SABRES 5, PENGUINS 4 (OT)
Jack Eichel scored 45 seconds into overtime as Buffalo
erased a three-goal deficit to win its sixth consecutive game, beating host
Pittsburgh. Eichel, who also had an assist, launched a shot from the right dot that
caromed in off the arm of Pittsburgh goaltender Casey DeSmith.
Zach Bogosian also had a goal and an assist, and Tage
Thompson, Casey Nelson and Casey Mittelstadt scored for the Sabres, who picked
up their fifth win when trailing after two periods.
Tanner Pearson had a goal and an assist, and Derick
Brassard, Phil Kessel, and Jake Guentzel scored for the Penguins, who blew a
4-1 second-period lead and fell to 1-7-2 in their past 10 games.
PANTHERS 7, SENATORS 5
The Florida Panthers sustained a potentially devastating
injury to 2017 All-Star center Vincent Trocheck but still prevailed 7-5 over
the host Ottawa Senators on Monday night.
Trocheck, who suffered an apparent knee injury, was taken
off the ice by stretcher with 1:47 left in the second period. He was hurt when
he was crunched into the boards by Ottawa's Ryan Dzingel. "It doesn't look
good to me," Florida coach Bobby Boughner said postgame, according to
NHL.com. "It looks long term, and there's no way to sugarcoat it."
Florida got goals from Troy Brouwer, Aleksander Barkov,
Jared McCann, Evgenii Dadonov, Micheal Haley, Frank Vatrano and Mike Hoffman.
Hoffman extended his Panthers franchise-record points’ streak to 16 games,
which is the longest active run in the NHL.
Matt Duchene led Ottawa with two goals and one assist.
Drake Batherson, Zack Smith and Brady Tkachuk had Ottawa's other goals.
KINGS 2, BLUES 0
Cal Petersen made 29 saves for his first career shutout
in his third NHL start, all in the past four days, to lead visiting Los Angeles
to a win at St. Louis.
The Blues were shut out for the second straight game and
lost for the fourth time in five games, and afterward they fired coach Mike
Yeo. Assistant coach Craig Berube will fill Yeo's role on an interim basis.
Matt Luff scored his first NHL goal in the second period
and Anze Kopitar scored into an empty-net with 29.5 seconds left to secure the
win. Jake Allen made 25 saves for St. Louis.
CAPITALS 5, CANADIENS 4 (OT)
Lars Eller scored with 1:26 left in overtime to give
Washington a come-from-behind victory at Montreal.
Montreal had won two in a row and held a 4-2 lead just
1:35 into the second period before Washington pulled rookie goalie Pheonix
Copley in favor of Braden Holtby. The 29-year-old veteran shut out the
Canadiens the rest of the way, stopping all 22 shots he faced.
Alex Ovechkin scored twice for Washington, which also got
goals from Brett Connolly and Nicklas Backstrom. Mike Reilly, Brendan
Gallagher, Jeff Petry and Kenny Agostino scored for Montreal, which led 4-2 in the
second period.
JETS 6, CANUCKS 3
Patrik Laine scored three goals as Winnipeg won at
Vancouver.
Laine gave the Jets an insurmountable 4-1 lead midway
through the second period with his first goal of the night. The flashy Finn
added two third-period goals, the final one an empty-netter, as the Jets posted
their fourth win in five games. The injury-riddled Canucks lost their sixth
consecutive game.
Winnipeg goaltender Connor Hellebuyck produced 22 saves
on 25 shots, while Vancouver counterpart Jacob Markstrom stopped 43 of 48.
RANGERS 2, STARS 1
Rookie Filip Chytil scored for the fourth consecutive
game, netting the tiebreaking goal early in the third period as New York ran
its home winning streak to six games with a victory over Dallas.
Chytil gave the Rangers a 2-1 lead with 15:28 remaining.
The 19-year-old became the first teenager to score in four straight games in
team history while helping New York improve to 8-1-1 in its last 10 games.
Jimmy Vesey scored the tying goal for the Rangers, who own
the NHL's longest home winning streak this season. Tyler Seguin tallied for the
Stars, who dropped to 1-3-0 in their past four road games and mustered a
season-low 17 shots.
PREDATORS 3, LIGHTNING 2
Ryan Johansen scored what proved to be the game-winning
goal and also had an assist, and Pekka Rinne made 29 saves to lead host
Nashville past Tampa Bay.
Kyle Turris and Filip Forsberg also scored goals for
Western Conference-leading Nashville. Mattias Ekholm added two assists. Rinne
improved to 9-0-1 in his career against the Lightning.
Victor Hedman and Nikita Kucherov scored goals and
Brayden Point added a pair of assists for the Lightning, who had a two-game
winning streak snapped. Louis Domingue stopped 31 shots.
FLAMES 7, GOLDEN KNIGHTS 2
Matthew Tkachuk collected two goals and two assists, and
Johnny Gaudreau had a career-high-tying four-point game as host Calgary rode a
five-goal first period to a thrashing of Vegas.
Flames goalie David Rittich made 20 saves to collect his
seventh victory in eight decisions. This win may have been the easiest for
Rittich, as his team potted five goals in a first period for the first time
since March 11, 1993, versus the Detroit Red Wings.
Sean Monahan scored twice for Calgary, which also got
goals from Gaudreau, TJ Brodie and Sam Bennett. Nick Holden and Max Pacioretty
got on the board for the Golden Knights after they fell behind 7-0.
MAPLE LEAFS 4, BLUE JACKETS 2
Zach Hyman scored the go-ahead goal late in the third
period and added another into an empty net as Toronto came back to defeat
visiting Columbus.
It was the fourth win in a row for the Maple Leafs, who
fell behind 2-0 in the first period. The Blue Jackets had won their three
previous games.
Tyler Ennis and Tavares also scored for Toronto. Mitch
Marner and Ron Hainsey each added two assists. Cam Atkinson and Pierre-Luc
Dubois each scored a goal and added an assist for Columbus.
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