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NHL Daily Recap - December 28, 2025 | IHM News

NHL Daily Recap - December 28, 2025 | IHM News

NHL Daily Recap - December 28, 2025

Date: December 28, 2025
Author: IHM News


New York Islanders 2 - 0 New York Rangers

A classic New York defensive battle ended with the Islanders shutting out the Rangers. Despite similar shot volume, the Islanders converted twice while allowing zero goals on 27 shots, backed by perfect goaltending.

  • Shots on Goal: 26 - 27
  • Shooting Percentage: 7.69% - 0%
  • Save Percentage: 100% - 96%

Buffalo Sabres 4 - 1 Boston Bruins

Buffalo controlled the game with superior shot volume and efficiency. Boston struggled to convert chances, finishing with just one goal on 22 shots.

  • Shots on Goal: 34 - 22
  • Shooting Percentage: 11.76% - 4.55%
  • Save Percentage: 95.45% - 90.91%

Carolina Hurricanes 5 - 2 Detroit Red Wings

Carolina dictated tempo from start to finish, outshooting Detroit heavily and converting at a higher rate. Detroit’s goaltender faced constant pressure throughout the night.

  • Shots on Goal: 38 - 20
  • Shooting Percentage: 13.16% - 10%
  • Save Percentage: 90% - 89.19%

Florida Panthers 2 - 4 Tampa Bay Lightning

Tampa Bay capitalized on efficiency, scoring four goals on 25 shots. Florida generated volume but lacked finishing, converting under eight percent of attempts.

  • Shots on Goal: 26 - 25
  • Shooting Percentage: 7.69% - 16%
  • Save Percentage: 87.5% - 92.31%

New Jersey Devils 3 - 4 Washington Capitals (OT)

Washington survived a high-paced overtime contest. Despite being outshot, the Capitals converted key chances and received timely saves to secure the extra point.

  • Shots on Goal: 38 - 33
  • Shooting Percentage: 7.89% - 12.12%
  • Save Percentage: 87.88% - 92.11%

Toronto Maple Leafs 7 - 5 Ottawa Senators

A high-scoring affair saw Toronto edge Ottawa with superior finishing. Both teams traded chances, but Toronto’s 21% shooting rate proved decisive.

  • Shots on Goal: 33 - 31
  • Shooting Percentage: 21.21% - 16.13%
  • Save Percentage: 83.87% - 81.25%

Winnipeg Jets 3 - 4 Minnesota Wild (OT)

Minnesota capitalized on limited chances, converting over 21% of shots. Winnipeg controlled possession but could not solve Minnesota’s goaltender in overtime.

  • Shots on Goal: 26 - 19
  • Shooting Percentage: 11.54% - 21.05%
  • Save Percentage: 78.95% - 88.46%

Dallas Stars 3 - 4 Chicago Blackhawks (SO)

Chicago prevailed in a shootout after an evenly matched contest. Both teams finished with identical shooting percentages, forcing the game beyond regulation.

  • Shots on Goal: 31 - 33
  • Shooting Percentage: 9.68% - 9.09%
  • Save Percentage: 90.91% - 90.32%

St. Louis Blues 3 - 2 Nashville Predators

St. Louis relied on goaltending and efficiency, scoring three times on 20 shots while blocking 19 attempts defensively.

  • Shots on Goal: 20 - 32
  • Shooting Percentage: 15% - 6.25%
  • Save Percentage: 93.75% - 85%

Los Angeles Kings 6 - 1 Anaheim Ducks

The Kings dominated Anaheim with ruthless finishing. Los Angeles scored six goals on 30 shots while allowing just one goal against.

  • Shots on Goal: 30 - 26
  • Shooting Percentage: 20% - 3.85%
  • Save Percentage: 96.15% - 80%

Calgary Flames 3 - 2 Edmonton Oilers

A tight Battle of Alberta ended with Calgary edging Edmonton thanks to stronger finishing and disciplined defensive play.

  • Shots on Goal: 32 - 31
  • Shooting Percentage: 9.38% - 6.45%
  • Save Percentage: 93.55% - 90.63%

Vancouver Canucks 3 - 6 San Jose Sharks

San Jose exploded offensively, converting over 16% of shots. Vancouver generated opportunities but could not keep pace defensively.

  • Shots on Goal: 26 - 37
  • Shooting Percentage: 11.54% - 16.22%
  • Save Percentage: 86.11% - 88.46%

Vegas Golden Knights 5 - 6 Colorado Avalanche (SO)

An extraordinary goaltending duel ended in a shootout. Both teams posted 100% save percentages during regulation despite heavy shot volume.

  • Shots on Goal: 25 - 39
  • Blocked Shots: 8 - 27
  • Goaltender Saves: 39 - 25
  • Shooting Percentage: 20% - 12.82%
  • Save Percentage: 87.18% - 80%

Coach Mark Comment

This game day perfectly illustrated the modern NHL reality. Shot volume alone no longer guarantees results. Efficiency, goaltending under pressure, and execution in overtime continue to separate winning teams from losing ones.

Q&A - December 28 NHL Recap

What defined this game day?
Finishing efficiency and overtime execution.

Which teams impressed most?
Toronto, Los Angeles, San Jose, and Minnesota.

How important was goaltending?
Decisive in multiple games, especially Islanders vs Rangers and Vegas vs Colorado.

How many games went beyond regulation?
Four games required overtime or shootouts.

Biggest offensive performance?
Toronto’s seven-goal outing and San Jose’s six-goal win.

Key trend?
Teams converting above 15% almost always controlled the outcome.

Who should be concerned?
Anaheim, Edmonton, and Vancouver due to defensive breakdowns.

League takeaway?
Parity remains high. Margins are thin, and efficiency decides nights.


NHL SHORT ICE - Top Stories in Minutes | December 24, 2025

NHL SHORT ICE - Top Stories in Minutes | December 24, 2025

🏒 NHL SHORT ICE - All Key Stories in Minutes

December 24, 2025 | IHM News

Short hockey news for busy professionals who want to stay informed without reading long articles.

🔥 Top Results and Momentum

Larkin ties it late, lifts Red Wings past Stars in OT
Detroit forces overtime with late pressure before Dylan Larkin finishes the job. The Red Wings stayed patient, survived Dallas zone time, and struck when structure finally cracked.

Domi lifts Maple Leafs past Penguins to end skid
Toronto snaps a losing stretch as Max Domi delivers the decisive goal. Leafs simplified their game, limited turnovers, and finally converted off sustained zone time.

Canadiens score five straight, surge past Bruins
Montreal flips the game completely with relentless pace and transition speed. Once momentum turned, Boston never recovered defensive balance.

Byram wins it in OT, Sabres stay hot against Senators
Buffalo continues its strong run as Bowen Byram seals overtime. The Sabres controlled spacing and punished Ottawa’s late coverage errors.

Pelech scores in third period, Islanders top Devils
New York leans on structure and defensive discipline. Adam Pelech’s third-period goal rewards sustained pressure and tight neutral-zone control.

Stamkos scores in OT, Predators edge Wild
Nashville stays composed into extra time before Steven Stamkos delivers the winner. Predators managed risk well and waited for a clean look.

Wedgewood makes 32 saves, Avalanche shut out Mammoth
Colorado dominates defensively as Scott Wedgewood turns aside every chance. The Avalanche protected the slot and eliminated second opportunities.

Daccord makes 35 saves, Kraken edge Kings
Seattle survives heavy pressure behind Joey Daccord. The Kraken absorbed volume but defended the middle effectively to secure the result.

Canadiens handle Bruins in Original Six fight fest
A physical, emotional matchup swings Montreal’s way. Energy shifts and net-front battles defined a rivalry game played on the edge.

Draisaitl hat trick powers Oilers into break
Leon Draisaitl takes over offensively with a dominant three-goal night. Edmonton enters the break with confidence and scoring rhythm.

Maple Leafs back Berube, end skid at three
Toronto management reinforces stability as the team responds on the ice. The win brings a needed reset after a short downturn.

Lafreniere hits milestone as Rangers rally
New York pushes back after falling behind, with Alexis Lafreniere reaching a personal milestone during the comeback effort.

📰 Top Headlines

ECHL players near strike amid CBA impasse
Labor tension rises as ECHL negotiations stall. The situation highlights growing pressure points in the professional hockey pipeline.

Predators ownership backs adding Saban to fold
Nashville leadership signals confidence in expanding its organizational influence, calling the move a clear strategic decision.

❓ IHM Q&A - NHL Short News (24 December 2025)

Why was Detroit’s overtime win significant?
Because they stayed structured under pressure and capitalized late. That combination travels well against playoff-caliber teams.

What changed for Toronto against Pittsburgh?
Simplicity. Fewer risky plays, cleaner exits, and better shot selection made the difference.

How did Montreal overwhelm Boston?
Speed through the neutral zone and relentless follow-up pressure turned one goal into a full momentum swing.

Why are the Sabres staying hot?
They are managing spacing better and finishing on high-quality looks rather than chasing volume.

What does the ECHL situation signal?
It shows how critical labor stability is across all professional levels, not just the NHL spotlight.


Milan 2026 in Trouble? Why the NHL Could Still Pull Its Players | IHM News

Milan 2026 in Trouble? Why the NHL Could Still Pull Its Players | IHM News

Milan 2026 in Trouble? Why the NHL Could Still Pull Its Players

December 2025 | IHM News

Sochi 2014. The last time Olympic hockey truly delivered what it is supposed to be: best on best. Since then, twelve years have passed. A full generation has changed, and the sport itself has become faster, heavier, and more expensive at the top end.

Connor McDavid went from a promising junior to a living NHL legend without playing a single second on the Olympic stage. Auston Matthews rewrote goal-scoring standards but never wore a USA jersey at the main tournament of the four-year cycle. Twelve years of waiting. Twelve years of promises. And now, with less than two months to go, clouds are gathering again over Milan 2026.

Groups, format, and the risk of an early exit

The tournament format and group stage already raise questions. One scenario being discussed is that a group featuring Sweden could theoretically push Canada into an extra qualification game, where a single random bounce against a team like Latvia could end a favorite’s run.

But the bigger intrigue is deeper. For the first time in a long time, Team USA does not look like a dark horse. They look like a potential favorite. Their overall roster depth, especially on defense, is arguably stronger than Canada’s right now. And it is not crazy to think the USA could win Olympic gold for the first time since 1980.

Why the NHL revealed early “first six” lists

In the summer of 2025, top national teams began naming their initial “first six” players for the Olympics. This is not a cosmetic announcement. It is a foundation. Coaches like Mike Sullivan for the USA and Jon Cooper for Canada gain the ability to build structure around specific core players early.

But there is a downside. Visibility. Throughout December 2025, one question keeps returning: what if Sidney Crosby gets hurt? At 38, Crosby is still elite. His presence is not only leadership. It is still goals and results.

Canada leaned into proven experience. The USA leaned into young predators. It is also telling that the Americans left the goaltender slot open in their early core, keeping flexibility because they have an abundance of top-end talent in net. Canada’s situation is the opposite.

The Olympic pause: who benefits and what it costs

The NHL will officially stop the regular season for 17 days. For commissioner Gary Bettman, that is painful business: 17 days without games impacts revenue tied to broadcasts and advertising.

The positives are clear. Roughly 80% of the league will not go to Milan and will get a mini break. Veterans can reset and load up for a playoff push. The Olympics also create a spike in attention: people who do not watch a regular Toronto versus Edmonton night will pay to see McDavid battle Matthews on the biggest stage.

The negatives are serious. Injury risk. Jet lag. Players return from Italy on February 23, and some will be back in NHL buildings two days later. Historically, teams that sent large Olympic contingents in 2006 and 2014 saw a measurable dip right after the Games, losing roughly 15% more points on average in the first month back.

The December 2025 controversy: ice safety becomes the main issue

In early December 2025, NHL deputy commissioner Bill Daly delivered a hard message: the league will not send players if the ice is not safe.

The focus is the Santa Giulia arena project in Milan. Reports suggest the concrete base was poured to dimensions that are shorter than standard NHL ice. The difference is close to one meter. On paper, that sounds minor. On ice, it can become a risk multiplier.

NHL players train for years with rink geometry in their bodies. On a shorter surface, puck rebound angles change, space disappears faster, and contact density rises. Some estimates suggest the frequency of heavy collisions could increase by 12 to 15 percent. That turns Olympic hockey into a survival derby instead of a technical showcase.

For McDavid, the quote is simple: ice size does not matter to him. For Bettman, it is a business exposure. December has felt like a quiet war. The NHL is pushing for board modifications and special shock-absorbing systems. Italy’s organizers point to budget reality: costs have reportedly already blown out by billions of euros. If no compromise is found by the New Year, the trip to Milan could be at real risk.

Who to watch in February

McDavid and Nathan MacKinnon. Their first Olympics. Their career peak. They need gold to stand in the same legacy line as Crosby.

Team USA look like the most balanced roster at the tournament, with no obvious holes in attack, defense, or goaltending depth.

Canada may leave young stars out. Connor Bedard and Macklin Celebrini could miss the final roster despite elite upside, depending on health and selection philosophy. Germany, meanwhile, is no longer a one-star story. They can turn a single game into a real problem for any favorite.

🧠 Coach Mark Comment

Milan 2026 is a pressure point between hockey and business. The format, the ice, and the season pause create real risk. If safety guarantees are not solved quickly, the NHL will not compromise. In the league’s logic, a player is an asset first, and a symbol second.

❓ Q&A

Can the NHL realistically skip the Olympics?
Yes, if arena and ice safety issues are not resolved by the internal deadline.

Why did ice dimensions become the critical factor?
Because geometry affects rebound angles, decision time, collision density, and therefore injury probability.

Who looks like the main favorite right now?
At the moment, Team USA, due to roster balance and depth across positions.


NHL Rumors SHORT ICE: Coleman Buzz, Andersson Watch, Devils Cap Squeeze, Olympics Arena Concern | IHM News

NHL Rumors SHORT ICE: Coleman Buzz, Andersson Watch, Devils Cap Squeeze, Olympics Arena Concern | IHM News

IHM NHL SHORT ICE | RUMORS

🏒 NHL Rumors SHORT ICE: Market Pressure Builds

December 23, 2025 | IHM News

A fast rumor board with clear separation between what is being discussed and what is actually moving. This is not a prediction post. It is a market pulse for the second half of the season.

🔥 Rumor Board

Blake Coleman: wide check-ins across the league
Multiple teams have reportedly reached out to Calgary to gauge availability. The key point is leverage: the Flames are not under pressure to move Coleman, which usually means the price stays high until the market tightens.

Rasmus Andersson: expected to heat up in January
Interest around Andersson is expected to increase as teams align plans around the Olympic roster freeze and midseason evaluation checkpoints. Calgary are positioned to wait for the best offer rather than forcing a timeline.

Toronto Maple Leafs: questions get louder if the pattern continues
The conversation is not about one bad night. It is about whether performance swings become a trend that influences roster decisions. If results remain uneven into the new year, the internal pressure to make a statement move typically rises.

Calgary Flames: a New Year pivot point
Calgary remain a team to watch because their assets sit directly in the middle of the market. When a club holds both desirable veterans and valuable trade pieces, the league keeps calling, even if a deal is not close.

Buffalo Sabres: Alex Tuch extension or market test
Buffalo face a classic fork in the road: lock in a core piece with a new deal, or quietly measure external value. If extension talks slow down, a front office will often take calls to understand the true market before committing.

Ottawa Senators: searching for secondary scoring
Ottawa reportedly want additional offense to support a playoff push. The profile that usually fits is a middle-six forward who can finish chances without compromising structure and defensive responsibility.

New Jersey Devils: cap math makes adding difficult
Cap constraints can turn into creative roster balancing. Dougie Hamilton’s name has been mentioned in rumor circles as a potential way to open space if New Jersey decide a forward upgrade is the priority.

Minnesota Wild: aggressive deadline posture
Minnesota are expected to stay active, with center depth often cited as a target area. When a team signals aggression early, it usually means they are preparing multiple options rather than chasing one name.

League-wide quick hits: watchlist names only
Speculation continues around Nazem Kadri, Quinn Hughes, Kiefer Sherwood, Ryan O’Reilly, and others. At this stage, treat these as monitoring notes, not indicators of an imminent trade.

Washington Capitals: John Carlson expected to stay
Carlson has indicated he expects to play next season and beyond, with Washington as the plan, while contract details are finalized. This reads more like a retention story than a trade storyline.

🔥 Additional Rumor: NHL and the Olympics in Italy

Could the NHL step back from the upcoming Olympic Games?
A developing conversation around the league centers on player safety and the Olympic hockey venue setup in Italy. The discussion is not framed as a decision yet. It is framed as due diligence.

The arena factor: ice dimensions and collision density
Sources have raised concerns that the primary Olympic ice arena is built with a smaller ice surface than traditional international dimensions. Less space can compress lanes, increase board contact, and raise the frequency of collisions, especially in short tournament formats where fatigue stacks quickly.

Why clubs care even if players are willing
Even when players want to represent their countries, teams evaluate risk through medical exposure, insurance clarity, and the impact of midseason injuries on playoff objectives. If the playing environment is perceived as amplifying injury probability, executives naturally push for stronger guarantees.

Status: no official signal of withdrawal
There is no confirmed plan that the NHL will refuse Olympic participation. The rumor layer here is about active monitoring and internal discussion, with venue specifications and safety assessments being key variables.


🧠 Coach Mark Comment

This is a listening phase across the league. When a club like Calgary is not forced to sell, the market usually waits for a trigger such as injuries, standings pressure, or cap trouble. On the Olympic topic, ice dimensions are not cosmetic. Smaller space reduces reaction time and increases contact density. If safety guarantees are not clearly addressed, hesitation from clubs is logical.

❓ Q&A

Why do rumor cycles spike around January?
Because teams set internal deadlines after midseason reviews, and roster freeze timing forces planning clarity.

What typically turns talk into action?
A losing streak, an injury to a key player, or a cap situation that removes alternatives.

Are major moves guaranteed from these names?
No. Interest and calls are common. A trade usually requires a real leverage shift plus a clear roster fit.

Is the NHL planning to skip the Olympics?
No official decision has been made. The current signal is ongoing evaluation tied to venue and safety assurances.

Why is ice size such a big concern at the Olympics?
Less space can increase collision frequency and board impacts, which may elevate injury risk in a condensed tournament window.

Why is the ice surface such a big issue?
Smaller ice increases collision frequency, board impacts, and lower-body stress, raising injury probability in a short tournament window.

What could change the NHL’s stance?
Clear safety assurances, insurance coverage clarity, and potential rink adjustments would ease concerns.

IHM Game Recap - December 23, 2025 | IHM News

IHM Game Recap – December 23, 2025 | IHM News

NHL Game Recap - December 23, 2025

Date: December 23, 2025 | League: NHL | Author: IHM News

A compact four-game NHL slate delivered clear structural outcomes rather than chaos. Tampa Bay and Philadelphia imposed pace and efficiency, Seattle punished finishing inefficiency, and Columbus converted volume into a controlled road win. No surprises, no anomalies - just execution.

Scoreboard - December 23, 2025

Tampa Bay Lightning 4 - 1 St. Louis Blues
Philadelphia Flyers 5 - 2 Vancouver Canucks
Anaheim Ducks 1 - 3 Seattle Kraken
Los Angeles Kings 1 - 3 Columbus Blue Jackets


Tampa Bay Lightning 4 - 1 St. Louis Blues

Tampa Bay controlled the game through finishing efficiency and defensive discipline. Despite lower shot volume, the Lightning converted at an elite rate while limiting St. Louis to low-quality looks.

Shots on Goal: Lightning 17, Blues 24
Shots off target: Lightning 14, Blues 11
Shooting Percentage: Lightning 23.53%, Blues 4.17%
Blocked Shots: Lightning 16, Blues 15
Goalkeeper Saves: Lightning 23, Blues 13
Save Percentage: Lightning 95.83%, Blues 76.47%
Penalties: Lightning 2, Blues 4
PIM: Lightning 4, Blues 8

Coach Mark: Tampa did not chase volume. They waited, finished, and closed space. That is veteran execution.


Philadelphia Flyers 5 - 2 Vancouver Canucks

Philadelphia overwhelmed Vancouver with sustained offensive pressure and clean zone entries. Shot volume and conversion separated the teams early and never allowed Vancouver momentum.

Shots on Goal: Flyers 39, Canucks 25
Shots off target: Flyers 10, Canucks 14
Shooting Percentage: Flyers 12.82%, Canucks 8.00%
Blocked Shots: Flyers 18, Canucks 12
Goalkeeper Saves: Flyers 23, Canucks 34
Save Percentage: Flyers 92.00%, Canucks 89.47%
Penalties: Flyers 2, Canucks 1
PIM: Flyers 4, Canucks 2

Coach Mark: this was pace control. Philadelphia dictated where and how the game was played.


Anaheim Ducks 1 - 3 Seattle Kraken

Anaheim generated heavy shot volume but failed repeatedly at the finishing stage. Seattle absorbed pressure, defended the slot, and punished inefficiency with decisive scoring.

Shots on Goal: Ducks 39, Kraken 21
Shots off target: Ducks 22, Kraken 12
Shooting Percentage: Ducks 2.56%, Kraken 14.29%
Blocked Shots: Ducks 13, Kraken 12
Goalkeeper Saves: Ducks 18, Kraken 38
Save Percentage: Ducks 90.00%, Kraken 97.44%
Penalties: Ducks 4, Kraken 3
PIM: Ducks 8, Kraken 6

Coach Mark: volume without execution is meaningless. Seattle won the critical moments.


Los Angeles Kings 1 - 3 Columbus Blue Jackets

Columbus converted territorial pressure into a clean road victory. The Kings struggled to finish despite respectable volume, while Columbus capitalized on higher-percentage looks.

Shots on Goal: Kings 24, Blue Jackets 30
Shots off target: Kings 16, Blue Jackets 14
Shooting Percentage: Kings 4.17%, Blue Jackets 10.00%
Blocked Shots: Kings 11, Blue Jackets 10
Goalkeeper Saves: Kings 27, Blue Jackets 23
Save Percentage: Kings 90.00%, Blue Jackets 95.83%
Penalties: Kings 8, Blue Jackets 6
PIM: Kings 16, Blue Jackets 12

Coach Mark: Columbus stayed patient and finished when it mattered. That is how road games are stolen.


❓Q&A - NHL Game Day December 23, 2025

What defined this slate?
Efficiency over volume. Three of four games were decided by finishing percentage, not shot count.

Which team showed the cleanest structure?
Tampa Bay. Minimal risk, high conversion, and disciplined defensive layers.

Where did games break down?
Anaheim and Los Angeles failed at the final execution stage despite adequate possession metrics.

Any ranking implications?
Philadelphia and Columbus continue to add quiet upward pressure through controlled wins.


NHL SHORT ICE - Top Stories in Minutes | December 22, 2025

NHL SHORT ICE - Top Stories in Minutes | December 22, 2025

🏒 NHL SHORT ICE - All Key Stories in Minutes

December 22, 2025 | IHM News

Short hockey news for busy professionals who want to stay informed without reading long articles.

🔥 Top Results and Milestones

Sabres win sixth straight and keep climbing
Buffalo edges New Jersey to extend its winning streak to six games, combining structure and late-game composure to stay hot.

MacKinnon and Avalanche snap Wild streak
Nathan MacKinnon drives Colorado past Minnesota, ending the Wild’s seven-game winning run and reinforcing the Avalanche’s top-tier status.

Crosby passes Lemieux in Penguins history
Sidney Crosby moves past Mario Lemieux for the all time franchise lead in points for the Pittsburgh Penguins, setting a new standard in club history during a winning performance.

Stars pull away from Maple Leafs
Dallas shows its usual efficiency, turning controlled pressure into a fourth straight victory while limiting Toronto’s transition looks.

McDavid and Oilers hold off Golden Knights
Connor McDavid scores as Edmonton protects a tight margin late and beats Vegas in a matchup that felt like playoff-style hockey.

Zetterlund pushes Senators to fourth straight win
Fabian Zetterlund scores twice, Ottawa earns a fourth straight win and keeps momentum inside a packed Eastern table.

Keller wins it in overtime for Mammoth
Logan Keller seals it in OT as Utah survives a Winnipeg rally and continues stacking results in tight-margin games.

📰 Top Headlines

Hughes scores in return, Devils still fall
Jack Hughes finds the net in his first game back, but New Jersey loses to red-hot Buffalo and cannot neutralize late pressure.

Crosby leaps Lemieux for franchise scoring crown
The Penguins captain now stands alone atop Pittsburgh’s all-time scoring list, surpassing Mario Lemieux with another milestone night.

Injured captain Miller sits out as Rangers fall 2-1
K’Andre Miller misses the game with a week-to-week designation, and the Rangers drop a narrow 2-1 decision without their captain-level presence.

Sabres hire former Habs GM Marc Bergevin
Buffalo strengthens its executive group with a major front-office addition, signaling long-term structural ambition.

Danault returns to Montreal in trade
Phillip Danault heads back to the Canadiens, giving Montreal a familiar two-way center and adding defined usage flexibility down the middle.

Blackhawks lose Nazar for four weeks
Frank Nazar takes a puck to the face and is ruled out approximately four weeks, creating another absence in Chicago’s developing core.

🔁 Status Report and Injury Notes

Miller week to week for Rangers
New York lists K’Andre Miller as week to week, forcing immediate adjustments in defensive pairings and special-teams deployment.

IHM Q&A – NHL Short News (22 December 2025)

Why is Crosby’s record significant today?
Because he officially passed Mario Lemieux for most points in Penguins history, cementing himself as the franchise’s all-time statistical leader.

What is driving Buffalo’s six-game winning streak?
Structure and efficiency – tightened defending, opportunistic finishing, and top-tier goaltending that keeps games under control.

How did Colorado stop Minnesota’s seven-game run?
Shot-quality pressure and defensive compression. Colorado forced Minnesota into low-percentage attempts and punished every mistake.

How did McDavid influence Edmonton’s win over Vegas?
Decision-making in transition – he generated separation plays that Vegas couldn’t neutralize, which flipped possession into goals.

Why are Dallas rolling with four straight wins?
Efficiency. Fewer wasted shots, better slot access, and disciplined special teams.

What pushed Ottawa to four straight victories?
High finishing rates, improved neutral-zone exits, and the tempo to stretch slower defensive structures.

How did Utah survive Winnipeg’s late rally?
Overtime composure – controlled the first possession, minimized risk, executed one chance.

What is the impact of K’Andre Miller’s injury for the Rangers?
Week-to-week status removes a key defensive stabilizer and complicates matchup management against top lines.

What did Hughes’ return mean for New Jersey?
He scored, but Devils still lacked efficiency – finishing collapse wasted the volume advantage.

Why is Montreal bringing Danault back?
Center-depth stabilizer, faceoff control, matchup reliability – immediate impact for a team struggling defensively.

How damaging is Nazar’s injury for Chicago?
Four-week absence strips transition speed and weakens secondary scoring.

Why does Bergevin joining Buffalo matter?
Front-office reinforcement – strategic personnel voice added during a momentum window.


NHL Daily Recap - December 22, 2025 | IHM News

NHL Daily Recap – December 22, 2025 | IHM News

NHL Recap - December 22, 2025

Date: December 22, 2025 | League: NHL | Author: IHM News

A heavy NHL slate delivered exactly what the standings suggest: the top-end of the IHM Power Rankings continues to operate with authority, mid-table volatility remains extreme, and several lower-block clubs showed meaningful traction. Colorado and Dallas handled business, Ottawa and Buffalo collected high-value road wins, Utah survived another overtime grinder, and Edmonton took a statement victory against Vegas.

Scoreboard - December 22, 2025

  • Minnesota Wild 1 – 5 Colorado Avalanche
  • Boston Bruins 2 – 6 Ottawa Senators
  • Dallas Stars 5 – 1 Toronto Maple Leafs
  • Nashville Predators 2 – 1 New York Rangers
  • New Jersey Devils 1 – 3 Buffalo Sabres
  • Pittsburgh Penguins 4 – 3 Montreal Canadiens (SO)
  • Utah Mammoth 4 – 3 Winnipeg Jets (OT)
  • Edmonton Oilers 4 – 3 Vegas Golden Knights

Minnesota Wild 1 – 5 Colorado Avalanche

Colorado, already holding the No. 1 position in our latest IHM Power Rankings, imposed full-ice structure and goal-volume supremacy. The gap in shot quality and defensive layers translates directly into the scoreboard – another elite-tier road win from a team that sets the league’s pace.

Shots on Goal: 29 – 42

Shots off target: 21 – 20

Shooting PCT: 3.45% – 11.9%

Blocked Shots: 8 – 25

Goalkeeper Saves: 37 – 28

Saves PCT: 90.24% – 96.55%

Penalties: 4 – 3

PIM: 8 – 6

Coach Mark: that is textbook domination – a top-ranked structure compressing a mid-tier unit that couldn’t handle pace, rotation pressure, or second-chance volume.


Boston Bruins 2 – 6 Ottawa Senators

Ottawa delivers one of its most convincing outputs of the month, punishing Boston’s defensive breakdowns and applying a finishing rate associated with playoff-caliber teams. The gap in discipline and zone management is what decides the scoreline.

Shots on Goal: 20 – 28

Shots off target: 17 – 12

Shooting PCT: 10% – 21.43%

Blocked Shots: 17 – 11

Goalkeeper Saves: 22 – 18

Saves PCT: 78.57% – 90%

Penalties: 10 – 12

PIM: 30 – 32

Coach Mark: Boston’s calculated, grind-control system collapsed under Ottawa’s rotational tempo. The Senators earn a legitimate claim to rise in the next IHM Power Rankings.


Dallas Stars 5 – 1 Toronto Maple Leafs

Dallas – already in our Top-3 block – illustrates why it projects as one of the league’s most efficient offensive systems. Fewer shots, higher precision, and excellent threat-suppression against a Toronto roster that never accessed its transition pace.

Shots on Goal: 22 – 28

Shots off target: 11 – 19

Shooting PCT: 22.73% – 3.57%

Blocked Shots: 9 – 12

Goalkeeper Saves: 27 – 17

Saves PCT: 96.43% – 80.95%

Penalties: 4 – 3

PIM: 8 – 6

Coach Mark: pure efficiency – that is the Dallas trademark we highlighted in our November rankings. No waste, no volatility.


Nashville Predators 2 – 1 New York Rangers

Nashville – part of the lower block in our previous rankings – earns a grinding home win over a mid-table opponent. Shot-volume pressure and zone cycling force Rangers into damage-control mode for most of the night.

Shots on Goal: 32 – 17

Shots off target: 11 – 13

Shooting PCT: 6.25% – 5.88%

Blocked Shots: 19 – 16

Goalkeeper Saves: 16 – 30

Saves PCT: 94.12% – 96.77%

Penalties: 3 – 2

PIM: 6 – 4

Coach Mark: this is a stereotypical lower-block climb – volume, intensity, and minimal structural risk. Nashville buys credibility with a result over a previously higher-ranked side.


New Jersey Devils 1 – 3 Buffalo Sabres

Buffalo - bottom-block in our most recent rankings – executes a disciplined and compact road game. Devils generate higher volume but zero efficiency. Sabres win through structure and opportunism.

Shots on Goal: 27 – 25

Shots off target: 20 – 10

Shooting PCT: 3.7% – 12%

Blocked Shots: 23 – 13

Goalkeeper Saves: 22 – 26

Saves PCT: 91.67% – 96.3%

Penalties: 0 – 1

PIM: 0 – 2

Coach Mark: this is why finishing rates can collapse a ranking profile – Devils own possession, Sabres own outcome. That usually pushes a bottom-block club upward.


Pittsburgh Penguins 4 – 3 Montreal Canadiens (SO)

A classic mid-table duel: Pittsburgh went for volume and rotational pressure, Montreal relied on counter-punch hockey. The shootout edge matches puck-control trends across sixty minutes.

Shots on Goal: 31 – 25

Shots off target: 20 – 16

Shooting PCT: 9.68% – 12%

Blocked Shots: 18 – 11

Goalkeeper Saves: 22 – 28

Saves PCT: 88% – 90.32%

Penalties: 3 – 4

PIM: 6 – 8

Coach Mark: this is the definition of ranking compression – tiny execution margins decide separation. Both teams remain volatile in our upcoming update.


Utah Mammoth 4 – 3 Winnipeg Jets (OT)

Utah continues to validate its expansion reputation – mature structure, situational patience, and extra-time composure. Jets match metric volume, lose the final exchange.

Shots on Goal: 22 – 26

Shots off target: 13 – 14

Shooting PCT: 18.18% – 11.54%

Blocked Shots: 15 – 13

Goalkeeper Saves: 23 – 18

Saves PCT: 88.46% – 81.82%

Penalties: 3 – 3

PIM: 6 – 6

Coach Mark: Utah already behaves like a legitimate playoff operation – controlled risk, stable retrievals, and execution under stress.


Edmonton Oilers 4 – 3 Vegas Golden Knights

Edmonton secures a high-value win over a club positioned inside our recent Top-5. lower shot-volume, higher precision, and opportunism in the attacking zones tilt the scoreboard.

Shots on Goal: 21 – 29

Shots off target: 17 – 16

Shooting PCT: 19.05% – 10.34%

Blocked Shots: 12 – 16

Goalkeeper Saves: 26 – 17

Saves PCT: 89.66% – 80.95%

Penalties: 5 – 3

PIM: 10 – 6

Coach Mark: that is a ranking-lever result – beating a Top-5 opponent drives movement. Edmonton earns upward pressure.


❓Q&A - NHL Game Day December 22, 2025

What is the main takeaway from Colorado and Dallas?

Both teams continue to validate November logic: elite structure travels, elite efficiency does not fluctuate, and both operate with playoff certainty.

Which lower-block clubs added the strongest ranking arguments?

Ottawa, Buffalo, and Nashville. All three defeated opponents ranked higher in our previous list and did it through structure – not luck, not chaos.

What does this slate say about the mid-table?

Pittsburgh-Montreal and Utah-Winnipeg show extreme compression. One transition, one rebound, or one shootout attempt decides positioning.

Is the hierarchy shifting?

Yes – separation lines are moving again. Bottom-block sides are stabilizing, middle-block volatility is rising, and even upper-block units are showing erosion through discipline and finishing variance.


IHM POWER INDEX - NHL 1-32 Holiday Rankings | December 21, 2025 | IHM News

IHM POWER INDEX - NHL 1-32 Holiday Rankings | December 21, 2025 | IHM News

IHM POWER INDEX - NHL 1-32 Holiday Rankings

Date: December 21, 2025 · Author: IHM News

The first IHM Power Rankings on November 30 were our quarter season reset. Three weeks later the league looks the same only at the top. Underneath Colorado the board has shifted hard. This is the official IHM POWER INDEX Holiday Edition. It is based on form, IHM Metrics, injury context, star impact and how sustainable each team’s game looks for the next few months.

For continuity every club keeps a clear reference to the previous IHM ranking from November 30. And because it is holiday season, each team also gets one simple Holiday Gift - the thing that would help the most if it showed up under the rink-side tree tomorrow.

1. Colorado Avalanche

Previous IHM Rank (Nov 30): 1 · Movement: -

Colorado stays on top of the IHM board. Nathan MacKinnon is pushing MVP pace again, Cale Makar drives the back end and the supporting cast feels deeper than the 2022 Cup group. The Avs still control games through pace and puck touches in the middle and they are one of the few teams that can win playing fast or grinding down the clock.

Holiday Gift: A reinforced trophy cabinet for all the individual awards and another deep run that still feels very possible.

2. Dallas Stars

Previous IHM Rank (Nov 30): 3 · Movement: ▲1

Dallas climbs one spot and looks like the clear number two for now. The Stars do not always dominate shot volume but they control game states with veteran poise. Their power play punishes mistakes, their top nine can score in waves and the blue line group is more than good enough when they keep the game in structure.

Holiday Gift: A steel chair and extra edge for the spring when the Central turns into a cage match with Colorado and Minnesota.

3. Carolina Hurricanes

Previous IHM Rank (Nov 30): 2 · Movement: ▼1

Carolina slides one spot but stays in the inner circle of contenders. The five man structure is still one of the best in the league and Brandon Bussi has given them the stable goaltending they were missing. When they are on time with their forecheck and line changes they suffocate teams at the blue lines and live in the offensive zone.

Holiday Gift: A tour bus for the Bussi story because he has gone from waiver claim to rock star in the crease.

4. Minnesota Wild

Previous IHM Rank (Nov 30): 9 · Movement: ▲5

Minnesota is the big climber in the top tier. The Quinn Hughes trade changed their ceiling instantly. Hughes has stepped into their system like he has been there for years and the Hughes FOW at the top of the Wild power play gives them a new look that forces opponents to respect every seam.

Holiday Gift: A lightsaber for Quinn and the full Star Wars treatment now that “Quinn esota” is officially a thing.

5. Vegas Golden Knights

Previous IHM Rank (Nov 30): 5 · Movement: -

Vegas holds their ground inside the top five. They still look like a playoff team nobody wants in the first round. Even with key injuries they keep shots to the outside and their comeback numbers when trailing are among the best in the league.

Holiday Gift: A fresh pack of batteries so they can keep charging from behind when the game looks lost.

6. Anaheim Ducks

Previous IHM Rank (Nov 30): 7 · Movement: ▲1

Anaheim was already high in the first IHM list and they stay in the elite group. Leo Carlsson drives their offense like a true franchise piece. The rest of the young core feeds off his pace and confidence. There is still volatility in their own zone but the upside is obvious.

Holiday Gift: An endless stack of rookie cards with Carlsson’s name on them because this season is building his legend in real time.

7. Tampa Bay Lightning

Previous IHM Rank (Nov 30): 4 · Movement: ▼3

Tampa drops a little, mostly because other teams surged, not because the Lightning fell apart. The Battle of Florida has tilted toward the Panthers again and injuries are adding up, but this core still knows how to plot a full season arc and peak when it matters.

Holiday Gift: Bandages for a roster that keeps going through physical wars but refuses to accept a closed window narrative.

8. Washington Capitals

Previous IHM Rank (Nov 30): 12 · Movement: ▲4

Washington climbs into the top ten on the strength of a tightened defensive game and high level goaltending. Alex Ovechkin is still contributing, but the real difference this year is how organized they look without the puck and how much Logan Thompson has stabilized their results.

Holiday Gift: A Canadian snack pack for Thompson if he keeps pushing his way into Olympic conversations.

9. Philadelphia Flyers

Previous IHM Rank (Nov 30): 22 · Movement: ▲13

Philadelphia is one of the biggest movers on the entire board. The defensive identity that was just a theory a month ago is now showing up in the numbers every week. Goals against remain low, the penalty kill is dangerous and Dan Vladar has turned his chance into a real starter’s workload.

Holiday Gift: A reflex test stick for Trevor Zegras so he can keep adding to his ridiculous shootout highlight reel.

10. Detroit Red Wings

Previous IHM Rank (Nov 30): 10 · Movement: -

Detroit stays locked in at ten. The goal differential is still a concern but the overall structure under Todd McLellan looks more stable than in previous seasons. Larkin, DeBrincat and the young forwards give them real scoring depth and the Wings refuse to drop out of the Atlantic race.

Holiday Gift: A brick wall in front of their net to bring the goals against closer to their actual talent level.

11. New York Islanders

Previous IHM Rank (Nov 30): 17 · Movement: ▲6

The Islanders jump into the top half of the list. Their defensive backbone is still there and now the young wave is making a real commercial impact. Matthew Schaefer has become a minute eater on the blue line and his jersey is suddenly one of the hottest sellers on the Island.

Holiday Gift: Extra fours and eights for the jersey room before they run out of 48 again.

12. Boston Bruins

Previous IHM Rank (Nov 30): 21 · Movement: ▲9

Boston is one of the sharp risers. Marco Sturm has doubled down on a defense first blueprint and the Bruins are grinding points out of tight nights. Morgan Geekie’s breakout goal numbers give them a second scoring pillar behind David Pastrnak and the special teams remain a strength.

Holiday Gift: A Best Buy gift card for the “Geek Squad” that has suddenly turned into one of the most dangerous lines in the league.

13. Edmonton Oilers

Previous IHM Rank (Nov 30): 25 · Movement: ▲12

Edmonton rockets up the list after a rough earlier stretch. Leon Draisaitl’s 1000 point milestone is a reminder of how long this core has been driving elite offense. The trade for Tristan Jarry is a calculated risk in net and the room clearly believes the window is wide open again.

Holiday Gift: A lighter to match the iconic Draisaitl celebration photo and keep the fire under this core for another deep push.

14. Florida Panthers

Previous IHM Rank (Nov 30): 16 · Movement: ▲2

Florida is playing the long game again. Injuries have kept the lineup in constant flux but the underlying profile is still that of a playoff team. Once they are closer to full health, the mix of Marchand, Reinhart and Lundell can drive them back toward the top of the conference.

Holiday Gift: A health savings card to finally get a full roster on the ice at the same time.

15. Los Angeles Kings

Previous IHM Rank (Nov 30): 8 · Movement: ▼7

The Kings slide a bit but still sit in playoff position in the IHM view. Injuries in goal have forced them into short term fixes again and that has cost them some stability. The defensive identity is still there and when they get league average health they look more like a top ten team than a bubble group.

Holiday Gift: A sleigh for Pheonix Copley so he can keep shuttling wins from the North Pole to Los Angeles in December.

16. Pittsburgh Penguins

Previous IHM Rank (Nov 30): 11 · Movement: ▼5

Pittsburgh falls to the middle of the board after a run of blown leads that would test any dressing room. The structure is good for two periods but late game management and third period details keep letting teams back in. The IHM model still likes their talent, but the reliability score has dropped.

Holiday Gift: A bigger third period cushion and a reset button for the last ten minutes of games.

17. Montreal Canadiens

Previous IHM Rank (Nov 30): 15 · Movement: ▼2

Montreal slides slightly, but the arc is not negative. The three goalie rotation has created some awkward rhythm but the defensive play in front of them is trending up. Caufield and Suzuki keep the offense honest and the Habs are starting to feel more like a hard out than a free spot on the schedule.

Holiday Gift: A Sith robe for the crease so someone can finally claim the full time number one role.

18. New Jersey Devils

Previous IHM Rank (Nov 30): 6 · Movement: ▼12

New Jersey takes one of the bigger drops on the board. The underlying attack is still dangerous, but the lineup has been in flux and Jack Hughes’ situation continues to hang over everything. When he is healthy and rolling the Devils can climb fast, yet right now their profile looks more like a volatile middle team.

Holiday Gift: A fully healthy Jack Hughes and a long stretch where their top forwards can stay together.

19. San Jose Sharks

Previous IHM Rank (Nov 30): 23 · Movement: ▲4

San Jose remains one of the most interesting rebuild stories. Macklin Celebrini continues to live near the top of the scoring charts and the rest of the young core is starting to stack real NHL minutes. They are not a finished product, but the direction of travel is finally clear.

Holiday Gift: A bobblehead shelf big enough for all the Celebrini and Will Smith collectibles that are coming.

20. Toronto Maple Leafs

Previous IHM Rank (Nov 30): 26 · Movement: ▲6

Toronto moves up after a better stretch of late game execution and a stronger response to Craig Berube’s demands. The top six can still explode in short bursts and a couple of comeback wins reminded everyone how fast this roster can flip a script.

Holiday Gift: A permanent bench mic for Berube so every fiery speech ends up on a motivational reel.

21. Utah Mammoth

Previous IHM Rank (Nov 30): 19 · Movement: ▼2

Utah drifts slightly downward, mostly because of the Cooley injury that hit the middle of their lineup hard. The process is still solid at both blue lines and the goaltending has been good enough to keep them in most games, but the top end scoring punch is temporarily reduced.

Holiday Gift: A little luck and a healthy return for Cooley so the early season momentum does not fade.

22. New York Rangers

Previous IHM Rank (Nov 30): 24 · Movement: ▲2

The Rangers are one of the strangest splits in the league. On the road they look like a legit playoff team. At home the numbers crash. The defensive foundation under Mike Sullivan is solid, but Madison Square Garden has turned into a puzzle they still have not solved.

Holiday Gift: A long road trip and maybe a mental reset on home ice expectations.

23. Ottawa Senators

Previous IHM Rank (Nov 30): 14 · Movement: ▼9

Ottawa falls down the board after struggling to score at five on five. The defensive play improved earlier in the season, but now the goals that were supposed to arrive from the core have gone quiet for stretches and their margin for error is thin.

Holiday Gift: A full month where the even strength scoring finally matches the shot quality.

24. Columbus Blue Jackets

Previous IHM Rank (Nov 30): 28 · Movement: ▲4

Columbus climbs a little on the back of steady goaltending from Jet Greaves and better control of their own crease. The young forwards still make mistakes, but the transition speed from Marchenko and Fantilli gives them a clear identity.

Holiday Gift: A General Grievous action figure for Jet Greaves to match the nickname that is starting to stick.

25. Buffalo Sabres

Previous IHM Rank (Nov 30): 30 · Movement: ▲5

Buffalo gets a small boost in the IHM index. The front office change to Jarmo Kekalainen signaled a harder edge in how this team will be built. Results are still inconsistent, but the idea of tying a young offensive core to a more demanding internal standard makes sense.

Holiday Gift: A whiteboard for all the possible Lindy Ruff and John Tortorella combinations that fans are already debating.

26. Winnipeg Jets

Previous IHM Rank (Nov 30): 18 · Movement: ▼8

Winnipeg drops as the Hellebuyck situation and team form remain unstable. Without peak level goaltending their weaknesses are more exposed and the path back into a strong playoff position becomes much narrower.

Holiday Gift: A Vezina trophy replica and a fully healthy Hellebuyck to remind everyone how high their ceiling is when he is at his best.

27. Chicago Blackhawks

Previous IHM Rank (Nov 30): 20 · Movement: ▼7

Chicago’s position takes a hit after the Bedard injury news. The entire offensive identity is tied to his ability to drive play and without him the Hawks look much closer to a classic rebuilding group than a sneaky spoiler.

Holiday Gift: A bacta tank level rehab for Bedard so this becomes a short setback and not a lost step in his development curve.

28. Nashville Predators

Previous IHM Rank (Nov 30): 32 · Movement: ▲4

Nashville actually rises a few spots despite still living near the bottom of the standings. The Nick Saban ownership link and the identity off the ice have given the franchise some extra noise, but on the ice they still lack depth scoring and consistent puck movement.

Holiday Gift: Crimson tinted alternate jerseys and a few more high end finishers to pair with Forsberg.

29. Seattle Kraken

Previous IHM Rank (Nov 30): 13 · Movement: ▼16

Seattle suffers one of the biggest drops on the entire board. The strong start has been erased by a brutal stretch of results and the health card has not helped. Their defensive structure still shows up in pockets, but the confidence in their game has clearly taken a hit.

Holiday Gift: A rewind button for the opening ten games when they looked like a true top ten team.

30. St. Louis Blues

Previous IHM Rank (Nov 30): 29 · Movement: ▼1

St. Louis stays in the bottom three despite some excellent defensive metrics. They limit chances as well as many top teams, but the finishing talent still lags behind and the power play has not given them enough free offense.

Holiday Gift: Fresh milk and yogurt for a goaltending tandem that keeps them in games and deserves a little more scoring help.

31. Calgary Flames

Previous IHM Rank (Nov 30): 31 · Movement: -

Calgary remains stuck near the bottom of the table in results, even though the defensive profile is still surprisingly strong. They keep shots and chances against at reasonable levels but do not yet have the consistent high end playmaking to flip tight games in their favor.

Holiday Gift: Sunglasses and a hoodie for anyone in the front office taking trade calls and trying to decide between retool and full reset.

32. Vancouver Canucks

Previous IHM Rank (Nov 30): 27 · Movement: ▼5

Vancouver drops to the bottom in this edition of the IHM Power Index, mostly because of the Quinn Hughes trade and the time required to rebuild their identity. The return pieces are interesting and could age very well, but in the short term this is a roster searching for a new backbone on the back end.

Holiday Gift: A Magic 8 Ball to fast forward five years and see whether this trade ends up looking like a franchise turning point in a good way.

IHM Q&A - Reading The Holiday POWER INDEX

Why does Colorado still sit above Dallas and Carolina?
All three look like real contenders, but the Avs still combine the best top end duo in MacKinnon and Makar with a deeper, more balanced supporting cast than a year ago. Their style also travels well, which matters when projecting playoff rounds.

Which team made the biggest positive move since the November 30 IHM list?
Philadelphia, Edmonton and Boston are the clearest risers. The Flyers have locked in a defensive identity, the Oilers have stabilized after a chaotic start and Boston’s structure shift under Sturm is starting to show in the numbers and the standings.

Who is the most dangerous “middle of the pack” team right now?
Detroit and Pittsburgh still profile as clubs that can jump a full tier with one strong month. Detroit’s talent is obvious and the Penguins’ issues are more about game management than talent. Either one could look like a top eight team by mid January.

Which rebuilding teams feel closest to breaking out?
San Jose and Chicago both have elite young centers, improving goaltending and a clear front office vision. Utah also belongs in that conversation as an expansion market that already has credible structure and a fan base buying in.

How often will the IHM POWER INDEX be updated?
The plan is to update the full 1-32 board at key checkpoints like the holiday break and the trade deadline, with shorter IHM highlight updates in between when big moves or injuries change the picture.

IHM News · IHM POWER INDEX - Holiday Edition · December 21, 2025


NHL SHORT ICE 24-Hour Recap | IHM News

NHL SHORT ICE 24-Hour Recap | IHM News

IHM SHORT ICE

NHL SHORT ICE 24-Hour Recap

December 21, 2025 · IHM News

Fast 24-hour NHL recap for busy hockey fans. One scroll with the most important results, streaks and clutch performances from the last night on the ice.

  • Tim Stützle posts 3 points and the Senators beat the Blackhawks to secure their third straight win.
  • Matt Boldy scores twice as the Wild defeat the Oilers and extend their winning streak to seven games.
  • Tage Thompson runs his goal streak to six games and the Sabres recover to top the Islanders in a shootout.
  • Robert Thomas delivers 2 goals and 1 assist to help the Blues end the Panthers winning streak at four games.
  • Fowler turns aside 31 shots for his first NHL shutout and the Canadiens blank the Penguins.
  • Luke Evangelista breaks the tie in the third period as the Predators edge the Maple Leafs in a tight finish.
  • Jake Guentzel scores two goals and the Lightning rally past the Hurricanes.
  • Erik Karlsson strikes twice to push the Canucks past the Bruins in a shootout and give Vancouver a fourth straight win.
  • Pavel Mintyukov nets the go-ahead goal in the third and the Ducks secure the win against the Blue Jackets.
  • Mikael Backlund collects 3 points as the Flames defeat the Golden Knights in a high-event matchup.
  • Joey Daccord makes 35 saves and the Kraken rally past the Sharks to snap their four-game losing streak.

Coach Mark Comment

This was a classic momentum night across the league. Several teams leaned on their top playmakers and turned tight games into controlled finishes, while hot hands like Thompson and Stützle kept driving the offense. What stands out for me is how often aggressive puck pressure and confident shooting decisions decided the final ten minutes.

Q&A IHM SHORT ICE December 21, 2025

Q: Which team extended the longest winning streak in this 24-hour window?

A: The Minnesota Wild, who reached seven consecutive wins with Matt Boldy scoring twice against the Oilers.

Q: Who recorded a first NHL shutout in this recap?

A: Fowler did it for the Montreal Canadiens, stopping 31 shots in a shutout win over the Penguins.

Q: Which skater is riding the most notable goal streak?

A: Tage Thompson, who scored again for the Sabres and pushed his goal streak to six games in the shootout win against the Islanders.

New IHM SHORT ICE recap drops every day. Stay on the ice with IceHockeyMan.


NHL Daily Recap | December 21, 2025 | IHM News

NHL Daily Recap | December 21, 2025 | IHM News

🏒 NHL Daily Recap - December 21, 2025

Date: December 21, 2025 By: IHM News

Eight games shaped the NHL board on December 21. Home teams pushed tempo in several buildings, but opportunistic finishing and special goaltending swings defined the night even more than raw shot volume.

Florida Panthers 2-6 St. Louis Blues

Final score: Florida Panthers 2 - St. Louis Blues 6

St. Louis turned a tight shot battle into a blowout with ruthless finishing. The Blues generated only a small edge in volume but converted at a far higher rate, while Florida’s defensive structure broke down under sustained pressure in the middle frame.

Key stats

  • Shots on goal: Panthers 29 - Blues 31
  • Shots off target: Panthers 9 - Blues 15
  • Shooting percentage: Panthers 6.9% (2/29) - Blues 19.35% (6/31)
  • Blocked shots: Panthers 15 - Blues 6
  • Goalkeeper saves: Panthers 25 - Blues 27
  • Saves percentage: Panthers 83.33% - Blues 93.1%
  • Penalties: Panthers 3 - Blues 4
  • PIM: Panthers 6 - Blues 8

Boston Bruins 4-5 Vancouver Canucks (After Penalties)

Final score: Boston Bruins 4 - Vancouver Canucks 5 (after penalties)

Boston controlled most of the territory but could not translate shot pressure into a decisive lead. Vancouver absorbed a heavy workload in its own zone, relied on outstanding goaltending and then finished the job in the shootout after surviving Boston’s late push.

Key stats

  • Shots on goal: Bruins 42 - Canucks 22
  • Shots off target: Bruins 14 - Canucks 13
  • Shooting percentage: Bruins 9.52% (4/42) - Canucks 18.18% (4/22)
  • Blocked shots: Bruins 17 - Canucks 12
  • Goalkeeper saves: Bruins 18 - Canucks 38
  • Saves percentage: Bruins 81.82% - Canucks 90.48%
  • Penalties: Bruins 5 - Canucks 4
  • PIM: Bruins 10 - Canucks 8

Montreal Canadiens 4-0 Pittsburgh Penguins

Final score: Montreal Canadiens 4 - Pittsburgh Penguins 0

Montreal played a controlled, low-event game and punished every defensive mistake from Pittsburgh. The Penguins produced plenty of attempts but could not solve the Canadiens goalie, who delivered a perfect night behind an active shot-blocking group.

Key stats

  • Shots on goal: Canadiens 21 - Penguins 31
  • Shots off target: Canadiens 16 - Penguins 21
  • Shooting percentage: Canadiens 19.05% (4/21) - Penguins 0% (0/31)
  • Blocked shots: Canadiens 13 - Penguins 16
  • Goalkeeper saves: Canadiens 31 - Penguins 17
  • Saves percentage: Canadiens 100% - Penguins 85%
  • Penalties: Canadiens 3 - Penguins 1
  • PIM: Canadiens 6 - Penguins 2

Nashville Predators 5-3 Toronto Maple Leafs

Final score: Nashville Predators 5 - Toronto Maple Leafs 3

Nashville won the interior battle and turned net-front persistence into a multi-goal cushion. Toronto created some quality looks of its own, but the Predators’ shot volume, second chances and balanced attack were the difference over sixty minutes.

Key stats

  • Shots on goal: Predators 34 - Maple Leafs 22
  • Shots off target: Predators 13 - Maple Leafs 12
  • Shooting percentage: Predators 14.71% (5/34) - Maple Leafs 13.64% (3/22)
  • Blocked shots: Predators 24 - Maple Leafs 12
  • Goalkeeper saves: Predators 19 - Maple Leafs 29
  • Saves percentage: Predators 86.36% - Maple Leafs 90.63%
  • Penalties: Predators 2 - Maple Leafs 3
  • PIM: Predators 4 - Maple Leafs 6

Tampa Bay Lightning 6-4 Carolina Hurricanes

Final score: Tampa Bay Lightning 6 - Carolina Hurricanes 4

Tampa Bay leaned on its high-end shooters and special plays off the rush to outscore Carolina. The Hurricanes stayed close in overall pressure but could not match the Lightning finishers when the game opened up in the second half of the night.

Key stats

  • Shots on goal: Lightning 29 - Hurricanes 22
  • Shots off target: Lightning 16 - Hurricanes 13
  • Shooting percentage: Lightning 20.69% (6/29) - Hurricanes 18.18% (4/22)
  • Blocked shots: Lightning 15 - Hurricanes 14
  • Goalkeeper saves: Lightning 18 - Hurricanes 23
  • Saves percentage: Lightning 81.82% - Hurricanes 82.14%
  • Penalties: Lightning 6 - Hurricanes 5
  • PIM: Lightning 14 - Hurricanes 10

Anaheim Ducks 4-3 Columbus Blue Jackets

Final score: Anaheim Ducks 4 - Columbus Blue Jackets 3

Anaheim survived a heavy defensive workload and used timely scoring to edge Columbus. The Ducks generated more overall attempts, but the real separation came from clutch finishing and late-game saves when the Jackets pushed hard for an equalizer.

Key stats

  • Shots on goal: Ducks 28 - Blue Jackets 26
  • Shots off target: Ducks 21 - Blue Jackets 14
  • Shooting percentage: Ducks 14.29% (4/28) - Blue Jackets 11.54% (3/26)
  • Blocked shots: Ducks 11 - Blue Jackets 26
  • Goalkeeper saves: Ducks 23 - Blue Jackets 24
  • Saves percentage: Ducks 88.46% - Blue Jackets 85.71%
  • Penalties: Ducks 2 - Blue Jackets 3
  • PIM: Ducks 4 - Blue Jackets 6

Calgary Flames 6-3 Vegas Golden Knights

Final score: Calgary Flames 6 - Vegas Golden Knights 3

Calgary punished Vegas turnovers and converted quickly in transition, turning a shot deficit into a comfortable win. The Golden Knights piled up attempts but were repeatedly denied, while the Flames made their best looks count and protected the middle of the ice better as the game wore on.

Key stats

  • Shots on goal: Flames 26 - Golden Knights 37
  • Shots off target: Flames 16 - Golden Knights 19
  • Shooting percentage: Flames 23.08% (6/26) - Golden Knights 8.11% (3/37)
  • Blocked shots: Flames 13 - Golden Knights 11
  • Goalkeeper saves: Flames 34 - Golden Knights 20
  • Saves percentage: Flames 91.89% - Golden Knights 80%
  • Penalties: Flames 3 - Golden Knights 1
  • PIM: Flames 9 - Golden Knights 5

San Jose Sharks 2-4 Seattle Kraken

Final score: San Jose Sharks 2 - Seattle Kraken 4

San Jose fired pucks from everywhere but lacked composure in the slot, while Seattle defended the interior and countered with efficient finishing. The Kraken goalie was excellent against a high-volume workload and turned the game into a classic volume-versus-quality contrast.

Key stats

  • Shots on goal: Sharks 37 - Kraken 32
  • Shots off target: Sharks 25 - Kraken 3
  • Shooting percentage: Sharks 5.41% (2/37) - Kraken 12.5% (4/32)
  • Blocked shots: Sharks 23 - Kraken 8
  • Goalkeeper saves: Sharks 28 - Kraken 35
  • Saves percentage: Sharks 90.32% - Kraken 94.59%
  • Penalties: Sharks 1 - Kraken 4
  • PIM: Sharks 2 - Kraken 8

❓ Q&A - NHL Game Day December 21, 2025

Which performance stood out most from this slate?
The Canadiens shutout was one of the most striking, combining 100 percent goaltending with efficient shooting against a Penguins team that still generated plenty of volume.

Why did some teams win despite being outshot?
Calgary and Seattle are good examples. Both leaned on higher shooting efficiency, better slot protection and stronger goaltending at key moments instead of pure shot quantity.

What can analysts take from this card?
The night reinforced that shot quality, special teams and finishing talent can flip games even when the shot totals lean the other way, an important layer for any deeper analytical model.