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Top NHL Rumours of the Week - Leafs Moving Kampf, Oilers Shop Stecher, Schmaltz Talks Stall, Malkin Final Season Buzz

IHM Rumors Insider: Top NHL Rumours of the Week

By IHM Team | IHM Rumors Insider | November 2, 2025

Leafs Moving on from Kampf, Oilers Shopping Stecher, Schmaltz Talks Stall and IHM Sources Say Malkin Playing His Final NHL Season

The NHL rumor mill is roaring as contenders and rebuilders move into the next phase of the season. From Toronto’s cap surgery to Edmonton reshuffling its blue line, this week brings significant whispers and one potentially era defining note from IHM sources.


Evgeni Malkin Expected to Retire After Season IHM Exclusive

According to internal discussions and those close to the player, Evgeni Malkin is strongly leaning toward retiring at season’s end.
Sources indicate the legendary forward is still uncertain about post career plans, exploring hockey media, development roles, and business options.

What’s clear he believes this is his last run.

A future Hall of Famer and one of the defining Russian players in NHL history, Malkin’s transition will be a storyline all year in Pittsburgh with emotion and legacy at the forefront.


Kampf “Done” in Toronto

Toronto placed David Kampf on waivers, sent him to the AHL, and now, per multiple insiders, the two sides may be headed toward a contract termination if a trade cannot be found.

Toronto isn’t chasing assets they just need the $2.4M cap relief. Kampf wants NHL ice time. If nothing materializes, a mutual exit remains possible.

Key takeaway: Toronto is aggressively clearing cap space.


Oilers Preparing to Move Troy Stecher

Healthy players are returning. The roster picture is tightening.
Insiders believe Troy Stecher is the odd man out in Edmonton.

He has value, he’s respected, and GM Jeff Jackson wants to do right by the player. Expect a soft landing trade, potentially to an injury hit team seeking depth.


Schmaltz and Utah Mammoth Far Apart on New Deal

Nick Schmaltz’s breakout year couldn’t come at a worse negotiating time for Utah.
He’s in the league scoring elite tier and wants to be paid for it. Talks are ongoing, but far apart. Utah has cap space, but how much they want to spend is the question.

Market whispers say 9-10M AAV would be needed.


Vancouver Hesitant on Sherwood Extension

Kiefer Sherwood is smashing expectations again and the market is noticing.
The Canucks love him but he’s headed for a major raise from $1.5M.

Talks haven’t even started.
Leverage 100 percent Sherwood’s side right now.

Analysts say deal likely reaches 5M plus AAV.


Cale Makar’s Mega Deal Coming

With Necas locked in, the Avs now face their biggest piece Cale Makar.
He will not take the max cap hit but Colorado must get creative to remain competitive.

Insiders project 12M plus AAV, term 8 years.


Samsonov Leaves NHL, Signs in KHL

Ilya Samsonov signs with HC Sochi, seeking a reset after a turbulent NHL stretch.
Not necessarily the end of his NHL career but that door is closing for now.


Chicago and Bedard Talks Paused

Not stalled strategically paused.
Chicago wants eight years. Bedard camp open to five to maximize future earning window.

Projected number 10-12.5M AAV.


Coach Mark Comment

Consistency is the currency in contract seasons. Some players rise under pressure, others tighten up. The teams that manage emotions and cap realities best will shape the playoff field. Watch the organizations that show patience and clarity, not panic.


Brad Marchand Returns & Leads Panthers to Shootout Win vs Stars | IHM News

Brad Marchand Returns & Leads Panthers to Shootout Win vs Stars | IHM News

by IHM Team | IHM News | October 31, 2025

Marchand Returns With Emotion and Delivers the Win as Panthers Edge Stars in Shootout

Brad Marchand Returns & Leads Panthers to Shootout Win vs Stars | IHM News

Brad Marchand’s return to the lineup was more than a hockey story – it was personal, emotional, and powerful. After stepping away from the Florida Panthers to support longtime friend JP MacCallum following the tragic passing of his 10-year-old daughter, Selah, Marchand came back and immediately wrote a script Hollywood couldn’t improve.

He scored the opening goal, pointed to the sky in tribute, and put the game to bed with the lone shootout tally as Florida defeated Dallas 4-3 in Sunrise. The emotional weight was clear. Marchand wasn’t playing for points; he was playing for someone special. And the Panthers rallied around it.

Sam Reinhart also scored his 300th NHL goal, continuing his elite form and extending his goal streak to four games. Sam Bennett added one, and Sergei Bobrovsky made 19 saves in a night defined by structure, resolve, and heart.

Dallas wasn’t going away quietly. The Stars clawed back twice, including Mikko Rantanen’s equalizer with under three minutes left. But in the end, Marchand – steady, calm, driven – delivered the clincher and carried Florida to two points.

Florida’s win lifts them above .500 at 6-5-1, while Dallas earns a point to extend their streak to six games. But tonight was bigger than standings. It was about emotion, purpose, and honoring a life taken far too soon.

Coach Mark’s Take

Emotional nights like this test the composure of a team. Florida handled it with maturity and structure. Marchand stepped right back in and set the tone, physically and emotionally. Dallas had their pushback, but Florida maintained their discipline and finished. Moments like this build real room chemistry and belief.


Tanev Leaves on Stretcher as Maple Leafs Beat Flyers 5-2 | IHM News

Tanev Leaves on Stretcher as Maple Leafs Beat Flyers 5-2 | IHM News

Tanev Leaves on Stretcher as Maple Leafs Beat Flyers 5-2

by IHM Team | IHM News | November 2, 2025

Veteran blueliner collided with Matvei Michkov in the third period. Toronto says he was moving and speaking and was taken to hospital for evaluation.

Tanev Leaves on Stretcher as Maple Leafs Beat Flyers 5-2 | IHM News

PHILADELPHIA - A scary moment overshadowed the Toronto Maple Leafs’ 5-2 win when Chris Tanev was taken off on a stretcher at 8:23 of the third period after a collision with Matvei Michkov near the Leafs’ blue line. Michkov received a minor penalty for interference.

Head coach Craig Berube said Tanev was moving and speaking and had been transported to a local hospital for tests. He added there is a chance Tanev could be released to travel with the team.

Captain Auston Matthews called it “a tough feeling,” noting the team is hoping for the best. The game was Tanev’s first after missing four with an upper-body injury. He assisted on Jake McCabe’s goal that made it 2-1 in the second period.

Tanev, 35, has two assists in eight games this season. He joined Toronto from Dallas in June 2024 and signed a six-year contract on July 1.

IHM Bench Notes

  • Incident time: 8:23 of the third.
  • Penalty: Interference on Michkov.
  • Next up: Leafs host Penguins on Monday.
  • Tanev career: 874 GP - 36 G - 173 A - 209 PTS.

Coach Mark: For Toronto, Chris Tanev is the backbone of their defensive identity - structure, poise, reliability. The important thing is that he was conscious and moving. In situations like this it’s pure protocol: stabilize, assess, clear.
Tonight wasn’t about systems or execution. It was about a human moment. The two points matter - but health always comes first.


Maple Leafs Working Two Tracks: Cap Relief on Kampf, Hockey Trade for Robertson | IHM News

Maple Leafs Working Two Tracks: Cap Relief on Kampf, Hockey Trade for Robertson | IHM News

By IHM Team | IHM News | November 1, 2025

Maple Leafs Working Two Tracks: Cap Relief on Kampf, Hockey Trade for Robertson

The Toronto Maple Leafs are running parallel trade paths. For David Kampf, management is focused on cap relief, targeting a move that clears his $2.4 million AAV and restores flexibility. For Nick Robertson, the preference is a like-for-like hockey trade with a similar-age player, which narrows the field and complicates timing.

Track 1: Getting off the money with Kampf

Kampf is a dependable depth centre and penalty killer, yet his ticket outweighs his current role in a crowded bottom six. The return is secondary to the cap space gained, which Toronto can reallocate when larger opportunities appear. Expect frameworks that include modest sweeteners or partial retention to accelerate talks.

Track 2: A tighter market for Robertson

Robertson’s case is different. Toronto wants a comparable piece back rather than a futures-only package. Usage dips and limited production reduce leverage, so the Leafs face a sequencing problem: play him to raise the value, or act now and accept a smaller return. A short run in a top-nine look could quickly reshape the conversation.

IHM analysis: leverage, timing, profiles

  • Leverage: Kampf can move first due to clearer valuation and cap utility. Robertson requires patience or a creative one-for-one swap.
  • Timing: Early November moves are rare. Activity typically increases as winter approaches and LTIR situations settle.
  • Potential profiles: Cap-flex teams needing PK help at centre, and rebuilders open to change-of-scenery winger swaps with ice-time runway.

Why this matters for Toronto

These files are clean levers to open space without touching core pieces. Freeing dollars now allows Brad Treliving to attack the market later rather than react to it.

Coach Mark comment

“Cap flexibility is oxygen. If you can turn a fourth-line cap hit into room by December, you set the table for the real move later. With Robertson, I would play him and let him build rhythm off the rush, then decide. Selling low is a tough habit to break.”


Oliver Kapanen is earning trust, minutes, and delivering results - 4 goals, 3 assists, and hard defensive work that coaches love.

Oliver Kapanen is Emerging as a Key Two Way Piece for Montreal | IHM News

IHM News Desk | November 01, 2025

Oliver Kapanen is Emerging as a Key Piece for Montreal

Oliver Kapanen is earning trust, minutes, and delivering results - 4 goals, 3 assists, and hard defensive work that coaches love.

Oliver Kapanen’s arrival in the NHL has not been loud or flashy, but it has been effective, disciplined and very Montreal. The 22 year old centre opened the season fighting for minutes and has quickly carved out a defined role in the Canadiens bottom six, delivering mature, structured hockey far beyond his age.

Kapanen’s foundation was built in Finland, where discipline and two way awareness is the core of development. Add in time in Sweden, strong NHL bloodlines and a calm decision making presence, and Montreal suddenly has a centre who looks tailor made for Martin St. Louis modern system.

A Patient Climb Built the Right Way

Kapanen’s journey was not instant. He bounced between Europe, Laval and Montreal last season, earning his ice time and learning the North American pace. Instead of trying to force offense, he built trust by winning small battles, supporting the puck and staying reliable without it.

Now, that patience is paying dividends. Through seven games he has already produced four goals and three assists, complimenting that with strong penalty killing work and physical engagement. His scoring has not come from highlight plays, but from reading situations early and getting to the right pockets of ice.

A Third Line Centre Growing Fast

The Canadiens continue to construct a competitive identity and Kapanen fits it perfectly: calm, efficient, responsible. His decision making under pressure has impressed the coaching staff, and his ability to quietly tilt shifts in Montreal’s favour is becoming noticeable.

Against Nashville, he delivered a composed late equalizer. Against Buffalo, he opened the scoring. And versus Edmonton he distributed well, picking up two assists. For a player many expected to simply compete for depth minutes, he is performing like a long term middle six solution.

A Feel Good Development Story in Montreal

Kapanen is not here to place himself on highlight reels. He is here to play winning hockey. Montreal fans have seen many prospects arrive with hype and fade. Kapanen has arrived with calm, substance and steadily rising influence.

He is proving that not every breakout needs hype. Some players grow shift by shift, building trust and then adding production. That is Kapanen – and his blend of Finnish detail and quiet confidence is turning into something real.

IHM Team Verdict

The Canadiens are not complete yet, but pieces like Kapanen accelerate the build. If he continues at this pace, he becomes a long term stabilizing centre with penalty kill value, secondary scoring threat and playoff style habits.

He might never be a superstar, and that is perfectly fine. Montreal needs players who do the right things consistently – and Kapanen looks like that player.

For Canadiens fans: enjoy this one. A quietly emerging two way centre with real hockey intelligence does not come along often.

Coach Mark Reaction

“I like the kid’s habits. Nothing forced, nothing rushed. He supports plays the right way, makes smart reads off the puck and understands spacing. That is coaching gold. If he keeps maturing like this, Montreal has a very reliable piece down the middle for years.”


Jacob Markstrom, Devils news, New Jersey Devils, NHL contracts, NHL signings, NHL extensions, Markstrom contract, Devils goalie, NHL goalie news, hockey news today

Devils sign Jacob Markstrom to 2-year, $12M contract | IHM News

Markstrom signs 2-year, $12 million contract with Devils

By IHM Team · IHM News | November 01, 2025

Jacob Markstrom, Devils news, New Jersey Devils, NHL contracts, NHL signings, NHL extensions, Markstrom contract, Devils goalie, NHL goalie news, hockey news today

Goaltender in 2nd season with New Jersey, could have become unrestricted free agent after season

Jacob Markstrom has signed a two-year, $12 million contract with the New Jersey Devils.

It has an average annual value of $6 million and begins with the 2026-27 season.

The 35-year-old goalie is 2-2-0 with a 5.13 goals-against average and .830 save percentage in four games this season. After being injured in a 3-2 win against the Columbus Blue Jackets on Oct. 13, Markstrom returned for Tuesday’s 8-4 loss to the Colorado Avalanche, making 34 saves on 42 shots.

Markstrom was 26-16-6 with a 2.50 goals-against average, .900 save percentage and four shutouts in 49 games for the Devils last season, his first with the team after being acquired in a trade on June 19, 2024.

He is in the final year of a six-year, $36 million contract ($6 million AAV) he signed with the Calgary Flames on Oct. 9, 2020, and could have become an unrestricted free agent after the season.

A second-round pick by the Florida Panthers in the 2008 NHL Draft (No. 31), Markstrom is 243-214-63 with a 2.72 GAA, .908 save percentage and 24 shutouts in 538 regular-season games (520 starts) for the Panthers, Vancouver Canucks, Flames and Devils and 14-17 with a 2.88 GAA, .911 save percentage and two shutouts in 31 Stanley Cup Playoff games.

Coach Mark comment

For New Jersey this is about floor and predictability. Markstrom’s technique and size still give you NHL-level starts, and a 2-year horizon at $6M AAV is a controllable bridge while the pipeline matures. Usage and load management will decide the value.


Necas locked for 8 years. First game after the deal: 1+2 and a statement win in Vegas

Martin Necas Signs Contract with Avalanche; 3-Point Night vs Golden Knights | IHM News

Necas signs 8-year contract with Avalanche; 3-point night vs Golden Knights

By IHM Team · IHM News

Necas signs 8-year contract with Avalanche

Forward could have been UFA after season, was acquired in 3-team trade that sent Rantanen to Hurricanes

Martin Necas signed an eight-year contract with the Colorado Avalanche on Thursday. Financial terms were not disclosed.

“Super excited and happy to get this done,” Necas said after practice on Thursday. “I’m excited for the times ahead now. Now I can just focus on playing hockey, winning hockey games, and do whatever it takes to bring a Cup back here to Colorado.”

The 26-year-old forward could have been an unrestricted free agent after this season. He began his first full season for the Avalanche with an eight-game point streak (six goals, six assists) and has 13 points (seven goals, six assists) in 11 games this season. He got his 40th point in his 38th game since joining the Avalanche, the fastest since the franchise relocated to Denver from Quebec to begin the 1995-96 season.

“I feel like coming into this season, having the whole camp, being with the guys, feel like a real player on the Colorado Avalanche,” he said. “I’ve seen the things we can do on the ice, and I was like, ‘Sign me up.’ The core group here is amazing. I’ve been on a great team in Carolina, and being here, seeing how good the guys are here and how special this group is, it was a big part of why I signed here.”

Necas was acquired by the Avalanche on Jan. 24, 2025, in a three-team trade involving the Carolina Hurricanes and Chicago Blackhawks that sent Mikko Rantanen and Taylor Hall to Carolina. He was among the first six players named to Team Czechia’s preliminary roster for the Olympic Winter Games Milano Cortina 2026.

“It’s going to be nice to finally settle in somewhere and have a long-term contract and just focus on winning and nothing else,” Necas said. “I’m super excited, happy I can call this place home now.”

The No. 12 pick by Carolina in the 2017 NHL Draft, Necas has 339 points (131 goals, 208 assists) in 452 regular-season games with the Hurricanes and Avalanche and 35 points (12 goals, 23 assists) in 66 Stanley Cup Playoff games.

“I think he’s an electric top-line winger at 26, turning 27 years old (in January),” Avalanche general manager Chris McFarland said. “They’re hard to find. They’re hard to acquire. You’ve got to draft them, or it’s a steep price to get [one], whether it’s in free agency or trade. But I think the fit has been really good. And his speed, his skill, his talent blends in really well here, but it would blend in anywhere, to be honest. He’s a very good hockey player, and we’re lucky to have him.”

Necas has 3 points, helps Avalanche hold off Golden Knights

Makar gets goal, assist; Vegas has lost 3 of 4

LAS VEGAS – Martin Necas had a goal and two assists, and the Colorado Avalanche held off the Vegas Golden Knights for a 4-2 victory at T-Mobile Arena on Friday.

It was Necas’ first game since signing an eight-year contract with Colorado on Thursday.

“He was feeling it tonight,” Avalanche coach Jared Bednar said.

Cale Makar had a goal and an assist, and Brock Nelson and Brent Burns also scored for the Avalanche (7-1-4), who have won two in a row after losing four straight. Scott Wedgewood made 21 saves.

“It seems like every night is another big game against another good team,” Burns said. “Obviously, they’re a top team. It’s important to have that kind of mindset every night. But it’s a good way to start the week.”

Tomas Hertl and Mitch Marner each had a goal and an assist for the Golden Knights (6-2-3), who have lost three of four. Carl Lindbom made 22 saves in his second NHL game.

“We obviously had a slower start. They scored on the first shift, but we had some good looks,” Hertl said. “Obviously, in the second, we have a lot of power plays. And sometimes it’s not just about scoring goals but getting the momentum. We got the momentum turned against us because we’ve been just chasing the puck. We actually gave up chances on our power play.”

Necas gave the Avalanche a 1-0 lead 41 seconds into the first period with a one-timer off a Makar cross-ice pass.

“The play they made [at the start]. We went over it nine minutes before the game started,” Vegas coach Bruce Cassidy said. “The coach has to prepare his team to play, right? But as players, you have to start on time. We’re getting to the point here, it’s almost November, and this is a recurring thing.”

Nelson extended it to 2-0 at 4:32 of the second period. Jack Drury took the puck off the bounce after a miscommunication between Ben Hutton and William Karlsson, then fed it to Nelson on the breakaway.

“Karlsson was pulling out when I was sliding it over, and then I was trying to back check,” Hutton said. “It was a tough play by me. Obviously, looking back, it’s easy to say I should have done it. Got to own that one.”

Hertl cut it to 2-1 during a 4-on-3 power play at 2:51 of the third period, sliding the puck underneath Wedgewood’s right pad after cutting across the crease.

“We know they’ve been aggressive, like a lot of teams, and I try to take it to the net,” Hertl said. “Sometimes, we have to keep it simple, get the pucks, shoot. When we get rebounds and stuff, it eventually opens up.”

Burns made it 3-1 at 10:11, finishing a wrist shot while trailing the play. It was the defenseman’s first goal since signing a one-year contract with Colorado on July 2.

“It’s funny how it worked out because in the first period, Necas and I had a similar play, and I didn’t jump in,” Burns said. “He let me know about it, so it was good. I said, ‘You know, big dummy needs to learn the lesson.’ So, it was a great play by him, and it’s nice to see.”

Marner made it 3-2 at 12:01 after he sent the puck toward the goal from the right side before it bounced off Burns into the roof of the net.

Makar then scored an empty-net goal at 18:22 for the 4-2 final.

“It’s another good game to measure ourselves against the other top teams in the League,” Bednar said. “We handled ourselves pretty good. We got an early lead. Obviously, it’s a big start to the game, and we’re able to play with the lead most of the game.

The second period got a little hairy with all the penalties, but 5-on-5, we did a nice job. They obviously pushed in the third period, but then we capitalized at the end. Good, hard-fought game by both teams. It’s good to get the two points.

Coach Mark Comment

Perfect response from a player who just signed long-term. Necas impacts the game with speed and decisions, not just highlights. Colorado secured a core driver and he delivered immediately. That is how you set the tone for a locker room.


Premium NHL Analysis BOSTON vs CAROLINA By Coach Mark Lehtonen

NHL Match Preview: Boston Bruins vs Carolina Hurricanes

Date: 01 November 2025
Venue: TD Garden (Boston, MA)

The TD Garden hosts a marquee Eastern Conference matchup as the Boston Bruins face off against the Carolina Hurricanes. This fixture consistently delivers high-tempo hockey, layered tactical battles, and elite systems play from both benches.

Boston arrives energized, showing strong offensive rhythm and depth contribution across all lines. Their forecheck continues generating dangerous sequences, and home-ice momentum at the Garden remains a factor. Defensively, the Bruins apply tight slot coverage and quick transitional exits-efficiency that often sets their pace early.

Carolina enters with its trademark high-volume shooting model, aggressive neutral-zone structure, and a heavy emphasis on layered puck support. They excel in closing space and forcing turnovers, but health and depth rotation will be key factors in this one. Special teams may also play a significant role, as Carolina typically drives tempo through power-play zone pressure.

Injury notes include key Bruins absences, matched by Carolina’s defensive depth challenges – especially in bottom-pair rotation.

Note: our previous premium analysis was on the Ottawa Senators to win in regulation -and while the Senators earned the victory, it came in overtime. Read our full recap inside the premium section.

Coach Mark Lehtonen has delivered a fresh, detailed tactical breakdown for this matchup – and members can access the full premium insight below.

🔒 Access today’s full Premium Breakdown

Martin Nečas commits to Colorado long-term - Avalanche lock in their speed weapon for 8 years

Martin Nečas Signs 8-Year Contract With Colorado Avalanche | IHM News

by IHM Team | IHM News | October 30, 2025

Martin Nečas commits to Colorado long-term - Avalanche lock in their speed weapon for 8 years

The Colorado Avalanche locked in a key piece of their future, signing forward Martin Nečas to an eight-year contract. The 26-year-old winger, who could have become an unrestricted free agent after this season, chose long-term stability in Denver after a blistering start and seamless fit with Colorado’s core.

Nečas opened the year on an eight-game point streak and already sits at 13 points in 11 games, bringing elite transition speed to the Avs top six. Since arriving via the blockbuster three-team trade last January that sent Mikko Rantanen and Taylor Hall to Carolina, Nečas has produced 40 points in his first 38 games in burgundy and blue. That is the fastest start for a newcomer since the franchise moved to Denver.

“Having a full camp here, being with the guys, it just felt right,” Nečas said. “This is a special group. I wanted to commit.”

A former 12th overall pick, Nečas now cements himself alongside Nathan MacKinnon and Cale Makar as part of Colorado’s championship window. He has 339 career points and continues to evolve into a dynamic dual-threat scoring driver. He was also among the first six players named to Team Czechia’s preliminary roster for Milano Cortina 2026.

Why Colorado Moved Fast

General manager Chris McFarland called Nečas “an electric top-line winger entering his prime.” Players with that speed and play-driving ability almost never hit the market. You either draft them or pay a steep price. Colorado did both: acquired the profile in a bold trade, then kept him before free agency could complicate the picture.

What The Numbers Say

  • 13 points in 11 games to start the season
  • 8-game point streak out of the gate
  • 40 points in first 38 Avalanche games since the trade
  • 339 NHL points overall across Carolina and Colorado

Production is only part of the story. Nečas extends possessions, attacks with pace, and fits Colorado’s pressure identity. He is a clean schematic match.

Coach Mark Lehtonen’s Take

“Smart move from both sides. Nečas fits Colorado’s speed and pressure style. He extends plays, attacks downhill, and creates off motion. You do not let those guys walk. For the Avs, it is about keeping a Cup window wide open. For Nečas, it is about the right room and a winning standard. He has earned this.”

IHM Verdict

This is the kind of deal that stabilizes a contender. Colorado keeps a prime-age top-line winger who fits their identity and timeline. For Nečas, it is clarity and a real shot at rings in Denver.

Author: IHM Team | Commentary by Coach Mark Lehtonen

Category: IHM News | Date: October 30, 2025


Premium NHL Analysis - 31 Oct 2025 Ottawa Senators vs Calgary Flames

Ottawa Senators vs Calgary Flames – Match Preview

Ottawa hosts Calgary tonight at Canadian Tire Centre in a matchup of contrasting momentum and structure. The Senators have found rhythm with disciplined puck support, aggressive forechecking pressure, and confident puck movement through the middle lane.

Calgary continues to seek consistency after a challenging stretch, with defensive gaps and breakout instability creating problems under sustained pressure. Depth scoring remains a question, and system execution has fluctuated in recent outings.

Ottawa’s ability to generate layered offense and force turnovers in transition gives them a stability edge on home ice. Expect a high-tempo matchup with a strong focus on tactical execution.

Yesterday’s tactical breakdown on Boston was executed cleanly – another strong read from Coach Mark’s system.

Full breakdown & Coach Mark’s private verdict available in Premium.

Unlock Premium Access