The St. Louis Blues eliminated the Winnipeg Jets with a 3-2 victory in Game 6 on Saturday.
More to come.
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The St. Louis Blues eliminated the Winnipeg Jets with a 3-2 victory in Game 6 on Saturday.
More to come.
Copyright © 2019 Score Media Ventures Inc. All rights reserved. Certain content reproduced under license.
The St. Louis Blues eliminated the Winnipeg Jets with a 3-2 victory in Game 6 on Saturday.
More to come.
Copyright © 2019 Score Media Ventures Inc. All rights reserved. Certain content reproduced under license.
Dallas Stars goaltender Ben Bishop, New York Islanders netminder Robin Lehner, and Tampa Bay Lightning goalie Andrei Vasilevskiy are the finalists for this year's Vezina Trophy, the league announced Saturday.
The Vezina Trophy is given annually to the goalie voted best at his position. Here's a look at how the three netminders stack up:
GSAA = goals saved above average
Bold indicates league leader
Goalie | GP | W | SV% | GAA | GSAA | SO |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Bishop | 46 | 27 | .934 | 1.98 | 32.24 | 7 |
Lehner | 46 | 25 | .930 | 2.13 | 26.24 | 6 |
Vasilevskiy | 53 | 39 | .925 | 2.40 | 26.40 | 6 |
Vasilevskiy finished third in last year's voting behind the Winnipeg Jets' Connor Hellebuyck and the winner, Pekka Rinne of the Nashville Predators. Bishop is a two-time finalist (2014, 2016) but has yet to win. Lehner - who claimed the Jennings Trophy along with teammate Thomas Greiss for fewest goals against as a team this season - is a first-time Vezina Trophy nominee.
A win by Bishop or Lehner would mark the fewest games played by a Vezina winner in a non-shortened season since Tom Barrasso claimed the award as an 18-year-old in 1983-84.
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Carolina Hurricanes winger Andrei Svechnikov claims Alex Ovechkin initiated the lopsided fight in which he fell victim to the powerful right fist of the Washington Capitals' captain.
"He did ask me first for (a) fight," Svechnikov said in broken English, according to The News and Observer's Luke DeCock. "I am not (a) superhero, (not going to) ask first for (a) fight."
The 19-year-old Svechnikov was knocked out by his fellow countryman during the first period of Game 3 after the two dropped the mitts. He suffered a concussion and remains unable to return for Saturday's Game 5.
Here's a video of the bout:
"I just wanted to stand up for myself," Svechnikov continued, justifying his decision to accept the fight offer. He said the tilt resulted from "back and forth all series."
Ovechkin reached out to the rookie after the game to apologize for the outcome.
"He called me right after (the) game, we talked a bit," Svechnikov added. I said 'sometimes (that) happens, you never know.'"
Svechnikov skated at Saturday's practice with a non-contact jersey and says he "hopes" to return for Game 6.
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The 2019 IIHF World Championship run from May 10-26 in Slovakia. Follow along for all the recent roster commitments ahead of the tournament opener.
Roster
Player | Position | Team |
---|---|---|
Sean Couturier | F | PHI |
Anthony Mantha | F | DET |
Tyler Bertuzzi | F | DET |
Carter Hart | G | PHI |
MacKenzie Blackwood | G | NJ |
Roster
Player | Position | Team |
---|---|---|
Patrick Kane | F | CHI |
Jack Eichel | F | BUF |
James van Riemsdyk | F | PHI |
Dylan Larkin | F | DET |
Clayton Keller | F | ARI |
Alex DeBrincat | F | CHI |
Luke Glendening | F | DET |
Colin White | F | OTT |
Frank Vatrano | F | FLA |
Chris Kreider | F | NYR |
Ryan Suter | D | MIN |
Brady Skjei | D | NYR |
Quinn Hughes | D | VAN |
Alec Martinez | D | LA |
Cory Schneider | G | NJ |
Thatcher Demko | G | VAN |
Cayden Primeau | G | MTL |
Roster
Player | Position | Team |
---|---|---|
Henri Jokiharju | D | CHI |
Roster
Player | Position | Team |
---|---|---|
Elias Pettersson | F | VAN |
Oskar Lindblom | F | PHI |
Adrian Kempe | F | LA |
Marcus Kruger | F | CHI |
Loui Eriksson | F | VAN |
Mario Kempe | F | ARI |
Jesper Bratt | F | NJ |
Adam Larsson | D | EDM |
Erik Gustafsson | D | CHI |
Robert Hagg | D | PHI |
Oliver Ekman-Larsson | D | ARI |
Henrik Lundqvist | G | NYR |
Jacob Markstrom | G | VAN |
Roster
Player | Position | Team |
---|---|---|
Ilya Kovalchuk | F | LA |
Vladislav Namestnikov | F | NYR |
Evgenii Dadonov | F | FLA |
Artem Anisimov | F | CHI |
Alexander Burmistrov | F | UFA (KHL) |
Alexander Kadeikin | F | UFA |
Vladimir Tkachyov | F | UFA |
Sergei Plotnikov | F | SKA (KHL) |
Nail Yakupov | F | SKA |
Alexander Barabanov | F | SKA |
Ivan Provorov | D | PHI |
Yegor Yakovlev | D | NJ |
Artyom Zub | D | SKA |
Dinar Khafizullin | D | SKA |
Artyom Sergeev | D | UFA |
Ilya Lybushkin | D | YAR (KHL) |
Alexandar Georgiev | G | NYR |
Roster
Player | Position | Team |
---|---|---|
Jakub Voracek | RW | PHI |
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All Mike Babcock could do was grin.
Since Game 5 against the Boston Bruins started with back-to-back Maple Leafs stick infractions - first, a questionable tripping call on winger Zach Hyman, then a borderline hooking call on forward Patrick Marleau - the bench boss did what we all do when we feel wronged but can't change the outcome of the matter at hand.
He smiled, once for each perceived slight.
The opening-round series' on-and-off officiating controversy - which peaked during a whistles-away Game 2 - reappeared Friday. The Leafs powered through the noise, though, bagging two even-strength goals over a two-minute span in the third period before holding off a late Bruins surge.
Toronto won 2-1 and now leads the series 3-2. With a victory Sunday at home, the high-profile club can advance to the second round for the first time since 2004.
"Obviously, the hardest game to win is the fourth game to put the other team out, especially a proud group of guys," Babcock told reporters postgame, tipping his cap to the Bruins. "It is something that we haven't been able to do in the last three years."
This version of Boston-Toronto has been very tight. Both clubs have scored 14 goals and have mostly received quality goaltending. Truthfully, nobody's running away with the series.
TEAM | ESG | PPG | OTHER | TOTAL |
---|---|---|---|---|
TORONTO | 9 | 3 | 2 | 14 |
BOSTON | 7 | 5 | 2 | 14 |
[Other = penalty-shot, empty-net, or pulled-goalie goals]
The Leafs have been the better team at five-on-five, limiting the formidable trio of Brad Marchand, Patrice Bergeron, and David Pastrnak to three even-strength goals. The Bruins, meanwhile, have dined on special teams, collecting five power-play markers in Games 1 through 4 while holding Toronto to just three on the PP. (Neither team scored on the PP in Game 5.)
Since the Leafs' two goals on Friday were so clean and well-executed, and occurred in what could be the series' turning-point contest, let's take a closer look at both sequences:
This goal was a complete group effort.
Defenseman Nikita Zaitsev made a terrific pass to Hyman, sending the puck from the Leafs' hash marks all the way to the far blue line. Toronto loves its stretch passes, and this particular attempt led to a clean zone entry.
Boston defenseman Charlie McAvoy then ran into Hyman, forcing him to find a streaking Kasperi Kapanen, who immediately handed off to Auston Matthews. Without puck support from Kapanen and Matthews, this play dies.
Matthews quickly deferred to Jake Muzzin hanging out at the point. Muzzin - who's having a tremendous series and became a father Thursday - wound up for a slap shot, faked it, then fed Matthews with an accurate pass. The big center had found a nice, open spot on his off wing and nailed the one-timer.
Boston goalie Tuukka Rask had no chance on Matthews' series-leading fourth goal. "He's a big guy so when he opens up you see him out of the corner of your eye," Muzzin said. "And great finish by him."
Hyman's role in the goal triggered a challenge from the Bruins, however. Coach Bruce Cassidy claimed the workhorse winger interfered with Rask.
The Situation Room - the league's centralized video room - took over for the on-ice officials and determined, yes, Hyman did interfere with Rask but the act wasn't egregious enough to overturn what had originally been ruled a good goal.
The bar is high for the Situation Room to overturn good-goal and no-goal calls made at ice level, and Hyman's interference didn't pass its threshold. There was contact, but the contact was 1) outside the blue paint, and 2) not compelling enough to justify a change.
In a Game 5 defined by a dearth of scoring opportunities from either team in the first 50 minutes, the Leafs managed to once again create offense by committee.
Two minutes after opening the scoring, Matthews swooped deep into Toronto's zone to receive a short breakout pass from defenseman Ron Hainsey. Matthews then found Hainsey's partner, Morgan Rielly, cruising through the middle of the ice.
Untouched, Rielly exited the Leafs' zone and entered the Bruins' zone in style before passing to winger Andreas Johnsson. When the Leafs are rolling as a cohesive unit, they're a runaway train. You could sense what was coming.
Johnsson went cross-ice to Kapanen and the 22-year-old Finn fired the puck into the open net. After accumulating 11 shots but zero goals in the first four games, Kapanen had his first of the playoffs. Babcock labeled it "huge" for the speedster's confidence.
"It doesn't matter who you are, at times when it isn't going good for you, you question yourself a little bit," the coach said. "That is what the National Hockey League is about. It takes your confidence away at times. You just keep grinding. I thought he was great tonight."
The game itself wasn't great Friday. It was slow and devoid of action until midway through the third. But it picked up, and following the Leafs' goals, Boston's David Krejci scored with Rask pulled to launch a short-lived comeback.
Combined with a shutdown performance from John Tavares, Matthews has been a gigantic difference-maker this series, especially since third-line center Nazem Kadri's been sidelined due to a suspension.
If Kapanen, Matthews, and the rest of the Leafs can replicate that Game 5 performance on Sunday, there's a strong chance the Leafs will be seeing the Columbus Blue Jackets in the next round.
Wouldn't that bring a smile - of a different variety - to Babcock's face.
John Matisz is theScore's National Hockey Writer. You can find him on Twitter @matiszjohn.
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The Colorado Avalanche eliminated the Calgary Flames from the postseason in five games Friday night with a one-sided 5-1 victory. Along with the Tampa Bay Lightning's sweep at the hands of the Columbus Blue Jackets, it marked the first time both No. 1 seeds lost in the first round in the expansion era.
The NHL expanded from six teams to 12 teams for the 1967-68 season, marking the beginning of the expansion era. With only six teams in the league before 1968, there was only one division, and thus only one top seed.
Calgary and Tampa didn't just lose, the two teams were completely outmatched, combining to win just one playoff game.
The Avalanche will now play the winner of the San Jose Sharks and the Vegas Golden Knights in Round 2. Vegas currently leads the series 3-2.
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It was only a matter of time before goalie interference reviews left their mark on the 2019 Stanley Cup Playoffs.
After a goal stood earlier in the evening during Game 5 between the Toronto Maple Leafs and Boston Bruins, the Calgary Flames were unable to overturn an on-ice goalie interference call in their win-or-go-home tilt with the Colorado Avalanche. Goalie interference giveth, and goalie interference taketh away.
Flames winger Sam Bennett was called for interference while wrestling with Avalanche defenseman Erik Johnson in front of the net. Calgary forward Johnny Gaudreau was able to slip home the wraparound while Colorado goaltender Philipp Grubauer was down and out of position. Here's another look:
In its explanation upholding the call, the league stated that Bennett's actions caused Johnson to make contact with Grubauer before the puck crossed the line.
The goal would've brought the Flames within one, but instead, the Avs rode the momentum to an even larger lead.
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