Tag: Mark Lehtonen

Expert hockey insights and analysis from former coach Mark Lehtonen. Covering team strategies, player performance, and tactical breakdowns to give fans a deeper understanding of the game.

Alex Ovechkin nets career goal No. 899 in Washington’s 5-1 victory over Columbus

Ovechkin Hits 899: Capitals Roll Past Blue Jackets 5-1

Author: IHM Team | Date: October 24, 2025

COLUMBUS, OH - The crowd at Nationwide Arena witnessed history as Alex Ovechkin moved just one goal away from the 900 mark, scoring his 899th career goal in a 5-1 Washington Capitals win over the Columbus Blue Jackets on Friday night.

Alex Ovechkin nets career goal No. 899 in Washington’s 5-1 victory over Columbus

Despite the final score, Columbus felt they played well for most of the night. The game stayed tight for 40 minutes before one controversial call in the third period blew it open.

First 40 Minutes: Thompson’s Wall of Steel

For two periods the game felt like a playoff test. Both teams stayed compact, protected the middle, and waited for mistakes. Columbus actually carried the play in the second period and outshot Washington 10-2 in that frame.

Logan Thompson was outstanding for Washington, finishing with 34 saves and robbing Columbus multiple times in high-danger looks. Head coach Dean Evason could only shake his head on the bench: “What the heck? How’d he do that? He was unreal all night.”

With under two minutes left in the second and the game still 0-0, John Carlson finally broke through from distance. That goal gave Washington a 1-0 lead heading into intermission even though Columbus controlled most of the period.

Ovechkin’s No. 899: History and Havoc

The opening minute of the third period changed everything. Off a faceoff play, Alex Ovechkin drifted into space and hammered home his 899th career goal to make it 2-0. The Capitals bench erupted. Moments later Justin Sourdif stretched it to 3-0.

Columbus pushed back. Denton Mateychuk finally beat Thompson, finishing off a setup from Sean Monahan to cut it to 3-1 and get the building back into it.

Then the game tilted for good.

With momentum starting to swing toward the Blue Jackets, a Columbus goal by Dmitri Voronkov was wiped out on review for a kicking motion. Seconds later Mathieu Olivier delivered a hit on Declan Chisholm. After review officials gave Olivier a five-minute major for elbowing.

Columbus was furious with the call. Olivier did not speak after the game. Evason did.

“I’m talking to some very intelligent hockey people that just don’t understand that call,” Evason said. “There’s no intent.”

Washington wasted no time. On that major, Tom Wilson and Connor McMichael both scored on the power play. Suddenly it was 5-1 and out of reach.

Postgame Frustration

In the Columbus room, the message was the same. They felt like they played the right way for most of the game, they were in control for 40 minutes, and a single sequence took it away from them.

Columbus now turns immediately to a back-to-back against the Pittsburgh Penguins on Saturday. The Capitals head home to face the Ottawa Senators.

Coach Mark’s Take

“You cannot give Washington that kind of window, not with Ovechkin still locked in on history,” said Coach Mark Lehtonen. “Columbus actually played a very structured game. They denied rush entries, they limited second looks, they did a lot right. But one major penalty flipped the table.

As for Ovechkin, that release is still lethal. He is not just chasing 900. He is proving he can still decide games in one shift.”

IHM Verdict

  • Ovechkin is now one goal away from 900 and still driving headlines.
  • Columbus showed real structure for two periods even in a 5-1 loss.
  • The Olivier major and the overturned goal will be a talking point going forward.

Final: Capitals 5, Blue Jackets 1. Ovechkin scores No. 899.

Alexander Ovechkin in Capitals jersey with Dynamo Moscow logo, Nazem Kadri in Canadiens concept, Dustin Wolf frustrated

IHM NHL Rumors · Ovechkin Return Rumor Shakes the League · Kadri to Canadiens, Wolf Growls, Canucks Cornered

By: IHM Team | Date: October 23, 2025

Sensational Rumor: Ovechkin’s Possible Return to Russia

Alexander Ovechkin in Capitals jersey with Dynamo Moscow logo, Nazem Kadri in Canadiens concept, Dustin Wolf frustrated

The hockey world woke up to a rumor that could rewrite the sport’s next chapter. According to information from sources close to Alexander Ovechkin’s inner circle and several former teammates, the Washington Capitals captain may be considering ending his NHL career after this season and returning to Russia, possibly to his first professional club, Dynamo Moscow.

The whispers have gained traction across European media and within KHL executive circles. Some insiders claim that Ovechkin, 40, has already discussed potential ambassadorial roles in Russia post-retirement, while others believe the decision could come sooner than anyone expected.

One former teammate told IHM off the record: “He’s thinking about legacy, family, and home. But nobody really believes he’s done yet.”

Coach Mark’s Take: With all due respect to the sources, I don’t buy it. Ovechkin is the face of a franchise and the backbone of its marketing. He’s still chasing history - the records, the milestones, the Gretzky number. Maybe one day he returns to Dynamo, but not before he’s finished what he started in Washington.

Still, the discussion has shaken the league and sparked a flood of speculation online. If Ovechkin ever does skate again in Dynamo blue, it would be a full-circle moment - and the biggest headline in hockey this decade.

Canadiens Linked to Nazem Kadri

Frustration continues to build in Calgary, and trade talk is heating up. Goaltender Dustin Wolf voiced his frustration after another loss, saying he “can’t score for them.” Multiple insiders now report that Nazem Kadri could be open to a move if the Flames’ struggles persist.

On The Sick Podcast, former Canadiens forward Maxim Lapierre called Kadri “a perfect fit” for Montreal, with co-host Pierre McGuire adding that his experience and leadership would “immediately elevate that room.”

Meanwhile, Elliotte Friedman noted that veterans like Kadri, Blake Coleman, and Rasmus Andersson have quietly begun to question how long this losing streak can last before management reacts. If Calgary keeps sinking, expect calls from Montreal.

Canucks Stuck in the Middle

The Vancouver Canucks are officially in the market for a center, but several insiders are suggesting the Canucks might be stuck, with few options available to them. Following Filip Chytil’s recent injury - one that has TSN’s Craig Button wondering if retirement might even be part of the conversation - general manager Patrik Allvin is searching for ways to upgrade at center or find a replacement.

Frank Seravalli reported that there isn’t much available on the market. Elliotte Friedman added that the Canucks know the market isn’t offering many options. Seravalli said: “They’ve been willing to give up young assets to make the right fit happen, but there are not players out there you’d be getting super excited about.” Friedman added: “When you’re drowning, teams don’t throw you a life preserver. They throw you an anvil.”

Oilers Ready for Roster Moves

With players returning from injury, the Edmonton Oilers face tough roster decisions. Mattias Janmark may be a candidate for a trade. The Oilers also see Alec Regula as a better fit over Ty Emberson, so when Regula comes back from injured reserve, Emberson could be dealt. Finally, because the Oilers don’t want to lose Noah Philp on waivers, Curtis Lazar’s long-term fit is being questioned.

The Oilers are stabilizing, but internal competition is about to ignite.

Hurricanes Could Go Big-Game Hunting

Pierre LeBrun said on Insider Trading that fans should keep an eye on the Carolina Hurricanes as they might go big-game hunting again this season. He noted that the Hurricanes took a swing on Kirill Kaprizov after he turned down the first offer with the Minnesota Wild. LeBrun could see them shopping for a difference-maker again this season if the right player becomes available.

Coach Mark’s Closing View:
This week’s rumors show how unstable early-season hockey can be. Kadri to Montreal? Possible. Calgary looks fractured. Vancouver? They’re desperate, not doomed. Edmonton and Carolina? Both are in control. But Ovechkin - that’s the kind of story that sends shockwaves through the sport. If he ever does leave, it won’t be quietly.


Emil Heineman celebrates after scoring for the New York Islanders against Detroit

Islanders Explode for 7 vs Red Wings, Win 4th Straight

Author: IHM Team | Date: October 24, 2025

ELMONT, N.Y. – The New York Islanders overpowered the Detroit Red Wings 7-2 at UBS Arena to collect their fourth straight win. Emil Heineman scored twice for his first career multigoal game and stretched his point streak to five games. David Rittich made 31 saves in net.

Emil Heineman celebrates after scoring for the New York Islanders against Detroit

Total buy-in, all four lines

Tony DeAngelo opened the scoring just 2:05 in, jumping into the rush and finishing blocker side. The Islanders never eased off. Jean-Gabriel Pageau, Kyle Palmieri, Mathew Barzal and Simon Holmstrom all scored. Captain Anders Lee had three assists and drove puck wins on the wall.

Patrick Roy: “Rittich was outstanding. Lee was a beast. DeAngelo looked like himself again. A lot of guys played really well.”

Heineman keeps rising

Heineman, acquired in the Noah Dobson trade, made it 2-0 in the first with a one-timer off a Bo Horvat feed on a 2-on-1. He struck again in the third to make it 6-1. His chemistry with Horvat is becoming a real threat.

“Bo is giving me great passes,” Heineman said. “I just keep my stick down and let it go.”

Details that win

  • 3-0: Anders Lee forced a turnover and set up Jean-Gabriel Pageau alone in the slot.
  • 4-0: Kyle Palmieri scored at the crease. Detroit challenged for goalie interference and lost.
  • 5-0: Mathew Barzal finished glove side on a short break late in the second.
  • 7-1: Simon Holmstrom buried a rebound from the left circle after relentless pressure.

Dylan Larkin and Jonatan Berggren scored for Detroit, which has now dropped back-to-back games.

Schaefer watch

Rookie defenseman Matthew Schaefer played 25:14 and finished plus-2, even though his six-game point streak ended. That streak had tied the longest season-opening run by a rookie defenseman in NHL history.

Coach Mark’s Comment: “This is Islanders identity at max volume: physical, layered, ruthless on loose pucks. Heineman gives them instant finish, Lee is doing captain’s work, and Rittich was calm. That’s a playoff blueprint game.”


Sidney Crosby celebrates after scoring against the Florida Panthers

Crosby Leads Penguins Past Panthers, Extends Goal Streak to Four

Author: IHM Team | Date: October 24, 2025

SUNRISE, Florida – Sidney Crosby scored twice and added an assist as the Pittsburgh Penguins defeated the Florida Panthers 5-3 for their fourth consecutive win, extending his goal streak to four games. Crosby now sits two points away from reaching 1,700 career points.

Sidney Crosby celebrates after scoring against the Florida Panthers

Penguins’ precision, Crosby’s poise

On the power play, Bryan Rust found Crosby behind the net for a quick one-timer from the left circle, giving Pittsburgh an early 1-0 lead. Rickard Rakell doubled the advantage in the second period, finishing a rebound from Erik Karlsson’s shot.

Brad Marchand responded for Florida with a power-play goal from Mackie Samoskevich’s feed, but Tristan Jarry stood tall with 34 saves, including 16 in the third period. “They carried the fight in the second half,” Crosby said. “Jarry bailed us out a lot.”

Key goals under fire

Ben Kindel restored the two-goal lead at 15:24 of the second with a one-timer off Tommy Novak’s pass. The Panthers closed the gap twice through Sam Reinhart and Marchand, but each time Pittsburgh answered quickly. Connor Dewar and Crosby’s second of the night secured the 5-3 final.

The leadership effect

Coach Dan Muse: “It’s the response, the detail, and the composure. He sets the tone in every situation – we feed off that.”

Crosby has nine points (5G, 4A) during a five-game point streak and continues to redefine consistency and leadership at 38 years old.

Coach Mark’s Comment: “Crosby’s presence stabilizes everything – from puck management to emotional control. You can see the ripple effect in how the younger lines react after goals against.”


Sidney Crosby nearing 1,700 NHL career points with the Pittsburgh Penguins

Crosby Nears 1,700: The Relentless Standard of a Generation

Author: IHM Team | Date: October 23, 2025

PITTSBURGH – Even after two decades in the NHL, Sidney Crosby continues to deflect attention. The Penguins’ captain, now 38 years old, sits at 1,695 career points – just five shy of becoming the ninth player in league history to reach 1,700.

Sidney Crosby nearing 1,700 NHL career points with the Pittsburgh Penguins

A milestone he won’t celebrate

When asked about joining names like Gretzky, Lemieux, Messier and Howe, Crosby stayed humble:

“I don’t put myself in that category at all. They’re in a whole other world. I just have so much appreciation for what they did.” – Sidney Crosby

Career of quiet dominance

  • 500th goal: February 2022 vs. Philadelphia
  • 1,500th point: April 2023 vs. Detroit (2G, 1A)
  • 1,600th point: October 2024 vs. Buffalo (assisting Malkin’s 500th goal)
  • Franchise assist leader: Surpassed Lemieux in December 2024
  • 20th point-per-game season: March 2025 (breaking Gretzky’s record)

He recently passed Mario Lemieux with 1,896 total points across the regular season and playoffs, the most in Penguins history.

Legacy beyond numbers

“When you play at that level at 38, you don’t chase numbers – they chase you.” – Kris Letang

Head coach Dan Muse called Crosby’s routine “a masterclass in daily preparation.”

Signed, sealed, not done

Under contract through 2026-27, Crosby has averaged 90+ points over his last three seasons. His focus remains on leadership and culture rather than records.

Sidney Crosby: “Being a good role model, good teammate – that’s what matters. Hockey gives you a chance to represent your community. That’s what I’ll always value.”

Coach Mark’s Comment: “Crosby’s evolution is a clinic in consistency. He’s not just producing; he’s teaching the next generation how to prepare, think, and compete.”


New Jersey Devils celebrate sixth straight win after 4-1 victory over Minnesota Wild

Devils Stay Hot With 6th Straight Win, Beating Wild 4-1

Author: IHM Team | Date: October 23, 2025

The New Jersey Devils continued their October surge with a 4-1 win over the Minnesota Wild at Prudential Center, stretching their winning streak to six games. The team’s speed, layers, and structure again defined the night.

New Jersey Devils celebrate sixth straight win after 4-1 victory over Minnesota Wild

First impressions

New Jersey entered off a road win in Toronto; Minnesota arrived after a rare victory at MSG. The first period was tight and physical, but the Devils dictated pace with aggressive gaps and clean zone exits.

Dillon strikes again

Early in the second period, New Jersey pressed hard. Jack Hughes nearly converted on a breakaway, followed by a scramble in front of Filip Gustavsson. A minute later, pressure turned into points: Simon Nemec cycled for Dawson Mercer, who found Brenden Dillon at the blue line. His wrist shot through traffic made it 2-0 – Dillon’s second in two games.

Gritsyuk’s first NHL goal

At 4:00 of the third, David Jiricek took a penalty for slashing Ondrej Palat. On the ensuing power play, Timo Meier won the draw and Arseni Gritsyuk pounced on the rebound to score his first of the season. It was a clean setup: retrieval, rotation, and net-front execution.

Wild’s lone response

Midway through the period, Zeev Buium started transition through center, feeding Joel Eriksson Ek, who set up Matt Boldy for a shot off the bar and in – his fifth of the season. The Wild pulled Gustavsson late but couldn’t generate sustained pressure.

Bratt seals it

With 1:10 remaining, Jesper Bratt forced a turnover and scored into the empty net to lock in the 4-1 victory. Jake Allen stopped 25 shots, stabilizing every late Wild push.

Coach Mark’s Comment: “The Devils look mature now – they manage momentum, stay disciplined, and trust structure. Hughes and Bratt drive tempo, while the supporting cast delivers depth goals. That’s what a complete team looks like.”


New York Islanders promote Sergei Naumovs after firing goalie coach Piero Greco

Islanders Make Early Goalie Change: Greco Out, Naumovs In After 6 Games

Author: IHM Team | Date: October 23, 2025

The New York Islanders made a rare in-season move only six games into the year. Goaltending coach Piero Greco was dismissed and Sergei Naumovs was promoted from AHL Bridgeport. Naumovs previously worked with Ilya Sorokin at CSKA Moscow from 2018 to 2020.

New York Islanders promote Sergei Naumovs after firing goalie coach Piero Greco

Context

New York has won three straight, but Sorokin’s numbers remain below his standard: 3.90 GAA and .873 SV% among goalies with at least four appearances. General manager Mathieu Darche called the switch a reset for the position and said he did not seek input from Sorokin, who is in year two of an eight-year, 66 million dollar contract that runs through 2032.

“Right timing to have a reset with our goalies. It is 100 percent my decision. The goalie had nothing to do with it.” - Mathieu Darche

Why Naumovs

  • Prior working relationship with Sorokin at CSKA Moscow.
  • Technical detail on post integrations and rebound control.
  • Cultural and communication fit that shortens the learning curve.

What changes now

  • Focus on quiet feet, early set and first-save probability.
  • Cleaner puck touches to speed exits and reduce repeat zone time.
  • Refined pre-scout habits and morning-skate workload.

Coach Mark’s Comment: “This is about getting Sorokin back to quiet feet and first save probability. Naumovs knows his rhythms and language. If the details tighten in the crease and on breakouts, the numbers will normalize quickly.”


Connor Bedard leads Blackhawks’ young core during early-season surge

Blackhawks’ Young Core Finds Poise as Rebuild Gathers Speed

Author: IHM Team | Date: October 23, 2025

Chicago look different this fall: calmer, faster, more connected. Connor Bedard and Frank Nazar drive the surge, while blue-liners Artyom Levshunov and Sam Rinzel add composure. The Blackhawks are 3-2-2 and talking about accelerating the rebuild rather than just surviving it.

Connor Bedard leads Blackhawks’ young core during early-season surge

What feels new

The kids are producing. Bedard has 2-5-7, Nazar 3-4-7. Rinzel sits at 1-2-3. Levshunov owns two helpers and steady minutes. Quicker support through the neutral zone and cleaner exits reduce long defensive shifts.

Chemistry on and off the ice

The 2022-24 draft class spent time together late last season and carried it into camp. Shared road routines and extra skill work translate to faster reads and better recovery habits.

System uptick under Jeff Blashill

The brief is simple: play faster and be assertive. Early returns show better first touches, middle-lane support, and more attacks off turnovers. Mistakes still happen, but the group resets quicker.

Perspective and pressure

Club icon Denis Savard wants them in the playoff race with ten to go for valuable reps. Chairman Danny Wirtz sees a bond that echoes past cores rising together.

The checklist ahead

  • Close games late with cleaner shifts after icings.
  • Special teams: sharper entries and a true net-front on the power play.
  • Road composure: next measurement game in Tampa.

Coach Mark’s Comment: “The talent is obvious. What stands out now is poise. Bedard and Nazar drive speed, Levshunov and Rinzel calm the back end, and the group recovers faster after mistakes. That is how a rebuild turns into results.”


Capitals Surge Past Kraken as Dowd Drives 4-1 Win

Capitals Surge Past Kraken as Dowd Drives 4-1 Win

Author: IHM Team | Date: October 22, 2025

Washington needed a response and delivered one. At Capital One Arena the Capitals beat the Kraken 4-1, powered by Nic Dowd who posted 1+1 and set the tone on the forecheck. Rookie Ryan Leonard scored in a second straight game, Aliaksei Protas had two assists, and Logan Thompson stopped 18 shots. Washington has won five of six.

Capitals Surge Past Kraken as Dowd Drives 4-1 Win

Fast start, cleaner second period

At 8:30 of the first, Brandon Duhaime drove the right wall, John Carlson touched inside, and Nic Dowd finished at the back post for 1-0.

The second period belonged to Washington. Ryan Leonard scored 25 seconds in on a quick snap shot after Aliaksei Protas forced a turnover below the goal line. At 1:33, Jakob Chychrun joined PP1 and wired a right-circle shot to the top corner off an Alex Ovechkin pass for 3-0. The Capitals outshot Seattle 16-3 in the frame.

Kraken flashes and Murray’s debut

Jaden Schwartz made it 3-1 at 3:50 of the third on a bounce from the end boards. Seattle pushed late but could not solve Logan Thompson. With the net empty, Tom Wilson scored at 19:10 for the 4-1 final. Matt Murray made 30 saves in his Kraken debut.

Ovechkin tracker

Alex Ovechkin recorded an assist and remains two goals shy of 900.

Coach Mark’s Comment: “Washington won the details. Dowd’s line tilted the ice, Protas drove retrievals, and the second-period structure was textbook. If PP1 stays this crisp with Chychrun’s shot threat, this team becomes much harder to chase.”

Hughes Takes Over Toronto as Devils Extend Hot Streak

Hughes Takes Over Toronto as Devils Extend Hot Streak

Author: IHM Team | Date: October 22, 2025

The New Jersey Devils keep finding new gears. At Scotiabank Arena, Jack Hughes delivered a statement performance: a hat trick to lead his team past the Toronto Maple Leafs 5-2, marking the Devils’ fifth straight win. Jesper Bratt had three assists and Jake Allen made 23 saves in another confident team display.

Hughes Takes Over Toronto as Devils Extend Hot Streak

Momentum Shift

Toronto struck first when John Tavares batted in a rebound midway through the first period. New Jersey’s response came fast and sharp in the second. At 1:27, Hughes beat Anthony Stolarz from the slot, with Ondrej Palat screening the goalie. Toronto’s challenge for goalie interference failed, and on the resulting power play Cody Glass put the Devils ahead 2-1.

Speed Takes Over

The second period turned into a showcase of New Jersey’s transition game. Brenden Dillon finished a 4-on-1 rush at 4:54, pushing the lead to 3-1. Toronto’s defense collapsed under the Devils’ quick reads and layered movement through the neutral zone.

Leafs Fight Back

New Maple Leafs forward Matias Maccelli cut it to 3-2 off a feed from William Nylander at 7:03, but that was as close as Toronto got. Hughes restored the two-goal cushion at 16:17 with a short-side shot from the circle. He sealed the win with an empty-net goal in the final 30 seconds to complete the hat trick.

Coach Mark’s Comment: “That’s what elite players do: they sense weakness and punish it. Hughes dictated tempo, Bratt created time and space, and New Jersey’s puck support was textbook. This team is playing connected hockey.”