Tag: NHL

Anaheim Ducks 4-1 Winnipeg Jets | IHM Game Recap

Anaheim Ducks 4-1 Winnipeg Jets | IHM Game Recap

Anaheim Ducks 4-1 Winnipeg Jets

Date: November 10, 2025
Author: IHM News

Ducks dominate Jets with special-teams precision, extend home momentum

Anaheim delivered another composed, structured home performance, beating the Winnipeg Jets 4-1 behind two power-play goals from Leo Carlsson and a standout all-situations night from rookie Beckett Sennecke. Winnipeg generated a shot edge but struggled to break Anaheim’s layered defensive zone reads, while Lukas Dostal delivered calm, technically precise goaltending to steady the Ducks throughout.

Game Flow

1st Period: Anaheim controlled pace early and struck first at 07:18 when Beckett Sennecke buried a rebound created through Corey Gauthier’s entry pressure. Physicality ramped up, but the Ducks kept composure. At 19:03, Carlsson doubled the lead on the power play, snapping a one-timer off a crisp Terry-to-Kreider passing rotation for 2-0.

2nd Period: Winnipeg responded quickly at 04:22 through Kyle Connor, finishing off a Morrissey-Scheifele sequence. Anaheim stabilized fast, and Sennecke answered at 11:48 with his second of the night after controlled middle-lane support from McTavish and Gauthier, restoring a 3-1 lead.

3rd Period: Early in the period at 02:46, Carlsson struck again on the power play, timing the weak-side seam perfectly for 4-1. Winnipeg thought they pulled one back at 19:13, but a successful goalie-interference challenge overturned the goal. Anaheim closed out confidently.

Numbers Box

  • Shots on Goal: ANA 21, WPG 24
  • Shots off Target: ANA 23, WPG 19
  • Power Play: ANA 2/4, WPG 0/4
  • Blocked Shots: ANA 15, WPG 14
  • Saves: Dostal 23/24 (95.8%), Comrie 16/20 (80%)
  • PIM: ANA 8, WPG 8
  • Notable: Sennecke 2G, Carlsson 2 PPG goals, Ducks win special-teams battle

Coach Mark Comment

Carlsson’s timing on the power play keeps getting better. Sennecke showed real poise in tight areas, and Anaheim’s defensive reads were simple but effective. When the Ducks control their neutral-zone tempo like this, they’re difficult to break.

Questions & Answers | IHM Performance Metrics

Why did Anaheim control this matchup?

Their special teams dictated pace, and their neutral-zone layers forced Winnipeg into predictable entries. Dostal handled the rest.

What stood out about Beckett Sennecke’s performance?

His goal-scoring came from smart support routes and quick-release positioning. He consistently attacked inside ice.

How did Winnipeg generate more shots but fewer dangerous chances?

Anaheim kept most attempts to the perimeter. Jets lacked sustained slot penetration, especially at even strength.

What made Carlsson’s power-play goals possible?

Elite timing, clean east-west puck rotation, and Winnipeg’s passive penalty-kill spacing.

Is Anaheim’s home performance trend sustainable?

Yes. Their defensive structure and transition clarity hold up well against most opponents.

More NHL news available on IHM.


Alex Ovechkin scores his 900th NHL goal with the Washington Capitals | IHM News

Alex Ovechkin scores his 900th NHL goal with the Washington Capitals | IHM News

By IHM Team | IHM News | November 6, 2025

Capitals captain hits landmark No. 900 in 6-1 win vs Blues, extends an untouchable record

Alex Ovechkin scores his 900th NHL goal with the Washington Capitals | IHM News

WASHINGTON – The NHL has a new club and it has a membership of one. Alex Ovechkin reached 900 career goals on Wednesday night at Capital One Arena, scoring 2:39 into the second period of the Washington Capitals’ 6-1 victory over the St. Louis Blues and pushing his all-time record to a tier no player had ever touched.

The 40-year-old captain found the moment in classic predator mode. Stationed low on the right circle after Washington’s initial thrust, Ovechkin reacted first to a rebound from Jakob Chychrun’s shot and shoveled a backhand past a sliding Jordan Binnington, who could not recover across his crease. The Capitals bench emptied for a quick on-ice celebration as the building erupted. Binnington secured the milestone puck – a souvenir soon to be headed for Ovechkin’s personal vault.

Ovechkin spoke afterward about the scale of the number and the relief of delivering it in front of home fans and family. Teammates called the goal inevitable. Defenseman John Carlson said the milestone should spark another wave of momentum, echoing a familiar theme over two decades: doubts surface, and Ovechkin erases them.

This latest summit comes months after he passed Wayne Gretzky with No. 895 in April, establishing the new NHL record that only he continues to elevate. He needed three more to hit 900. After opening the season with four outings without a goal, he ended that mini-drought with a third-period strike against Minnesota on Oct. 17 and added No. 899 a week later versus Columbus before planting the flag tonight.

Washington is still built around the pressure Ovechkin creates on entries and on the power-play flank, but the 900th came from second-chance instinct, not the trademark one-timer. It fit the wider picture of late-career adaptation: different routes to the same destination.

Ovechkin is in the final season of his contract. Whether he chooses another chase – toward the round figure of 1,000 – can wait. For now, the league’s ledger shows a category with a single name. Nine hundred.

Around the milestone

  • Second-period time of goal: 2:39.
  • Opposing goalie: Jordan Binnington (STL).
  • Teammate setup: rebound of Jakob Chychrun shot.
  • Game result: Capitals 6, Blues 1.

What they said

  • Ovechkin called it a special moment and appreciated delivering it at home with family in the building.
  • T.J. Oshie recently dismissed doubts about another 30-goal season for Ovechkin, citing a career of proving people wrong.
  • Logan Thompson joked about Binnington tucking the puck away to ensure it found the right hands.

The NHL’s most prolific goal scorer has authored another chapter. The number is new; the feeling in Washington is familiar.

Coach Mark comment
Ovechkin again showed elite read on second pucks and interior positioning. This was not a set-piece one-timer but a veteran goal built on timing and anticipation. The larger point is consistency under pressure and the ability to adapt his routes to the net. History continues because details remain sharp.


Flyers outlast Canadiens 5-4 in shootout after blowing 3-0 start | IceHockeyMan

Flyers outlast Canadiens 5-4 in shootout after blowing 3-0 start | IHM News

By IHM Team | IHM News | November 5, 2025

Flyers survive Montreal rally and win 5-4 in shootout

Brink scores twice, Zegras decides the tiebreaker, Suzuki point streak reaches 12

MONTREAL Philadelphia rode a blistering start, absorbed a furious response, and still left Bell Centre with two points. The Flyers built a 3-0 cushion on their first six shots, saw the Canadiens answer with four consecutive goals in a wild second period, and ultimately prevailed 5-4 in a shootout.

Bobby Brink provided two goals including a net-front redirection and a rebound put-back, Cam York added a 5-on-3 strike, and playmakers Trevor Zegras and Travis Konecny each registered two assists. In the skills contest, Zegras delivered the only conversion to seal it. Dan Vladar made 16 saves for Philadelphia, steady in the third and in overtime after the game tilted.

Montreal clawed back behind Kirby Dach’s brace and a power-play surge driven by Nick Suzuki and Ivan Demidov. Suzuki’s second-period one-timer extended the longest point streak in the league this season to 12 games with 19 points over that span. Rookie winger Nikita Grebenkin added a composed third-period finish from the high slot for his first NHL goal, tying the game 4-4 at 10:51.

The opening frame belonged to the Flyers. At 1:56, Brink angled a Travis Sanheim point shot with his backhand for 1-0. On a two-man advantage at 7:07, York hammered Zegras’s backhand feed from the right circle. Just 43 seconds later, Brink jumped on a rebound for 3-0 and Philadelphia’s second straight power-play goal.

Montreal responded immediately in the second. Dach cut the deficit to 3-1 at 3:12 by slamming a lively carom off the end boards. Suzuki made it 3-2 at 4:15 with a clean one-timer into an open side after a cross-ice pass from Demidov. The building surged, and the Canadiens kept pressing. Dach knotted it 3-3 at 13:28 on a quick feed from Lane Hutson below the goal line. At 15:57, Demidov gave Montreal a 4-3 lead with a high-glove wrist shot from the right dot on the power play.

Philadelphia steadied in the third, tightened the neutral-zone gaps, and forced overtime where Zegras’s creativity mattered most. His lone tally in the tiebreaker, paired with Vladar’s stops, delivered the extra point.

Scoring summary

  • 1st, 1:56 PHI – Brink, backhand deflection of Sanheim shot, 1-0
  • 1st, 7:07 PHI 5-on-3 – York, one-timer from right circle (Zegras), 2-0
  • 1st, 7:50 PHI PP - Brink, rebound at the crease, 3-0
  • 2nd, 3:12 MTL – Dach, rebound from low right circle, 3-1
  • 2nd, 4:15 MTL PP – Suzuki, one-timer from left side (Demidov), 3-2
  • 2nd, 13:28 MTL – Dach, feed from Hutson below the line, 3-3
  • 2nd, 15:57 MTL PP – Demidov, wrist shot high glove from right dot, 4-3
  • SO PHI – Zegras, winner

Goaltenders

PHI: Vladar 16 saves on 20. MTL: Montembeault 38 saves on 42, resilient after early barrage.

Team notes

  • Zegras and Konecny drive pace with east-west touches and inside-lane entries.
  • Suzuki extends franchise best since Pierre Turgeon’s 13-game run in April 1995.
  • Grebenkin records first NHL goal in his 16th career game.

Coach Mark comment
Philadelphia responded to momentum loss with smarter puck management and shorter shifts. Montreal’s second-period push was elite with Hutson activating below the goal line and Suzuki commanding the weak side. The difference came from special teams execution and one extra play in the shootout.