RSS Devils Team Notes

New Jersey Devils Prospect Update: Daniil Orlov, KHL All-Star

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SAINT PETERSBURG, RUSSIA - 2026/01/22: Daniil Orlov (62) of Spartak Hockey Club seen in action during the Hockey match, Kontinental Hockey League 2025/2026 between SKA Saint Petersburg and Spartak Moscow at the Ice Sports Palace. (Final score; SKA Saint Petersburg 1:2 Spartak Moscow). (Photo by Maksim Konstantinov/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images)

As the NHL takes a break for the Olympics, Daniil Orlov plays in the Fonbet KHL All-Star tournament.

All-Star Orlov​


After a breakout season of 7 goals and 22 points in 51 games, defender Daniil Orlov made KHL All-Star as part of the U23 squad and picked up a goal and three assists in two games in the mini-tournament. Orlov also took fourth on the hardest shot competition with a high of 149.83.

It has been a great year for Orlov, who has grown into a legit prospect. Orlov scored his seventh of the season before this weekend’s festivities.

🚨 #NJDevils prospect defenseman Daniil Orlov scores his 7th goal of the season to open the scoring.

51 GP 7-15–22 PTS #SPR #KHL pic.twitter.com/r4hlV2BKZF

— Hockey News Hub (@HockeyNewsHub) February 4, 2026

The Devils will have to be patient on the 22-year-old defender, who is signed to Spartak Moskva until 2028. On the bright side, Orlov should be a finished product by then and ready to jump right into an NHL lineup should he sign to come over to North America.

Around the Pool:​

  • Winger Lenni Hameenaho and defenseman Colton White were assigned to Utica to keep playing during the Olympic break. Hameenaho earned an assist in his first game back on the Comets only goal in a 5-1 loss to Rochester. Nico Daws earned the loss, stopping 20 of 24.
  • I haven’t written much about Jeremy Hanzel, but the 22-year-old defender is 2nd on the Adirondack Thunder in scoring with 26 points in 42 games. It’s solid growth for the defender who produced 22 points in 61 games in the ECHL last year. Hanzel is still a long shot to make the NHL, but probably deserves a shot in the AHL, especially with the Comets lingering in the league basement.
  • Lastly, there aren’t too many videos I can repost of David Roszival of the USHL, who leads all Devils prospects this year in points and goals with 17 goals and 28 points in 40 games. So, enjoy this older clip.
David Rozsíval vstřelil svůj 1️⃣5️⃣. gól v sezoně!

Momentálně má v USHL ve 36 utkáních 26 bodů (15+11) a je nejproduktivnějším českým hráčem v soutěži 👏🏻🇨🇿 pic.twitter.com/NQh61VajZS

— Eliška (@eliska_tweetuje) January 19, 2026

Your Take​


Post your comments below.

Source: https://www.allaboutthejersey.com/p...ils-prospect-update-daniil-orlov-khl-all-star
 
The All About the Jersey Overview of Men’s Hockey at the 2026 Winter Olympic Games

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BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS - FEBRUARY 20: Jack Eichel #9 of Team United States skates with Connor McDavid #97 of Team Canada during the first period of the 4 Nations Face-Off Championship game between Team Canada and Team United States at TD Garden on February 20, 2025 in Boston, Massachusetts. (Photo by Brian Babineau/4NFO/World Cup of Hockey via Getty Images)

Welcome to Olympic hockey! While our focus at All About the Jersey remains largely on the Devils, some of us will be tuned into the international affairs in these two weeks. Before we do that, though, we need to look at each of the teams and what they bring to the table.

Group A​


The toughest group of the Men’s tournament in these Olympics, this group features the powerhouse Team Canada, the ever-competing Team Czechia, the new threat of Team Switzerland, and the respectable outsider Team France. Let’s start with Team Canada.

Team Canada

After winning the Four Nations Face-Off last season, Team Canada looks for Gold on a larger scale in the Olympics. However, they will have two opponents in the Czechs and Swiss who were on the outside of Four Nations and will be looking to bring it to this year’s event. Captained by Sidney Crosby with assistants in Connor McDavid and Cale Makar, Team Canada’s strength lies most in their far superior forward group, especially at center. This is how Team Canada should be lined up:

Macklin Celebrini — Connor McDavid — Tom Wilson
Mitch Marner — Sidney Crosby — Mark Stone
Brad Marchand — Nathan MacKinnon — Nick Suzuki
Brandon Hagel — Bo Horvat — Sam Reinhart
Extras: Sam Bennett and Seth Jarvis

Devon Toews — Cale Makar
Josh Morrissey — Colton Parayko
Travis Sanheim — Shea Theodore
Extra: Drew Doughty

Darcy Kuemper
Logan Thompson
Jordan Binnington

As long as this team gets decent goaltending, they are by far the favorite for Gold. Could they have made better choices on the blueline? Yes. Could they have pulled one of Colorado’s goaltenders to replace Binnington? Yes. Even so, it will be very, very difficult to topple a team that features McDavid, Crosby, and MacKinnon on separate lines.

Team Czechia

Team Czechia was dealt a brutal blow when they learned that former Devil Pavel Zacha will be unable to play in the tournament due to injury. Still, the Czechs have some very, very good forwards and a respectable defense, so they should be in a good position to push on to the playoffs. They are captained by one-time NHLer and longtime Czech Captain Roman Cervenka, with assistants in David Pastrnak and Radko Gudas. Here is how they are lined up:

Martin Necas — Tomas Hertl — David Pastrnak
Ondrej Palat — David Kampf — Ondrej Kase
Roman Cervenka — Lukas Sedlak — David Tomasek
Matej Stransky — Radek Faksa — Dominik Kubalik
Extras: Filip Chlapik, Jakub Flek

Radim Simek — Filip Hronek
Michal Kempny — Radko Gudas
Jan Rutta — David Spacek
Extras: Jiri Tichacek, Tomas Kundratek

Lukas Dostal
Karel Vejmelka
Dan Vladar

The loss of Zacha really stings the Czechs down the middle, but they still have the advantage of mostly carrying players who have played or are currently playing in the NHL. Former NHLers include Sedlak, Tomasek, Kempny, Rutta, Simek, and Kundratek. Jiri Tichacek is an undrafted defenseman in the Finnish Liiga, while Matej Strasnky was drafted in 2011 but never played in the NHL. They will have to wear opposing teams down to open up ice for that top line to score.

Team Switzerland

Finally, we are getting to our New Jersey Devils at the Olympics. Team Switzerland features three New Jersey Devils, who should all be getting top minutes in this tournament. I look at Switzerland as a bit of a dark horse in this tournament, featuring some really high-end players and a national program that really wants to prove their worth. They are captained by the Swiss legend Roman Josi, and his assistants will be rotated between Kevin Fiala, Nico Hischier, Nino Niederreiter, and Andrea Glauser. Here’s how Team Switzerland is lining up.

Kevin Fiala — Nico Hischier — Timo Meier
Nino Niederreiter — Pius Suter — Philipp Kurashev
Sven Andrighetto — Denis Malgin — Christoph Bertschy
Simon Knak — Calvin Thurkauf — Damien Riat
Extras: Ken Jager, Sandro Schmid

Jonas Siegenthaler — Roman Josi
JJ Moser — Tim Berni
Dean Kukan — Michael Fora
Extras: Andrea Glauser, Chirstian Marti

Akira Schmid
Reto Berra
Leonardo Genoni

Unlike the Czechs, the depth of the Swiss team is made up entirely of European professionals, with no NHLers or former NHLers beyond their third line or second pairing. It will be interesting to see how much of an impact coaching and team leadership can make here. For Devils fans, however, all eyes will be on Hischier alongside Timo Meier and Jonas Siegenthaler. Nico is feeling it going into the Olympics, despite his recent illness, while Jonas Siegenthaler and Timo Meier have had very difficult seasons. If they play well here, how might they carry that into the rest of the NHL season?

Team France

Captained by former NHLer Pierre-Edouard Bellemare, the French team is not expected to advance past the group stage. In addition to the awesome defensive center Bellemare, the French defense is led by 35-year old former New Jersey Devil Yohann Auvitu. Up front, the French have current Montreal Canadien Alexandre Texier on the wing and former NHLer Stephane Da Costa at center behind Bellemare. Their hopes will largely hinge on keeping games low-scoring, though I do not expect them to pull off any wins against the other Group A teams.

Group B​


A bit of a weaker group than A, Group B’s most talented roster comes from Team Sweden. They are joined by a regional national rival in Team Finland, who has a lot of NHL talent but really wins these kinds of tournaments through discipline, cooperation, and grit. Eyes should also be on Team Slovakia, who medaled for the first time ever in 2022 with the help of some youngsters who now find themselves rising in the NHL. The hosting Team Italy rounds out the group. Let’s start with the Swedes.

Team Sweden

The Swedes are captained by Gabriel Landeskog, joined by veteran defensemen Victor Hedman and Erik Karlsson. Two Devils, Jesper Bratt and Jacob Markstrom, are on the team. However, it is unclear how much of a role either will take, as it seems that their national team has noticed their struggles this season. Bratt interchanged rushes in practice with Filip Forsberg, so we’ll see how the actual lineup shakes out.

Adrian Kempe — Joel Eriksson Ek — William Nylander
Jesper Bratt / Filip Forsberg — Elias Lindholm — Lucas Raymond
Elias Pettersson — Mika Zibanejad — Rickard Rakell
Gabriel Landeskog — Pontus Holmberg — Alexander Wennberg / Marcus Johansson

Gustav Forsling — Rasmus Dahlin
Victor Hedman — Rasmus Andersson
Phillip Broberg — Erik Karlsson
Extras: Oliver Ekman-Larsson, Hampus Lindholm

Filip Gustavsson
Jesper Wallstedt
Jacob Markstrom

Team Sweden is the first team here that I take real issue with in terms of lines. Namely, is Pontus Holmberg really holding down a lineup spot here? Alex Wennberg can easily play center, and I even wonder whether Zibanejad should be centering a line over Elias Pettersson for the third line. Still, these lines can shift around depending on whether Jesper Bratt ends up dressing, as he would presumably shift some players down the lineup. If Bratt was not playing his personal worst hockey in five seasons, he’d be an easy lock for the top line over Adrian Kempe.

Team Finland

Captained by Mikael Granlund, the Finns have one of the most well-rounded, two-way teams in the tournament, though they lack some of the high-end scorers (aside from Mikko Rantanen) that other nations bring. This team does not feature any Devils, though it does have a recent one in Erik Haula. Let’s look at their lines:

Mikael Granlund — Roope Hintz — Mikko Rantanen
Artturi Lehkonen — Sebastian Aho — Teuvo Teravainen
Eetu Luostarinen — Anton Lundell — Kaapo Kakko
Joel Armia — Erik Haula — Eeli Tolvanen
Joel Kiviranta, Kasperi Kapanen

Essa Lindell — Miro Heiskanen
Olli Maattaa — Henri Jokiharju
Niko Mikkola — Rasmus Ristolainen
Mikko Lehtonen, Nikolas Matinpalo

Juuse Saros
Joonas Korpisalo
Kevin Lankinen

Team Finland is a solid group, never to be underestimated. I have them as a solid second-best behind Team Sweden in Group B, but they cannot be counted out of the medal hunt. If Mikko Rantanen scores a ton of goals, or if Miro Heiskanen plays 30 minutes per match at the top of his game, and Juuse Saros turns back the clock a little bit, they can go far.

Team Slovakia

Headlined by the rising NHLers Juraj Slavkovsky and the Devils’ very own Simon Nemec, the Slovaks are looking for their first medal with NHLers present at the tournament. They are captained by former New Jersey Devil Tomas Tatar (who probably still would have been a better choice for our bottom six than most of his replacements this season), and I expect them to take nothing for granted, bringing the battle to their opponents. Let’s look at their lines.

Juraj Slafkovsky — Adam Ruzicka — Tomas Tatar
Adam Liska — Dalibor Dvorsky — Libor Hudacek
Milos Kelemen — Martin Pospisil — Pavol Regenda
Samuel Takac — Matus Sukel — Oliver Okuliar
Extras: Peter Cehlarik, Lukas Cingel

Martin Fehervary — Simon Nemec
Martin Gernat — Erik Cernak
Martin Marincin — Peter Ceresnak
Extras: Michal Ivan, Patrik Koch

Adam Gajan
Samuel Hlavaj
Stanislav Skorvanek

Slovakia should at least play some good hockey in the tournament, but they are not very likely to medal. Still, I have high hopes that Simon Nemec gets some confidence from getting a ton of ice time and a top scoring role for the team. And, if I do happen to see them play, it’s always good to see Tomas Tatar on the ice.

Team Italy

The players on Team Italy are certainly excited to play in front of their home country, but, like France, they are not expected to advance. Unlike France, they have no players who have played in the NHL, though some have been drafted by NHL teams. Their key to upsets will be purely through opponents underestimating them, but it will be hard to beat a stacked Swedish team, a super-disciplined Finnish team, and a rising Slovak team.

Group C​


By far the weakest group of these Olympics, Group C is headlined by Team USA. They are joined by Team Latvia, who have a handful of NHLers but are not quite as strong as they may have been in the past. Perhaps rising above Latvia this season could be Team Germany, who feature the best individual player in the group, while Team Denmark makes their second-ever appearance in Olympic hockey. Let’s start with our very own team.

Team USA

My takes on Team USA this year are bathed in cynicism and doubt. After leaving Jason Robertson and Cole Caufield behind, I have had little faith in national GM Bill Guerin, whose choices have largely seemed to revolve around appeasing head coach Mike Sullivan and the New York Rangers. Let’s take a look at their lines.

Jake Guentzel — Auston Matthews — Matt Boldy
Brady Tkachuk — Jack Eichel — Matthew Tkachuk
Kyle Connor — Dylan Larkin — Tage Thompson
J.T. Miller — Brock Nelson — Jack Hughes
Extras: Clayton Keller, Vincent Trocheck

Quinn Hughes — Charlie McAvoy
Jaccob Slavin — Brock Faber
Jake Sanderson — Zach Werenski
Extras: Jackson LaCombe, Noah Hanifin

Connor Hellebuyck
Jeremy Swayman
Jake Oettinger

There is no world in which J.T. Miller is a better player at this moment than Clayton Keller. Miller and Trocheck should not have even sniffed the national team with their play this season. And if they give a perennial underperformer in Connor Hellebuyck starts in goal, this could be a very disappointing year. They are already missing two of their best goal scorers due to bad roster decisions, so they will need to hope that their still-great defense (though without Adam Fox, who is injured and could not replace Seth Jones) just controls the puck for entire games. Quinn Hughes can do that for you.

Jack Hughes, however, is returning from his lower-body injury after playing some rough games with a compromised hand after the Devils’ Chicago steakhouse accident. I would certainly prefer him at center, but Guerin and Sullivan are valuing size first for this team despite the Olympics’ stricter rules on fighting and physicality. Hopefully, the no-backcheck J.T. Miller and the still-very good Brock Nelson can finish more of Jack’s passes than Auston Matthews did last year at Four Nations.

Team Latvia

Team Latvia has a great chance to advance to the playoffs this year because of the weakness of this group. They are Team USA’s first matchup, and they have a few NHLers to lean on in the tournament. Let’s take a look at those lines:

Sandis Vilmanis — Zemgus Girgensons — Eduards Tralmaks
Rihards Bukarts — Teddy Blueger — Rudolfs Balcers
Renars Krastenbergs — Dans Locmelis — Kaspars Daugavins
Roberts Bukarts — Oskars Batna — Martins Dzierkals

Kristians Rubins — Uvis Balinskis
Kristaps Zile — Janis Jaks
Roberts Mamcics — Alberts Smits

Arturs Silovs
Elvis Merzlikins

Per the team itself, a player to watch is the young Alberts Smits, who is 2026 Draft Eligible as the second-ranked international skater by NHL Central Scouting. The veterans of this team, Girgensons, Blueger, and Merzlikins, will be looking to build Smits up and put the team in a position to win by bringing their experienced games to the ice. From the linked NHL.com article:

“Our young kids are growing and they’re doing good things and we’re putting our name on the map,” Columbus Blue Jackets goalie Elvis Merzlikins said. “Now opponents like Canada, the Americans or others like Sweden, Finland, they look at us with another perspective, and they know we can win. We battle and we’re going to fight until the end.”

Team Germany

Team Germany might have the best player outside of Connor McDavid, and their roster does not end there. The Germans bring an offense-first roster, built largely around NHL forwards. They have Leon Draisaitl, Tim Stutzle, JJ Peterka, Lukas Reichel, Nico Sturm, Tobias Rieder, Dominik Kahun, bringing a solid mix of NHLers and former NHLers to the table. However, they only have one NHLer on the blueline in Moritz Seider, presenting a potential weakness. In net, they will have Philipp Grubauer, carrying two European professionals as backups in Maximilian Franzreb and Mathias Niederberger.

So far, Team Germany’s lines have not been reported. If I see them, I will insert them here. But expect to see some fun hockey from Draisaitl, Stutzle, and Peterka.

Team Denmark

Perhaps the weakest team of the group, Team Denmark features only four NHL forwards and no current NHLers on the blueline. They are led by Nikolaj Ehlers and veteran center Lars Eller. Up front, they also have Oliver Bjorkstrand and Oscar Fisker Molgaard, though the 20-year old Molgaard has only played three NHL games this season. Their best hopes will be in net, led by Frederik Andersen and Mads Sogaard. Denmark is the team I do not expect to advance out of the group stage, but maybe they have some surprises in store.

Like with the Germans, I have not seen any Danish lines posted online. If I see them, I will pass them along.

The Group Stage Procedures​


If you are confused about the four-team, three-group format, do not worry. In total, eight teams will pass through to the playoffs. The top four teams — the three group winners and the top second-place team —will receive byes into the elimination bracket. The next eight teams will play qualification games. These teams will be reseeded. So, if Denmark, France, and Italy have no wins, they will likely be the 12th, 11th, and 10th seeds, with the fifth seed being the team playing against the 12th for qualification, and so on.

The Schedule​


The schedule for Group Stage is as follows:

Feb 11:

  • Slovakia v. Finland, 10:40 AM EST (local time 16:40)
  • Sweden v. Italy, 3:10 PM EST (local time 21:10)

Feb 12:

  • Switzerland v. France, 6:10 AM EST (local time 12:10)
  • Czechia v. Canada, 10:40 AM EST (local time 16:40)
  • Latvia v. United States, 3:10 PM EST (local time 21:10)
  • Germany v. Denmark, 3:10 PM EST (local time 21:10)

Feb 13:

  • Finland v. Sweden, 6:10 AM EST (local time 12:10)
  • Italy v. Slovakia, 6:10 AM EST (local time 12:10)
  • France v. Czechia, 10:40 AM EST (local time 16:40)
  • Canada v. Switzerland, 3:10 PM EST (local time 21:10)

Feb 14:

  • Sweden v. Slovakia, 6:10 AM EST (local time 12:10)
  • Germany v. Latvia, 6:10 AM EST (local time 12:10)
  • Finland v. Italy, 10:40 AM EST (local time 16:40)
  • United States v. Denmark, 3:10 PM EST (local time 21:10)

Feb 15:

  • Switzerland v. Czechia, 6:10 AM EST (local time 12:10)
  • Canada v. France, 10:40 AM EST (local time 16:40)
  • Denmark v. Latvia, 1:10 PM EST (local time 19:10)
  • United States v. Germany, 3:10 PM EST (local time 21:10)

The playoffs will run from February 17 through February 22. The Bronze Medal Game will run at 2:40 PM EST on Saturday, February 21 (local time 20:40), while the Gold Game will be played at 8:10 AM EST on Sunday, February 22 (local time 14:10).

Your Thoughts​


What do you think of the teams this year? Are you excited for Olympic hockey? Leave your thoughts in the comments below, and thanks for reading.

Source: https://www.allaboutthejersey.com/2...-mens-hockey-at-the-2026-winter-olympic-games
 
2026 Olympics Team USA Game Preview and Gamethread #1: USA vs. Latvia

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MILAN, ITALY - FEBRUARY 09: Players, staffs and officials of Team United States pose for team photos during training on day three of the Milano Cortina 2026 Winter Olympic games at Milano Santagiulia Ice Hockey Arena on February 09, 2026 in Milan, Italy. (Photo by Bruce Bennett/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Matchup: Team USA (0-0-0) vs. Team Latvia (0-0-0)

The Time: 3:10 PM EST (local time 21:10)

The Broadcasts: TV — Peacock, USA Network

The Olympic Overview: Click here for an overview on the teams.

News From Practice​


While I have already ripped on Team USA’s choices plenty, they have drawn some ire from others for Mike Sullivan’s power play units. While the first unit features Jack Eichel, Auston Matthews, Tage Thompson, Matthew Tkachuk, and Quinn Hughes — a very good top unit — the second features Brady Tkachuk, Matt Boldy, Kyle Connor, Jake Guentzel, and Zach Werenski. I might still believe that Jack Hughes is still hurt, but is he really not on the second power play over Matt Boldy? Aside from issues with the power play, all signs point to Connor Hellebuyck starting over Swayman and Oettinger. I am not really a believer in Hellebuyck after his repeated playoff performances over the years.

Yesterday’s games showed us that any upset is possible. If Damian Clara did not get hurt on the 49th shot against of the game for Italy, there was a pretty solid chance that Team Italy could have taken Team Sweden to overtime. Team Slovakia opened the tournament by beating Team Finland, as well, though that was a less shocking result. Still, if Slovakia can beat Finland, Latvia can catch the United States sleeping. We’ll see who comes more ready to play.

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.

Source: https://www.allaboutthejersey.com/2...a-game-preview-and-gamethread-1-usa-vs-latvia
 
Nelson, Hughes Power USA Over Latvia

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MILAN, ITALY - FEBRUARY 12: Brock Nelson #29 of United States celebrate his goal with Jack Hughes #86 of Team United States on day six of the Milano Cortina 2026 Winter Olympic games at Milano Santagiulia Ice Hockey Arena on February 12, 2026 in Milan, Italy. (Photo by Andrea Branca/Eurasia Sport Images/Getty Images) | Getty Images
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Maybe it was the extra week off.

Maybe it was the competition, or lack thereof.

One thing is certain: Devils’ center Jack Hughes didn’t look at all bothered by the lower body injury that prevented him from dressing for the Devils’ final three games — all losses — before the Olympic break.

In fact, Hughes looked fantastic.

He picked up two assists in his Olympic debut, a 5-1 win for Team USA over Latvia in group play, at the Milano Santagiulia Ice Hockey Arena in Milano, Italy.

It was his first game since exiting the Devils Jan. 29 overtime win against the Nashville Predators late in the first period – a span of two full weeks. Hughes had been listed as day-to-day from Jan. 30 to Feb. 5. According to Devils’ head coach Sheldon Keefe, the Devils’ training staff wouldn’t clear Hughes, who’d been skating on his own, for two crucial Metro Division games last week.

But the face of the franchise was clearly not exaggerating last Sunday when he said he, “felt good,” after practicing with his American teammates. Hughes set up Avalanche center Brock Nelson twice during the second period, when the Americans scored three unanswered goals to chase Latvian starter Elvis Merzlikins.

Despite having just six active NHLers on its roster, including Merzlikins, who shut out the Hughes-less Devils last week, Latvia managed to escape the first period tied at 1-1.

But the game wasn’t as close as the score suggested.

Two US goals were waived off early in the first period. Already up 1-0 after Brady Tkachuk scored 5 minutes, 29 seconds in, the Americans appeared to take a 2-0 lead on a Quinn Hughes’ goal that was eventually ruled offsides after video review.

Not long after, Renars Krastenbergs tied it for Latvia at 1-1.

The Americans then appeared to take a 2-1 lead on a deflection by Nelson, but again the Latvians challenged, this time for goalie interference, and again they won the challenge and the goal was disallowed.

If the Latvians were harboring hopes of another American Olympic upset – they tied USA 3-3 the last time the countries played in Turin 20 years ago – those hopes were dashed midway through the second.

Jack Hughes drew two defenders as he circled the net and found Nelson in the slot for what turned out to be the game-winner at 10:38.

Nice 'n easy Nelly 🚨 #WinterOlympics pic.twitter.com/b2G2kueNeM

— USA Hockey (@usahockey) February 12, 2026

The Americans put the game out of reach scoring twice in the final 2:25 of the second.

Tage Thompson scored a power play goal on a nifty backhander from just outside Merzlikins’ crease, and 2:13 later Nelson netted his second on a pretty passing play with Jack Hughes and Matthew Tkachuk.

Just an absolute passing clinic and Brock Nelson finishes it for goal No. 2 of the night 😮‍💨 #WinterOlympics pic.twitter.com/6HOXI7auAc

— USA Hockey (@usahockey) February 12, 2026

Merzlikins, who was under non-stop pressure in the second, was replaced by Arturs Silovs to start the third.

The Americans needed all of 2:35 to solve Silovs.

This time it was American captain Auston Matthews, with Jack Eichel and Quinn Hughes each picking up their second assists of the game.

Up Next​


Team USA (1-0-0) plays Denmark (0-1-0) at 3 p.m. EST, Saturday afternoon. Like Latvia, Denmark is short on NHL talent with just six sort of active NHL players. Goalie Frederik Andersen and forwards Nikolaj Ehlers, Lars Eller, and Oliver Bjorkstrand. Ehlers had an assist and Andersen made 23 saves in Denmark’s 3-1 loss to Germany on Thursday. Oscar Fisker Molgaard, who has split time between NHL Seattle and AHL Coachella Valley had a goal for Denmark in the loss. Another part-time NHLer, goalie Mads Sogaard, plays for the Ottawa Senators.

Your Thoughts​


Hard to know what to take from games like this. Team USA is basically the only “real” team in its group. In a best-on-best tournament the team with all NHL players should win games against teams with just a handful of real NHLers going away. And that’s what the Americans did. The shots were ugly (USA 48, Latvia 15). The first disallowed goal was offsides by inches (centimeters? since they’re in Europe). The second is probably a goal under NHL rules since J.T. Miller was mainly in the crease as opposed to actively interfering with Merzlikins. Everyone, including Jack Hughes, looked great. But it’s Latvia. But hey, they were supposed to run away with it and they did.

Source: https://www.allaboutthejersey.com/2026-olympics/66524/nelson-hughes-power-usa-over-latvia
 
Devils in the Details – 2/13/26: Fixing the Blue Line Edition

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Here are your links for today:

Devils Links​


Olympic update! Timo Meier scored two goals for Switzerland, Jack Hughes tallied a pair of assists for the United States and more updates on Devils in Italy: [Devils NHL]

A look at a few potential trade partners for the Devils: [Infernal Access ($)]

“There’s just too much redundancy on the Devils’ blue line, and they won’t improve next season if they don’t retool their defense with more puck-moving and offensive ability. Who they could target to remake their defense is more of an offseason topic. But get the ball rolling and start freeing up roster space at the trade deadline.” [Devils on the Rush]

Timo Meier, Jonas Siegenthaler and Nico Hischier talk about their connection representing Switzerland: [The Hockey News]

Hockey Links​


Macklin Celebrini rises to the moment:

No matter the stage, the moment is NEVER too big for Macklin Celebrini 🤯🔥

(h/t @CurtisPashelka) pic.twitter.com/OBafS2pAQX

— Gino Hard (@GinoHard_) February 13, 2026

“Russian and Belarusian players under the age of 18 could re-enter the international hockey scene as soon as 2027-28 under new IOC recommendations, but the NHL has no current plans to bring Russia back into the fold in time for its 2028 World Cup.” [The Athletic ($)]

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

Source: https://www.allaboutthejersey.com/d...-details-2-13-26-fixing-the-blue-line-edition
 
How Do the New Jersey Devils Fix Their Development Issues?

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VANCOUVER, CANADA - JANUARY 23: Arseny Gritsyuk #81 and Lenni Hameenaho #29 of the New Jersey Devils wait for a face off during the first period of their NHL game against the Vancouver Canucks at Rogers Arena on January 23, 2026 in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada. (Photo by Derek Cain/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The New Jersey Devils may be on break for the Olympics, but there are still players within the organization that are active. Sure, a few Devils are representing their countries at the Olympics, but I’m mainly referring to prospects and AHL players in action. The team’s affiliate, the Utica Comets, may have had the week off for the All Star break, but play resumes tomorrow for the league, while Utica has to wait until Saturday for their season to resume. Sitting with a record of 13-22-5-3 and in last place in the Eastern Conference, the New Jersey Devils organization as a whole is failing.

While New Jersey has had some level of success (in that they at least made the playoffs a couple of times) over the last few seasons, Utica hasn’t been a playoff team since 2022-23, and you could argue they were already declining towards the level they are at now in that season. While the team was legitimately good in 2021-22, they still weren’t winners and their predecessor, the Binghamton Devils, was a bottom feeder more often than not as well.

Let’s face it: most of the Devils’ draft success stories are either from high first round selections or, like Arseny Gritsyuk and Jesper Bratt, are from overseas development. Yes, there’s definitely been a handful of players who have come up through the Devils’ minor league system who wound up going on to find NHL success, but even some that you could call a success are looking more like minor complementary pieces that true Top 6 Forward/Top 4 Defender talent. There’s still some hope for recent draftee and recently promoted Devil Lenni Hameenaho at least, but there still has to be a good amount of concern. The majority of the NHL club’s current roster wasn’t drafted by the Devils, and while that’s probably true for a lot of teams, the Devils aren’t being supplemented by most of their draft choices either. So what can be done to fix this?

Firing people seems to be a popular topic when discussing the Devils lately, and today will be no exception! If the Devils aren’t finding a lot of success through drafting, maybe it’s time to change the people making those decisions. Whether it’s scouts, members of management, or both, something isn’t working right now. The Devils organization isn’t finding success at either the major league or minor league level and while it could be argued that the major league club is underachieving and should be winning, it’s not the case. Certainly, there doesn’t seem to be enough of a talent influx or pipeline to keep any success sustained even if the NHL team turns things around.

The Devils might also want to invest in a coaching/management overhaul at the minor league level. I’ll be frank enough to admit I don’t follow the AHL staff closely enough to know how much turnover they’ve had in recent years, but we’re talking about a group that has been bottom of the barrel for three straight years now. Yes, there’s going to be less wins at the AHL level when the NHL team is in win now mode, but we can’t even say the Devils are in win now mode currently! What kind of message does that send to prospects? What kind of culture is that building? How much damage is being done to the development of kids who could maybe one day become legitimate contributors?

My answer for those questions is that honestly it’s hard to gauge right now because of the earlier discussed problem that the Devils just don’t seem to have players coming into Utica that could become legit players. Sure, maybe a guy like Shane LaChance eventually is full time in the NHL, but he projects as more of a low line guy, not an impact player. The Devils just have seemingly not struck on enough mid-round selections lately to fill out a competitive Utica squad, which has also led to limited reinforcements for New Jersey when necessary. Compare that to Boston and Pittsburgh, two teams that were supposed to falter and be on the outside looking in; both are in playoff spots (well above the Devils in the standings) and have two of the best AHL affiliate in terms of results.

Changes need to come for the Devils in multiple aspects of the whole organization. Sadly, it seems like it might very well take quite a few firings and new voices to get the team back on track to where it was supposed to be right now.

What’s your take on the Devils developing of players; do you think it’s time for a change in scouting? Would you rather see management and/or coaching get overhauled in Utica? Do you think this is a complete top-down problem? Or is the drafting fine and just being overly scrutinized because of how bad the Devils are this season? Leave any and all comments below and thanks as always for reading!

Source: https://www.allaboutthejersey.com/d...ew-jersey-devils-fix-their-development-issues
 
2026 Olympics Game Preview and Gamethread #2: USA v. Denmark

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MILAN, ITALY - FEBRUARY 12: Quinn Hughes #43 of Team United States shoots the puck in the first period during the Men's Preliminary Group C match between Latvia and United States on day six of the Milano Cortina 2026 Winter Olympic games at Milano Santagiulia Ice Hockey Arena on February 12, 2026 in Milan, Italy. (Photo by Gregory Shamus/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Matchup: Team USA (1-0-0) vs. Team Denmark (0-1-0)

The Time: 3:10 PM EST (local time 21:10)

The Broadcasts: TV — Peacock, USA Network

The Olympic Overview: Click here for an overview on the teams.

Latvia Beats Germany, Giving USA an Easier Path to Group Victory​


After USA beat Latvia 5-1 on Thursday and Germany beat Denmark 3-1, it looked like the battle for Group C was squarely between the Americans and Germans. However, this morning, Latvia put up a 4-3 win over Germany, putting USA in position to run away with the group if they get the win over Denmark today. Team Canada already has Group A wrapped up with a 10-1 goal differential and two wins, while Slovakia may have stunned Sweden for Group B this morning thanks to a late weak power play point shot goal past Jacob Markstrom. The ultimate result there depends on Italy vs. Finland today.

For USA, though, they just have to beat Denmark today, which should not be difficult with the level of disparity between these rosters. Get it done, and the playoff stage of the Olympics can be very fun.

Andersen to Sit​


Yesterday, the Danes already announced that Frederik Andersen would sit today against Team USA. Given that his backups, Frederik Dichow and Mads Sogaard, are not NHL goaltenders, this tells me that the Danes are hedging on beating Latvia with him in net tomorrow. For what? I am not sure. If Denmark loses the game today, they lose Group C.

2 goals Dans Locmelis; 26 saves Arturs Silovs; Latvia beats Germany 4-3.

Latvia plays Denmark tomorrow; Germany, the USA

Jeremy Swayman starts tonight vs the Danes…Danish coach already said Frederik Andersen won't play. We will see if it is Mads Sogaard or Frederik Dichow

— Elliotte Friedman (@FriedgeHNIC) February 14, 2026

Maybe, Mads Sogaard has a surprising performance in him. He is 6’7” and has at least faced NHL teams before with the Ottawa Senators (.877 SV% in 31 games), but he is truly an AHL/ECHL goaltender at best at his current level of ability. We’ll see. Frederik Dichow would be my preferred goaltender if I were rooting for Team Denmark, as he has a .912 SV% with HV71 of the Swedish Hockey League in 10 games this season. In his SHL career (61 games), Dichow has an .897 SV%.

More Jack Hughes, Less J.T. Miller​


Team USA is expected to roll with the same lines they had in their first match against Latvia. This means that two players who should not be playing — J.T. Miller and Vincent Trocheck — will continue getting ice time. Against Latvia, they combined for over 20 minutes.

Here's the ice-time spread from USA's 5-1 win over Latvia pic.twitter.com/73IdayQ1gh

— Kyle Cushman (@Kyle_Cush) February 12, 2026

When I was watching, I did not think that the top line could have done more. I expect more than fluttery shots from the Tkachuk brothers, but at times it just did not look to me like they were as aggressive as they could have been. Hopefully they wake up a bit more today. One rush shot goal by Brady isn’t enough for me for them to agree with them getting that kind of usage. As for Miller and Trocheck, these guys are just taking ice time away from better players (especially Jack Hughes, who created multiple goals), while keeping another better player in Clayton Keller off the ice entirely. For now, it might not matter against Denmark. But when this team is playing teams like Sweden or Canada, you want the best possible lineup, and that is not it. We’ll see if J.T. Miller forgets that you can’t stand in the middle of the crease in Olympic hockey today, but I guess it largely doesn’t matter as long as it’s a Jack Hughes — Brock Nelson show on that line.

Your Thoughts​


What do you think of today’s game? Are you looking forward to it? Leave your thoughts in the comments below, and thanks for reading.

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.

Source: https://www.allaboutthejersey.com/2...s-game-preview-and-gamethread-2-usa-v-denmark
 
The Path Forward: Step 1, Find a New Front Office

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Hello Devils friends and family, I hope you’re all enjoying your reprieve from *gestures at Newark*. It’s no secret that this current version of the Devils has flamed out spectacularly. If it is a secret… umm, surprise! They have 25 games left, and would need to go 20-4-1 to get to 99 points and be in a comfortable playoff spot. Your mileage may vary on what you see as the problem, and the blame game is in full force, from the owners to the 4th line to the medical team and most recently, Jack seems to be the target du jour. And quite frankly it’s all correct – there is blame to go around to everyone in that pile. Some pretty serious changes need to be made top to bottom.

The first step starts at the top. Tom Fitzgerald leads this organization, and leads my list of changes that need to be made and this seems to be a widely shared opinion. However, if Tom is replaced, it cannot be an interim GM from inside the organization. We need fresh eyes to dispassionately examine the roster, scouting, drafting, and operations. Jared wrote a longer blog about this and I agree: Our two AGMs are not people I would have faith in making the necessary changes for the Devils. Dan MacKinnon oversees a bad Utica team and ineffective player development, while Kate Madigan is behind the scenes and more of an operational role and has a large say in contracts. If Tom goes, both of them should as well so there is no connection between regimes. The third internal option scares me more than these two, advisor Chuck Fletcher. He is only an advisor because no one would touch him for a GM role – and guess what? He and Fitz are buddies and that’s why he is here and to advise on contracts, scouting, and operations.

This entire front office tenure can be summed up in the phrase “too little, too late.” Goalie changes, coaching changes, roster additions – all too little too late. The most recent acquisition, Nick Bjugstad, as Chris wrote was three months too late. The only big swing this group took was for Timo Meier, a deadline move that was about as obvious as can be, meanwhile we have gone 3 consecutive years with glaring season-long holes that went unaddressed. Colorado fixed their goalie issues a month into the 24-25 season, Carolina managed to swing a trade for Rantanen and later flip him when they realized he wasn’t going to sign long term. Don’t get me started on Quinn. Meanwhile Fitz builds his roster in the offseason and dabbles at the deadline, and even then he only comes in second, or “owes it to the team” to bring in Andrew Hammond.

One place I think we should probably retain is our amateur scouting mechanism. For as poor as the 1st round drafting has been, the team’s later rounds picking has been fine to good and the verdict is still out on some of the last two years. Daniil Orlov, Roszival, Moe, Cheslock, Yegorov, and Malek all show potential from our most recent crop and I encourage you to check in on James’ prospect updates.

We Know Tim, Get to the Point​


Sorry, I get a little carried away talking about Fitz. Anyway, I wanted to look through a variety of GM/Front Office options, and truly hope the ownership group takes a broad sweeping look at different ways to approach the role(s). Whether that is finding a more “traditional” experienced Manager, whether they are going to split the President of Hockey Operations and GM roles, and whether they are going to look outside the box. So I decided to scour the marketplace for options that are very much traditional to options that are very much not – and people in between. We need to find the next Bill Zito, Breisbois, or Jim Nil – all three of which came from different worlds.

Luckily for me, I got some help from people that know more than me. As you probably are aware, Barry Trotz is stepping down as the Predators GM, and Elliott Friedman rattled off a variety of potential options on 32 Thoughts. Frank Seravelli mentioned on his show that there may be expectations that the Devils will be making a GM change this summer while also discussing the Preds job, implying the Devils job may be more desirable. So, let’s take a look at those options for the big chair.

Traditional “Hockey Guys” With GM Experience​


Rob Blake: Blake is most notably known for stepping into he Kings GM where he pivoted the team into a significant roster rebuild and away form an aging core, bringing in Fiala, drafting Byfield and Clarke, and taking a swing on Dubois. I do like that he recognized that didn’t work and pivoted to a solution… how refreshing to have a GM realize his mistake and move off it getting value in return. His downfall was the Edmonton Oilers.

Brendan Shanahan: Hired to transform a struggling franchise, Shanahan initiated a comprehensive rebuild that resulted in drafting cornerstone players Auston Matthews, Mitch Marner, and William Nylander. He oversaw consistent regular-season success, including nine straight playoff appearances, however I think we are all aware of their failure to get past their playoff ghosts. He would probably be more of a POHO role, similar to what he held in Toronto, so if the Devils keep the role the same (POHO/GM) or split them into two separate roles – he could be a consideration.

Marc Bergevin: He is best known for his role as GM of the Montreal Canadiens (2012–2021), leading them to the 2021 Stanley Cup Final during the lockout year. Two of his key acquisitions were Nick Suzuki and Shea Weber (for PK). As GM of the Canadiens, he oversaw six playoff appearances and previously won a Stanley Cup as Director of Player Personnel with the Chicago Blackhawks in 2010.

Peter Chiarelli: No.

Traditional “Hockey Guys” That Are AGMs​


Jamie Langenbrunner: You many not know that he is the AGM of the Bruins where he manages player personnel decisions, evaluates pro and amateur talent, and oversees prospect progression. He is well thought of for his work in scouting, identifying player improvements, and assisting with draft preparations and is on the “next” list according to people that know things. Worth an interview.

Jason Spezza: Currently serves as an AGM under Kyle Dubas in Pittsburgh. Moved with Dubas from Toronto to continue his work in hockey operations, scouting, and player development, particularly in Wilkes Barre, where he took over the role to manage the organization’s top prospects and minor league operations. He also served under Dubas as a special assistant with the Leafs from 22-23, so since his entry into management he has had a pretty impressive apprenticeship with one of the league’s best young GMs. It’s no coincidence that Toronto is a on dumpster fire watch after both he and Dubas left. Dubas (and by extension Spezza) gets a lot of flak for no real reason, he was really hurt by the Covid-induced flat cap more than anything. Also worth an interview.

“Hockey Guys” you May Not Know (Mostly AGMs)​


Ryan Bowness: Ryan Bowness is a prominent NHL executive currently serving as the AGM and Director of Player Personnel of the Islanders. He has moved up the ranks on the player personnel and pro scouting side of the house through Atlanta/Winnipeg, Ottawa and Pittsburgh. I have long felt our pro scouting is severely lacking, and instead of unearthing undervalued assets, we have given known commodities term on the back half of their deals in UFA.

Ryan Johnson: Ryan Johnson is currently the AGM of the Canucks and GM of Abbotsford. You may balk at the Vancouver part of that, but he has overseen a very successful Abbotsford team that won the Calder Cup in 2025. He also comes from the player development side of the house which also needs some work (see comment under Bowness). He is credited with the AHL -> NHL transition of guys like Silovs and Hoglander, while also working on the cap and pro scouting.

Brad Pascal: Brad Pascal is currently the Assistant General Manager and Vice President of Hockey Operations for the Calgary Flames, a role he has held since 2014. He also serves as the General Manager of the Flames’ American Hockey League (AHL) affiliate, the Calgary Wranglers. He also serves as co-general manager for international events for Hockey Canada such as the Spengler Cup, working alongside Joe Thornton. One thing the Devils lack is any high end Candians which (in my opinion) may be a contributing factor to the currents Tate of the team and he has been very successful in his tenure with Hockey Canada: 3x Olympic Gold, 5 consecutive World Junior Golds, 2004 World Cup and IIHF gold in 03 and 04. My only issue with all of that? it’s been a while, but he would be worth a conversation.

“Non-Traditional” AGMs From Winning Cultures​


Some would point to a roadmap for finding the next great GM: an impressive apprenticeship for well run, winning organizations. If you are of the mind that avoiding the old boys club of recycled options is the best path, the below group of guys is for you.

Sunny Mehta is one of the primary architects of the current Florida regime, comes from an analytics background and was a professional poker player. He is largely considered the godfather of hockey analytics, getting his original start int he Devils organization. I like his skill set and he was a major part in finding hidden gems in a variety of distressed assets in Reinhardt, Forsling, and Verhaege. He also had a front row seat for the cultural impact of the Tkachuk trade and recognized his skill set vs Huberdeau’s, and Zito has said multiple times Mehta was instrumental in that trade. Also, a Jersey boy.

Kevin McDonald is the AGM in Colorado, and would certainly deserve a look considering their current success. He also spent 20 years with Blues where he has a cup ring from 2019 and as an AGM with Colorado, he works closely with General Manager Chris MacFarland on hockey-related matters. His main focus remains overseeing the Colorado Eagles, the Avalanche’s American Hockey League (AHL) affiliate and comes from a pro scouting and professional development background.

Capitals AGM Ross Mahoney interviewed in 2020 when they picked Fitz. Washington found a way to go from being a capped out group of aging veterans with no future to finding several gems in the draft, bought low on Canada’s starting goalie Logan Thompson and managed to set the Caps on a path to a retooled transition. As assistant general manager, Mahoney is responsible for the NHL Entry Draft, the club’s developmental programs, evaluations of opposing teams’ prospects, and oversees the organization’s amateur scouting staff. In Game 5 of the 2018 Stanley Cup Final, 12 players who were drafted during Mahoney’s tenure were in the lineup. (source)

Golden Knights AGM Andrew Lugerner is the guy who has managed their salary cap. Considering the magic tricks they have pulled off (see what I did there) with their cap and the downright ruthless nature of the Vegas front office, he would certainly be worth an interview.

Agents​


One would only have to look at the success of Bill Zito in Florida and Kent Hughes in Montreal to consider agents as options and it’s not crazy to suggest that someone moving from one side of the negotiation table to the other would be in the consideration set. Agents have a unique perspective on the nuances behind player choices and motivations, particularly when it comes to contracts. They also scout and recruit players from a young age, and likely have very good eyes for the type of attitude that will translate to success in hockey. And maybe, just maybe, an agent can come in and understand NMC/NTC clauses a little better and how to leave yourself some outs if a contract doesn’t work out.

Agents are very difficult to find information on aside from client lists, and leaving and agency is complicated. However, Can one of them be lured to the other side of the table? Here are some of the biggest (and fun names) in that group with the amount of money they manage and some of their prominent clients (from puckpedia):

Judd Moldaver (Wasserman) – $428MM in contracts. Matthews, McDavid, Pesce, Werenski, Josi

Pat Brisson (CAA) – $1.4BN in contracts. MacKinnon, Crosby, Larkin, Jack, Luke, Quinn, Mercer

Dan Millstein (Gold Star) – $643MM in contracts. THE Russian Agent basically:. Kucherov, Vasilevskiy, Sorokin, Marchenko

Claude Lemieux (4Sports) – Yes, I snuck Pepe in here. $353MM in contracts. Timo, Seider, Eriksson Ek, Rasmus Anderson, Olofsson

Darren Ferris (Quartexx) – $333MM in contracts. Marner, Bennet, Kadri, Hall, Rodrigues, Byram

My Dream Team​


So, after all that, My dream team for the top two chairs are…. Shanahan as POHO and Mehta as GM. I think bringing in someone like Shanny as a POHO to have a broader view of everything as well as a newly minted GM is the ideal scenario. One of the failures in the Fitz regime is having noone overseeing him as a new GM. This set-up allows Mehta to focus on building the team and overall structure, while Shanny can focus on the larger organizational issues. I know Sunny Mehta isn’t a unique thought, but there is a reason why several people think he should be next, his background and experience checks so many boxes for me.

But it doesn’t stop there. As I mentioned we need to clean house, so that would leave two AGM spots open and if we can’t lure someone from one of the above mentioned AGM chairs to make the lateral move, I think it would be wise to go try and lure the Tampa Bay Director of Player Development, JP Cole out of Tampa. The work he has done finding and developing players has been nothing short of astonishing, considering the injury woes Tampa has had the past few year, and the plug and play guys that have stepped into roles and thrived there.

As an AGM, I would also be interested in Judd Brackett, who is the head of Amateur Scouting for the Wild. Prior to the wild he spent 12 years in Vancouver, and his list of draftees is impressive: Rossi, Buium, Ohgren (basically the Quinn trade), and while in Vancouver he was front and center drafting Quinn, Boeser and Petterson. His main focus is prioritizing hockey IQ and skating, which have become two of the most valuable commodities in the current NHL.

Your Thoughts​


Who do you like, anyone on this list strike you or anyone I didn’t mention that would be of interest? What’s your level of confidence a change at the top happens?

There is no right or wrong solution here, but this front office needs new eyes on it, and those eyes need to come from the outside since the organizational rot comes from the top.

LGD

Source: https://www.allaboutthejersey.com/d...e-path-forward-step-1-find-a-new-front-office
 
A Brief History of Star Player Trades in the NHL And Why the Devils Trading a “Core Player” Is A Bad Idea

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NEWARK, NJ - OCTOBER 18: New Jersey Devils center Jack Hughes #86 celebrates with New Jersey Devils defenseman Luke Hughes #43 after scoring a goal during a game between the Edmonton Oilers and New Jersey Devils at Prudential Center on October 18, 2025 in Newark, New Jersey. (Photo by Andrew Mordzynski/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images) | Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

The New Jersey Devils season has not gone according to plan. They’re unlikely to make the playoffs when they return from the Olympic break. And because this is supposedly a “win now” team, missing the playoffs entirely is an unacceptable result. People are looking for someone to point the finger at and blame for the shortcomings of the team.

We can all agree that there are issues with this team. Where we don’t necessarily agree is where the biggest issues lie and the way to go about fixing it. I think I’ve made my viewpoint perfectly clear where I blame Tom Fitzgerald more than anyone, and I don’t think any of this changes until the Devils clean house with their front office and scouting departments. That doesn’t necessarily mean that I don’t think Sheldon Keefe is a big part of the problem (he is) or that the players are blameless (they’re not), but much like when weeds pop up in your front lawn, you’re not going to get rid of them until you literally get to the root of the issue. To me, that’s Fitzgerald.

Where I struggle to get on the same page as some of my Devils fan brethren is when it comes to blaming the players. I would agree that there are very few players, if any, on the Devils that have had a good year. My list would probably be Cody Glass and maybe Arseny Gritsyuk and that’s about it. I would also agree that when it comes to the “core players”, they haven’t been anywhere near good enough this season. And with all due respect to the supporting cast, its the Devils “core players” that would significantly move the needle one way or the other in regards to how good this team actually is. It’s not surprising with them all having bad years that the team is bad.

Where I disagree is wanting to cut bait with said players.

For reasons that I don’t quite understand, there are Devils fans who don’t like Jack and Luke Hughes. There are Devils fans who suggest that Nico Hischier is a “bad captain”, whatever that means. Depending upon how wide-ranging you want your “core” to be, Jesper Bratt, Timo Meier, Dougie Hamilton, and others have had their flaws as hockey players picked apart as much as anybody else on the roster, because that’s what we do as fans when the team underperforms. It has to be someone’s fault, after all. And with the core of this team being together for several seasons now and only have one (1) second round appearance to show for it, fans get restless, throw their arms up in disgust, declare that you can’t win with these guys, and it’s time to trade them.

Never mind the fact that if the player(s) is as bad as you’re telling me he is, why would any other team want them?

Never mind the fact that you’re telling me that the player(s) is bad and needs to be traded while also simultaneously trying to tell me this other team will definitely give up their superstar player in exchange for him.

I’m not saying that the Devils should continue what they’re doing indefinitely when it hasn’t worked. But it also doesn’t take a genius to suggest that trading away good players isn’t the answer either. So this week, I’m going to take a brief historical look at trades where a team gave away a star player for one reason or another, why it hasn’t worked out for them, and why it also won’t work out for the Devils if they were foolish enough to go down that road.

For purposes of this exercise, I’m only going to include deals in the salary cap era. I’m not really all that interested in going back to when the Oilers traded away Wayne Gretzky or Mark Messier, but spoiler alert, the Oilers didn’t win those deals when they got rid of future first-ballot Hall of Famers. Shocking, I know.

Maple Leafs Trade Mitch Marner to the Golden Knights for Nic Roy​


This one feels a little bit like cheating since Marner was technically a free agent who was clearly leaving, but the circumstances leading up to it actually share a lot of parallels to what the Devils are currently going through.

The Maple Leafs went through season after season of being unable to to reach a Conference Final, let alone a Stanley Cup Final. They changed the coach several times. They changed the GM. They changed the supporting cast on the roster time and time again. But the core was essentially the same throughout with Auston Matthews, John Tavares, Mitch Marner, William Nylander, and Morgan Reilly as the constants for the Leafs from the late 2010s up until last season.

The Leafs had yet another season where they came up short and “something simply had to change because you can’t keep running it back” in regards to the core. After all, they’ve already changed the GM, the coach, and the supporting cast several times over. Matthews is the new captain and he recently re-signed so he’s not going anywhere. Nylander is signed long-term so neither was he. Same goes for Reilly. So the only pieces that could theoretically change were pending UFAs Tavares (who took a discount to stay) and Marner. Marner was deemed the whipping boy or scapegoat or however you want to phrase it, and he was as ready to move on from the Leafs as the Leafs were ready to move on from him.

How’s that working out for Toronto this season? Not great.

There are other reasons why Toronto will likely miss the playoffs this season….Anthony Stolarz has been injured and hasn’t been very good when he has played, and the Leafs supporting cast is still average. But perhaps no reason is bigger than Toronto essentially letting a player who was a consistent 25-30 goal scorer and chipped in 60+ assists leave for essentially nothing but a bottom six center.

I like Nic Roy. He’s a solid option to have further down in your lineup. But he’s no Mitch Marner, who is having a typical Mitch Marner season in Vegas for a team that is likely playoff-bound. And while it remains to be seen what Marner and the Knights do once they get there, I doubt he’s all that upset about getting out of the Toronto pressure cooker. Especially given where he wound up.

Toronto failed to replace the production that a departing Marner provided, and it’s a big part of the reason why they’re going to miss the playoffs. That’s not to say that they still can’t eventually replace Marner’s production going forward, but as we already know, there’s no player with Marner’s level of production that is hitting the UFA or trade market this summer, and even if there were, there’s no guarantee Toronto gets them.

Maple Leafs Trade Phil Kessel (And Stuff) to the Penguins for Mostly Spare Parts​


Long before Marner was the scapegoat for Toronto’s failures, there was Phil Kessel.

Toronto missed the playoffs during Kessel’s last few years there. “It was time to move on” from a player like Kessel, who has a mercurial personality to begin with. Add in the fact that the Toronto media did everything they could to run Kessel out of town and Leafs management finally obliged with this doozy of a trade.

Toronto sent Kessel, Tyler Biggs, Tim Erixon, and a conditional 2nd round pick to the Penguins for Kasperi Kapanen, one-time almost a Devil Scott Harrington (who was later in the Timo Meier trade), Nick Spaling, a conditional first round pick (later flipped for Frederik Andersen), and a third round pick (James Greenway).

Kapanen was the most notable piece that the Leafs got back, and he was ok with 90 points over 202 games for Toronto before being later dealt back to Pittsburgh. Harrington was later dealt to Columbus and was a journeyman defenseman. Spaling was a checking line forward who was flipped at the deadline later that year. Greenway never played in the NHL, and the first round pick was flipped for Frederik Andersen who was mostly good for Toronto before he too was eventually run out of town for Toronto’s failures as a team. Toronto hasn’t gotten past the second round of the playoffs since making this trade, and actually tanked for a couple seasons in the immediate aftermath of said deal, which did land them Auston Matthews and Mitch Marner.

Is a handful of good seasons by the goaltender and a handful of ok seasons by Kapanen enough of a return for a top line scoring winger in his prime who fit the Penguins like a glove and was a key part of two Stanley Cup winning teams there (and three if we count his final season in Vegas?). Especially when the Leafs wound up accomplishing nothing of significance for the period that Andersen and Kapanen were there before they were eventually moved? Who’s to say?

Sabres Trade Jack Eichel to Golden Knights for Alex Tuch, Peyton Krebs, and Picks​


The backstory with Eichel’s falling out with the Sabres is well documented. The Sabres were a perennial loser with him. Eichel got injured and needed neck surgery. Both sides disagreed on how to proceed with the specific neck surgery that Eichel would get. Eichel, who was already annoyed with the organization given the state of the team throughout his tenure there, got fed up and requested a trade. The Sabres eventually obliged once the situation became untenable, sending him (along with a 3rd rd pick) to Vegas for Alex Tuch, Peyton Krebs, a first round pick (eventually used on Noah Ostlund) and a second round pick (later flipped to Minnesota for Jordan Greenway).

Eichel eventually got the surgery he wanted, returned to the lineup for the Golden Knights, and has been been better than a PPG #1 center for the Golden Knights since. Eichel was a key member of their championship team in 2022-23 and had a legitimate case for the Conn Smythe award that eventually went to Jonathan Marchessault.

Buffalo got an excellent player on a good contract in Tuch, although he is a pending UFA so it remains to be seen where his future lies. But Krebs hasn’t really developed into anything more than a fourth line center. Ostlund has been ok in his first full NHL season and Greenway has been an average at best bottom six winger. That’s not exactly the type of return you’re looking for when you’re trading away a borderline Top 5 center in the entire league.

Needless to say, Buffalo has mostly struggled since trading Eichel. Their playoff drought will probably come to an end this season, as they’ve been white hot since firing the GM who made that trade. Which is weird, because I’ve been told time and time again that you can’t possibly expect the team to play better after making a change like that.

Generally speaking though, I would disagree with anyone who suggests that Buffalo has been better off without Eichel. They’ll probably make the playoffs this year, but the Eichel trade isn’t the reason why. That’s not to say that Tuch hasn’t been good, because he certainly has been. But Vegas winning a Cup almost immediately with Eichel and Eichel remaining an elite level center for them for the remainder of his prime trumps anything Buffalo has accomplished post-trade.

Bruins Trade Joe Thornton to the Sharks for Marco Sturm, Wayne Primeau, and Brad Stuart​


People in Boston might retroactively try to claim that trading away Joe Thornton was the catalyst for the Stanley Cup championship team they would eventually build that won in 2011.

They’re entitled to their opinion, but that would be revisionist history.

Thornton, who was Boston’s captain when traded and had just signed a 3-year deal the previous offseason, became a punching bag in Boston due to his leadership style and Boston’s failures in the playoffs. The two sides had a contentious contract negotiation the previous summer with each side unhappy with the other, but Thornton eventually put pen to paper on a new three year deal.

With the Bruins struggling in the first season post-lockout, they traded Thornton to the Sharks for three players and no draft picks. Sturm was ok as a Bruin, with 193 points in 302 games over parts of five seasons. But Primeau and Stuart were depth pieces who ultimately left Boston as free agents.

Meanwhile, Thornton immediately turned the Sharks season around with a Hart Trophy season and a playoff appearance. Including the split season between Boston and San Jose, Thornton totaled 970 points over his next 937 games, which is a Hall of Fame-caliber career in and of itself. The Sharks never won a Stanley Cup while Thornton was there….call it a byproduct of playing in the same era as Chicago and Los Angeles when they were winning championships if you want….but the Sharks were a consistent playoff team throughout his 15 years in Northern California. Meanwhile, Boston got nothing of note in return for a future first ballot Hall of Famer in his prime.

None of us have a crystal ball to tell us whether or not Boston eventually wins a Cup had they kept Thornton. We know they won one in 2011 without him, but that team was also significantly better than the ones Thornton was on. Tim Thomas won a Vezina that year. They had Hall of Famers up and down their lineup with a young Patrice Bergeron and Brad Marchand playing alongside Zdeno Chara and Mark Recchi. Guys like Milan Lucic, David Krejci, and Nathan Horton were young and in their primes. Blake Wheeler and Tyler Seguin would go on to become stars in the league themselves. That Boston team was loaded.

If the argument is that trading Thornton allowed Boston to sink to the bottom of the standings and allocate resources elsewhere, I would disagree with that. Boston was really only bad for a two year stretch in the mid 00s. Bergeron and Thomas were already on the roster when Thornton was dealt. Marchand was drafted in the third round the following season. They did wind up signing Chara that following offseason. While it would be foolish to suggest Chara wasn’t a big part of why the Bruins turned things around, who Boston later acquired after the fact doesn’t exactly make up for what has been universally accepted as one of the worst trades in modern NHL history.

Flames Trade Matthew Tkachuk to the Panthers for Jonathan Huberdeau, MacKenzie Weegar, Cole Schwindt, and a 2025 first round pick (Cullen Potter)​


Of course, I fully expect the one trade everyone in the comments section who wants to trade Jack and Luke Hughes, Nico Hischier, and Jesper Bratt to point to would be this one.

Context matters however.

The Flames didn’t necessarily want to trade Matthew Tkachuk. They knew how good he is. But the Flames found themselves in that position where they didn’t have much of a choice after Johnny Gaudreau left in free agency and Tkachuk made it clear that he wasn’t going to re-sign in Calgary when his contract was up in a year. Tkachuk had a fairly limited list of teams he was willing to sign a contract extension with (side note, New Jersey wasn’t one of those teams on his list even though his cousin is Devils GM Tom Fitzgerald). And even with that, Calgary probably did better than most of the other teams on this list in terms of getting quality NHL players in return.

That’s not to necessarily say they did great though. Huberdeau has been unable to replicate the 115 point season he had in his final season in South Florida and is in the middle of a long-term deal that Calgary handed him which pays him $10.5M AAV. Weegar has been a top pairing defenseman for the Flames but has struggled this year and is also in the middle of a long-term deal that Calgary handed him. Schwindt hasn’t really taken off as an NHL player and is now back with Florida while the jury is out on what Potter will be. But in the bigger picture, Calgary has been doing their own retool or rebuild or whatever one wants to call it since Tkachuk and Gaudreau left. They haven’t made the playoffs since this trade, and probably aren’t heading there anytime soon as they continue to shop veteran players like Nazem Kadri and Blake Coleman, among others.

Of course, all of that pales in comparison to Tkachuk, who was a key member of a Florida Panthers team that reached the Stanley Cup Final in three consecutive seasons since he arrived and won twice.

I don’t know if in an alternate universe if Bill Zito and the Panthers wind up winning a Stanley Cup had Tkachuk gone to St. Louis or Vegas or Tampa Bay instead. Saying they might have won anyways diminishes Tkachuk’s contributions when he was a key piece of that team. But it’s not like Florida didn’t have a good team prior to that trade. A lot of key players like Sasha Barkov, Sam Bennett, Sergei Bobrovsky, Aaron Ekblad, Gus Forsling, Anton Lundell, Eetu Luostarinen, Brandon Montour, Sam Reinhart, and Carter Verhaeghe were already there. Huberdeau and Weegar were the odd men out, but it’s also in a trade to get Matthew Tkachuk.

Zito had an opportunity to make a franchise-defining trade and certainly has no regrets after the fact. Nor should he. But this is also a particularly perfect set of circumstances that played out in his favor and Calgary still wound up doing better than most teams in terms of getting an actual return for trading away a star player. I don’t think this is one that is easily duplicated, in part because most teams aren’t looking to trade away a “Tkachuk-type” if they have one. And even if a team is trading that type away, its usually because they know they’re going to lose the player if they don’t trade him, and the list of destinations is fairly limited.

How Does This Pertain To the Devils?​


I could keep going on bad trades that sent a star player out of town, such as the deal that sent Jeff Carter to Los Angeles (helping spur two championship runs for the Kings) or the Roberto Luongo trade that sent him from Florida to Vancouver (where he was runner up for the Hart and Vezina in his first year and helped lead Vancouver to a Cup Final appearance), but I think you get the point.

The purpose of this article isn’t to say the Devils should definitely not trade (insert player name here). When you’ve been as mediocre as the Devils have been for the last several years, I do think you should approach this situation with an open mind.

That said, there’s quite a few things that need to be said.

It’s hard to get talented players in this league. The Devils have never historically been a premiere free agent destination, and as we’re seeing with the Devils the last few years, building a team through free agency is tough to do. You’re paying market rate for said players who are more of the supporting cast types than franchise players, you’re in a position where you probably have to get a little uncomfortable by giving them an extra year and/or no-trade protection, and we’re dealing with players in their 30s when their best years might already be behind them. The superstar players that actually move the needle rarely make it to free agency in their prime, and in the rare cases they do, they’re not picking New Jersey. That includes Dougie Hamilton, who is closer to being a really good supporting cast member than a true #1 defenseman.

Teams that have star players aren’t going to easily give them up. There’s usually extenuating circumstances that lead to the “why” the trade is happening. The team wants to cut costs, or they know the player is going to be a free agent and they’re unlikely to keep them. Maybe there’s bad blood between management and the player for whatever reason, such as the one I pointed out with Eichel. Maybe its a situation where in a hockey-crazy market, the team listens to their fanbase in regards to who not to bring back because its easier to run a smear campaign after the player left town than it is to build a winner around said player. Giving up on talent should be viewed as a last resort, and should only be considered once other options have been exhausted.

And even when you do decide to give up on said player? You’re probably not going to come close to winning said trade. You’re probably going to get a late first round pick back. Maybe two if you’re lucky because one of the picks may have a “if the team wins the Stanley Cup, you get a first round pick” condition attached to it. You’ll likely get a prospect back, but it probably won’t be THE prospect you want from said team because that player has been deemed untouchable by his current team. And you might get a young player back, but that player won’t be nearly as good as the one you’re trading away.

While all this is going on, you’ll continue to lose hockey games because it turns out said player you’re giving up on wasn’t actually part of the problem in the first place. To make matters worse, you’ll probably see said player celebrate newfound success with their new team because their management team and/or coaching staff actually knows what they’re doing and knows how to put players like that in a position to succeed. Tom Fitzgerald has made plenty of mistakes in his time as Devils general manager, but how much worse would things be if he had given up on difference makers like, say, Sam Bennett or Carter Verhaeghe too early instead of Jesper Boqvist and Vitek Vanecek. But hey, maybe those prospects and magic beans you’re getting back will pan out someday.

Nobody is saying that Jack or Luke Hughes, Nico Hischier, Jesper Bratt, Timo Meier, Dougie Hamilton, or whoever else you want to consider to be a “core” piece of the Devils moving forward is as good as the players listed in the historical examples above. But when you start giving up on players, you better be right about that because the consequences if you are wrong are more significant than giving up on a coach, or a GM, or changing around the supporting cast. Especially when there’s been zero inclination of said players actually wanting out of this situation. The Devils shouldn’t be looking to push their so-called core pieces out the door. Those are the types of unforced errors that can set the franchise back half a decade or longer.

This isn’t the NHL video game where you can propose trading the Hughes brothers to Minnesota to complete the Hughes triforce there, or try pawning off Jesper Bratt on Ottawa for Brady Tkachuk because “we need a Tkachuk-type”. Star player for star player trades aren’t commonplace for a reason. And no, I’m not interested in trading Jack Hughes for some draft picks and a B-level prospect because “you gotta shake up the core” or because he’s “always hurt” or you don’t like the answers he gives to the media. I’d rather have Jack Hughes, who we all know can be a game-breaking talent, flaws and all. If Luke Hughes is as bad as everyone has told me he was this year (and he’s not nearly that bad, to be clear), who is giving you anything worthwhile that’s worth accepting when he’s making $9M AAV for six more years? I’d rather bet on the player and that he’ll ultimately be the player the Devils projected him to be when they drafted him than sell on the player for 30 cents on the dollar.

Nico Hischier might be different in that he’ll be entering his contract year next year. I would expect that he ultimately signs a contract extension, but its not a lock that he does. If, and only if, he decides not to sign would I even entertain a trade pertaining to the Devils captain. But what I’m not doing is trading a guy that people tell me is a bad captain when those people have no idea what they’re talking about when it comes to dynamics in the room when they’re not actually in said room.

I’m not drawing a definitive line in the sand when it comes to everybody else in the Devils roster because I do think there’s something to the idea that the mix itself isn’t working and hasn’t worked. But I also believe the Devils have good players on this roster who are having bad years. I don’t know what the reason for that necessarily is, whether its injury-related, a coaching structure that is way too conservative, bad luck, or some combination of the above. But we’ve seen enough good hockey from Jesper Bratt, for example, over the years to where I don’t think he just forgot how to play hockey in his age-27 season.

I’m not saying the Devils shouldn’t consider trading Bratt, or Hamilton, or Meier, or Dawson Mercer, or Simon Nemec, or whoever. I’m not even saying any or all of them are “core players”. I’m saying that it’s easier to change everything else around the players. It’s easier to find a new GM who actually does think skill is important and isn’t just loading up on grinders who play “playoff style hockey”. It’s easier to find a coach who strikes the right balance where maybe you’re not always selling out for offense like they did under Lindy Ruff, but you’re also not suppressing offense for the sake of defense either like they are under Sheldon Keefe. It’s easier to swap out your supporting cast until you find a better mix of players to compliment the skill players you do have.

At the end of the day, you need talented players in order to win in this league. You’re not winning without good players. One shouldn’t be so quick to discard said players because you don’t think they don’t fit the mold of what you think a winning hockey player looks like.

But with that said, if you want to go ahead and trust the regime that whiffed on the Alex Holtz and Chase Stillman picks with more draft capital that they’ll get it right this time, by all means. If you want to trust the regime that can’t figure out how to build a winning team at the AHL level or develop that favorite prospect of yours that definitely would’ve made it if he only got a chance, go for it.

I’d rather keep the bird in the hand than take my chances with the two in the bush.

Final Thoughts​


It’s true that the Devils best players need to be better than what we’ve seen this year. You’re only going to go as far as your best players take you. But the reality of the situation is that almost across the board, the majority of the team is having a bad year. Nobody has been good enough.

It’s also true that the Devils need to do a better job of building a team around the handful of good players they do have instead of kicking those players to the curb because you’re sick of them like a petulant child would be with a toy he got on Christmas that he didn’t like. If it means a GM change and bringing in somebody who has a better vision of what a winning team looks like than the crew currently in charge, so be it. If it means bringing in a coach who knows how to allow the team’s best players to be their best players, so be it.

Maybe the Devils ultimately don’t wind up winning anything with this particular “core”, regardless of who is in it, when its all said and done years from now. But they haven’t exhausted all of their options yet trying to build around said core either. Selling low on good players who are all having a bad year isn’t the answer. The Devils shouldn’t consider trading any core player until it’s absolutely necessary.

As bad as things are, we’re not even close to that point yet.

Source: https://www.allaboutthejersey.com/d...he-devils-trading-a-core-player-is-a-bad-idea
 
Devils in the Details – 2/11/26: Hot Seat Edition

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NEWARK, NJ - FEBRUARY 05: Timo Meier #28 of the New Jersey Devils skates during the first period of the game against the New York Islanders on February 5, 2026 at the Prudential Center in Newark, New Jersey. (Photo by Rich Graessle/NHLI via Getty Images) | NHLI via Getty Images

Here are your links for today:

Devils Links​


A look at a few coaching options for the Devils next year: “Big changes are, or should be, coming to New Jersey this off-season, barring a major, miraculous run that sees them make the 2026 NHL Playoffs. One such change could be behind the Devils’ bench, with Sheldon Keefe’s seat likely heating up every day.” [Devils’ Advocates]

“There have not been many positives for the New Jersey Devils this season. They are grossly underperforming preseason expectations, and almost every player on the roster is producing below their norms. One of the few exceptions is Cody Glass.” [Infernal Access ($)]

Which teammate will most likely not know how to change a tire? Which teammate is most likely to show up late to an event? Which teammate is most likely to binge a TV show in one day? Brett Pesce dishes on his teammates: [The Hockey News]

“With the likelihood that the season is cooked, big changes are ahead. General manager Tom Fitzgerald’s days are seemingly numbered and head coach Sheldon Keefe should follow him out the door. Yet, on paper, the Devils appeared to be a better team than in 2024-25. A team that at least made it to the postseason. So, how did we get here?” [New Jersey Hockey Now]

Hockey Links​


A dominant performance from the USA women against Canada:

The Canadians Women’s hockey team had NEVER been shutout at the Olympics… before today 😳

A truly DOMINANT performance by the Americans to win the group 👏🇺🇸 pic.twitter.com/KFvb9p4MG6

— B/R Open Ice (@BR_OpenIce) February 10, 2026

How are Olympic hockey rules different from NHL rules? [The Athletic ($)]

A look at how NHLers feel about being forced to wear neck guards in Olympic play: [Sportsnet]

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

Source: https://www.allaboutthejersey.com/d...evils-in-the-details-2-11-26-hot-seat-edition
 
Devils in the Details – 2/16/26: Watch Your Feet Edition

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MILAN, ITALY - FEBRUARY 12: Jack Hughes #86 of Team United States looks on before the Men's Preliminary Group C match between Latvia and United States on day six of the Milano Cortina 2026 Winter Olympic games at Milano Santagiulia Ice Hockey Arena on February 12, 2026 in Milan, Italy. (Photo by Bruce Bennett/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Here are your links for today:

Devils Links​


Jack Hughes, friends:

WATCH YOUR FEET. 👀#WinterOlympics pic.twitter.com/LE0xsbiIj0

— NBC Olympics & Paralympics (@NBCOlympics) February 14, 2026

More Devils Olympic updates here: [Devils NHL]

“According to a trusted NHL source, the New Jersey Devils are looking to make an impact ‘hockey trade’ that will shake up their roster and ‘send a message’ to their dressing room coming out of the NHL Olympic Roster freeze.” [RG]

Could Dawson Mercer be on the move? “The problem here is, how much do you trust Fitzgerald to trade Mercer for Kyrou or someone of that ilk? That’s what makes a hockey trade a bit frightening. If Fitzgerald trades Mercer for a 30-something grinder, well, that’s a bit of a problem.” [Devils on the Rush]

“We’re over a season and a half through (Sheldon Keefe’s) tenure with the Devils now, though, and the results simply haven’t been there. Yes, Jack Hughes has transformed into a legitimate two-way star. Yes, the Devils’ defensive numbers are slightly improved from what they were under Lindy Ruff. However, just about everything else has trended downwards significantly.” [Infernal Access ($)]

Hockey Links​


“Los Angeles Kings star Kevin Fiala’s leg injury suffered in Switzerland’s loss to Canada is likely season-ending, an NHL source told ESPN on Saturday. Fiala, 29, was ruled out of the rest of the Milan Cortina Olympic tournament after being stretchered off the ice with what the Swiss Ice Hockey Federation called a lower leg injury. The Swiss said Fiala had surgery on his leg after being hospitalized.” [ESPN]

“Meet the Spidercam. Slafkovský and Connor McDavid might be the two most dominant players in the Olympic men’s hockey tournament so far, but the Spidercam has been the real star of the show. Suspended over the ice by four retractable wires, the mobile camera is always looming — crossing, dipping, diving, twisting above the players’ heads. And it’s giving fans a new vantage of the fastest game on Earth.” [The Athletic ($)]

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

Source: https://www.allaboutthejersey.com/d...n-the-details-2-16-26-watch-your-feet-edition
 
2026 Olympics Team USA Game Preview and Gamethread #3: USA vs. Germany

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MILAN, ITALY - FEBRUARY 14: Jack Hughes #86 of Team United States celebrates with teammates after scoring a goal in the third period during the Men's Preliminary Group C match between the United States and Denmark on day eight of the Milano Cortina 2026 Winter Olympic games at Milano Santagiulia Ice Hockey Arena on February 14, 2026 in Milan, Italy. (Photo by Maja Hitij/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Matchup: Team USA (2-0-0-0) vs. Team Germany (1-0-1-0)

The Time: 3:10 PM EST (local time 21:10)

The Broadcasts: TV — Peacock, USA Network

Final Day of Round Robin​


Today is the final preliminary round day of the Men’s Tourney in Milan. Probably the most surprising development so far is Slovakia and our guy Simon Nemec won Group B that had both Sweden and Finland in it.

Canada is cruising to the top seed in Group A with only France left to play to secure the top seed. This morning the Swiss with Timo, Nico and Siegs took down Czechia to take the 2nd seed.

Team USA​


Team USA wraps up their group play at 3:10 this afternoon against Leon Draisatl and Team Germany. Theoretically, this game should mostly be a formality for the US to take the top seed in group C, but they have come out of the gates slow in both games so far leading Latvia only 1-0 after the 1st on Thursday and only really separating from Denmark in the 3rd yesterday. With wins both the US and Canada would both be 3-0, so goal differential will determine the top seed. Right now Canada sits at a pristine +9 scoring 10 and giving up only 1, while the US sits at +7 (11-4). SO for the US to steal the top seed they would need to dominate Germany and we would need France to put up a fight against Canada.

All 12 teams will move to the knock out stage, with the top 4 seeds (Likely Canada, The US, Slovakia and Finland) getting a bye, and awaiting the results of teams ranked 5-12.

So far Team USA has been powered by the line of Matthew Tkachuk-Jack Eichel-Brady Tkachuk, with Eichel topping the team with 4 points in 2 games while Brady Tkachuk has scored two massive goals to get the US team on track. Jack Hughes has had an excellent tournament so far finding chemistry with Brock Nelson on their “4th line” and both players are tied for 2nd on the team in scoring with 3 points in 2 games. Jack scored one of his patented bank shots yesterday to put Denmark away for good in the 3rd.

Play Free Bird!

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.

Source: https://www.allaboutthejersey.com/2...-game-preview-and-gamethread-3-usa-vs-germany
 
New Jersey Devils Prospect Update: Rare Goal Explosion Propels Comets Over Rochester 7-4

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LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA - NOVEMBER 1: Brian Halonen #48 of the New Jersey Devils skates before the game against the Los Angeles Kings at Crypto.com Arena on November 1, 2025 in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by Ric Tapia/Getty Images) | Getty Images

It was a strong season debut for Marc McLaughlin.

Comets Win​


Sunday’s win was a who’s who of multi-point efforts led by two goal games from defenseman Ethan Edwards and winger Angus Crookshank. Forward Marc McLaughlin potted a goal and two assists in his first game of the season, as did Brian Halonen. Shane LaChance started the scoring with his ninth goal of the season. Center Jonathan Gruden added three assists. Defensemen Topias Vilen and Calen Addison each put up two assists. Nico Daws earned the win stopping 32 of 36.

The game winner would belong to Ethan Edwards from an impossible angle.

Ethan, when you get a chance… can you let us know…

HOW DID YOU DO THAT???? https://t.co/OTDAsuKTar pic.twitter.com/syibgV73BF

— Utica Comets (@UticaComets) February 15, 2026

Lenni Hameenaho did not play, as it appears the plan is to rest him and Colton White until their recall after the Olympic break, per James Nichols. Even with the rest and time in NJ, Hameenaho still leads the Comets in points with 22, though Halonen is on the door step with 21 and has played six fewer games.

Around the Pool:​

  • Forward Ben Kevan has had a frustrating freshman season for Arizona State, especially after a blistering two-goal game start, but has potted a few more points recently, including this wicked snipe for his fourth of the year.
OK, Ben Kevan…go ahead and wheel, snipe, celly. #NJDevils
pic.twitter.com/SIwkJzf1M5

— Devils Insiders (@DevilsInsiders) February 15, 2026
  • Goaltender Mikhail Yegorov sat on Saturday for Boston University. In 30 games, Yegorov has a 13-13-2 record, a 2.86 GAA and a .900 SV% on a tough Terriers team.
  • Goaltender Tyler Brennan has been solid this year as the 1B to Jeremy Brodeur in Adirondack with a 9-7-2 record, 2.61 GAA and .912 SV%. In this last year of his ELC, one wonders whether the Devils have any future plans for the 22-year-old goaltender in their system. However, his improvement over last year’s 3.48 GAA and .878 SV% is extremely noticeable and his struggles in previous seasons seem to be behind him.
  • Is defenseman Chase Cheslock the 81st best prospect in the NHL? Watch the Stars thinks so, which heavily uses NHLe in their analysis. The 6’3” RHD known more for his physicality around the netmouth has had a quiet breakout season for the University of St. Thomas with 21 assists in 30 games.
WATCH THE STATS TOP 100 PROSPECT RANKING

Here are my prospect rankings for this winter! To qualify as a prospect, a player must have played no more than 25 NHL games in their career and be in their D+5 or earlier.

If you've been following my stuff for a while, Cole Hutson at… pic.twitter.com/EUiWaVmHRC

— Nick (@nickiacoban) February 10, 2026

I cannot say whether Cheslock really deserves to be ranked so high, but the Devils should absolutely sign him this summer.

Your Take​


What do you think? Post your comments below.

Source: https://www.allaboutthejersey.com/p...l-explosion-propels-comets-over-rochester-7-4
 
2026 Olympics Team USA Game Preview and Gamethread #4: USA vs. Sweden

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The Matchup: Team USA vs. Team Sweden (Knockout Round)

The Time: 3:10 PM EST (local time 21:10)

The Broadcasts: TV — Peacock, USA Network

Knockout Stage​


As expected, Team USA cruised through their group unscathed 3-0-0-0 and got a bye yesterday awaiting the result of Sweden and Latvia. Surprisingly, Sweden has struggled in this tournament so far finishing as the 7th seed, and the coach has made some questionable lineup choices to say the least.

Earlier this morning Slovakia took down Germany to advance to the semi-finals 6-2, with old pal and Slovak captain Tomas Tatar icing the game with an Empty Netter. Juraj Slafkovsky added another point and continues to be very impressive in Olympic play as does Simon Nemec who led all defenseman in the entire tournament in scoring chance creation:

Here's the full list of defencemen scoring chance creators from the preliminary round of the 2026 Men's Olympic Hockey tournament: pic.twitter.com/qlV1Jex1UW

— JFresh 🇨🇦 (@JFreshHockey) February 16, 2026

Canada takes on Czechia at 10:40 EST this morning and has looked like an absolute wagon so far, and Finland Takes on Nico, Timo and Siegs at 12:10 EST this afternoon. Timo sits at 3rd in the entire tournament in scoring with 7 points in 4 games and Nico had a big game against Italy with 1g and 2a.

Team USA​


An interesting sub plot going in to this game is the status of Jesper Bratt. He has been healthy scratched for the past two games, and the general consensus is that it is a head scratching decision by a non-NHL coach. He sits 42nd amongst all forwards in offensive creation, even though he has only played one game. Weird, but I have not seen any lineup decisions as of this writing – nor have I seen whether Markstrom gets the back to back start. (speaking of questionable choices).

Here's the full ranking of all 162 forwards in the preliminary round of the Men's Olympic Hockey tournament based on their scoring chance contributions: pic.twitter.com/aC1yob3ODR

— JFresh 🇨🇦 (@JFreshHockey) February 16, 2026

As you will also notice, Jack Hughes has been very effective in the US’s group stage games ranking 17th overall in a 4th line role, getting around 12-13 minutes a night and no real PP time. Team USA has looked deep and their defense has been stifling, which was widely thought to be their strength coming into the Olympics:

Which teams were the best at preventing scoring chances in the preliminary round of the Men's Olympic Tournament? pic.twitter.com/OjVdRktyQM

— JFresh 🇨🇦 (@JFreshHockey) February 16, 2026

Play Free Bird! Nobody likes the metric system!

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.

Source: https://www.allaboutthejersey.com/2...a-game-preview-and-gamethread-4-usa-vs-sweden
 
Nico Hischier’s Future Has an Impact on Everything Going Forward

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NEWARK, NJ - FEBRUARY 05: Nico Hischier #13 of the New Jersey Devils comes to the bench after scoring during the second period of the game against the New York Islanders on February 5, 2026 at the Prudential Center in Newark, New Jersey. (Photo by Rich Graessle/NHLI via Getty Images) | NHLI via Getty Images

If you read my article last week, you’ll know that my general thought process when it comes to fixing the Devils is that trading away star players is a bad idea. Most teams that make those types of deals don’t get better as a result of it.

There was one player that I did kind of gloss over in that article though where I think its worth a deeper dive. And that player is none other than Devils captain Nico Hischier.

I wrote this last week pertaining to Hischier.

Nico Hischier might be different in that he’ll be entering his contract year next year. I would expect that he ultimately signs a contract extension, but its not a lock that he does. If, and only if, he decides not to sign would I even entertain a trade pertaining to the Devils captain.

Nico Hischier will be entering the final season of his contract next season. Signed for $7.25M AAV, he is eligible to sign a contract extension on July 1st. If he were to sign a max-term seven-year contract (per the new CBA), that would take him through his age 35 season in 2033-34. A contract extension would cement Hischier’s status as one of the greatest forwards in franchise history as he’d likely finish his career in the Top 5 of every major statistic as a Devil.

But what does Nico Hischier actually want as he enters a contract year?

I’ve talked about this before when it comes to Hischier when I broached this topic over the summer, but it bears repeating. Hischier literally does everything for this team. He plays in all situations. He takes almost every important faceoff this team has and wins at a 55% clip. He is consistently among the team leaders in scoring. He plays hurt. He plays sick. He does this all while wearing the ‘C’ and representing himself, his home nation, and the fanbase in a way we can be proud of as Devils fans. Is he a perfect player? Not by any means. But he’s our player. He’s been here since he was drafted #1 overall in 2017 and has grown from a teenager who “love to hockey” into the player he is today.

At the end of the day though, the NHL is a business. Teams make business decisions all the time in their best interests. Players are no different. Players will do what they determine is best for them and their families. Yes, players want to be paid. But they also want to be in a position to win.

That last part is critically important because this is where the Devils fumbling the bag as often as they have in recent years and under Tom Fitzgerald’s leadership might ultimately come back to bite them.

To be clear, Nico Hischier has never said anything publicly about his frustrations with the organization or not wanting to be in New Jersey. At least, as far as I’m aware of. But he is human. He’s a guy who is giving it his all every game, every shift. He’s the captain of this team for a reason.

That said, we also need to be honest about the Devils and where they are as a franchise.

This is an organization that for his entire time in New Jersey, they have only been to the playoffs three times. They have won one playoff round. Despite a hot start to this season, they’re likely going to be on the outside looking in when it comes to the playoffs once again.

This is also an organization where the GM has made questionable move after questionable move in attempts to win now. This is an organization where the coaching style of Sheldon Keefe doesn’t really fit the core players the Devils have in place. This is an organization where the other star center in Jack Hughes, fairly or not, has a lengthy injury history and isn’t always available, which puts even more pressure on Hischier to carry the load in his absence. For as bright as the future looked three years ago, it’s hard to have that same sense of optimism entering this offseason.

I’m not suggesting that Hischier is looking to bolt the first chance he gets. I’m not a mindreader and I don’t know what he’s thinking. But put yourself in his shoes for a moment.

Imagine that you were the one busting your butt to try to do everything you could for this organization to win games. Now consider that your direct bosses (in this case, Tom Fitzgerald and Sheldon Keefe) might not know what they’re doing in regards to building a winning team and/or putting you in the best position to succeed. You have to take every critical faceoff because the GM never bothered to replace Michael McLeod a few years ago. You have to kill penalties because the other forwards are inadequate doing so. You’re doing everything you reasonably can despite the fact that every other year, the goalie can’t make a save, regardless of who they bring in to play the position. It’s demoralizing to have a good period where you’re doing all of the right things only to be down 1-0 because the goaltender can’t make routine saves.

Consider that you’re already 27 years old, and while you’re not an old man, you’re not getting younger either. You want to win, but the organization hasn’t done nearly enough to maximize your prime and/or put the requisite pieces around you where you don’t have to literally do everything. And knowing all of this, this upcoming summer is the one chance you have to make a career-defining decision when it comes to how much you’ll be compensated and where you’ll live and work for the next eight years. AKA the rest of your prime. The best years you have remaining in a short playing career where you only have this kind of earning power for so long.

Wouldn’t you at least consider your options?

Wouldn’t you at least consider that the organizational decision makers might not be as smart as they think they are? Or that even if the GM and/or the coach have the best intentions that they might not be who you want to put your trust in given their respective track record(s)?

Wouldn’t you at least consider going to an organization that might only be a center away from potentially going on a Cup run?

I don’t doubt that when it comes to Hischier, it’s not a matter of whether or not the Devils want to keep him. It’s not a matter of cap space and whether or not the Devils have enough money to make it so the next 3 generations of Hischiers never have to work a day in their lives. I’m not even sure if Hischier is the type of person who is trying to squeeze every last penny he can out of the organization in a rising cap environment. Tom Fitzgerald might not be a good GM, but if he did one thing well, it was lining up a bunch of contracts to expire at the same time as Hischier’s deal. Ondrej Palat is already gone, and Brenden Dillon and Stefan Noesen will likely be gone by the end of 2026-27, if not sooner. Having the money to pay Hischier isn’t, or shouldn’t be, an issue. Fitzgerald also has a lot of Allain Roy’s clients under contract. Roy is Hischier’s agent. There’s a familiarity there.

The Devils should want to keep Hischier.

But what does Hischier want?

If Hischier decides he’s as fed up with the organizational incompetence as we, the fans, are, who could blame him if he told the Devils on July 1st that he’s not planning on signing a contract extension? Who could blame him if his agent presented Tom Fitzgerald (or whoever succeeds him once he’s fired) with a list of teams that Hischier would be willing to sign a contract extension with? It’s not like the Devils have a lengthy track record of winning over Hischier’s nine years here where they’ve earned the benefit of the doubt that this year is the aberration. It’s also not like the Devils have a track record of being one of the more aggressive teams like Vegas, Tampa, or Florida who will trade whatever futures they have to do for the sake of winning now.

Hischier has earned the right to decide where he wants the play for the rest of his career. And if the Devils are so incompetent when it comes to building a winner where he decides the grass is greener elsewhere, that’s not a Nico Hischier problem. That’s a New Jersey Devils problem because they, as an organization, failed him.

For what its worth, I still think the Devils ultimately get Hischier signed. But I don’t have any inside information. I’m not basing that on anything other than the fact the Devils can offer him the extra year, the Devils can pay him handsomely, the Devils know how important he is to the team, Hischier doesn’t seem like a ‘rock the boat’ type of player, and as Greg Wyshynski so eloquently puts it, his stuff is here.

I also don’t write all this to cause a panic in the Devils fanbase. But we’ve been down this road before with players entering contract years. Plenty of players ultimately reached free agency throughout the Devils run in the 90s, 00s, and early 10s, and the team was in much better shape then than it is right now. While I believe Hischier will ultimately stay, it’s not done until it’s done, and I’ll believe its done when it’s actually done. Until then, it’s not a done deal.

If the Devils do get him signed, they need to be serious when it comes to building a winner around him and whoever else they deem part of the solution going forward. They need to see to it that they’re not wasting the next five, six, seven, or eight years of his career like they’ve wasted the first nine. They need to see to it that Hischier doesn’t become the 37 year old a decade from now who is Cup chasing with whoever because the Devils were run so poorly as an organization that he had no choice but to Cup chase elsewhere. I can’t speak for Hischier, but I know if I were in his shoes, I’d want some assurances that the Devils are indeed all in before signing another contract here. If they’re not, why would I re-sign there in the first place?

Conversely, if they can’t get Hischier signed, the Devils are now in the undesirable position of having to try to maximize a Hischier trade that they’re not going to win because everyone knows he’s a year away from UFA. I don’t care how desirable centers are in the market. That late first round pick and that prospect who won’t be as good as Hischier is better than getting nothing with him walking as a UFA, but it’s not great either. The Devils will have a massive hole at the top of their lineup in Hischier’s absence that isn’t easily replaced. You can’t just go out and buy another 1C.

To make matters worse…..if Hischier leaves, we’ll have to start having larger questions and debates about everybody else on the roster because if you can’t win with this group with him, you’re certainly not winning without him. It will take time to replace a Hischier and it probably is only getting done properly through the draft. It might make more sense to retool or rebuild and jettison as many 30+ year old players off the roster as you can rather than fight a battle you can’t win trying to compete without him.

Unfortunately for the Devils, they don’t really get to decide any more than, say, the Flames got to decide whether or not Matthew Tkachuk was going to stay. With the player a year away from UFA, he’s the one with the leverage. Hischier will have the hammer, or the trump card, or whatever you choose to call it, and he’s well within his right to swing it.

It’s the Devils’ responsibility to give Hischier reasons to stay, and if they fail to do so, that’s on them.

Source: https://www.allaboutthejersey.com/d...ure-has-an-impact-on-everything-going-forward
 
The New Jersey Devils Might as Well Try Timo Meier on the Right at This Point

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NEWARK, NEW JERSEY - JANUARY 29: Timo Meier #28 of the New Jersey Devils skates during the game against the Nashville Predators at Prudential Center on January 29, 2026 in Newark, New Jersey. (Photo by Ishika Samant/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Timo Meier has had another rough season for the New Jersey Devils. Upon his arrival in New Jersey at the 2023 trade deadline, the hopes were that Meier’s goal scoring ability would help push the Devils offense forward into another gear. Yet since coming over from San Jose, Meier hasn’t managed his 2021-22 numbers nor his 2022-23 total. While there was some leeway given for adjusting after his acquisition, once Meier signed his eight year, $8.8 million per season contract, expectations rose exponentially. Sadly for both Meier and the Devils, said expectations haven’t been met.

Now, there are some reasonable explanations for Meier’s reduced scoring totals. Part of it is his shot volume; in the season where he joined the Devils, Meier put 327 total shots on goal; the season prior, 326. His first “full” season in New Jersey (he missed 13 games) saw him only get 207 shots on goal. Last season saw a slight jump to 239, but he did play 11 more games than the season prior. His shooting percentage was slightly above his career average in his 40 goal 2022-23 campaign, yet his 35 goal season in 2021-22, the same year he tallied 326 shots on goal saw his shooting percentage almost match his career average. He’s currently trending towards worse numbers in terms of both goals scored and shooting percentage; maybe Meier is just declining as he approaches his 30s.

Except for the fact that he just finished representing Switzerland in the Olympics…and he was one of the best forwards there…and he played on the right side that he was accustomed to in San Jose.

Meier’s time at the tournament may be done with Switzerland’s elimination yesterday, but he posted seven points (including three goals) in five games, good for him to currently be tied for fifth in Olympic scoring. In an additional positive note, he also did not take a single penalty in those games. I am aware that Olympic hockey is different and that teams are in some essence all-star teams, but Switzerland isn’t exactly a powerhouse full of NHL talent. If you account for the fact that he isn’t playing with scrubs on the Devils, there’s two main differences that stand out: the coaching and the wing he’s on.

The Devils making a coaching change has already been discussed, and whether it should happen (or will happen) or not depends on who you ask. Moving Timo from left wing to right wing, however, has yet to be tried in his Devils tenure, and at this point I have to ask what’s the harm in trying? It seems that playing on the right side is Meier’s preference, as again that as his spot for both San Jose and for Switzerland. Maybe it doesn’t unlock whatever is blocking him from being more successful as a Devil, but if he continues to underachieve in his preferred spot, then we just wind up right back at the “coaching change” part of this discussion, albeit with more evidence to make said change.

I know there will be some fans/pundits that say moving Meier to the right won’t make a difference. That at most it is a minor change that will have little to no impact on both Meier’s individual stats and the team’s record. If that’s the concern, then why not at least TRY it? The worst thing that happens is Meier stays stagnant as he is now; at the very least, trying it could lead to something positive happening. He’s not going to get worse than 28 points in 52 games (a lowly 44 point pace across 82 games) for $8.8 million this season, so Sheldon Keefe might as well try Meier out on his off hand side. And if this is some sort of coaching staff not believing in forwards on their off side issue, or a management thing with them not wanting that, then maybe it’s time to replace whoever it is with that antiquated way of thinking.

“Move Meier (Back) to the Right Wing” isn’t a new concept, but maybe it’s time to at least give it a chance. Like I mentioned already he can’t really play any worse, and maybe it is part of why he had a stronger performance internationally. The Devils need something, anything to get them going after the break if they want to try to be competitive. Giving Timo a shot on the other side of the ice could be one small move that helps lead toward the team improving.

What are your thoughts on the Devils possibly playing Timo Meier on his off wing; do you think it would have any impact at all? Do you feel he should’ve been on that side all along? Are there any concerns you have that weren’t discussed, such as where this would push other players in the lineup? Does it all still come back to coaching? Leave any and all comments below and thanks as always for reading!

Source: https://www.allaboutthejersey.com/d...ell-try-timo-meier-on-the-right-at-this-point
 
Devils in the Details – 2/18/26: Going for Gold Edition

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USA's forward #37 Abbey Murphy celebrates with teammates after scoring her team's third goal during the women's play-off semi-final ice hockey match between USA and Sweden at the Milano Santagiulia Ice Hockey Arena during the Milano Cortina 2026 Winter Olympic Games in Milan, on February 16, 2026. (Photo by Piero CRUCIATTI / AFP via Getty Images) | AFP via Getty Images

Here are your links for today:

Devils Links​


Olympic updates: Nico Hischier had a goal and two assists as the Swiss advanced to the quarterfinals. Jesper Bratt was scratched but the Swedes advanced as well. [Devils NHL]

“Dougie Hamilton was one of the New Jersey Devils’ biggest disappointments for the first chunk of the season. He recorded just eight points over the first three months of the campaign, with only one coming in November or December. His production was so non-existent that the Devils actually made Hamilton a healthy scratch. Dougie has been a completely different player since the calendar flipped. He has piled up 13 points over 16 games in 2026, putting him one behind Jack Hughes for the team lead.” [Infernal Access ($)]

“Retools don’t always have great results, but a few recent examples show that retools on the fly can change the trajectory of a team. Among the successful retools have been the Pittsburgh Penguins, Boston Bruins, and Washington Capitals. The Devils could learn a thing or two from each as they begin a retool of their own.” [Devils on the Rush ($)]

Hockey Links​


Some analysis of the remaining games in the Olympic men’s hockey tournament: [The Athletic ($)] [ESPN]

USA and Canada will play for gold in the women’s tournament: “Over nearly three decades, the Canada-USA rivalry has been among the best in sport, with the two sides in a near-constant battle for women’s hockey supremacy. The cross-border rivals have combined to win every Olympic gold medal — Canada has a 5-2 edge — and all 24 Women’s World Championships.” [The Athletic ($)]

“From an outside lens, Norway’s lack of hockey success doesn’t make much sense, especially considering its status in other winter sports. It’s in a region with excellent hockey nearby. Sweden has a larger population, but Finland doesn’t. What’s stopping Norway from having a larger hockey presence?” [The Athletic ($)]

“The hockey boards at Santagiulia Arena have been changed to a lighter color beginning Tuesday after feedback from teams and federations, including the NHL and NHL Players’ Association.” [ESPN]

“Connor McDavid leads the Olympic tournament in scoring with nine points, but Team Canada’s top-line centre is contributing in so many ways beyond just goals and assists. ‘I mean, he’s doing everything,’ said captain Sidney Crosby. ‘Whether it’s with the puck, without the puck, [being] physical, he’s leading by example in every possible way. He’s poised. Guys have taken some runs at him, he just continues to play. He’s shown a lot of focus that way. He’s been leading the way for sure.’” [TSN]

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

Source: https://www.allaboutthejersey.com/d...in-the-details-2-18-26-going-for-gold-edition
 
2026 Olympics Team USA Game Preview and Gamethread #5: USA vs. Slovakia

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MILAN, ITALY - FEBRUARY 18: Quinn Hughes #43 of Team United States celebrate his victory goal in overtime with JT Miller #10 and teammates during the Ice Hockey Men's Play-off Quarterfinals match between Team United States and Team Sweden on day twelve of the Milano Cortina 2026 Winter Olympic games at Milano Santagiulia Ice Hockey Arena on February 18, 2026 in Milan, Italy. (Photo by Xavier Laine/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Matchup: Team USA vs. Team Slovakia (Semifinals)

The Time: 3:10 PM EST (local time 21:10)

The Broadcasts: TV — Peacock, USA Network

For Gold or Bronze​


Both the Americans and Slovaks have earned the shot for a medal. Today’s Semifinal matchup just decides whether they will go for the top prize or if they will have to fight for a third-place consolation. After a tough matchup in the Quarterfinals against Sweden, Team USA has to make sure that they do not let up against a pluckier Slovakian team. Slovakia, who drew the easiest Quarterfinal matchup against Germany, has their biggest test ahead of them.

Team USA Needs More Jack Hughes, Less Matt Tkachuk​


In Wednesday’s win over Sweden, both of Team USA’s goals were created or scored by a Hughes brother. Jack Hughes played the least of any of Team USA’s right wings, playing just 13:14 and barely at all in the third period. In the third period, Rangers American Head Coach Mike Sullivan leaned heavily on J.T. Miller and Vincent Trocheck, who nearly blew the game as some of their poor play led to Sweden’s stunning game-tying goal in the dying minutes of the third. Team USA, who looked dominant when possessing the puck in the offensive zone, suddenly startled to sink into a turtle shell.

Matthew Tkachuk did not help matters. He played the second-most of the right wings behind Matt Boldy, playing 17:25, which was nearly two minutes more than his younger brother, Brady.

Here’s the problem: Brady Tkachuk is healthy and active. Matthew Tkachuk is clearly compromised and not 100% from his injury.

Per Dimitri Filipovic’s Olympic tracking data, Jack Hughes was second on Team USA in creating scoring chances against Sweden. Matthew Tkachuk was tied with J.T. Miller for the second-least.

🇺🇸🇸🇪 Forward Scoring Chance Contributions

Great stuff from Eichel and Hughes, but perhaps more importantly great job shutting down Nylander and Forsberg, two of their most dangerous forwards in the tournament. Raymond earned a lot of attention.

Data from @DimFilipovic pic.twitter.com/VNbfachKls

— JFresh 🇨🇦 (@JFreshHockey) February 19, 2026

Is Slovakia a powerhouse? No. Can they let up today and just let Tkachuk shuffle through his shifts? No. Can they let him play 17-18 minutes if they get through to Canada? Absolutely not. I do not care how much Matthew Tkachuk loves America: he is not playing nearly as well as a healthy Matthew Tkachuk can play. The division in scoring chances very clearly paints the “ideal lines” as something like this, if nobody changed position (though I think, at this point, Jack should be playing center).

Guentzel — Eichel — Hughes
B. Tkachuk — Matthews — Boldy
M. Tkachuk — Larkin — Thompson
Miller — Nelson — Keller

Is that going to happen? Almost assuredly not. Should it? Yes. If you were worried that Jack Hughes can’t keep up with the best, this tournament should throw that idea out the window and into a ravine. He is regularly at the tops of these scoring chance trackers despite playing among the fewest minutes on the team, and he is probably even the best defensive winger on Team USA. I constantly see him making little plays in the defensive zone to get the puck out more quickly, but he is barely rewarded by Mike Sullivan for clearly deserving more ice time.

Get the Hughes brothers on the ice, and Team USA will win.

For reference, these are the USA lines we are actually expecting today:

B. Tkachuk — Eichel — M.Tkachuk
Guentzel — Matthews — Boldy
Hughes — Larkin — Thompson
Miller — Nelson — Trocheck

Watching Nemo​


Of course, our eyes will also be on Simon Nemec today. He has been a game-changer for Slovakia on the blueline, and this will be his biggest test against a tough American team. For Nemec, he is going to have to skate his hardest today and not let any of the Americans line him up. So far, he has two points in four games, but he has eaten a ton of minutes and provided the kind of support that Juraj Slafkovsky and Dalibor Dvorsky have needed to make things happen up front.

I will also have my eye on Adam Ruzicka today. Ruzicka has spent the last two seasons in the KHL, but this always seemed more like something stemming from personal issues (that the Coyotes and NHL did not get him help for, likely in violation of the CBA) rather than his skills or abilities. He is only 26 years old, and he certainly has that NHL fourth line size at 6’4” and 230 pounds. After Ruzicka’s incident in 2024, the Slovak Ice Hockey Association gave him a ban from that year’s World Championships, but he has been able to get back in their graces for these games. I can only hope that Ruzicka has been successful at getting healthier on his own, and I am going to be watching how he matches up against Jack Eichel with Slafkovsky on his wing.

Your Thoughts​


What do you think of today’s game? How do you think Slovakia will match up against Team USA? Leave your thoughts in the comments below, and thanks for reading.

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.

Source: https://www.allaboutthejersey.com/2...game-preview-and-gamethread-5-usa-vs-slovakia
 
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