Sabres sign goalie Devon Levi to 3-year, entry-level deal

The Buffalo Sabres signed goaltender Devon Levi to a three-year, entry-level contract, the team announced Friday.

Levi will be with the Sabres for the rest of the season once he completes the immigration process, general manager Kevyn Adams said, according to beat reporter Joe Yerdon.

The executive added that the plan is to get Levi into some practices and didn't rule out him seeing game time, per The Buffalo News' Lance Lysowski.

Levi, 21, registered a 17-12-5 record this season for the Northeastern Huskies and led the NCAA with a .933 save percentage while ranking third with six shutouts across 34 starts. He was named the Hockey East Player of the Year for his efforts and was tabbed one of the 10 finalists for the Hobey Baker Award for a second consecutive season.

Northeastern's season ended Saturday following the quarterfinal of the Hockey East Tournament. Levi made 32 saves in the Huskies' 2-1 overtime loss to the Providence Friars.

Levi also put up gargantuan numbers in 2021-22 and took home the Mike Richter Award, which recognizes the top collegiate goalie. He posted a .952 save percentage, tying him with current Winnipeg Jets stalwart Connor Hellebuyck for the second-best single-season mark in NCAA history.

The promising prospect also stunned on the international stage while helping Canada capture a silver medal at the 2021 World Junior Championship. Levi owned a .964 save percentage - the highest ever at a single tournament - and a 0.75 goals-against average in seven appearances.

In 66 games over two seasons with the Huskies, Levi owns a .942 save percentage and 1.90 goals-against average, as well as a .742 win percentage.

The Florida Panthers drafted Levi in the seventh round in 2020 but sent his rights and a 2022 first-round pick to the Sabres in exchange for forward Sam Reinhart in July 2021.

Copyright © 2023 Score Media Ventures Inc. All rights reserved. Certain content reproduced under license.

Senators’ Tkachuk backs ‘goalie of the future’ Sogaard during crucial stretch

Senators captain Brady Tkachuk gave Mads Sogaard a vote of confidence after a litany of injuries to Ottawa's crease forced the 22-year-old goaltender into the spotlight.

"He's a young goalie, but he's our goalie of the future," Tkachuk said after Thursday's 5-4 loss to the Colorado Avalanche. "He's going to take us to the Stanley Cup, and he's going to take us to that next level that we want to get to.

"It's just a shitty situation that he's in right now with the pressure and him being such a young goalie, but we have all the belief in him, all the faith. It’s unbelievable how good of a player he is already. He's already stepping in and giving us a chance to win."

Sogaard owns a 5-4-1 record this season to go along with an .883 save percentage and 3.46 goals against average.

All of his starts have come after the All-Star break; Anton Forsberg's season effectively ended after he suffered MCL tears in both knees on Feb. 11, while the injured Cam Talbot has been limited to just four games since Feb. 1 and is expected to miss around two more weeks with a mid-body ailment.

The Senators have had to rely on Sogaard and inexperienced backup Kevin Mandolese as they fight for a place in the postseason. They're eight points behind the New York Islanders for the second wild-card spot in the Eastern Conference.

Ottawa pushed its losing streak to four games with Thursday's dramatic defeat to the defending Stanley Cup champions. Avalanche forward Lars Eller potted the eventual game-winner during a bizarre sequence in the second period.

The Senators appeared to think an icing call was imminent, but the whistle wasn't blown to stop play. Eller then tapped in the puck sitting in the crease.

Tkachuk made it clear the Senators didn't blame Sogaard for the incident.

"It's one of the weirdest goals this year. ... I feel terrible for him," he said.

The Senators selected Sogaard in the second round of the 2019 draft. He registered an .889 save percentage and 3.07 goals against average in two showings last season.

Copyright © 2023 Score Media Ventures Inc. All rights reserved. Certain content reproduced under license.

NHL Friday player props: Vrana to stay hot vs. Capitals

Thursday night was a good one for our shot props. Carter Verhaeghe and Jared McCann breezed past their totals, ensuring a profitable night despite a dud of a performance from Jason Robertson.

We'll happily take the 2-1 night and look to build upon it with three more plays as we begin the weekend.

Jakub Vrana over 2.5 shots (+115)

To say Vrana has hit the ground running with the Blues would be an understatement. The highly skilled winger has played inside the top six, as well as on the top power play, and has taken full advantage of it.

Vrana has scored three times over three games while generating nine shots on goal and 17 attempts. With just under six attempts per game, Vrana is creating more than enough volume to hit his shot total on a consistent basis.

He finds himself in a juicy matchup Friday night against the Capitals. Not only is it a chance to make some noise against one of his former clubs, but the Capitals enter this game playing some of their worst hockey this season.

At five-on-five, they are bleeding shots and rank 31st in expected goals against per 60 since the trade deadline. We've also seen a healthy uptick in penalties, which means extra time and space for Vrana to go to work.

Vrana has gone over his total in two of three games since debuting with the Blues. Given he's being centered by a strong playmaker in Pavel Buchnevich and is being used in every key offensive situation, I expect him to come through once again.

Tage Thompson over 3.5 shots (-110)

After finding himself a bit of a rut, Thompson is heating up. He has hit in back-to-back games, generating eight attempts or more in each.

That not so coincidently aligns with the return of top line winger Alex Tuch. With Tuch back in the fold, the Sabres' top line possesses more punch and is able to spend additional time on the attack. Clearly, it's paying off.

While we have seen an uptick from Thompson since Tuch's return, it is worth noting he also leads the team in attempts, shots, and chances over the past 10 games. He was still generating plenty as the go-to shooter.

Every point is crucial for the Sabres right now and that is reflecting in Thompson's usage, as he's played 21 minutes or more in two straight contests. So long as this game against a feisty Flyers team remains relatively close - I expect it will - Thompson will get all the ice he can handle.

Troy Terry over 2.5 shots (-125)

Terry is quietly having a productive shooting year, at least on home ice. The skilled winger has averaged 2.9 shots per game in Anaheim and gone over his shot total 57% of the time; including six of his last nine.

He has feasted on underwhelming competition in that span, getting the job done most recently against the Coyotes, Blackhawks, Predators, and Islanders.

Luckily for Terry, he has another mouthwatering matchup in front of him Friday.

The Blue Jackets rank dead last in the NHL and have conceded shots at a higher rate than every other team since their deadline sell-off. They are awful.

I think this is a generous price for Terry at home against the worst defensive team he'll see all season.

Todd Cordell is a sports betting writer at theScore. Be sure to follow him on Twitter @ToddCordell.

Copyright © 2023 Score Media Ventures Inc. All rights reserved. Certain content reproduced under license.

Briere’s to-do list in Philly, Rantanen’s MVP-caliber run, and 4 other NHL items

Friday marks one week on the job for Daniel Briere, interim general manager for the Philadelphia Flyers. It's safe to say it's gotten progressively more stressful.

Philadelphia introduced Briere to the media and fans Sunday - normal and cool.

The former Flyers forward then traveled to Florida to mingle with his peers at the GM meetings. Normal and cool, too, though likely a whirlwind for the new guy.

By Wednesday, all of that normalcy and coolness vanished. Briere had to issue a statement condemning his second-oldest son's "inexcusable" actions at a bar after surveillance camera footage of Carson Briere shoving an unoccupied wheelchair down a flight of stairs went viral. (Carson, a 23-year-old junior forward at Mercyhurst University in Erie, Pennsylvania, apologized in his own statement.)

Portland Press Herald / Getty Images

Carson's actions aren't directly related to the Flyers. But the entire situation reflects poorly on the Briere family and taints what ought to have been a heady first week at the helm. The proud Flyers fan base surely isn't pleased.

Mercyhurst suspended Carson Briere and two other athletes while continuing to investigate the incident. The matter is also in the hands of Erie police.

After dealing with that sideshow, Daniel Briere still has to figure out how to turn the Flyers around. He remarked during his press conference that a rebuild was on its way and warned it won't be a quick fix. He also said he didn't want to conduct a fire sale. Translation: The roster will be under heavy construction, but don't expect a Chicago Blackhawks-style strip down.

To be completely unambiguous, Briere has his work cut out for him.

Tim Nwachukwu / Getty Images

On a recent episode of the Hockey PDOcast, host Dimitri Filipovic and I discussed which NHL franchises had the most depressing medium-term outlooks (roughly two to four years). We determined only the lowly Arizona Coyotes were in a worse spot than the Flyers.

Here's a high-level to-do list for Briere:

Acquire more 2023 draft capital

Failing to move pending unrestricted free agent James van Riemsdyk ahead of the trade deadline may have been the final nail in the coffin for Briere's predecessor, Chuck Fletcher. The Flyers, sitting 27th in points percentage, own their first-round pick in the upcoming draft. That's great. But they don't pick again until roughly halfway through the third round. That's unacceptable for a club in Philadelphia's position. Once the trade freeze lifts, Briere must find a way to acquire another 2023 first or, at the very least, an early second.

Define the long-term identity and core

Carter Hart, Travis Konecny, Joel Farabee, Owen Tippett, Cam York, Ivan Provorov, and Travis Sanheim are all under 27 years old and under contract or team control through next season (far beyond, in some cases). If Briere is serious about rebuilding, only some of those core pieces should be around for the long haul. Moving on from Provorov is a no-brainer, Sanheim appears to have fallen out of favor within the organization, whereas the decisions for guys like Hart and Konecny are complicated and carry more potential downside.

Len Redkoles / Getty Images

Search for stars and/or future stars

The Flyers' outlook seems so bleak partly because, aside from Konecny, the roster is devoid of anybody an objective observer might consider an NHL star or superstar. Hart, 24, is fairly young for a goalie, so there's still a chance he really pops. Prospect Cutter Gauthier could be a stud. Otherwise, the lack of star/future star talent is concerning, especially with uncertainty surrounding Sean Couturier's health. Proper drafting and developing are vital here, though it wouldn't hurt if Briere got creative on the free agency and trade markets.

Offload Hayes and Ristolainen contracts

Briere gave head coach John Tortorella a vote of confidence during his press conference. What does that mean for Kevin Hayes' future in Philly? Not only is he not Tortorella's favorite player, but Hayes is also a salary-dump candidate given his age and contract. A rebuild just doesn't mesh with Hayes' timeline as an effective NHLer. Rasmus Ristolainen's deal, which runs through 2026-27 at $5.1 million per year, is an even bigger eyesore on the Flyers' cap sheet. Similar to "search for stars," this task is far easier said than done for Briere.

Rantanen's MVP-caliber run

Icon Sportswire / Getty Images

The last time the incomparable Connor McDavid collected all 100 first-place votes to win the Hart Trophy, Mikko Rantanen snuck into the top 10. The 26-year-old Colorado Avalanche winger earned a respectable 15 voting points for 2020-21 MVP thanks to one selection each for second, third, and fourth.

McDavid is going to win the Hart again, probably unanimously - again. The rest of the ballot is up for debate, though it's hard to envision Rantanen - whom teammate Nathan MacKinnon labels a "beast" one second and "horse" the next - finishing outside the top 10. The Finn will make the cut if he hits 50 goals (he's five away with 15 games remaining) and continues to play more than any forward not named McDavid (Rantanen is two seconds ahead of MacKinnon).

"You talk about value to a team and what he brings? Mikko's top three, top four, top five in the league," Avs forward Andrew Cogliano told theScore.

Cogliano's rationale: In his 16 years in the NHL, he's never played on a team that's encountered as much regular-season adversity as the 2022-23 Avs, and Rantanen has led them through the storm. The defending champions have dealt with a laundry list of injuries on top of having that title target on their backs. Yet they own the fifth-best points percentage in the Western Conference.

Jack Dempsey / Getty Images

Gabriel Landeskog has been sidelined the entire season, while Josh Manson's missed 40 games, Bowen Byram's missed 38, Valeri Nichushkin 29, Cale Makar 13, and MacKinnon 11. Earlier this week, Colorado ruled Artturi Lehkonen out for four-to-six weeks. Rantanen is one of four Avs to appear in all 67 games.

"There were moments when it was Rants and maybe one more guy from the top six healthy. He was carrying the team," goalie Alexandar Georgiev said.

Added MacKinnon, who's also been incredible with 85 points in only 56 games: "Rants probably doesn't get all of the recognition that he deserves. Me and Cale were hurt, other guys were hurt, and he was getting hat tricks. He was leading our team to wins. He's been playing huge minutes all season."

Old-man Anderson still contributing

Quirky fact: The NHL's oldest player is on the league's youngest team.

Goalie Craig Anderson, who's in his 20th campaign in the league and second with the Buffalo Sabres, turns 42 in May. He has more than two years on Toronto Maple Leafs defenseman Mark Giordano, the NHL's second-oldest player.

To put Anderson's elder statesman status in perspective, rookie teammates Owen Power and JJ Peterka were eight days and 10 months old, respectively, when the netminder made his NHL debut on Nov. 30, 2002.

Bill Wippert / Getty Images

The Sabres have kept Anderson's workload light this year with their three-goalie rotation. Still, there's no denying he's stopped pucks at an admirable rate, rocking a .917 save percentage in 23 games during a season in which the league average has drooped to .905. He's 13th in Evolving Hockey's goals saved above expected metric.

Teammates gush over how well Anderson, a leader in the dressing room and on the ice, processes incoming offense and how calm he is in the crease.

"He's so good at reading guys' eyes, reading guys' sticks, and figuring out where they're going to shoot," forward and 40-goal man Tage Thompson said.

"He makes it look like something is open," added Dylan Cozens, another young center with scoring chops. "But he takes it away right when you go to shoot. A lot of times, he knows exactly where you're going with the puck."

Parting shots

Max Domi: The Central Division-leading Dallas Stars needed offensive punch prior to the trade deadline, so they sent injured goalie Anton Khudobin and a second-round pick to the Blackhawks for Domi (and prospect Dylan Wells). Through seven games, the bet's looking solid with one goal, two assists, 17 shots, and 10 takeaways. Domi's averaged 16 minutes a night alongside five different linemates due to Dallas' injury woes. Domi's dad, Tie, and Stars bench boss Pete DeBoer were both selected by the Maple Leafs in the 1988 draft. Max is infinitely more skilled than dad, but Tie passed down a degree of grittiness. Are their personalities similar? Different? "I don't know if anyone's got a personality like Tie. I think Max is the best of his mom and his dad. That's a (good) way to put it," DeBoer said with a hearty laugh.

Kirill Marchenko: The Columbus Blue Jackets have positioned themselves quite nicely for the draft lottery in May. Better odds at picking Connor Bedard is a prize worth chasing, but the season's been miserable for a squad that aspired to make the playoffs in Year 1 of the Johnny Gaudreau era. A rare bright spot has been Marchenko's emergence on the wing. The 6-foot-3, 197-pound rookie started his NHL career by recording exclusively goals, 13 of them, before earning his first assist (16 straight to start a career is the record, set in 1917-18). Now with 17 snipes and two helpers in 44 games, Marchenko easily has the highest ratio. He's the Cy Young leader, if you will. Victor Olofsson (24 goals and nine assists) and Cole Caufield (26-10) trail him.

Fighting ban: As early as next season, the Quebec Major Junior Hockey League is moving toward an outright ban on fighting, commissioner Mario Cecchini said Thursday. The league is still determining disciplinary standards. I reached out to a few QMJHL contacts for reactions. One GM who is against the change is mostly curious about the motivation behind the ban. "Is it to reduce injuries?" the GM texted. "If so, the data should support this action. But, in my experience of late, most fights do not produce injuries. Thus, I believe this stance is for optics and politics rather than improving our game."

Takes, Thoughts, and Trends is theScore's biweekly hockey grab bag.

John Matisz is theScore's senior NHL writer. Follow John on Twitter (@MatiszJohn) or contact him via email (john.matisz@thescore.com).

Copyright © 2023 Score Media Ventures Inc. All rights reserved. Certain content reproduced under license.

Post-game: Canucks lack bite vs. Coyotes

Sat Shah and Bik Nizzar breakdown the Canucks 3-2 loss in Arizona Thursday night. Hear from Rick Tocchet and Quinn Hughes post game. Randip Janda and Iain McIntyre provide their analysis as well. 

The views and opinions expressed in this podcast are those of the hosts and guests and do not necessarily reflect the position of Rogers Media Inc. or any affiliate. 

The views and opinions expressed in this podcast are those of the hosts and guests and do not necessarily reflect the position of Rogers Media Inc. or any affiliate.

Panthers, Canadiens combine for 10 goals in breathless 1st period

Goaltending was optional during the first period of Thursday's contest between the Florida Panthers and Montreal Canadiens.

The Atlantic Division counterparts combined for 10 goals in the opening 20 minutes, with the Panthers going to intermission with a 7-3 lead and a franchise record for most goals in a single period.

The offensive outburst tied the all-time record for goals in the first 10 minutes of a period, according to NHL Public Relations. It also tied the benchmark for most goals in an opening frame, per StatsCentre.

Florida and Montreal fell two tallies short of matching the NHL record for goals in a period, set by the Toronto Maple Leafs and Buffalo Sabres in 1981 (12).

The Canadiens opened the scoring 16 seconds after puck drop on a goal from Mike Matheson and beat Sergei Bobrovsky on each of their first three shots of the game.

The Panthers responded to Matheson's marker with two goals of their own within three minutes. The score was tied 3-3 before Florida scored four straight beginning at the 10:33 mark. Matthew Tkachuk, Carter Verhaeghe, and Josh Mahura paved the way with two points apiece, and 14 different skaters notched a point.

Florida's seven goals came on just 1.55 expected in all situations, according to Natural Stat Trick. The clubs scored all 10 goals at even strength.

The Canadiens have been involved in numerous high-octane affairs lately, losing 8-4 to the Colorado Avalanche on Monday before defeating the Pittsburgh Penguins 6-4 on Tuesday.

Copyright © 2023 Score Media Ventures Inc. All rights reserved. Certain content reproduced under license.

Prospect Central – Scott Wheeler on where to find defencemen in the Draft

Dan and Sat are joined by The Athletic's Scott Wheeler to discuss some of the defencemen in the upcoming draft, who could be available in the teens, and more.

This podcast was produced by Josh Elliott-Wolfe.

The views and opinions expressed in this podcast are those of the hosts and guests and do not necessarily reflect the position of Rogers Media Inc. or any affiliate. 

The views and opinions expressed in this podcast are those of the hosts and guests and do not necessarily reflect the position of Rogers Media Inc. or any affiliate.

Has Brock Boeser turned a corner or is this more of the same?

Dan and Sat discuss Brock Boeser's recent play under Rick Tocchet and what we can actually take away from it. Also, hear from Sportsnet's John Garrett to talk about Mullett Arena, Jordan Binnington's antics, and more.

This podcast was produced by Josh Elliott-Wolfe.

The views and opinions expressed in this podcast are those of the hosts and guests and do not necessarily reflect the position of Rogers Media Inc. or any affiliate. 

The views and opinions expressed in this podcast are those of the hosts and guests and do not necessarily reflect the position of Rogers Media Inc. or any affiliate.