Tag: nhl highlights

Watch the best NHL highlights featuring top plays, goals, saves, and game-changing moments. Relive the excitement of the National Hockey League with expert breakdowns and analysis of key plays.

Wild Beat Predators in OT After Dramatic Stamkos Equalizer

Minnesota beats Nashville 3-2 in OT after Stamkos equalizer with 0.3 seconds left | IceHockeyMan

By IHM Team | IHM News | November 5, 2025

Wild top Predators in OT after last-second equalizer by Stamkos

Johansson wins it at 3:38 of overtime as review confirms goalie-caused net displacement

ST. PAUL, Minn. Minnesota absorbed a gut punch and still closed the deal. After Steven Stamkos hammered a one-timer with 0.3 seconds on the clock to force overtime, the Wild regrouped and defeated the Predators 3-2 at Grand Casino Arena. The winner belonged to Marcus Johansson at 3:38 of OT in a rare sequence that required a long look from the NHL Situation Room.

The deciding play began when Nashville goaltender Justus Annunen knocked the net off its moorings during a scramble. Johansson’s first attempt struck the left side where the post should have been, and he immediately tapped the puck into the vacant space. On-ice officials ruled goal. Video review supported the call, determining Annunen’s actions displaced the net prior to the puck crossing, which by rule awards the goal.

Minnesota leaned on its top pieces all night. Kirill Kaprizov recorded a goal and an assist, again steering the power-play tempo from the top of the slot, and Brock Faber logged two primary helpers including the low-slot shot that Zeev Buium redirected for a second-period power-play strike. Filip Gustavsson handled 32 of 34 shots with sturdy tracking through layers.

Nashville earned its point in dramatic fashion. With Annunen pulled for the extra skater, Stamkos darted into the left circle and uncorked a clean one-timer off a high feed, beating Gustavsson over the shoulder with 0.3 seconds remaining to tie the game 2-2. Earlier, rookie Matthew Wood had pulled the Predators level 1-1 by slipping behind coverage for a back-door finish on a Michael McCarron backhand pass.

Minnesota opened the scoring at 10:44 of the first on a man advantage. Kaprizov walked into a wrist shot from the high slot through traffic for his third goal in six games, part of an eight-point surge in that span. The Wild restored control late in period two when Buium angled Faber’s low drive past Annunen for 2-1, setting the stage for the wild finish.

Scoring summary

  • 1st, 10:44 MIN PP – Kaprizov 3, wrist shot from the slot (Faber, Johansson), 1-0
  • 2nd, 5:16 NSH – Wood, back-door tap-in from McCarron, 1-1
  • 2nd, 16:01 MIN PP – Buium, redirection of Faber shot in low slot (Faber, Kaprizov), 2-1
  • 3rd, 19:59 NSH – Stamkos, one-timer from high left circle with extra attacker, 2-2
  • OT, 3:38 MIN – Johansson, awarded after goalie-caused net displacement, 3-2

Goaltenders

MIN: Gustavsson 32 saves on 34. NSH: Annunen 22 saves on 25.

Team notes

  • Minnesota power play goes 2-for-x on the night, both goals created through Faber’s point activation and Kaprizov’s half-wall gravity.
  • Kaprizov up to 8 points in his last 6 games, continuing to drive controlled entries and east-west looks.
  • Nashville drops a second straight in overtime after a 5-4 OT loss to Vancouver the previous night.

Coach Mark comment
Minnesota showed mature game management after an emotional swing. The Kaprizov unit kept pace and spacing simple, Faber’s point timing was excellent, and the bench reset quickly before overtime which is a good playoff indicator.


Jacob Markstrom

Markstrom Turns Away 43 as Devils Silence Kings 4-1 | IHM News

By IHM Team | IHM News | November 2, 2025

Markstrom Turns Away 43 as Devils Silence Kings 4-1

Mercer scores twice shorthanded, Halonen nets first NHL goal, New Jersey perfect on the kill

Jacob Markstrom

LOS ANGELES. Jacob Markstrom was the difference. The New Jersey goalie stopped 43 shots and iced a 4-1 road win over the Los Angeles Kings at Crypto.com Arena. The performance arrived one day after Markstrom signed a two-year, $12M extension that starts in 2026-27.

Dawson Mercer struck twice shorthanded in the third period, Nico Hischier opened the scoring on a Luke Hughes point shot, and Brian Halonen beat Darcy Kuemper glove side for his first NHL goal. New Jersey snapped a two-game skid and moved to 9-3-0. The Devils killed all four Kings power plays and turned the game with their penalty kill.

Los Angeles saw a seven-game point streak end. Andrei Kuzmenko scored their lone goal from the low slot off an Anze Kopitar feed. Kuemper finished with 18 saves. The Kings remain winless at home this season.

What decided it

  • Goaltending: Markstrom’s 43 saves included multiple high-danger stops in the second and a clean OT-kill stand late.
  • Special teams: New Jersey went 4-for-4 on the kill and scored twice shorthanded through Mercer.
  • Starts and answers: Hischier’s redirect at 1:22 set the tone. When LA pushed, Mercer’s second closed the door into an empty net.

Milestones and notes

  • Luke Hughes recorded his 100th NHL point on Hischier’s tip.
  • Brian Halonen scored his first NHL goal and point in his 12th career game.
  • The Kings fell to 0-3-2 at home.

Coach Mark: Markstrom owned the blue paint tonight. The kill was connected, sticks in lanes, quick exits, and Mercer read the ice like a veteran. That combination wins playoff games.


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.


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.”


Red Wings edge the Kings 4-3 in a shootout.

Red Wings Survive Late Push, Beat Kings 4-3 in Shootout | IHM News

Red Wings edge the Kings 4-3 in a shootout.

by IHM Team | IHM News | Los Angeles, Crypto.com Arena

Detroit built a 3-1 cushion on the road, saw Corey Perry tie it with two goals in 40 seconds late in the third, then kept their composure to close a 4-3 shootout win. Marco Kasper scored twice, Alex DeBrincat added a goal and assist, and Cam Talbot made 35 saves plus a perfect 3-for-3 in the shootout.

Los Angeles extended its point streak to seven games but remains winless at home. Quinton Byfield had two assists, Darcy Kuemper stopped 24 shots, and an overtime power-play winner from Kevin Fiala was overturned for goalie interference.

“Two points is two points. We battled through the swings and finished the job in the shootout,” said Alex DeBrincat.

Game Flow

  • 1-0 LAK (12:39 2nd): Alex Laferriere short-handed breakaway, backhand finish.
  • 1-1 DET (13:22 2nd, PP): DeBrincat one-timer from the left circle on a feed from Lucas Raymond.
  • 2-1 DET (15:46 2nd, PP): Marco Kasper redirects Axel Sandin-Pellikka long shot. Good goal after stick-height review.
  • 3-1 DET (14:45 3rd): Kasper crashes the net on an odd-man rush from Mason Appleton.
  • 3-2 LAK (17:47 3rd, 6-on-5): Corey Perry cleans up a deflected point shot.
  • 3-3 LAK (18:27 3rd, 6-on-5): Perry redirects Byfield wrist shot from the slot.
  • OT: Kevin Fiala goal waved off for goalie interference at 4:21.
  • Shootout: Raymond scores the lone tally. Talbot stops all three attempts.

Cam Talbot rebounded from a tough previous start: big save on a 2-on-1 in the opening minute set his rhythm and the bench’s belief.

Coach Mark Lehtonen’s Take

“Detroit will like the response. Special teams delivered, Kasper played inside ice and stopped at the paint, and Talbot was calm in the skill moments. The Kings drove late with volume and net presence, which is their identity. The difference came down to the small goalkeeping details and one clean shot in the shootout.”

IHM Verdict

A grown-up road win for the Red Wings: controlled special teams, a young center driving the middle, and veteran goaltending in leverage time. The Kings bank a point again but still need a first home win to match their road form.

Final: Red Wings 4-3 Kings (SO)

Author: IHM Team | Commentary by Coach Mark Lehtonen


San Jose Sharks celebration at SAP Center

Sharks Blitz Early, Handle Devils 5-2 | IHM News

Sharks Blitz Early, Handle Devils 5-2

by IHM Team | IHM News | San Jose, SAP Center

San Jose landed three quick punches in the first period and never let New Jersey breathe. William Eklund scored 42 seconds in, Philipp Kurashev and Alexander Wennberg added two more in a five-minute span, and the Sharks closed out a confident 5-2 home win.

Wennberg and Kurashev finished with a goal and an assist each. Will Smith and Tyler Toffoli also scored. Timothy Liljegren posted two assists, and Alex Nedeljkovic stopped 29 shots as San Jose collected its first home and first regulation win of the season. The Sharks have now won three of five and look more organized shift to shift.

For New Jersey, Dawson Mercer delivered both goals on the power play with Dougie Hamilton supplying two helpers, but the Devils could not overcome the opening ten minutes. After an eight-game heater, they have now dropped two in a row.

“Just compete and play. I liked our start and the maturity in the third,” Sharks coach Ryan Warsofsky said.

Game Flow

  • 1-0 SJ (0:42 1st): Eklund outraces the bounce and beats Jake Allen five hole.
  • 2-0 SJ (12:12 1st): Wennberg threads from the wall, Kurashev one-timer glove side.
  • 3-0 SJ (15:47 1st): Mario Ferraro shot deflects in off Wennberg.
  • 3-1 (19:00 1st): Mercer tips Jack Hughes puck in on the power play.
  • 4-1 SJ (16:50 2nd): Macklin Celebrini wins the draw, Smith scores on his own rebound.
  • 5-1 SJ (18:30 2nd): Dmitry Orlov wrister glances off Toffoli and in.
  • 5-2 (4:19 3rd): Mercer redirects Hamilton point shot on the power play.

Nedeljkovic credited the group in front: “We were detailed, blocked shots, good layers. A lot never got through.”

Coach Mark Lehtonen’s Take

“San Jose played to identity. Early pace, direct entries, pucks to the blue paint, and they protected the house for Nedeljkovic. For the Devils, this was not structure as much as urgency. When your first three shifts lose races and sticks, you chase. Special teams kept them alive, but five-on-five compete has to spike.”

IHM Verdict

Clean, professional home win for the Sharks with clear shot selection and middle-lane drive. New Jersey’s response after the first was better, but the opening blitz decided it.

Final: Sharks 5-2 Devils

Author: IHM Team | Commentary by Coach Mark Lehtonen


Jake Sanderson celebration in red home

Senators Rally Late, Beat Flames 4-3 in Shootout | IHM News

Senators Rally Late, Beat Flames 4-3 in Shootout

by IHM Team | IHM News | Ottawa, Canadian Tire Centre

The Senators showed real growth under pressure. Jake Sanderson tied the game with 2:49 left in regulation when his shot from the left circle pinballed off bodies, kissed the crossbar, and dropped in. Ottawa then finished the job in the shootout on goals from Drake Batherson and Tim Stutzle, edging Calgary 4-3.

Ottawa trailed three different times in the third but never cracked. Lars Eller had a short-handed goal and an assist, Artem Zub scored through traffic, and Linus Ullmark made 27 saves. The Senators move to 4-1-1 in their last six and look increasingly comfortable in tight, grindy games.

“It was a mucky game,” Batherson said. “We knew they were desperate. We stayed patient and found a way.”

For Calgary, there were positives in defeat. Devin Cooley stopped 35 shots and was outstanding in overtime with seven saves, including multiple stops during a 4-on-3 penalty kill. Nazem Kadri, Yegor Sharangovich, and Matt Coronato scored, but the Flames could not close it out and fall to 1-8-2 in their last eleven.

Game Flow

  • 1-0 CGY (5:51, 1st): Sharangovich beats Ullmark high glove on the power play from the right circle.
  • 1-1 (7:37, 1st): Eller finishes a short-handed 2-on-1 off a Shane Pinto rebound. Ottawa’s first short-handed goal of the season.
  • 2-1 CGY (15:53, 1st): Coronato jams home a loose puck on the power play.
  • 2-2 (2:36, 3rd): Zub’s point shot finds a lane through a heavy screen.
  • 3-2 CGY (8:16, 3rd): Kadri executes a give-and-go with Jonathan Huberdeau, snaps it off the right post and in.
  • 3-3 (17:11, 3rd): Sanderson’s drive deflects twice, off the bar and over the line.
  • Shootout: Batherson and Stutzle score, Ullmark seals it.

Calgary coach Ryan Huska praised Cooley’s poise: “He made key saves at important times. Backup life is staying ready. He did that.”

Coach Mark Lehtonen’s Take

“Ottawa’s habits are maturing. They did not chase the game late. They layered their rushes, shot through traffic, and got bodies to the crease. Sanderson’s poise under pressure is big-time. Calgary’s structure was better, and Cooley battled, but game management in the last five minutes cost them. When you are in a spiral, you must close out the routine plays.”

IHM Verdict

Ottawa banked a grown-up win. Calgary showed effort and goaltending, but the margins in the third were the difference.

Final: Senators 4-3 SO Flames

Author: IHM Team | Commentary by Coach Mark Lehtonen


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


Flyers’ Travis Konecny Extension Is Aging Horribly - and It’s Only Year One

Flyers’ Travis Konecny Extension Already Aging Poorly | IHM News

Flyers’ Travis Konecny Extension Is Aging Horribly – and It’s Only Year One

by IHM Team | IHM News | October 28, 2025

When the Philadelphia Flyers gave Travis Konecny an eight-year, $70 million extension in July 2024, it looked bold – maybe even visionary. But less than a year later, that deal already looks like a time bomb.

Flyers’ Travis Konecny Extension Is Aging Horribly - and It’s Only Year One

A Rebuild With a Veteran Core

General manager Daniel Brière made the deal knowing the Flyers were still rebuilding. Konecny’s new cap hit – $8.75 million – makes him the highest-paid player in team history. That number might fit a contender, but for a club still finding its identity, it’s becoming an anchor.

The contract runs until Konecny is 36. His supposed “prime” is being spent on a non-playoff team – and his production has fallen dramatically.

The Numbers Tell a Bleak Story

Since January 29, 2025, Konecny has scored four goals and 22 points in 39 games – an eight-goal, 46-point pace while playing over 20 minutes per night.

  • 23rd percentile in points per 60 minutes
  • 3rd percentile in goals per 60 minutes
  • Outscored 50-34 at even strength
  • 39.7% expected goal share away from Couturier and Michkov

He’s no longer driving play; he’s just occupying space in it.

The Cam Atkinson Comparison

Before the extension was signed, some analysts warned this could become another Cam Atkinson scenario – productive 20s, steep decline post-30. That’s exactly what’s happening.

Atkinson’s contract with Columbus became a cap casualty before he retired in 2025. Konecny’s could become an even more expensive version of that story.

Long-Term Risk for the Flyers

The Flyers’ rebuild depends on flexibility – cap space, youth, and patience. Konecny’s $8.75M deal through 2032 could cripple all three. Worse, his decline may overlap with Matvei Michkov’s rise – right when Philadelphia needs freedom to build around him.

Coach Mark Lehtonen’s Take

“You can justify overpaying for a veteran leader when you’re close to winning. But the Flyers aren’t there yet.
Konecny’s contract feels emotional – like paying for what he was, not what he’s becoming.

Every coach sees when a player loses that half-step – it changes everything: forecheck, timing, puck battles. I don’t think he’s finished, but unless he finds that spark soon, this deal will age like milk in the sun.”

IHM Verdict

The red flags are waving. The Flyers paid top dollar for a player already on the wrong side of his curve. Year One of eight – and the trendline points down.

Author: IHM Team | Commentary by Coach Mark Lehtonen

Category: IHM News | Date: October 28, 2025


Sidney Crosby just became the 9th player in NHL history to reach 1,700 career points

Sidney Crosby Reaches 1,700 Points as Penguins Beat Blues 6-3 | IHM News

Crosby Hits 1,700 Points as Penguins Beat Blues 6-3

by IHM Team | IHM News | October 28, 2025

Sidney Crosby keeps rewriting hockey.

Sidney Crosby just became the 9th player in NHL history to reach 1,700 career points

The Pittsburgh captain put up a goal and two assists in a 6-3 win over the St. Louis Blues, and in the process became just the ninth player in NHL history to reach 1,700 career points. The milestone was sealed on Bryan Rust’s goal early in the third period.

Crosby now sits at 1,701 career points (632 goals, 1,069 assists). Only Wayne Gretzky, Jaromir Jagr, Mark Messier, Gordie Howe, Ron Francis, Marcel Dionne, Steve Yzerman and Mario Lemieux have ever touched that level. He is second all time in Penguins history behind Lemieux.

The 38-year-old center hit 1,700 in 1,362 games. That is the fourth-fastest pace in NHL history, behind Gretzky, Lemieux and Dionne.

“This is a group of players I grew up idolizing,” Crosby said. “I never thought I’d be anywhere near them. I’m just grateful I’ve been able to play this long.”

Pittsburgh is rolling too. The Penguins improved to 7-2-1 and are now 5-0-1 in their past six.

Game Flow

Pittsburgh came out aggressive. The Penguins scored twice on their first two shots in the opening minute: Bryan Rust at 0:39 and Anthony Mantha at 0:55. St. Louis got burned immediately.

“Poor start,” Blues coach Jim Montgomery said. “Two mistakes in two minutes and their top guys made us pay.”

St. Louis did fight back. Nick Bjugstad made it 2-1, and Jordan Kyrou tied it 2-2 late in the first with a wrist shot off the rush. Kyrou extended his point streak to seven games.

But every time the Blues pushed, Crosby answered. In the second period, with the game tied, Crosby threaded a cross-ice feed to Parker Wotherspoon on a delayed penalty. Wotherspoon scored to make it 3-2.

Early in the third, Rust tipped an Erik Karlsson point shot to push it to 4-2. Crosby had the secondary assist on that goal. That was his 1,700th career point.

“To be the guy on his 1,700th point is something I’m going to remember,” Rust said.

Mathieu Joseph cut it to 4-3 for St. Louis, but Crosby answered again. He broke free, got in alone, followed his own rebound and finished to make it 5-3 with under four minutes left. Evgeni Malkin added the empty-netter for 6-3.

Tristan Jarry made 26 saves. Karlsson had three assists. Rust scored twice. Malkin posted a goal and a helper. This was not nostalgia. This was an active statement from Pittsburgh’s core.

Coach Dan Muse said after the game that the second and third periods looked much more like Penguins hockey: “You get two early and you can think it’s going to come easy. We can’t think that way. I liked our response later in the game.”

Blues Outlook

St. Louis has now dropped four straight (0-3-1). The Blues were able to push in the first and second, but never controlled the pace long enough to flip the game in their favor.

“We didn’t push well enough to take the lead and have them chase,” Montgomery said. “That’s the difference.”

Off-Ice Situation

The Penguins confirmed that an adult male fan fell from the upper concourse to the lower bowl area and was taken to a local hospital. Coach Dan Muse opened his postgame comments by saying the team’s thoughts are with that fan and his family.

Coach Mark Lehtonen’s Take (IHM Analysis)

“That is not just another stat night. You are talking about a 38-year-old center still driving games in the best league in the world. Crosby did not just collect points. He controlled momentum. When St. Louis answered, he answered back harder.

What I liked most was timing. Big plays at pressure moments. That is what elite captains do. That is why that locker room still follows him.

And for Pittsburgh overall, this looks like a veteran core that still believes. Karlsson was sharp. Malkin was sharp. Rust was hungry. If they stay healthy and keep this pace, they are not just sentimental favorites. They are dangerous.”

IHM Verdict

The Crosby story is not over. Pittsburgh is not done. Final score: Penguins 6, Blues 3.

Author: IHM Team | Commentary by Coach Mark Lehtonen

Category: IHM News | Date: October 28, 2025