All posts by Josh Gold-Smith

Leafs’ Nylander named NHL’s rookie of the month again

William Nylander is once again the NHL's rookie of the month.

The Toronto Maple Leafs forward was named March's top rookie, the league announced Saturday.

It's the second time this season he's earned the honor after winning it for his work in October.

Nylander led all members of the class with 14 points in 14 games last month, notching four goals in that span.

All of those points came during a 12-game streak that was the longest by a rookie in the club's 100-year history. It also tied for the longest point streak by anyone in the NHL in 2016-17.

The 20-year-old ranks second on the Leafs and third among rookies with 58 points. His 21 goals rank fourth both in the rookie class and on his team.

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Devils all-time leading scorer Elias retires

Patrik Elias is calling it a career.

The New Jersey Devils legend announced his retirement from the NHL on Friday.

"After 18 seasons, I am pleased to announce that I will be retiring from the National Hockey League, having played my last game with the New Jersey Devils," Elias said in a statement.

"For the past few months, I have weighed this decision both physically and mentally. I am happy to say this provides me and my family with closure."

The Devils also announced Friday that they will retire Elias' No. 26 next season. He'll be the fifth player in franchise history to earn that honor, joining Martin Brodeur, Scott Stevens, Scott Niedermayer and Ken Daneyko.

Elias goes out as the club's all-time leader in goals (408), assists (617), points (1,025), game-winning goals (80), and hat tricks (eight).

The 40-year-old was part of two Stanley Cup championship squads, in 2000 and 2003.

Elias also won three bronze medals representing the Czech Republic - two at the world championships and one at the Olympics in 2006.

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Real transparency still a long way off for NHL despite sharing protected lists

The NHL came around on going public with teams' unprotected lists for the upcoming expansion draft, but the league still has plenty of work to do when it comes to sharing information with its fans.

While announcing the decision to both publicize the lists and televise the event, deputy commissioner Bill Daly stated Wednesday that "one of our guiding principles from the start of this process was to prioritize transparency," admitting keeping the lists private wouldn't have accomplished that.

The league's general managers didn't initially want to share the lists of players their clubs were leaving unprotected for possible selection by the Vegas Golden Knights, which Daly confirmed, saying he believed GMs "on balance favored maintaining the privacy of the process."

This should come as no surprise to anyone who's followed the NHL recently. While the decisions to reveal the lists and make the expansion draft a TV spectacle represent two steps toward transparency, the league has attempted to conceal information and thus protect its key figures in a host of ways over the years.

The most obvious example is the fact that the NHL allows its clubs to individually set policies about revealing contract terms, rather than insisting teams publish the financial details - which inevitably leak out within minutes of a signing announcement regardless.

Some teams make a point of disclosing their deals, giving year-by-year breakdowns and providing other useful details, but the majority of clubs offer a simple "per club policy, terms were not disclosed" and withhold the info that emerges moments later from one or more of many reliable insiders.

Commissioner Gary Bettman added fuel to the fire a couple of years ago when he said he's not sure fans care about player salaries, despite the overwhelming success of (and demand for) websites like CapGeek and CapFriendly.

Bettman's comments were predictably panned, but it's clear he was speaking on behalf of the league's owners and GMs, who may not enjoy being embarrassed down the road for offering ill-conceived deals.

The NHL's secrecy about injuries is another issue. Unlike the NFL, NBA, and MLB, this is the only league within the four major U.S. pro sports that allows its clubs to be purposefully vague about physical ailments.

Rather than being required to tell reporters - and by extension, fans - what's bothering a player, coaches and GMs can simply resort to calling it an "upper-body" or "lower-body" injury, a practice that's become commonplace in the NHL but nowhere else.

Another strategy the league uses to shield its employees from scrutiny is failing to denote which teams have been officially eliminated from playoff contention on the official standings page. This might not seem like a big deal, but the NBA has no problem publicizing which teams' seasons are effectively over on its official website, and the NHL does identify which teams have clinched postseason berths.

It's another element of the league's clear focus on the positive, which comes with a reluctance at times to present negative news - an approach the NHL takes in a number of ways, some of them ever-so subtle. The adoption of the "loser point" for overtime or shootout losses has been debated since its inception, but it also has a convenient effect on team records, making owners, GMs, and coaches look better in the process.

Maintaining a third column in the standings - which used to be reserved for ties - and dividing a team's losses between two columns makes every team's record more aesthetically pleasing. Although the OTL column certainly matters, there are still only two true outcomes (wins and losses) rather than the three different results seen in pre-shootout times.

When ESPN's Pierre LeBrun first reported the GMs' reluctance to publicize the expansion-draft lists during their meetings earlier in March, it provoked an immediate backlash from members of the hockey media. The next day, Colin Campbell admitted the league was considering changing its mind because the information is "going to get out there."

The NHL's executive vice president and director of hockey operations is exactly right. Whether it's expansion-draft lists, contract details, injuries, teams eliminated from the playoffs, or a club's true win-loss performance, the info is always going to get out thanks to plugged-in reporters and the advent of social media.

Wednesday's announcement was a refreshing acknowledgement of that from the league, but a rich history of truth-averse practices demonstrates the NHL still has a long way to go before it can be considered truly transparent.

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Trending ▲, Trending ▼: Canadian clubs on verge of clinching

Mobile app users - expand the banner below to view more on the race to the playoffs.

Each week, theScore looks at the teams, players, and other hockey figures trending upward and taking a step back.

▲ Calgary Flames

The Flames missed a prime opportunity to clinch a playoff berth Wednesday night, but their 4-1 loss to the Los Angeles Kings likely only delayed the inevitable.

Calgary holds an 11-point lead over Los Angeles, the last Western Conference team outside the postseason picture with any hope of getting in. Time is running out on the Kings, who need to go perfect over their final six games - and even that wouldn't guarantee them a spot.

It's essentially not a matter of if, but when for the Flames, which is commendable considering where they were last season, and earlier in this one.

Brian Elliott wasn't great Wednesday night, but he's improved as the season's progressed, and Calgary could certainly do worse than having a playoff-tested netminder in the fold as it prepares to make its return to the festivities for the first time in three seasons.

▼ New York Islanders

The post-Jack Capuano honeymoon is over for the Islanders, who got off to a great start in the Doug Weight era, but have plummeted since.

New York has lost two in a row and won only four of its last 10 games. While the Islanders still have a shot to squeeze into an Eastern Conference wild-card position, it's unlikely.

The Islanders have a 10.9 percent chance to get in, according to Sports Club Stats, and they'd need to leapfrog the Boston Bruins and the surging Tampa Bay Lightning.

It's not impossible, but it sure looks like the team that plays in Madison Square Garden will be the lone New York representative in the Stanley Cup playoffs.

▲ Montreal Canadiens

No Atlantic Division club has booked a ticket to the postseason dance yet, but that could change Thursday night.

The Canadiens can lock up a spot with a regulation or overtime win against the Florida Panthers, and while Montreal has basically gone wire-to-wire atop the division, it's closing out the regular season the right way.

A three-game sweep of the Ottawa Senators during an eight-day stretch earlier this month opened up some breathing room for Montreal in the Atlantic, and the Canadiens appear primed to put last season's disaster fully behind them with another playoff run.

▼ Florida Panthers

(Photo courtesy: Action Images)

The Panthers haven't been lucky this season, but they also haven't been good.

Injuries to Jonathan Huberdeau and Aleksander Barkov put Florida in a hole earlier this season, while losing Roberto Luongo afterward didn't help. Now James Reimer's hurt, too.

Still, the Panthers have been surpassed by most of their Eastern Conference rivals because they simply haven't been able to score all year (23rd in goals per game at 2.53), and because their rate of power-play success has been woeful at 16.9 percent, sixth-worst in the NHL.

Florida's lost two straight and six of its last 10 games. And while the Panthers haven't yet been officially eliminated, that day is certainly coming soon.

After a historic campaign in 2015-16 and an active offseason spent locking up their core, it's surprising to see the Panthers' hopes all but extinguished this spring.

Mobile app users - expand the banner below to view more on the race to the playoffs.

Copyright © 2017 Score Media Ventures Inc. All rights reserved. Certain content reproduced under license.

Trending ▲, Trending ▼: Canadian clubs on verge of clinching

Mobile app users - expand the banner below to view more on the race to the playoffs.

Each week, theScore looks at the teams, players, and other hockey figures trending upward and taking a step back.

▲ Calgary Flames

The Flames missed a prime opportunity to clinch a playoff berth Wednesday night, but their 4-1 loss to the Los Angeles Kings likely only delayed the inevitable.

Calgary holds an 11-point lead over Los Angeles, the last Western Conference team outside the postseason picture with any hope of getting in. Time is running out on the Kings, who need to go perfect over their final six games - and even that wouldn't guarantee them a spot.

It's essentially not a matter of if, but when for the Flames, which is commendable considering where they were last season, and earlier in this one.

Brian Elliott wasn't great Wednesday night, but he's improved as the season's progressed, and Calgary could certainly do worse than having a playoff-tested netminder in the fold as it prepares to make its return to the festivities for the first time in three seasons.

▼ New York Islanders

The post-Jack Capuano honeymoon is over for the Islanders, who got off to a great start in the Doug Weight era, but have plummeted since.

New York has lost two in a row and won only four of its last 10 games. While the Islanders still have a shot to squeeze into an Eastern Conference wild-card position, it's unlikely.

The Islanders have a 10.9 percent chance to get in, according to Sports Club Stats, and they'd need to leapfrog the Boston Bruins and the surging Tampa Bay Lightning.

It's not impossible, but it sure looks like the team that plays in Madison Square Garden will be the lone New York representative in the Stanley Cup playoffs.

▲ Montreal Canadiens

No Atlantic Division club has booked a ticket to the postseason dance yet, but that could change Thursday night.

The Canadiens can lock up a spot with a regulation or overtime win against the Florida Panthers, and while Montreal has basically gone wire-to-wire atop the division, it's closing out the regular season the right way.

A three-game sweep of the Ottawa Senators during an eight-day stretch earlier this month opened up some breathing room for Montreal in the Atlantic, and the Canadiens appear primed to put last season's disaster fully behind them with another playoff run.

▼ Florida Panthers

(Photo courtesy: Action Images)

The Panthers haven't been lucky this season, but they also haven't been good.

Injuries to Jonathan Huberdeau and Aleksander Barkov put Florida in a hole earlier this season, while losing Roberto Luongo afterward didn't help. Now James Reimer's hurt, too.

Still, the Panthers have been surpassed by most of their Eastern Conference rivals because they simply haven't been able to score all year (23rd in goals per game at 2.53), and because their rate of power-play success has been woeful at 16.9 percent, sixth-worst in the NHL.

Florida's lost two straight and six of its last 10 games. And while the Panthers haven't yet been officially eliminated, that day is certainly coming soon.

After a historic campaign in 2015-16 and an active offseason spent locking up their core, it's surprising to see the Panthers' hopes all but extinguished this spring.

Mobile app users - expand the banner below to view more on the race to the playoffs.

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Maple Leafs recall Kasperi Kapanen

A prized Toronto Maple Leafs prospect is rejoining the youth movement.

The club recalled 20-year-old forward Kasperi Kapanen from the AHL's Toronto Marlies on Monday, and he subsequently joined the NHL team for practice.

He racked up 18 goals and 43 points in 43 games with the Marlies in 2016-17, and was held pointless in a nine-game NHL stint last season.

Kapanen was acquired by the Leafs in the Phil Kessel trade on July 1, 2015, after being drafted 22nd overall by the Pittsburgh Penguins in 2014.

The Leafs also recalled goaltender Garret Sparks from the Marlies on Monday amid uncertainty over whether injured netminder Frederik Andersen will be able to play Tuesday night against the Florida Panthers.

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Julien unfazed after beating Sens again: ‘I fix things, I don’t panic’

Claude Julien insists he's cool as a cucumber.

The Montreal Canadiens head coach tried to assure reporters of his calm demeanor after earning a 3-1 victory Saturday over the Ottawa Senators:

The Canadiens played the Senators three times in eight days and won all three games, prevailing by a combined 7-2 margin in their final two regular-season matchups.

Montreal holds a three-point lead over Ottawa atop the Atlantic Division. The Senators have a game in hand, but three fewer regulation or overtime wins, which would be the tiebreaker at season's end.

The Canadiens are 11-5-1 since firing Michel Therrien and re-hiring Julien on Feb. 14, when they were six points up on the Senators.

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Babcock: Leafs earned ‘absolutely huge point’ in OT loss to Blackhawks

The "loser point" doesn't have a huge fan club, but Toronto Maple Leafs head coach Mike Babcock was proud of his team for securing one by making it to overtime in a loss to the Chicago Blackhawks on Saturday.

"That's a huge point for us (tonight), an absolutely huge point," Babcock told reporters following the 2-1 defeat, according to TSN's Mark Masters.

"Every day you talk about how big the game is, but that's what we're going to do right to the end, obviously," Babcock added.

Auston Matthews ended his seven-game point drought when he opened the scoring in the first period, but John Hayden potted his first career marker in the second and Ryan Hartman tallied the winner for the Western Conference-leading Blackhawks with 17 seconds left in overtime.

Despite the loss, the Leafs restored their one-point lead over the New York Islanders for the second Eastern Conference wild-card spot. The Islanders earned a point of their own earlier Saturday in an overtime loss to the Columbus Blue Jackets.

Toronto has a game in hand on both New York and the Tampa Bay Lightning, who fell 5-3 to the Washington Capitals on Saturday night and now sit two points behind the Leafs.

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Blue Jackets putting serious heat on Capitals in Presidents’ Trophy race

The Washington Capitals haven't had to sweat much in their quest to secure the NHL's top seed, but the Columbus Blue Jackets are cranking up the thermostat down the stretch.

Cam Atkinson's overtime-winner Saturday gave the Blue Jackets their third straight victory and sixth win in their last seven games. It also drew them even with the Capitals for top spot in the Metropolitan Division, the Eastern Conference, and the league as a whole, albeit with an asterisk.

Both teams have 12 games remaining on their regular-season schedules, and both will play five at home and seven on the road, but the Capitals have an easier road to the preliminary hardware.

Washington will close out the regular season with a pair of home-road back-to-backs, but they play the lowly Arizona Coyotes twice and the league-worst Colorado Avalanche once beforehand.

The Blue Jackets close out a back-to-back Sunday, then have to play three more before the postseason begins, so six of their final 11 games will be parts of back-to-back clusters.

Columbus will face Washington twice and battle the Chicago Blackhawks and the Pittsburgh Penguins on the road before season's end, while the Capitals only have two major tests the rest of the way with a road game against the Minnesota Wild and a home date with the New York Rangers.

Still, the two division rivals are headed in opposite directions at the moment. While the Blue Jackets have reeled off seven wins in their last 10 games, the Capitals have lost five of their last six.

The chase for the league's No. 1 spot could be decided April 2, when the Capitals host the Blue Jackets in their final pre-playoff meeting. However, considering the way both clubs have been playing, it might not be decided until the final day of the regular season.

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Maple Leafs’ Martin not worried about Matthews’ pointless skid

Auston Matthews has gone seven games without collecting a point, but the Toronto Maple Leafs aren't hitting the panic button.

Whether it's a case of hitting the "rookie wall," or simply a standard drought that all players go through in an 82-game season, the rookie phenom's most intimidating teammate says he isn't concerned.

“Auston has been - I don’t want to say carrying us all year - but he’s scored a lot of goals for this team,” Matt Martin told The Toronto Star's Kevin McGran. “He’s got 30-plus on the season, he’s been a catalyst offensively all year."

Despite the seven-game slide, Matthews still ranks eighth in the NHL and second among all rookies in goals (31).

The 19-year-old is tied with teammate Mitch Marner for second in points (55) among those in the rookie class. He leads the Leafs in goals and is also tied with Marner for the club lead in points.

Toronto won four of the seven games in which Matthews failed to register a point, and vaulted back into the second Eastern Conference wild-card spot with a shutout win over the Tampa Bay Lightning on Thursday night.

Martin potted a rare goal in the victory, his fifth of the season and first since Jan. 21.

“We’re getting offensive production from other guys when (Matthews isn't) scoring," Martin said. "He’s still playing well. The puck’s not going for him. We have to find ways to win. I’m confident he’ll get back on track.”

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