Sports
NHL roundup: Despite loss, Sabres end NHL-record 14-year playoff drought
Apr 4, 2026; Washington, District of Columbia, USA; Buffalo Sabres center Tage Thompson (72) talks with Sabres defenseman Rasmus Dahlin (26) prior top a face-off against the Washington Capitals during the second period at Capital One Arena. Mandatory Credit: Geoff Burke-Imagn Images Despite taking a 6-2 loss to the host Washington Capitals on Saturday, the Buffalo Sabres ended their NHL-record 14-year postseason drought on Saturday thanks to Detroit’s regulation loss to the New York Rangers earlier in the day.
Logan Thompson made 37 saves for Washington in the convincing win.
Jakob Chychrun, Aliaksei Protas and Connor McMichael each had a goal and an assist for the Capitals, who have won four of their past five games. Washington took a 3-0 lead in just over two and a half minutes early in the first.
Rasmus Dahlin had a goal and an assist and Beck Malenstyn scored for the Sabres, who are even on points for second place in the Atlantic Division.
Canadiens 4, Devils 3 (SO)
Oliver Kapanen scored in the fifth round of the shootout to extend Montreal’s win streak to eight games with a victory over New Jersey in Newark, N.J.
Cole Caufield failed to find his 50th goal of the season, but tallied a pair of assists in the win. Ivan Demidov, Jayden Struble, and Lane Hutson all scored for the Canadiens, who got 35 saves from Jakub Dobes.
Jack Hughes, Timo Meier and Dawson Mercer all scored for the Devils, with Jake Allen stopping 26 shots.
Avalanche 2, Stars 0
Martin Necas and Nathan MacKinnon scored goals in the final 9:21 to break a scoreless tie and help visiting Colorado blank Dallas in a battle of the top two Western Conference teams.
MacKinnon added to his league lead with his 52nd goal on an empty-netter after Necas netted his career-high 36th goal. Scott Wedgewood made 17 saves for his third shutout of the season.
Casey DeSmith made 20 saves for the Stars, who fell to 3-6-2 since a 14-0-1 run skyrocketed them up the standings.
Kings 7, Maple Leafs 6 (OT)
Quinton Byfield scored his second goal of the game at 2:33 of overtime to lift Los Angeles past visiting Toronto.
The Kings took a 6-4 lead with three goals in 1:36 of the third period, and Toronto rallied to tie the game. Adrian Kempe had two goals and two assists for the Kings. Artemi Panarin added a goal and two assists while Samuel Helenius and Alex Laferriere also scored.
Matthew Knies had two goals and an assist and John Tavares had a goal and two assists for the Maple Leafs. Steven Lorentz, Easton Cowan and Nicholas Robertson also scored. Joseph Woll made 33 saves.
Penguins 9, Panthers 4
Evgeni Malkin recorded his first hat trick in more than four years, Sidney Crosby climbed ahead of Steve Yzerman in the record books and a six-goal second period moved Pittsburgh two points closer to a playoff spot as the Penguins walloped visiting Florida.
A dozen players registered at least a point for Pittsburgh, with Crosby’s two assists giving him 1,756 career points, placing him one ahead of Yzerman for seventh on the NHL all-time points list. Malkin’s hat trick was the 14th of his career. Arturs Silovs stopped 19 shots for the Penguins.
A.J. Greer had a goal and an assist, while Seth Jones, Noah Gregor and Mackie Samoskevich also scored for the Panthers, whose three-peat hopes officially came to an end as they became the first Stanley Cup defending champion to miss the ensuing season’s playoffs since the Los Angeles Kings in 2015.
Jets 2, Blue Jackets 1
Kyle Connor scored twice as visiting Winnipeg defeated Columbus. The loss prevented the Blue Jackets from gaining ground in the Eastern Conference playoff race, leaving them tied with Ottawa, Detroit and Philadelphia, with the Senators holding the tiebreaker for the final wild-card spot on regulation wins.
Conversely, the victory kept the Jets firmly in the mix for the Western Conference’s final wild-card spot. Mark Scheifele picked up both primary assists for Winnipeg. Connor Hellebuyck made 15 saves for the Jets.
Ivan Provorov scored the lone goal for the Blue Jackets, who have lost six straight games. Columbus’ Jet Greaves made 23 stops.
Golden Knights 5, Oilers 1
Defenseman Jeremy Lauzon and forward Brett Howden had a goal and an assist each to lead Vegas to a win over host Edmonton which moved the Golden Knights just a point back of the Pacific Division lead.
Colton Sissons, captain Mark Stone and defenseman Rasmus Andersson also scored for the Golden Knights, who won their third straight under new coach John Tortorella thanks in part to 31 saves from Carter Hart.
Defenseman Evan Bouchard got the goal for the Oilers, who had their five-game winning streak snapped and remain tied on points for the Pacific Division lead with the Anaheim Ducks.
Hurricanes 4, Islanders 3
Seth Jarvis scored two goals to go with an assist in host Carolina’s victory against New York.
The Hurricanes never led until Sebastian Aho’s short-handed goal with 3:43 remaining in the second period. Jackson Blake also scored for the Canes and K’Andre Miller had two assists. Brandon Bussi made 13 saves to improve his record to 29-6-1.
Marc Gatcomb, Max Shabanov and Anders Lee had the goals for the Islanders, who have a four-game losing streak for the first time this season. llya Sorokin, playing in his 11th consecutive game, stopped 36 shots.
Predators 6, Sharks 3
Tyson Jost set up the game winner, the insurance marker and added an empty-netter in the third period as visiting Nashville doubled up San Jose to move into the second wild-card spot in the Western Conference.
Filip Forsberg scored twice and added an assist, while Steven Stamkos, Ryan O’Reilly and Erik Haula also scored for the Predators. Juuse Saros made 24 saves.
Nick Leddy scored and added an assist, and Macklin Celebrini and Alexander Wennberg scored for the Sharks, who erased a 3-0 first-period deficit but had their four-game winning streak snapped.
Lightning 3, Bruins 1
Darren Raddysh’s game winner also broke a franchise record as Tampa Bay closed its seven-game homestand with a three-goal third period in a win over Boston.
Raddysh netted his 21st goal with 5:31 remaining, marking the most goals by a Lightning defenseman in a single season. Tampa Bay, which also got 21 saves from Andrei Vasilevskiy, clinched its ninth straight playoff appearance before taking the ice due to other Saturday results.
Casey Mittelstadt tallied for the Bruins, who are 0-2-0 on their four-game road trip. Goalie Jeremy Swayman stopped 20 shots.
Blackhawks 4, Kraken 2
Sacha Boisvert scored his first NHL goal as Chicago defeated host Seattle, further damaging the Kraken’s dwindling playoff hopes.
Ilya Mikheyev had a goal and an assist, Teuvo Teravainen and Tyler Bertuzzi also tallied, and Wyatt Kaiser had two assists for the Blackhawks, reduced to the role of spoiler after being eliminated from postseason contention with a 3-1 loss Thursday at Edmonton. Goaltender Arvid Soderblom made 25 saves.
Jaden Schwartz had a goal and an assist and Kaapo Kakko also scored for the Kraken, who lost their fourth in a row and for the eighth time in their past nine games to drop into seventh place in the Western Conference’s wild-card playoff race, six points out of the final spot.
Mammoth 7, Canucks 4
Clayton Keller collected his third career hat trick in a four-point game to lead visiting Utah to a victory over cellar-dwelling Vancouver.
Dylan Guenther and Lawson Crouse both scored once and added an assist for the Mammoth, who pulled closer to clinching a playoff berth.
Linus Karlsson scored twice while Jake DeBrusk and Marco Rossi added single tallies for the Canucks, who have lost eight of nine games.
Flames 5, Ducks 3
Morgan Frost scored twice while Joel Farabee and Matvei Gridin both collected one goal and one assist to lead visiting Calgary to an upset of slumping Anaheim.
Goaltender Devin Cooley made 36 saves and held strong while the Ducks frantically pushed for the equalizer in a comeback that fell short after the Flames scored four straight goals to take a 4-1 lead into the third period.
Beckett Sennecke, Leo Carlsson and Mason McTavish scored for Anaheim, which is winless in five games (0-4-1) and squandered a chance to move back atop the Pacific Division.
Rangers 4, Red Wings 1
Rookie Gabe Perreault scored twice in the third period to deliver his first career hat trick as New York shut down visiting Detroit.
Jaroslav Chmelar also scored a goal, Adam Fox had two assists and Jonathan Quick narrowly missed a shutout, making 31 saves for the Rangers and allowing his only goal with 33 seconds left.
David Perron scored a goal and John Gibson made 16 saves for the Red Wings, who have lost five of seven to hinder their playoff chances.
Wild 4, Senators 1
Ryan Hartman scored twice for Minnesota in a win against Ottawa in Saint Paul, Minn.
Jonas Brodin and Jake Middleton also scored, Mats Zuccarello had two assists and Jesper Wallstedt made 33 saves for the Wild, who have won two straight for the first time in a month.
Drake Batherson scored a late goal and Linus Ullmark made 19 saves for the Senators, who remain in the second and final wild-card spot in the Eastern Conference despite having lost four of five.
–Field Level Media
Sports
Blue bloods Denver, Wisconsin clash in Frozen Four championship game
Apr 9, 2026; Las Vegas, Nevada, UNITED STATES; Wisconsin Badgers defenseman Aiden Dubinsky (28) celebrates with goalie Daniel Hauser (31) after defeating North Dakota Fighting Hawks in the semifinals of the NCAA men’s ice hockey Frozen Four at T-Mobile Arena. Mandatory Credit: Lucas Peltier-Imagn Images The first-ever Frozen Four played in Las Vegas culminates with historic blue bloods Denver and Wisconsin meeting for a national championship on Saturday.
The competitors have taken different paths to the ultimate game. Denver (28-11-3) carries 12-game winning and 16-game unbeaten streaks to be within one victory of its record 11th all-time title. Wisconsin (24-12-2) seeks to complete a Cinderella run to its first crown in two decades after receiving a proverbial second life in the NCAA tournament following a Big Ten quarterfinal loss.
In their semifinal round games on Thursday, both teams bent but didn’t break.
The Pioneers, who recently won it all in both 2022 and 2024, were outshot 52-26 but topped No. 1 overall seed Michigan 4-3 on senior captain and defenseman Kent Anderson’s double-overtime goal. It was the third-longest game in Frozen Four history.
“It means everything to play in this national championship game,” Anderson said. “It’s our goal at the beginning of the year. It’s what we work for and what we play for at Denver.”
Though the Pioneers boast a Frozen Four-high 15 NHL draft picks, this time of year in hockey is all about unsung heroes. Anderson is certainly one of those, having scored just one previous goal this season and five in his first 148 career games.
“Really proud of him and how he’s led this team,” Denver coach David Carle said. “Not many had him on the ‘BucciOT Challenge.’ No matter.”
Meanwhile, the Badgers got goals from Simon Tassy and Ryan Botterill 27 seconds apart in the first period and went 5-for-5 on the penalty kill — including 1:57 of 5-on-3 time in the second — before holding off a late North Dakota surge in a 2-1 win.
“It doesn’t have to be (a) Mona Lisa,” Wisconsin coach Mike Hastings said. “You just have to find a way to make sure you’re living for another day.”
The Badgers entered Thursday with the second-worst penalty kill in the country (70.9%), but they stepped up at the most crucial time against a high-octane offense.
“Guys took a lot of effort on blocking shots, getting in lanes,” said defenseman Ben Dexheimer, who propelled Wisconsin to its first Frozen Four since 2010 with an overtime goal for a 4-3 win over regional top seed Michigan State on March 28 in Worcester, Mass.
Denver is at its best on the back end, having entered the Frozen Four tied for the fourth-best scoring defense in the country (2.10 goals per game).
On that note, the best penalty killers and key reasons why both teams advanced were the goaltenders: Wisconsin’s Daniel Hauser and Denver’s Johnny Hicks — both older freshmen with past Canadian major junior experience.
Hauser made 21 saves in Thursday’s game, posting his eighth win in nine starts.
However, no goalie on the planet is on a hotter run than Hicks, who is an incredible 15-0-1 with a .957 save percentage since taking over the net from Quentin Miller in December. He stopped a season-high 49 shots against Michigan, staying in the game after taking a third-period hit on a drive to the net.
“He’s a battler. He’s unfazed. He was our best player,” Carle said. “Made the saves you’re supposed to. Made a lot that he wasn’t supposed to.”
The two teams had one previous national championship meeting in Boston in 1973, with Wisconsin winning 4-2. That was the first of six Badgers titles, the most recent coming in 2006.
–Field Level Media
Sports
Birdie barrage gives Rory McIlroy largest 36-hole lead in Masters history
Apr 10, 2026; Augusta, Georgia, USA; Rory McIlroy reacts after a putt on the 18th green during the second round of the Masters Tournament at Augusta National Golf Club. Mandatory Credit: Katie Goodale-Imagn Images AUGUSTA, Ga. — Rory McIlroy’s quest to become the fourth player to win consecutive Masters might turn into a 36-hole march toward history thanks to a late birdie barrage on Friday that gave him a record six-shot lead heading into the weekend at Augusta National.
McIlroy carded six birdies over his final seven holes — including a chip-in from 29 yards on No. 17 — to shoot a 7-under-par 65 and sit at 12 under halfway through the 90th Masters. It’s one shot better than the score McIlroy posted in 72 holes last April before winning his first green jacket in a playoff.
“I knew I had some chances coming in when I was standing on the 12th tee, but I didn’t think I’d birdie six of the last seven,” McIlroy said. “It just shows what you can do around here.”
The Northern Irishman will be paired in Saturday’s final group with Sam Burns, who shared the 18-hole lead with McIlroy at 5 under. Burns also took advantage of a back nine at Augusta National that gave way to unexpectedly low scores Friday. He closed with three birdies over his final four holes to get under par for the day with a 71 and become the first to reach the clubhouse at 6 under.
Burns moved into the final pairing when Patrick Reed’s 6-foot par putt on the 18th hole slid left of the cup. That left the 2018 Masters champion with matching 69s to sit at 6 under for the tournament. Reed briefly tied the lead with a birdie on No. 12 to reach 6 under for the first time, which occurred while McIlroy was bogeying No. 10.
Reed climbed to 7 under before suffering his lone bogey of the day at 18.
“The worst part and the thing that frustrated me most is I hit every golf shot how I wanted to,” Reed said. “On 18 you’re having to get up and down, and then hit the putt where I wanted to and just doesn’t go in. Things like that happen around here. In golf in general.”
Playing three groups behind Reed, McIlroy was catching fire. He started with a birdie on the 12th hole that surrendered 19 on the day, then drove it into the pine straw on 13 yet managed a birdie anyway. McIlroy repeated the scrambling act on the par-5 15th hole and knocked it to three feet for birdie on the par-3 16th before his Houdini act on 17. The Northern Irishman then hit his approach to six feet on 18 to set the stage for the closing birdie.
McIlroy holds the largest 36-hole lead in Masters history — and the third largest in any major — despite hitting only five fairways on Friday and 13 of 28 through two rounds. He has managed to hit 13 greens both days while relying heavily on his short game.
“But my wedge play today was really good. My short game the first two days has been amazing,” McIlroy said. “I’ve built up a nice cushion at this point. My mindset is just trying to keep playing well and keeping my foot on the gas.”
If he’s able to close out the victory, he would join Jack Nicklaus (1965-66), Nick Faldo (1989-1990) and Tiger Woods (2001-02) as the only players to win consecutive Masters. Only 18 players have won multiple Masters titles at any point in their careers.
“I think the next two days for me is really about focusing on myself,” McIlroy said. “It’s hard to avoid those big leaderboards out there, but like I know that I’ve got a lead. So, I don’t need to keep checking it all the time. For me, just really focusing on myself and staying in my own little world out there is the best thing.”
Reed will be paired on Saturday with England’s Justin Rose, who was the first of three players to reach the clubhouse at 5 under on Friday.
For a while, it appeared Rose might be set up for a Saturday pairing with McIlroy 12 months after their dramatic playoff showdown. Rose reached 5 under with a birdie on the 11th hole before immediately giving it back on the 12th. He battled back with a birdie on the 15th and parred out from there.
England’s Tommy Fleetwood and Ireland’s Shane Lowry are also at 5 under and will be paired on Saturday. Another shot back is Tyrrell Hatton, who set the tone for the lower-than-expected scoring in the second round by posting a 6-under 66. He is at 4 under along with Wyndham Clark, Cameron Young, Australia’s Jason Day, China’s Haotong Li and Kristoffer Reitan, only the second Norwegian to compete in the Masters.
“This is my best start thus far at Augusta and I’m just really excited to be in this position,” said Clark, whose only other sub-par score in seven previous rounds at the Masters was also a 68 in last year’s second round. “This morning kind of throughout the whole day wasn’t as firm as yesterday. I know we went off in the morning, typically it’s softer.
“I think as the tournament goes on, I mean, these greens are going to be concrete. Obviously getting really fast without the wind, so it’s going to really matter hitting it in the fairway and the angles and being patient.”
The extremely difficult conditions predicted by many players after scores rose throughout Thursday’s first round never materialized on Friday. The scoring average dropped nearly two shots, from 74.65 to 72.85. After only five players broke 70 in the first round, there were 20 scores in the 60s on Friday.
“There wasn’t a ton of wind. It felt somewhat gettable,” Rose said. “I thought the pins were just a little easier than yesterday.”
Scottie Scheffler, who was unable to capitalize on the conditions, said he expects Augusta National’s teeth to return for the weekend. The two-time Masters champion and World No. 1 struggled to a 74 that left him at even par for the tournament and 12 shots off McIlroy’s lead.
“I felt like the greens would get firmer as the week went on, but I think they may have saw how difficult it was late in the day yesterday,” Scheffler said. “It felt like they softened them up a bit today, but I couldn’t imagine them doing that the rest of the weekend.”
–Derek Harper, Field Level Media
Sports
Maple Leafs, Panthers play out the string with youngsters
Sep 21st, 2025; Ottawa, Ontario, CAN; Toronto Maple Leafs goalie Artur Akhtyamov (70) loses sight of the puck following a shot by Ottawa Senators center Ridly Greig (71) in the third period at the Canadian Tire Centre. Mandatory Credit: Marc DesRosiers-IMAGN Images The Toronto Maple Leafs will host the Florida Panthers in something of an anticlimactic Saturday night bout.
The reigning Stanley Cup champion Panthers (37-38-4, 78 points) and their 2025 Eastern Conference semifinal victims find themselves at the bottom of the Atlantic Division with three games remaining.
The Maple Leafs (32-33-14, 78 points), who will miss their first postseason since 2016, continued their downward spiral on Thursday night with an ugly 5-3 loss to the New York Islanders. Rookie netminder Artur Akhtyamov faced 44 shots in his first NHL start.
“We had 60 shot attempts or so tonight. Fifteen of them hit the net,” Maple Leafs coach Craig Berube said after his team’s fourth consecutive loss. “That’s really a lot of the story for me.”
The silver lining to Toronto’s late-season turmoil is the potential to rescue its first-round pick. The Leafs dealt it to the Boston Bruins in March 2025 as part of the trade to acquire defenseman Brandon Carlo. If they finish in the league’s bottom five, though, the Maple Leafs retain the pick and Boston must wait for either their 2027 or 2028 first-round selection depending on their fortunes next season.
Five NHL teams enter Saturday’s action with fewer than 78 points, but the bottom five remains realistic for Toronto as the Seattle Kraken are fifth-worst with 77 points and one additional game to play.
It may well be someone from the Florida Panthers’ front office tasked with retooling the Maple Leafs this offseason, regardless of where that draft pick lands. Panthers assistant general manager Sunny Mehta has emerged as the betting favorite to become Toronto’s next general manager after the recent firing of Brad Treliving.
A slew of injuries has left the Leafs’ lineup decorated with new faces and elevated role players. Forward Luke Haymes made his NHL debut against the Islanders and recorded his first point. Rookie Easton Cowan, who tied the game in the second period, was fourth among Toronto forwards with 18:54 of ice time.
“I like to say ‘work before skill’ a lot of the time. I think (Cowan) has kind of grabbed that side of things,” said Berube, who did not provide an update on injuries to goaltender Anthony Stolarz, forward Dakota Joshua or Carlo. “Easton works and skates. He gets rewarded.”
Player-for-player, though, the Panthers are the substantially more depleted team. Defenseman Seth Jones joined their sprawling list of injury absences after breaking his foot in their Tuesday night loss to Montreal. That list includes Aleksander Barkov, Aaron Ekblad, Brad Marchand, Sam Reinhart and Niko Mikkola. Matthew Tkachuk missed the last two games to be with his wife for the birth of his first child.
Given the circumstances, coach Paul Maurice was empathetic after the Panthers’ 5-1 loss to the Ottawa Senators on Thursday. He had particularly high praise for defensemen Marek Alscher and Ludvig Jansson after their NHL debuts.
“Really, really happy with his game,” Maurice said of Alscher, who logged nearly 20 minutes of ice time. “That’s an awful lot to ask a guy and then to go in with another guy who spent most of his time in the American (Hockey) League.”
Berube and Maurice both indicated they would continue to experiment on Saturday.
Toronto has won two of the teams’ three meetings this season. The Panthers hope to snap their own four-game losing streak. They have allowed 22 goals over the difficult stretch.
–Field Level Media
