Steens become 4th father-son duo to notch 600 points apiece

Alexander Steen and his father, Thomas, joined some elite company Thursday night.

The St. Louis Blues forward picked up three assists in a 5-2 win over the Detroit Red Wings, and his second was the 600th point of his career.

With that helper, the Steens became only the fourth father-son tandem to each hit the 600-point plateau in their careers, joining Gordie and Mark Howe, Bobby and Brett Hull, and Peter and Paul Stastny, according to NHL.com's Lou Korac.

Thomas Steen racked up 817 points in 950 games across 14 NHL seasons with the original Winnipeg Jets from 1981-82 to 1994-95.

Alex Steen has 601 in 955 contests over 14 campaigns spent with the Blues and Toronto Maple Leafs.

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Lightning’s Gourde handed match penalty for hit on Jordan Staal

Yanni Gourde's night ended early Thursday after his high hit on Jordan Staal.

The Tampa Bay Lightning center was assessed a match penalty and a five-minute major after catching the Carolina Hurricanes pivot in the head in the first period.

Staal left immediately for the dressing room after the hit but returned to the bench for the second period.

The 30-year-old missed 32 games earlier in the season due to concussions.

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Melnyk: We want to identify ‘real’ Senators fans

Eugene Melnyk wants to know who really supports the Ottawa Senators as criticism of him and his hockey club continues to dominate headlines.

The team owner wondered aloud Thursday who the true Senators are when asked how he plans to win back fans who've lost faith in the ownership group.

"The key for us is, first of all, to identify who's a Senators fan and (who's) not," Melnyk said on Sportsnet 590 The FAN.

"We tripped up one of these guys, somebody big, and it turns out it was a 12-year-old in Toronto that was upset with the Senators in general," he added. "I'm a high-profile person that's an easy target, so let them do what they want to do. I basically ignore 99 percent of it."

Melnyk said the organization is trying to turn things around for those who remain patient with the team.

"For our fans, our real fans, we're doing the best we can and all you can do is just keep doing what you've been doing," he said.

The Senators have traded away Erik Karlsson, Mike Hoffman, Mark Stone, Matt Duchene, and Ryan Dzingel within the last six months and have also suffered from various off-ice scandals.

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Oilers CEO: If Rieder had 10-12 goals, ‘we’d probably be in the playoffs’

Bob Nicholson has found his scapegoat.

The Edmonton Oilers CEO criticized Tobias Rieder at length at a breakfast for season-ticket holders Thursday, according to the Edmonton Journal's Bruce McCurdy.

Nicholson said the Oilers won't re-sign Rieder at season's end, lamented that he hasn't scored a goal with the club and has "missed so many breakaways," and added that if the struggling forward "would have scored 10 or 12 goals, we'd probably be in the playoffs."

The executive said that other teams wanted Rieder in free agency last summer, but the 26-year-old signed with the Oilers for one year because he wanted to play with fellow German national Leon Draisaitl.

"He thought if he wasn't playing with Leon, he'd be playing with Connor (McDavid), he'd score 15-16 goals, and instead of making $2 million, he'd sign a four-year (extension) at $3.5 million (annually)," Nicholson said.

The Oilers CEO opened his remarks at the breakfast by saying he wouldn't throw anyone under the bus, according to McCurdy.

Nicholson later apologized to Rieder and admitted he "stepped out of bounds," according to TSN's Darren Dreger.

Rieder has 11 assists in 59 games with the Oilers this season. He signed with Edmonton last July 1 after mustering 12 goals and 13 assists in 78 contests split between the Arizona Coyotes and Los Angeles Kings in 2017-18.

The Oilers entered Thursday's action with a minus-38 goal differential and sit seven points out of a Western Conference wild-card spot.

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Sens’ Pageau suspended 1 game for boarding Canucks’ Sautner

Ottawa Senators forward Jean-Gabriel Pageau is suspended one game for boarding Vancouver Canucks defenseman Ashton Sautner, the Department of Player Safety announced.

The play occurred Wednesday evening. Pageau was given a two-minute minor while Sautner remained in the game.

Pageau is eligible to return to Ottawa's lineup Saturday in Edmonton.

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Blues’ Perron ponders future after latest concussion

David Perron returned to the St. Louis Blues' lineup Saturday with tears of joy streaming down his face after missing nearly two months with a concussion.

He explained his raw emotion to NHL.com's Lou Korac on Wednesday.

"Because it's harder and harder every time," Perron said, according to Korac's In The Slot blog. "It's so hard on the mental side of it to go through. Basically, you have some situations that heal up quicker, and some that linger and there's no reason why, and that's why it gets harder on you, it gets harder on your family, you start to wonder about other things and you get in your head a lot.

"It's just good to be back. I think when you play, you think less and everything kind of settles."

Perron suffered his first concussion during the 2010-11 season after taking a blindside hit from Joe Thornton. He ended up missing 97 games.

Perron's since suffered multiple concussions. His latest head injury, which forced him to miss 24 games, caused him to think about the bigger picture.

"There's so many things that are hard mentally," he said. "You feel different as a person almost. ... I really, really hope - knock on wood - that it never happens again just because I don't know how many more times I can go through this."

He noted a wide variance in how long it takes him to recover from concussions.

"Last year I had one and I was out 10 days," Perron said.

The 30-year-old veteran is in his third stint with the Blues. He has 20 goals and 20 assists in 48 games this season, including five points in three contests since rejoining the lineup.

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Evolution complete: Mark Stone arrived in Vegas at the perfect time

Mark Stone's having a moment right now.

Since being traded to the Vegas Golden Knights on Feb. 25, Stone's already bagged four goals and four assists while his new team has won nine of 10 games heading into Thursday's home date with the Jets. Quite simply, the fit has been impeccable.

It's crazy to think that just last month, Stone debated re-signing with the Ottawa Senators, who drafted him in the sixth round in 2010. However, the queasy state of the Senators ultimately saw the right winger shipped to Vegas, where he quickly signed an extension through 2026-27 at a team-high annual cap hit of $9.5 million.

Ethan Miller / Getty Images

Really, Stone's never had it so good.

After carrying the weight of being the best player on the NHL's worst team, the low-profile 26-year-old is now drawing second-tier matchups on a line with smart veterans Paul Stastny and Max Pacioretty. Individually, he's firmly in the Selke Trophy conversation for the first time in his career. And at the team level, he's playing for last season's Stanley Cup finalist, which should contend again in the Western playoff bracket.

So, let’s unpack how Stone arrived at this juncture of his career, and what makes him so effective on the ice.

The early days

Rob and Jackie Stone designated a boatload of time, energy, and money to hockey in the 1990s, which assured that Mark and older brother Michael, currently a Calgary Flames defenseman, could immerse themselves in the sport.

Over time, mom and dad developed a habit of stopping by one particular vendor at the arena to pick up a keepsake for whichever child had been competing that day. "If our games were being videotaped, we weren’t leaving the rink without one," Mark told theScore in a recent phone interview.

The collection of souvenirs morphed into pieces of research for young Mark, who became obsessed with reviewing not only his own shifts but also the performances of his brother’s team, particularly during the famous Brick tournament in Edmonton.

"We bought all the tapes of Michael's games," Rob said of the annual event showcasing the country's top 10-year-olds. "The only person who’s ever watched them is Mark."

Jeff Bottari / Getty Images

There were other early signs of potential stardom, namely Mark's elite hockey sense that began bubbling to the surface during his formative days in Winnipeg-area arenas.

Rob remembers other parents demanding that young Mark - then skating against kids a year older - strap on the goalie pads for a few two-minute shifts per game in an effort to level the playing field. Fair enough, the Stones thought. Unfortunately for the complainants, the lopsidedness continued.

"As the goalie, he would fire passes up the ice so his teammates could get breakaways," Rob recalled, seemingly still in disbelief 20 years later. "That’s how much of a strategist he was, even as a 5-year-old."

Along with his advanced mind, Mark developed what Michael calls an "ultracompetitive" streak, which the brothers shared. "We hated losing. To one another, and in anything," Michael said, referring to baseball, lacrosse, and other sporting adventures.

At least once, Mark broke a mini stick over the back of Michael's leg. And no family member was immune to his fits of rage.

"I remember him getting mad at my grandma because they lost the baseball game and she was just trying to say, 'Hey, everything’s alright,'" Michael laughed. "And he was so mad. He would have been, like, seven? Five? Really young and totally took it out on our grandma."

As he aged, Mark matured and gained a greater appreciation for the sport, although he refused to settle for anything less than perfect when it came to his hockey stick - much to the annoyance of his parents.

"You have no idea how many nights he'd go, 'I need a new stick,'" Rob said. "We'd be like, 'Another new stick? Ah man, OK. Let’s go and look.' We would never go to just one store."

The progression

Wedged between Stone's minor-hockey triumphs and his 400-game NHL career was a period of doubt. The general concern: How will this lanky teen with inefficient skating get from Point A to Point B?

"He hadn't, as a young player, added up to the sum of his parts," Kelly McCrimmon, then the Brandon Wheat Kings' owner, general manager, and head coach, said of the 14-year-old Stone he selected 92nd overall in the 2007 Western Hockey League bantam draft.

"The skating really needed work, physical maturation, getting stronger. Those were the things that had to come together for him."

Icon Sportswire / Getty Images

In due time, Stone made McCrimmon, now assistant GM of the Golden Knights, look like a talent-evaluation genius. It's true that a growth spurt in the forward's mid-teens had taken his skating from awkward to poor, but after a strong second season that saw the Wheat Kings nearly win the 2010 Memorial Cup, Stone broke out, piling up 229 points in 137 games across his final two junior campaigns.

The turning point arrived in the summer of 2011, when the Senators assigned Stone some gut-check homework one year after drafting him: Change the mechanics of your stride, kid. Get your feet moving in harmony instead of against each other.

With the aid of Senators skating coach Marc Power, concerns began to fade. "We had to make sure he's learning how to use his edges and how to maximize his skating ability as much as he can, with the body that he has," said Paul MacLean, Ottawa's bench boss from 2011-14. "That was a priority for us, and it's something that he went and worked at and became good at."

"His skating, to me, was never going to be a big issue," added Cory Clouston, who took over for McCrimmon as Wheat Kings coach in Stone's last junior year. "I think he took it upon himself to say, 'If that’s my weakness, I’m going to turn it into a strength.' I think he's done a really good job at it."

Stone, who's now a coordinated 6-foot-4, 220-pound package on skates, graduated to the pro ranks in 2012-13. And the sixth-rounder from a few summers earlier - a complete long shot on paper - made noise almost immediately, contributing 38 points in 58 AHL games while managing to crack Ottawa's lineup four times.

"He was an impact player back then," said current Ducks forward Jakob Silfverberg, Stone’s teammate in Binghamton that year. "You could tell, anytime he had the puck on his stick it was under control. He never seemed to be rushed on the ice. He was always making the right play. And that’s something he's still doing today, but maybe with more confidence."

Therein lies the secret to Stone’s rise, and the reason he didn’t fall off the rails amid the reconstruction of his skating stride. His mind, as Clouston framed it, is very "proactive." The winger is flexible, versatile, and really cares about winning.

"For an offensive guy at that level, I don't know if I’ve ever had a guy who took that much pride in his defensive game," the coach said. "He wanted to be successful. He didn't want to be a one-dimensional player."

The finished product

It seemed like something was always going wrong during Stone's tenure in Ottawa.

Sure, he was a key part of two Cinderella runs - the Hamburglar streak of 2015 and the near trip to the 2017 Stanley Cup Final - but the Senators were never considered true contenders.

Yet Stone, to steal a phrase from former Ottawa coach Guy Boucher, was Mr. Consistency. In four full seasons, he posted point totals of 64, 61, 54, and 62. He starred on special teams, drew the stiffest competition, housed rookies, and kept his mouth shut as the franchise spiraled out of control. Brilliantly, Stone even recorded five points in the first game after the infamous Uber video leaked in November.

Then there are the copious defensive plays. Including this year, in which he's recorded 107 takeaways through 69 games, Stone has paced the NHL in the category in five of his six seasons.

"His hand-eye coordination is second to none, and I think the way he reads the game he almost knows what you're doing before you even think about doing it," Senators goalie Craig Anderson said.

Beyond those skills, Stone has become the league's takeaway king while using one of the weirdest - and most effective - sticks in the league, especially in his first two NHL seasons.

"We called it the Lizard Stick. It comes out of nowhere and then is gone," former Senators teammate Curtis Lazar said of Stone's lumber during those early years. Meanwhile, Stone admits his stick obsession, which carried forward from childhood, got "out of control" when he entered the NHL.

"Mine have always been different than most," he said. "(These days), it's got a little shorter blade, it’s a little bit longer, but it’s a lot more standard than it used to be."

Along with the takeaways and the projected career bests in goals, assists, and points this season, Stone's underlying defensive numbers are off the charts. Among the 420 skaters who've played at least 700 five-on-five minutes in 2018-19, he leads in two important categories: Corsi Relative percentage and Goals Above Replacement. There's a strong possibility Stone could become the first winger to win the Selke - an award usually reserved for elite two-way centers such as Patrice Bergeron and Anze Kopitar - since Jere Lehtinen in 2003.

"As much as I love scoring goals and being out there for a goal, it almost makes it worse when you’re out there for something against," Stone said. "It’s just something that has stuck with me throughout my career."

Ethan Miller / Getty Images

So far in Vegas, the Pacioretty-Stastny-Stone line has been dominant at even strength, controlling 60 percent of shot attempts, 61 percent of scoring chances, 62 percent of shots, and 67 percent of goals. Stone's also found a spot on the first-unit power play, lining up on the right flank.

"Whatever that subliminal impact is across the entire team, I think Mark’s had a really positive impact to our team, and specifically to the two players he's playing with," McCrimmon said.

The adjustments have been seamless because both team and player needed each other. The Golden Knights had been yearning for secondary scoring, while Stone's time in Ottawa, like that of other franchise stars over the past couple seasons, had run its course.

Signing the long-term extension was a no-brainer as well. Stone, the former draft long shot, could finally cash in on his dedication and progression, while McCrimmon and Vegas could lock up an elite three-zone winger who quietly ranks eighth in points among those selected in the 2010 draft, which featured Taylor Hall and Tyler Seguin at the top.

"The last year and a half have been tough on me, losing so many hockey games," Stone said. "Being in Vegas right now, I’m just so excited with how well the team is playing and how many wins we're getting. It looks like we’re going to have an opportunity to try and win a Stanley Cup.”

John Matisz is theScore's National Hockey Writer. You can find him on Twitter @matiszjohn.

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Devils plan to begin extension talks with Hall ‘well before July 1’

The New Jersey Devils are eager to lock up their franchise player.

Taylor Hall is scheduled to become an unrestricted free agent in the summer of 2020, but Devils general manager Ray Shero plans to begin extension talks with the reigning Hart Trophy winner once this season concludes.

"He's been something for our franchise that we really haven't had in a long time ... At the end of the day, we still have another year left," Shero said on Wednesday's edition of the NHL's "Executive Suite" podcast. "But the intention is to sit down somewhere after the season, well before July 1."

The Devils can officially sign Hall to a contract extension from July 1 onward. He's due for a sizable raise from his current $6-million cap hit.

"It's not like, 'Hey, here's the contract, sign it up,'" Shero continued. "If we're getting into some longer term with a free agent, well OK, what are you selling, what are we doing? So they need to know that and I want to know that from their standpoint.

"I think the respect and relationship both ways has been really good and he's an important player for our franchise, certainly. So that will be the hope sitting down ... something that can work for both of us longer term and if that's meant to be."

Hall has been out of the Devils' lineup since December and underwent knee surgery in February. The 27-year-old winger racked up 37 points in 33 games before he went down.

New Jersey snapped a five-year playoff drought last season on the strength of Hall's 93-point campaign. He had 41 more points than his team's second-leading scorer, Nico Hischier.

The Devils have clearly missed their star player this season; they currently sit fourth-last in the NHL.

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Where Trout’s contract ranks among biggest in sports

Mike Trout got paid.

The Los Angeles Angels signed the superstar outfielder to a 10-year contract extension that kicks in after the 2020 season. Folded into the remaining two years of his present deal, Trout is set to earn $426.5 million overall.

But how does it compare to the biggest contracts in sports? Here, we take a look at the biggest deals to ever be signed across various leagues and promotions.

Note: The financial figures below are all reported deals. The ranking is determined by total value of contract and not by annual average.

Association Football: Neymar, Paris Saint-Germain ($600+ million)

FRANCK FIFE / AFP / Getty

In 2017, Neymar left Barcelona for Paris and became €500 million richer in the process. That incredible deal includes bonuses over a five-year period with the club. Not only that, but Paris Saint-Germain paid a record €222-million transfer fee to his former team.

Soccer has a slew of oversized contracts that rival, and exceed, the exorbitant deals signed throughout Major League Baseball. Lionel Messi is earning approximately $35.8 million per season with Barcelona, according to USA TODAY Sports, while Cristiano Ronaldo is banking $35.2 million every year with Juventus over his four-year contract.

MLB: Trout, Angels ($426.5 million)

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No North American contract compares in terms of sheer volume. Few star athletes eclipse even the $300-million plateau, and Trout is getting more than $100 million on top of that. The deal he signed on Tuesday has him making $36 million annually starting in 2021 and is the most lucrative in baseball history. The pact will keep him in California through the 2030 season, which could be the rest of his career.

Harper is a distant second in MLB at $330 million with Giancarlo Stanton ($325 million) and Manny Machado ($300 million) close behind.

Boxing: Canelo Alvarez ($365 million)

Tom Hogan / Getty Images Sport / Getty

Before Trout's contract shook the sports world, the largest contract belonged to Alvarez. He inked a five-year, 11-fight contract with DAZN worth $365 million in 2018. On an annual scale, his deal still dwarfs everyone else as Alvarez is paid $73 million per year through 2023.

NBA: James Harden, Rockets ($228 million)

Streeter Lecka / Getty Images Sport / Getty

In July 2017, Harden became basketball's most affluent player when he inked a four-year extension with the Houston Rockets. His $160-million deal folded into the remaining two years of his previous contract made the entire agreement worth a whopping $228 million.

Harden's contract came about a week after Stephen Curry signed a five-year, $201-million extension with the Golden State Warriors. Oklahoma City Thunder point guard Russell Westbrook has Curry beat, earning $205 million over a five-year period through 2023. They may not match Trout's total, but their annual salaries are at another level.

NFL: Matt Ryan, Falcons ($150 million)

Harry How / Getty Images Sport / Getty

Ryan became the NFL's highest-paid player last year when he signed a five-year, $150-million extension. Unlike other leagues, that total isn't fully guaranteed over the life of the deal, but it's still the largest number put to paper for a gridiron athlete. Despite this, the contract reportedly includes $100 million guaranteed, which is also a league record.

Continuing the trend of usurping the previous money king in short succession, Ryan took the mantle from Minnesota Vikings quarterback Kirk Cousins less than two months after his record-setting contract.

NHL: Alex Ovechkin, Capitals ($124 million)

Icon Sportswire / Icon Sportswire / Getty

Ovechkin's 13-year contract is a bit unique as eight-year deals now represent the longest available to a player under the current CBA. With a salary cap in place, it may be a while before someone comes close to challenging Ovie's title.

In terms of yearly earnings, however, several players have inked more lucrative deals. Edmonton Oilers center Connor McDavid ($12.5 million), Toronto Maple Leafs forward Auston Matthews ($11.6 million), and Los Angeles Kings defenseman Drew Doughty ($11 million) are among the players who earn more annually, according to Spotrac.

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Marchand takes shot at Boston sports writer after criticism of Krug

Brad Marchand came to the defense of teammate Torey Krug via Twitter on Thursday after NBC Sports writer Joe Haggerty suggested the Boston Bruins may be a better team without the blue-liner in the lineup.

Krug has missed 14 games due to injury this season, including the last three. The Bruins are 8-4-2 without him in the lineup.

The 27-year-old's 48 points lead all Bruins defensemen and rank fifth overall on the team. He's been the league's sixth-best blue-liner so far this year, according to Corsica's player ratings.

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