NHL season on October 7. The Devils, of course, started on October 9. Let’s look at the standings since then:

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*Note: The Weeks Won for this week of the season may be changed in the next update based on how teams perform today and tomorrow.

The New Jersey Devils and Carolina Hurricanes got off to roaring starts, while the Pittsburgh Penguins surprised many people with their resurgence under a new coaching staff. But really, did nobody think Crosby and Malkin had another surprise under their sleeve? The Washington Capitals and Philadelphia Flyers also got off to decent, but unspectacular starts, and Philadelphia was able to leapfrog the Capitals last night. They are currently within striking distance of a playoff spot in the early stages of the season.

Rounding out the bottom of the division are the New York Islanders, Columbus Blue Jackets, and New York Rangers. All three teams are NHL .500, though the Islanders and Rangers have lost more games than they have won, including overtime and shootouts. The Islanders have lost twice in shootouts, while the Rangers have lost twice in regular overtime. Most shockingly, the Rangers have yet to win a single home game as of today, though they are 6-1-1 on the road.

That aside, here are the team schedules for the next two weeks:

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With the crunch of the holidays coming and the Olympic break built into the February schedule, these are among the busiest weeks of the season. Still, the Penguins get quite a bit of a rest before they go to Stockholm for the NHL Global Series, after which they also have a bit of a break from games. Everyone else will be playing between five (Flyers) and eight (Islanders, Jackets, Rangers) games.

But how have the teams really been doing? What’s coming up? Let’s dive into all of them.


New Jersey Devils


What Happened Last Month: The New Jersey Devils have managed injury after injury to make themselves the first team in the NHL to get to 10 wins. No, they do not have the most games played. The Penguins and several Western Conference teams have played 15 games, while the Boston Bruins have already played 16. Only the Colorado Avalanche have more points than the Devils, thanks to their five overtime losses. But the Devils were very close to not being the first team to 10 wins and very close to not being the first-place team in the Metropolitan today. As Jackson recapped last night, the Devils won a dramatic game against the Montreal Canadiens in overtime. Had they lost, the Penguins would be atop the Metropolitan Division, while the Canadiens would be the only team in the league with 10 wins. Thank you, Timo Meier and Jesper Bratt.

But it was not an easy time for the Devils, despite the wins and their perfect home record. Evgenii Dadonov got hurt in the first game of the season. Zack MacEwen got hurt in the next. Jake Allen left his first start with cramping, leading to Jacob Markstrom injuring himself in the final seconds of his relief appearance. Cody Glass missed seven games. Then Brett Pesce apparently broke something in his hand or wrist, while Connor Brown started missing games with an undisclosed injury. They were still able to go on an eight-game winning streak, beating the Lightning, Panthers, Oilers, Leafs, Wild, and Avalanche in the process.

The only down-side, games-wise, was the western road trip. The Devils were a bit lost to begin the trip after Pesce got hurt on October 26, which was their eighth win of the streak, as they gave up 13 goals in their first two games to the Avalanche (eight) and Sharks (five). The eight-goal game against the Avalanche was a bit disconcerting, as it was Markstrom’s first game back from an injury. But then Markstrom signed an extension, and he promptly played his best game of the season against the Los Angeles Kings. That turned out to be their only victory of the four-game trip.

What’s Coming Up This Fortnight: The Devils will battle for the top of the division against the Pittsburgh Penguins tomorrow afternoon before facing off against the Islanders on Monday. Then, the Devils kick off on a road trip, starting with Chicago on November 12. After that, they won’t be back home until the week of Thanksgiving, but this road trip will be along the east coast after the one game against the Blackhawks.

The Devil of the Month for October: Sans the Month in Review post for October, we will discuss our Devil on the Month here. With Jacob Markstrom falling quickly to injury this season, the New Jersey Devils needed a spark from the rest of their team to get going on the kind of winning streak that they had. And, yes, Jake Allen was great in that stretch. He had a .906 save percentage and a 2.39 goals against average for a 3.20 goals saved above average and 2.89 goals saved above expected. He did very well to earn his 5-1-0 record in October.

But Jack Hughes, man. Jack had 15 points in the 11 Devils games of October despite not looking quite like himself for the first few games of the season. But then he scored a big goal against the Florida Panthers, then scored two against Edmonton, and then had a hat trick against Toronto, finishing off the road trip with two crucial goals — including an overtime winner — against the Colorado Avalanche to get the winning streak to eight games. In total, he had nine goals, five primary assists, and one secondary assist in the month of October. That is Hart-pace stuff, and his 23.68 shooting percentage in October, while high, is not that far above an “unsustainable” point. It has since dropped to 20.00%. Could we be seeing a return of the lethal accuracy he showed in the 2021-22 season, when he had 15.8% of his shots hit the back of the net? Adding good team defense on top of that, and Jack Hughes was the All About the Jersey Devil of the Month for October 2025.

Pittsburgh Penguins​


What Happened Last Month: The Pittsburgh Penguins are back. Evgeni Malkin is a monster on the power play again, Sidney Crosby is as good as ever in the offensive end, and the Penguins have gotten some big contributions from Anthony Mantha and Justin Brazeau. Mantha, who signed a one-year, $2.5 million deal, has seven goals and 12 assists in 15 games. Is it sustainable? I think people have been long waiting for Mantha to hit that next level of production, considering his skill that people have raved about since he was in Detroit. Malkin already has nine power play points after only having 16 in 68 games last season. Brazeau, who is in year one of a two-year deal worth $1.5 million per season, had 12 points in 12 games before getting hurt on October 30, as he has now been placed on IR with the expectation that he returns in early October. In a more fortuitous development for the Penguins, though, 18-year old and 11th overall pick Benjamin Kindel has five goals and seven points in 13 games for the club while holding his own in the faceoff circle and getting involved on defense. Kindel also currently leads all qualified Penguins forwards in expected goals percentage at five-on-five at 56.34%.

Brazeau hitting IR is another tough blow for the Penguins, who have an even longer IR list than the Devils right now. Kevin Hayes was placed on injured reserve yesterday, though he may make his season debut against the Devils tomorrow. Tristan Jarry, who was actually having a good start to his season at 5-2-0 with a .911 save percentage, will not be back until December with a lower-body injury. The Penguins now have Sergei Murashov backing up Arturs Silovs, as Joel Blomqvist has been out for the start of the season. Luckily for the Penguins, Murashov was very promising in Russia and has been very good int he ECHL and AHL since arriving in North America last season. The Penguins are also missing Caleb Jones, who was playing third pairing minutes until he hit IR with a lower-body injury in late October, in addition to Rickard Rakell, who had eight points in nine games before getting hand surgery. He won’t be back until late December. The Penguins keep chugging along.

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Have the Penguins had a tough schedule so far? Not really. They have beat the Kings, Panthers, and Wild, though they have yet to face a fellow true top team. But their stars are playing like stars. Erik Karlsson and Kris Letang are playing good defense and continuing to eat big minutes. For a team who was pretty much being divvied up for spare parts by every external armchair onlooker throughout the offseason, they look set to go on a playoff run. Rather than selling this season, they look like they should be buyers. Why not go for it one more time with Crosby, Malkin, and Letang?

What’s Coming Up This Fortnight: Tomorrow afternoon should be fun. The Penguins are a bit of an elder squad, though, so they might have an easier time waking up in time for the 12:30 start time. After the Devils game, the Penguins face the Kings in Pittsburgh on Sunday afternoon before traveling to Stockholm for the Global Series with the Predators. Nashville, a team that is seemingly falling apart in the locker room (between Erik Haula and Juuse Saros angrily yelling in Finnish in the locker room after an OT loss days before Ryan O’Reilly blasts himself for not being good enough) under head coach Andrew Brunette and GM Barry Trotz, is talented enough to keep up with anyone, but they do not seem to have the right people guiding them, and I expect Pittsburgh to take three or four points in Sweden. Let’s be real, a team that has Erik Haula (I miss him) almost tripling Steven Stamkos’s point production through 16 games is a team that is almost completely broken, and Pittsburgh’s veterans should eat them up with their breakfast smörgås.

Carolina Hurricanes​


What Happened Last Month: The Carolina Hurricanes started their season with a five-game winning streak. Since then, they are 4-4-0. Their injuries on the back-end may be starting to catch up with them, to some extent. Jaccob Slavin has not played since their second game of the season, and Shayne Gostisbehere had seven points in four games before leaving on October 18 with an injury after just four minutes of ice time. He tried to come back on October 28, but left after just seven minutes of ice time. Now, he has “no timetable” for return. K’Andre Miller has also missed six games, but is now back in the lineup playing top pairing minutes with Sean Walker. And in another unfortunate turn for their blueline, Jalen Chatfield left yesterday’s game with a head injury after an illegal check from Tyler Pitlick. In addition to their injuries on defense, they are missing William Carrier and Eric Robinson, who are on injured reserve.

At forward, Jackson Blake has fit like a glove in Carolina, disguising Andrei Svechnikov’s continued premature decline. Jordan Staal may be playing the best defensive hockey of his life, as the Hurricanes have only given up two goals in 13 games with him on the ice at five-on-five. But Taylor Hall has been slow since a hot start, with just two points in his last 10 games. The big fish of the offseason, Nikolaj Ehlers, only has two goals and six points in 13 games, finally scoring in a 3-0 win against the Rangers on November 4.

Their wins have largely come against struggling teams so far, losing twice to the Golden Knights and once to the Stars, while Frederik Andersen stole a shootout win against the Quebec Nordiques Colorado Avalanche for one of their three wins against playoff teams who have more wins than losses (also the Devils and Ducks, which they won before Gostisbehere’s injury). They also beat the Kings in overtime, who are technically in a playoff spot, but have lost nine of their 15 games.

What’s Coming Up This Fortnight: The Hurricanes have two real challanges over the next two weeks, playing the Maple Leafs in Toronto on the back-half of a back-to-back on Sunday before facing the Edmonton Oilers in Raleigh on the back-half of a back-to-back next Saturday. Otherwise, they have home games against the Sabres, Capitals, and Canucks over the next week, while they go on the road to face the Bruins and Wild later in the fortnight. I am still waiting for the Wild to turn it around, given their talent, but they have yet to do so. Might it happen by the time they play Carolina?

Philadelphia Flyers​


What Happened Last Month: I will say it right now: I do not believe in the Philadelphia Flyers. Do you want a team to put on the “fraud watch” board? It’s the Flyers. They currently possess the second wild card spot, but they are tied with the Canadiens, Senators, Rangers, and Sabres for the fewest regulation wins in the Eastern Conference. Their five regulation and overtime wins are better than just the Senators and Sabres. Even the Sharks, who have two regulation wins as the second worst team in the whole league, have as many ROW as the Flyers. The Flyers have the 26th ranked offense in the league by goals per 60 minutes played in all situations as well as in five-on-five play. They have had good special teams so far, but take more penalties than they draw. Most of all, I do not believe Dan Vladar will continue to run with a .917 save percentage, and there is only so long that the team can lean on Travis Sanheim for over 26 minutes a game to keep chances against down.

Trevor Zegras is doing well to lead their offense, but Matvei Michkov is off to a much worse start under Rick Tocchet, who is giving him nearly two fewer minutes of ice time per night than John Tortorella did. I guess Michkov really doesn’t want to play the dump-and-chase game. What a shock it is that the coach who almost managed to ruin Clayton Keller is now doing it again with one of the most talented players in the league. The Flyers will continue to play muck-up, mediocre hockey until they finish sixth or worse in the division. But for now, they are in a decent spot. They did beat the Panthers, Wild, and Kraken in October. I won’t give them too much credit for the shootout wins over the Penguins and Canadiens. Until they start playing Michkov on the top line and modernize their offense enough to get out of possession hell, I won’t believe in them.

What’s Coming Up This Fortnight: The Flyers play Ottawa tomorrow afternoon, but their real tests are next week with a home game against the Oilers and a road back-to-back against the Blues and Stars that Friday and Saturday. Then, they get a four-day break before a home game against the Blues. So, they’ll be nice and rested for when they face the Devils in Philadelphia beyond this fortnight. Will they still be in a playoff spot? I doubt it.

Washington Capitals​


What Happened Last Month: The Washington Capitals have some great top-end forwards. Tom Wilson and Dylan Strome are both scoring at over a point per game, and they also have Aleksei Protas and Alex Ovechkin not too far off. Ovechkin, of course, recently scored his 900th career goal in the NHL, and he may even reach 1700 points if more of his shots start hitting the back of the net (currently at 1633). Unfortunately, they will be without Pierre-Luc Dubois for a large chunk of the season, so it may be difficult for them to replicate last year’s regular season success. Their success will be built off of their solid defense, which includes John Carlson, Jakob Chychrun, Martin Fehervary, and Matt Roy, as the four provide a great mix of offense in both shooting and passing ability from Chychrun and Carlson, while Fehervary and Roy play incredibly solid defense. Their goaltending has been very good to start the season, as well, as Logan Thompson is playing at an insane .938 save percentage and 1.45 goals against average, while Charlie Lindgren has struggled in a more defined backup role than the split platoon he played last season. Thompson has been so consistently great in net that he has a 1.45 GAA despite not yet recording a shutout this season.

Like other teams mentioned here, the Capitals have not yet had quite the difficult schedule that the Devils have had to play through. They did beat the Lightning in overtime, and they handily beat the Wild and Kraken. But with losses to the Canucks, Stars, Senators, Islanders, and Penguins, they have largely not done as well against equally skilled or better competition. The Capitals currently struggle down the lineup, with very little production from their bottom six. If Dubois ends up being out multiple months, I can imagine them being out of a playoff spot down the stretch. They do not have the centers to make up for his absence, unless maybe Nicklas Backstrom (currently with 13 points in 18 SHL games in his first hockey in about two years) were to make an unexpected return to the NHL. The trade market might not open up until Dubois is closer to a return, and some serious damage might be made against their playoff hopes by then.

What’s Coming Up This Fortnight: The Capitals have a chance to right the ship and prove themselves in a brutal stretch here. They are currently in the middle of a road trip, which features games against the Lightning, Hurricanes, and Panthers over the next week. Then, they return home to play the Devils, Kings, and Oilers before finishing the fortnight with an away game in Montreal the night after they face Edmonton. If they rise above here, they will have established themselves as resilient enough to compete for a playoff spot even without Dubois.

New York Islanders​


What Happened Last Month: Matthew Schaefer is very good. With five goals and 11 points in 13 games, Schaefer is displaying his incredible skating and offensive abilities to at least make the Islanders a very interesting watch. With a robust offense that features Bo Horvat, with nine goals and 15 points, alongside good starts to the year by Mat Barzal, Kyle Palmieri, and others, the Islanders should actually be disappointed they are this far down the standings. In short, Ilya Sorokin has been bad. He is 3-4-2 with an .879 save percentage. Is some of that due to bizarrely trading Noah Dobson away for Emil Heineman, thinking they could replace Dobson on the right side with Tony DeAngelo? Probably. I was not with Mathieu Darche on that one — a mistake that I don’t think Lou Lamoriello would have ever made, no matter if Heineman is a serviceable third-line scoring forward.

(Noah Dobson is Noah Dobson. But a first-round pick could be anything! It could even be Noah Dobson!)

The Islanders had a great run in the middle of October, beating the Oilers, Senators, Sharks, and Red Wings in a stretch of four games where they scored 20 goals. Aside from that, it has been mostly rough, as they only have 23 goals in their other nine games. They started the year with a three-game losing streak against the Penguins, Capitals, and Jets, while they followed their winning streak up with a shootout loss to the Flyers and two more in regulation to the Bruins and Hurricanes. They did get back on the board with a win over Washington on Halloween, and they continued to improve their divisional record with a win over Columbus a couple days later. The Islanders, I think, are an unpredictable team, who can both beat or lose to anyone in a much more random fashion than most teams in the league.

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What’s Coming Up This Fortnight: Like the Capitals, the Islanders have a tough stretch ahead. They kick off a back-to-back tonight at home against the Wild before playing tomorrow night against the Rangers at the Garden. Then, they go to Newark on Monday night to play the Devils before going on a western road trip. They will face the Knights and Mammoth in a back-to-back before playing the Avalanche, Stars, and Red Wings the following week. Needless to say, they would probably be happy with a .500 points percentage in these two weeks, as their schedule lightens up with a long home stand afterwards.

Columbus Blue Jackets​


What Happened Last Month: The Columbus Blue Jackets are just not all there yet. They have some good players. Kirill Marchenko and Dmitri Voronkov are fun to watch on offense, and Zach Werenski is fantastic on the back-end. Sean Monahan and Charlie Coyle is looking like a good top six center duo. But some of their younger players, like Adam Fantilli, are just not ready to bring the team to the next stage of competitiveness, while one of their veterans in Boone Jenner is not what who he once was. They are getting good blueline play from Ivan Provorov, Denton Mateychuk, and Damon Severson, but depth among the defense is as hard to come by as it is at forward. Through a month, they still have not settled on a third pairing due to a lack of quality personnel, leading to a combined 2.93 goals against average for their goaltenders despite a .912 team save percentage.

The Jackets did have some impressive wins in October. They beat the Wild, Lightning, Stars, and Maple Leafs, though they lost to the Devils, Avalanche, and Capitals. They are now coming off of a resounding loss to the Calgary Flames, and they will have to reset themselves while in the midst of a western Canadian road trip.

What’s Coming Up This Fortnight: The Blue Jackets next face the Canucks on Saturday night before facing the Oilers and Kraken in a back-to-back on Monday and Tuesday. Then, they have a home set against the Oilers, Rangers, and Canadians. Then the NHL schedulers massively screw them over with a road back-end to a back-to-back on November 18 in Winnipeg, just 24 hours after they play the Canadians. Then, they continue a four-game road trip with a game against Toronto to end their fortnight.

New York Rangers​


Oh boy.

What Happened Last Month: Big thanks to James Dolan for being too preoccupied to see how poorly Chris Drury is running his team. Despite the propaganda of the worst hockey minds of the internet, trading K’Andre Miller for a first-round pick and Scott Morrow was an incredibly poor decision for a team who presumably wants to win before Artemi Panarin leaves in free agency. (K’Andre Miller is K’Andre Miller. But a conditional first-round pick could be—). Mika Ziabejad is still terrible at even strength, and Vincent Trocheck has been out with an upper-body injury. Artemi Panarin only has seven points in 14 games. J.T. Miller looks like a slow version of the kid the Rangers traded away for Tampa Bay to properly develop instead of the 100-point center he became in Vancouver. Alexis Lafreneire got his bag and decided to go full-Yakupov. If the Rangers didn’t have Adam Fox, Igor Shesterkin, and Jonathan Quick, they might have zero wins.

As someone who was glued to the television for the entirety of Cory Schneider’s tenure with the New Jersey Devils, I know how it feels, but the Rangers should be ashamed of having the league-worst offense while having the names they have on their roster. But maybe it’s just their fault. Maybe Chris Drury and Peter Laviolette never knew what they were doing, and now Mike Sullivan has the worst roster of the Drury era to work with. Meanwhile, Chris Kreider has nine goals in nine games in Anaheim, while Jacob Trouba has a league-leading +13 rating with three goals and eight points in 13 games without much power play usage to speak of.

As of today, the Rangers are winless at home. They have only won on the road, winning good games agains the Penguins and Canadiens while beating the Oilers in overtime in a good western Canada-plus-Seattle performance, where they took six of eight points. The Rangers should be better than this, but they have been shutout in four of their six road games, and the only times they scored at home were against the Wild (31st-ranked defense) and Sharks (31st-ranked team). Based on their first month, I would say they could tank for Gavin McKenna, but they would probably need to trade Shesterkin and Fox to pull that off, and that is obviously not on the table and would also be very sad to watch.

What The Next Fortnight Looks Like: The Rangers have a back-to-back starting tonight in Detroit, followed by a match with the Islanders tomorrow night. Then, they play Nashville at home before playing two road games against the Lightning and Blue Jackets, coming back home for a back-half of a back-to-back against the Red Wings. Then, they go west to play the Knights and Avalanche. They have some winnable games, but some more tough contests. If they falter, they will likely still be at the bottom of the Division on Thanksgiving, by which point Trocheck might be returning. They are in a tough spot.


Your Thoughts​


Thus concludes the first Metropolitan Division Snapshot of the 2025-26 season, which will proceed to be updated on a bi-weekly/fortnight basis. What do you think of the state of the Division right now? Do you think anyone is performing well above or below their ability? Will the Devils still be atop the board in two weeks? Will the Flyers fall down the standings? Will the Penguins stay where they are? How will Carolina continue to manage their injuries? Leave your thoughts in the comments below, and thanks for reading.

Source: https://www.allaboutthejersey.com/d...napshot-1-one-month-down-and-first-to-10-wins
 
Devils in the Details – 11/7/25: The Comeback Edition

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Here are your links for today:

Devils Links​


A late goal from Timo Meier got the Devils to overtime against the Canadiens, and Jesper Bratt finished things off as New Jersey took a 4-3 win on Thursday. [Devils NHL]

Our requisite injury:

It’s a lower body injury for Dougie Hamilton, I’m told.#NJDevils

— Ryan Novozinsky (@ryannovoNHL) November 7, 2025

“Jonas Siegenthaler was arguably the best defensive defenseman in the NHL a season ago, but he’s struggling through the first 13 games of the 2025-26 campaign. What’s gone wrong, and is he due to turn it around soon?” [Devils on the Rush ($)]

“Things started out OK this season but (Nemec’s) game has really fallen off of late. He was absolutely atrocious the past couple of games – so much so that his underlying numbers are worse than a year ago.” [Infernal Access ($)]

Hockey Links​


Well then!

Sidney Crosby now leads the NHL with 11 goals on the season 👀

38 years old. Age is just a number for Sid 🔥 pic.twitter.com/xk3OZRnUw1

— B/R Open Ice (@BR_OpenIce) November 7, 2025

It was even a slick goal!

900 NHL GOALS FOR ALEX OVECHKIN!!! 🤩 pic.twitter.com/4HeKNfluoF

— NHL (@NHL) November 6, 2025
HE DID IT 😱

ALEX OVECHKIN'S THE FIRST PLAYER TO EVER SCORE 900 GOALS! 🚨 pic.twitter.com/7jB6tkD3rV

— NHL (@NHL) November 6, 2025

Incredible stuff:

Jordan Binnington nearly kept Ovechkin’s 900th puck 😂
pic.twitter.com/NsCDfev9Vv

— FanDuel (@FanDuel) November 6, 2025

“Whether it’s due to injury, a struggling starter, a backup pushing for a greater role, or some other reason, here are some of the goalies we’re keeping an eye on as the season progresses.” [Sportsnet]

An early look at the 2026 draft class: [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-11-7-25-the-comeback-edition
 
Jake Allen Dominant in Goal in 2-1 Devils Shootout Win Over Penguins

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First Period​


The third line had the first good chances of the game, with Ondrej Palat firing a one-timer that was fought off by Arturs Silovs before Cody Glass came cutting down the left side for another good shot that Silovs froze. The Devils had the better run of play early on, but the third pairing of Dennis Cholowski and Colton White was quickly shown to be subpar, and not because of the freshly-called up Colton White. Cholowski turned the puck over on his very first shift, causing the Jack Hughes line to get stuck in the defensive zone yet again before a hit by Noesen in the neutral zone led to a Penguins icing.

Stefan Noesen had Jack Hughes on a two-on-one almost eight minutes into the period. Noesen passed it back to Hughes after drawing Silovs low, but Hughes tried making a move to the backhand and lost the puck. Near the halfway point, Dennis Cholowski completely missed an easy puck by the boards, forcing Jake Allen to make a big save on Ville Koivunen with White rushing over to defend the unexpected one-on-one.

Play was stopped a minute later when Brenden Dillon threw a giant hit in the offensive zone on Tommy Novak as Novak was reaching for a puck by the blueline, leading to a fight between him and Anthony Mantha while Blake Lizotte went off on the rush. Allen stood strong, fighting off the shot before Dillon punched Mantha’s face a few times. No minor penalties were called on the play, and the Devils had to manage themselves without their top pair defenseman for five minutes. Meanwhile, no instigator penalty was called on Mantha.

Timo Meier took a crosscheck while firing a slap shot with over six and a half minutes to play, leading to him slowly getting off the ice, but no penalty was called. The Penguins proceeded to put a lot of pressure on the Devils, with a deflection chance for Crosby going just wide after Rust took two shots on goal, but the Devils kept the game tied. Meier, however, returned for his next shift a minute and a half later, after a TV timeout.

Jake Allen made a huge save on Ville Koivunen with under two and a half minutes to play. Siegenthaler had his back turned to him, and the puck came off Malkin’s skate right to Koivunen, who shot it into Allen’s glove. This freed Brenden Dillon from the box, with the Penguins putting up 8 shots on goal in the time he was unavailable. Then, Arseny Gritsyuk went rushing and chasing Kris Letang back into his own zone in the last minute of the game, sneaking behind and stealing a pass. He went to the forehand and roofed the puck! The Devils took the lead on their first shot in five minutes.

Second Period​


Nico Hischier was hooked at the offensive blueline by Erik Karlsson, leading to a penalty call in the first minute of the period. Timo Meier joined the first wave of the power play to begin this afternoon, and the Devils set up after winning the puck from a faceoff loss. A bad pass from Luke Hughes to Bratt forced them back. Bratt regained the zone but was hit into the boards by Letang, and the Devils managed to keep possession for a Meier one-timer that was saved. Jack Hughes later looked for a redirection for Meier, but the deflection went wide. The rest of the power play was not noteworthy, and Paul Cotter went figure skating with open ice to shoot, not shooting and circling the zone instead, wasting their possession afterwards.

Arseny Gritsyuk slipped up at the blueline off a faceoff draw almost eight minutes into the period, and Anthony Mantha went on a partial breakaway with Colton White backchecking as fast as he could from the far side. Allen came out to challenge with White cutting down the angle, and Mantha’s shot went wide.

After Dennis Cholowski was unable to clear the defensive zone while paired with Luke Hughes, the Penguins tied the game with a high shot from Ryan Graves that deflected off of Ondrej Palat’s shoulder. The Penguins almost took the lead when the fourth line got utterly hemmed in on the following shift, but Jake Allen came up big with a glove save just a minute after he was run over to no call by Benjamin Kindel.

The Devils had a chance to retake the lead in the final minute of the game, as Luke Hughes found his brother for a chance below the faceoff dot with Silovs out of position to make the stop. Silovs still dove over for the glove save, and the game remained tied through the end of the period.

Third Period​


The third period started off slowly, with some wide-angled attempts by Timo Meier and an icing by Pittsburgh. After Siegenthaler fought off Anthony Mantha on a rush, Stefan Noesen set up Jack Hughes after Jesper Bratt fell down, but Silovs made the save. Then, Stefan Noesen was sent off for slashing for two minutes, and Connor Clifton got away with a hit on Noesen after the whistle.

The Devils won the defensive zone draw and cleared the puck. An offsides delayed the Penguins from setting back up, but Pittsburgh won the neutral zone draw and gained the offensive zone. Evgeni Malkin had a shot saved by Allen, but Luke Hughes shot the puck off Brenden Dillon, allowing Sidney Crosby a chance from the point that was frozen by Allen. Simon Nemec blocked an Erik Karlsson shot attempt after the following draw, but the Devils could not clear the zone until Luke Glendening averted a scoring chance with Allen diving around by backhanding the puck from the crease to center ice. The Devils survived the penalty.

Stefan Noesen had a great shift, forcing Silovs to make a couple big saves while Noesen fought off two Penguins by the crease to get some whacks in. The Hughes line came back and had a good shift, but Dennis Cholowski could not bury his backhand try. Then, Nico Hischier left the game after diving to block a shot with his head. I don’t even know what commentary to add to that — that’s just what happened.

marky and luke’s little pats 😭😭 pic.twitter.com/pgZTsb7q7A

— ¹³ faith🇨🇭₊˚⟡ (@hischiersdevils) November 8, 2025

Cody Glass was cross checked in the head with a bit over seven minutes to play, and Evgeni Malkin was very angry about being called for it. Dawson Mercer had a chance early on and shot the puck for a rebound, but nobody was around to clean it up. The Devils cycled without many shot attempts until a one-timer by Luke Hughes was deflected out of play at the end of the first minute. As Nico Hischier returned to the bench, Timo Meier ripped a one-timer off of Silovs and the iron, but it stayed out. After the power play, the teams went back and forth but were unable to score a winning goal.

Overtime​


The Devils took possession to start three-on-three, and Hischier had a shot blocked early. The Devils kept possession through the first change, though, and Jack Hughes entered the zone and shot from a sharp angle. Silovs stopped it, and Luke Hughes blocked a shot by Novak on the other end. The Penguins continued to pressure, preventing the Devils from changing, and Jake Allen had to make three outstanding stops on Ben Kindel, including a diving poke check.

A generous change by Evgeni Malkin cut down a chance for Timo Meier while four Penguins were on the ice. The Devils kept possession, though, but they had to go back to center. Luke Hughes later spun a backhand pass to Paul Cotter on a rush, but Cotter was unable to finish. A desperate last-second slap shot by Jack Hughes (after a great dive by Simon Nemec) was saved by Silovs, sending the game to a shootout.

Shootout​


Paul Cotter went first for the New Jersey Devils. He made a great dipsy-doodle fake to his forehand to score!

Bryan Rust followed, and Allen stuck out the pad to stop him!

Jesper Bratt went second, and he slickly put the Devils up two!

Sidney Crosby tried to save the game for Pittsburgh. He went wide, and the Devils won on Allen’s pad stop!

Woof.

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

JAKE ALLEN​


The Devils did their best today, I think, considering the circumstances. They are now missing Dougie Hamilton while Brett Pesce, Connor Brown, and Evgenii Dadonov are still out of the lineup, and they had to run a pretty rough defensive lineup as a result. They pulled this off thanks to the outstanding, steady performance of Jake Allen. He was never in the wrong spot today, and could have had a shutout if not for an extremely unfortunate bounce off of Ondrej Palat.

The stats say that Allen only faced 2.32 expected goals against. It felt like a lot more, and when you consider how much offensive zone possession time the Penguins had, I’m sure Sheldon Keefe and the Devils felt like it could have been three or four goals for Pittsburgh on the 34 shots they had on goal. He had to be locked in for the majority of the game, as the Devils were just playing to limit the danger that Pittsburgh sent his way. It worked — they kept this game going long enough to get the shootout win, even if I was dreading a heartbreaking goal against after Pittsburgh’s fluke of a game-tying goal in the second period.

Paul Cotter’s Redemption​


I was blasting Paul Cotter’s performance throughout today’s game on account of him seeming to hold the puck too long, hurting some possessions and causing turnovers while the fourth line was repeatedly hemmed in. I have written before that Cotter has incredible skill, and I still believe that, but I think he has again gotten too into his own head when he has the puck. Shoot it! Dump it! Do something!

But Cotter almost finished the game in overtime, and probably would have if not for a great backcheck against the feed he got from Luke Hughes. Then, his shootout move was absolutely disgusting. And I’m not someone who likes to give shootouts much attention (I would still prefer a longer overtime at four-on-four), but this was for the Metropolitan Division lead. Had Cotter and Bratt not scored there, Pittsburgh might be atop the board right now.

He also had the best quote of the post-game:

I’m not sure Nico is necessarily the guy who should be blocking pucks with his head, but I mean that’s the type of stuff that’s happening.

Some faster decision making from Cotter during the game would turn him into a regular 20-goal scorer. He has the hands to be a net-driving power forward, and he has even more speed than hands.

The Elephant in the Room​


Dennis Cholowski had another bad game today. Let’s see some breakdowns on his with-or-without-you’s (WOWYs):

  • Jack Hughes: 20.55 xGF% with Cholowski, 73.23 xGF% without Cholowski
  • Luke Hughes: 73.49 xGF% with Dillon, 0.00 xGF% and a goal against with Cholowski
  • Cody Glass: 15.56 xGF% and a goal against with Cholowski, 83.08 xGF% without Cholowski
    • Think it’s Luke Hughes’s fault? Glass had a 66.82 xGF% with Luke on the ice, including Cholowski’s drag.
  • Juho Lammikko: 31.29 xGF% with Cholowski, 53.97 xGF% without Cholowski

You can say that you don’t believe in advanced stats, but no matter who you look at, Cholowski makes them perform worse on the ice. The Devils’ options are limited, but I think today’s game showed how essential it is for them to find a better stopgap on the third pairing. He missed pucks left and right, had a few turnovers, and just looks too slow out there.

Nico Hischier​


Nico Hischier means everything to the New Jersey Devils, but he needs to be a lot more careful about (literally) throwing himself into danger like he did in the third period today. He has already been looking a little slower than usual, probably fighting through something nagging, and the team cannot afford him missing time due to an injury. I thought his line was a little disappointing again today, though it seemed like they were largely deferring to Timo Meier, who almost had a third period goal when he wrapped around the net. In Hischier’s case, I do not think it’s enough that teams don’t score against him. He’s not a 35-year old defensive center. If Hischier or his linemates are not scoring, the team will have a tough time winning games. They pulled this one out, but I wouldn’t count on too many wins with a scoreless top six. That said…

Give Gritsyuk More Ice Time!​


Arseny Gritsyuk is now regularly near the top of the board in terms of expected goals percentage, Devils shots on goal, and other indicators of offensive threat. With his fantastic goal today, he showed again why playing a tick under 14 minutes a night is not enough for him. I did like how Noesen worked with the Hughes line today, but the Meier-Hischier-Mercer line has not been as good since Mercer moved to center and then back to wing. With the fourth line in desperate need of a makeover, I think it might not be a terrible idea to have Mercer center a third line, using Glass as a fourth-line center (and he’d probably be the best 4C in the league). This would allow Arseny Gritsyuk to get top six minutes again.

And it’s not a linemates thing. I think Ondrej Palat and Cody Glass have looked very good with Gritsyuk. Maybe it’s a fourth line overusage thing, preventing that line from getting enough looks. But whatever it takes, I would like to see Gritsyuk playing more. He had a bit over 16 minutes today, which draws his season average up closer to 14 minutes a night, but that needs to be the consistent approach.

Stick Taps for Nemo and Luke​


You might not have been impressed with their game today, but they made a lot of defensive plays (such as the dive by Nemec in overtime) and ate up a lot of minutes for the Devils tonight. Luke Hughes led the team with 29:39 tonight, while Nemec played 26:39. In the future, Brenden Dillon should probably strive to avoid five-minute fighting majors while the team is already down multiple defensemen, but these guys playing a breakeven game while playing overly-inflated minutes was one of the things that needed to happen for the Devils to win today.

Your Thoughts​


What did you think of today’s game? Did you think the Devils would pull it off? Who were your top players of the night? Leave your thoughts in the comments below, and thanks for reading.

Source: https://www.allaboutthejersey.com/d...goal-in-2-1-devils-shootout-win-over-penguins
 
2025-26 Gamethread #15: New Jersey Devils vs. Pittsburgh Penguins

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The Matchup: The New Jersey Devils (10-4-0) versus the Pittsburgh Penguins (9-4-2)

The Time: 12:30 PM ET

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

The Game Preview: I wrote today’s preview.

The Song of the Day: If you’re in New Jersey or Pennsylvania, savor today. It looks like it may be one of the last warm, sunny afternoons before winter. So, today’s song of the day is Sunny Afternoon by The Kinks. It’s just not the summertime, but I wish it was for a day.

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-14-new-jersey-devils-vs-pittsburgh-penguins
 
Game Preview #15: New Jersey Devils vs. Pittsburgh Penguins

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The Matchup: The New Jersey Devils (10-4-0) versus the Pittsburgh Penguins (9-4-2)

The Time: 12:30 PM ET

The Broadcast: TV — MSGSN

Hamilton Down​


There was no update yesterday on Dougie Hamilton, who left Thursday night’s game against the Montreal Canadiens with a lower-body injury. Per Sheldon Keefe, Hamilton was being evaluated yesterday, so we should have some word on him today, whether or not he is available. With Colton White already in New Jersey, the Devils simply shifted their defensemen around to accommodate the newest injury. The resulting defensive pairs are…not pretty.

No changes to the forward lines #NJDevils today as Brown remains out.

Without Dougie Hamilton, everything shifts on defense with White drawing in.

MacEwen and Halonen are skating as a fourth D-pair. pic.twitter.com/7PpA1vabmn

— Amanda Stein (@amandacstein) November 7, 2025

Still, the Devils have to work with what they have available. Do I think they should call up someone like Ethan Edwards or Seamus Casey, who were paired together in a 3-0 Utica Comets victory last night? Yes. Do I think they’ll do it? Well, not in time for this game. If the Devils are to win this game without Dougie Hamilton, it will be by relegating that third pairing to play with bottom six lines only, as the now-temporarily defunct Cholowski-Nemec pairing has had disastrous impacts and results in their minutes with Jack Hughes’s line. On top of that, I would expect Siegenthaler, Dillon, and Hughes to all hover around 25-30 minutes played this afternoon if it is a particularly close game.

The Penguins​


The Pittsburgh Penguins are off to a great start this season. I invite everyone to read what I wrote about them yesterday in the Division Snapshot. From there, there are some important injury notes on their roster:

Brazeau hitting IR is another tough blow for the Penguins, who have an even longer IR list than the Devils right now. Kevin Hayes was placed on injured reserve yesterday, though he may make his season debut against the Devils tomorrow. Tristan Jarry, who was actually having a good start to his season at 5-2-0 with a .911 save percentage, will not be back until December with a lower-body injury. The Penguins now have Sergei Murashov backing up Arturs Silovs, as Joel Blomqvist has been out for the start of the season. Luckily for the Penguins, Murashov was very promising in Russia and has been very good in the ECHL and AHL since arriving in North America last season. The Penguins are also missing Caleb Jones, who was playing third pairing minutes until he hit IR with a lower-body injury in late October, in addition to Rickard Rakell, who had eight points in nine games before getting hand surgery. He won’t be back until late December. The Penguins keep chugging along.

With 18-year old rookie Benjamin Kindel making a big impact on the Penguins alongside free agent pickup Anthony Mantha, the Penguins still have the players to keep their top six performing well. Their bottom six, however, still looks a little more suspect after those injuries, though Connor Dewar has chipped in some goals from the wing. The Penguins are always a threat to score when Erik Karlsson and Kris Letang are on the ice, though, and that is still about three-quarters of the game.

The last time the Devils played the Penguins, they hard-matched Cody Glass on Sidney Crosby due to Jack Hughes’s absence, and Glass did very well that night. I wonder if Keefe will go to the same look today, allowing Jack Hughes to feast on one of the Penguins’ bottom six lines. Otherwise, I would expect Nico Hischier to get the minutes against Crosby and Rust.

First Period Performance​


As has been recently written about around here, the Devils need to make sure they show up for the first period. This is even more important with it being a 12:30 start time. If the Devils let the elder Penguins have free run in the first period, either Jake Allen or Jacob Markstrom (I’m presuming Allen based on the slightly short rest since Thursday) will have to come up big for them. I would prefer to see the Devils get out to an early lead, though, as this game is for the Metropolitan Division points lead.

Your Thoughts​


What do you think of today’s matinee? Will you be there or will you be watching from home? Do you think the Devils will win? Who are you looking for a big performance from? Leave your thoughts in the comments below, and thanks for reading.

Source: https://www.allaboutthejersey.com/d...w-15-new-jersey-devils-vs-pittsburgh-penguins
 
2025-26 Gamethread #14: New Jersey Devils vs. Montreal Canadiens

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The Matchup: The New Jersey Devils (9-4-0) vs. Montreal Canadiens (9-3-1)

The Time: 7:00 PM ET

The Broadcast: MSGSN, Devils Hockey Network

The Game Preview: Matt took care of today’s preview.

The Song of the Day: Let’s get back in the win column today, yeah? Today’s song of the day is “Black Flag” by the Montréalais electropunk/moog-rock band Duchess Says. They should really get back around to releasing new music, but hey. It’s a good pump-up song.

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-14-new-jersey-devils-vs-montreal-canadiens
 
Devils in the Details – 11/10/25: Under the Radar Edition

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Here are your links for today:

Devils Links​


Jake Allen was brilliant again as Paul Cotter and Jesper Bratt converted in the shootout to give the Devils a 2-1 win over the Penguins on Saturday. [Devils NHL]

“I have been so, so impressed by (Arseny Gritsyuk). I think, like, if this guy was able to play first line with Jack [Hughes] and [Jesper] Bratt and was getting power play time, his numbers would be popping, and people will be talking about him the same way they’re talking about [Ivan] Demidov and things like that. I’m not saying that he is as good as Demidov, but I feel like he is still so under the radar.” [New Jersey Hockey Now]

Roster move:

#NEWS: We've assigned Brian Halonen to Utica (AHL).https://t.co/vdekHu7Xok

— New Jersey Devils (@NJDevils) November 9, 2025

All the best to the loved ones of Mel Bridgman:

The New Jersey Devils remember Mel Bridgman, captain of our team for four seasons in our first decade in New Jersey. Our thoughts and prayers are with his family and friends at this difficult time. https://t.co/LTrWWxi9Jp

— New Jersey Devils (@NJDevils) November 8, 2025

Hockey Links​


Pierre-Luc Dubois will miss some significant time:

Pierre-Luc Dubois underwent surgery Friday “to address injuries to his abdominal and adductor muscles.” He’s expected to miss 3-4 months pic.twitter.com/N4wouJnMFu

— B/R Open Ice (@BR_OpenIce) November 9, 2025

“Friday marked the one-month mark of the 2025-26 NHL season. It may feel early, but history suggests the hour is likely late for a head coach or two. Last season, we saw the first two axings before November was up, with the Boston Bruins firing Jim Montgomery and the St. Louis Blues firing Drew Bannister. Two more coaches got pinked slipped in December. It’s thus not too soon for the Roundtable to speculate: Who will be the first coach fired in 2025-26?” [Daily Faceoff]

“Kirill Kaprizov, Connor McDavid, Jack Eichel, Kyle Connor and now Martin Necas. Just like that, next year’s elite UFA class suddenly looks extremely thin. That leaves Artemi Panarin, Adrian Kempe and Alex Tuch as the last of the big-name free agents.” What do contracts look like for those three? [The Athletic ($)]

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

Source: https://www.allaboutthejersey.com/d...-the-details-11-10-25-under-the-radar-edition
 
2025-26 Gamethread #16: New Jersey Devils vs. New York Islanders

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The Matchup: The New Jersey Devils (11-4-0) versus the New York Islanders (7-6-2). SBN Blog: Lighthouse Hockey

The Time: 7:00 PM ET

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

The Game Preview: Please see the preview here.

The Song of the Day: Long Island has had some good music acts over the years, and one of my favorites from there is De La Soul. Today’s song of the day is “Me, Myself, and I” — go get them, Devils.

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-16-new-jersey-devils-vs-new-york-islanders
 
Hughes Miscues Help Isles Outlast Devils

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Over the course of a three-game homestand that began last Thursday against Montreal, the Devils had tempted fate time and again and survived.

They needed a late goal from Timo Meier and overtime heroics from Jesper Bratt to outlast the Canadiens Thursday night. On Saturday afternoon, they needed Jake Allen to keep them in the game long enough to beat Pittsburgh on a Paul Cotter shootout goal.

So when Simon Nemec blasted a slap shot from the point past Ilya Sorokin to tie Monday night’s game with 4.7 seconds to play you couldn’t blame the sellout crowd of 16,514 for getting their hopes up.

Those hopes were dashed just 1 minute, 17 seconds into overtime when Jonathan Drouin feathered a pass through Luke Hughes to Mat Barzal and Barzal scored to give the Isles a 3-2 win, snapping New Jersey’s eight-game home winning streak.

WINNER WINNER, CHICKEN DINNER! #LGI | @FORD pic.twitter.com/mwDSogouja

— New York Islanders (@NYIslanders) November 11, 2025

The Devils, who now head out on a five-game road trip dropped to 11-4-1. They’re now 3-3-1 in their last seven after starting the season 8-1.

It was not a good night for Luke Hughes, who after an early assist on a Timo Meier goal that put the Devils ahead 1-0, was on ice for all three Islander goals, played a major role in two of them, and finished a minus-2.

In the second period, he gifted Bo Horvat a goal by throwing a blind pass to Kyle Palmieri at center ice and then got stuck between Emil Heineman and a linesmen and couldn’t recover in time to catch Horvat, who fired a wrist shot past Jacob Markstrom to get the Islanders even at 1-1 at 6:55.

Palmieri + Horvat = 🚨#LGI | @ford pic.twitter.com/C43uwOWJTI

— New York Islanders (@NYIslanders) November 11, 2025

And that’s how things stayed till the final few minutes of the third.

Sorokin was outstanding, stopping 33 of 35 shots, including the first 13 he faced in the third period, when the Devils seemed to be coming in waves.

Markstrom was also really good stopping 21 of 24 and made two heart-stopping poke checks, but was helpless to stop ex-Devil Palmieri from putting the Islanders up 2-1 with 2:53 to go, whacking home a Matthew Schaefer point shot that deflected off Brendan Dillon in front.

That set the stage for Nemec’s first of the year with Markstrom off for the extra attacker and time expiring.

4.7 SECONDS LEFT! pic.twitter.com/LPCmpDj5r6

— New Jersey Devils (@NJDevils) November 11, 2025

The Devils had a golden opportunity right before Barzal’s OT winner when Ryan Pulock nearly gave the puck away to Jack Hughes in the slot, but Barzal tipped it away from Hughes to Drouin and raced up ice to score the winner.

Consolation Prize​


Seeing the home winning streak end is disappointing but every point banked is important at this point. New Jersey stays a point ahead of Carolina atop both the Metropolitan Division and Eastern Conference and are enjoying one of the best starts in franchise history points-wise.

It was also nice to see them finally snap the 0-for-8 power play drought and get their first PPG since Oct. 30 thanks to Meier and Bratt. Granted they went 0-for-3 with the man-advantage the rest of the way.

Up Next​


The Devils travel to Chicago for a Wednesday night game with a Blackhawks team that’s third in the Central at 8-5-3. Then they have games with Washington, Tampa, Florida, and Philly, before returning home to host the Red Wings Thanksgiving week.

Your Thoughts​


What did you think of tonight’s game? It felt like they were going to pull it off until they didn’t, didn’t it? Should Luke Hughes be way less sloppy in year three? Leave your thoughts in the comments below, and thanks for reading.

Source: https://www.allaboutthejersey.com/devils-game-recaps/62902/hughes-miscues-help-isles-outlast-devils
 
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. 🙂

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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.

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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.

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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
 
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