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Heading into the 2023 Stanley Cup playoffs, one series that grabbed the attention of many fans was the No. 2 vs. No. 3 matchup in the Metropolitan Division, pitting the New Jersey Devils against the New York Rangers in the latest edition of the Battle of the Hudson.

Thus far, it’s been a one-sided affair, with the visiting Rangers winning both Games 1 and 2 by 5-1 scores. According to ESPN Stats & Information, the Rangers are the second team in Stanley Cup playoff history to win the first two games on the road by four or more goals. The other club was the 1970 Boston Bruins, who did so in the Stanley Cup Final against the St. Louis Blues. Boston would sweep that series.

As talented as the Devils are, a comeback is certainly a possibility. They will attempt to start one in the Game 3 clash Sunday at Madison Square Garden.

To help get you ready for the game, we’ve put together a guide on what to watch from each team, including keys to victory from senior writer Greg Wyshynski, and in-depth statistical insights from ESPN Stats & Information.

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Line: NYR -140 | O/U: 5.5

Wyshynski’s keys to victory

The young Devils are making their first playoff appearance since 2018 after the most successful regular season in franchise history. But they have looked nothing like that team through two games. The experienced Rangers have overwhelmed their neighbors, outscoring them 10-2.

Still, New Jersey forward Erik Haula said not to count them out yet.

“We’re not done. We’re far from done. We’re not defeated. We’re going to keep pressing,” he said.

Here are three keys for Game 3:


Is the Devils’ deficit too large?

Losing the first two games of a series always puts a team’s collective back against a wall. Losing the first two games on home ice is a recipe for disaster.

According to the NHL, teams that take a 2-0 lead in a best-of-seven series when starting on the road hold a series record of 85-20 (.810). The last time it happened was in the 2022 Stanley Cup playoffs, when the Tampa Bay Lightning took the first two games in Sunrise against the Florida Panthers and swept them.

The Devils were tied for the second highest points percentage on the road this season (.732), winning 28 of 41 road games. They had a win and an overtime loss at Madison Square Garden this season.

“The fact that we haven’t gotten the results we wanted, we still have the ability to do something special,” Devils coach Lindy Ruff said. “We win one game, we turn this series around.”


Kreider time

The biggest factor in this series so far has been the Rangers’ power-play dominance.

The Rangers scored two power-play goals in each of the first two games, some of them coming at soul crushing times. In Game 1, a power-play goal gave the Rangers a 2-0 lead just 9:30 into the game. In Game 2, a power-play tally boosted the Rangers’ advantage in the second period just 4:04 after they had tied the score.

The Devils have been short-handed 10 times in two games after averaging 2.85 times per game being short-handed at home in the regular season.

“I don’t think we’re playing very well. We’re taking terrible penalties. Everyone’s gotta play better,” center Jack Hughes said.

One way to be more effective on the penalty kill would be to find a way — any way — to stop the Rangers’ Chris Kreider, who scored all four of their power-play goals.

“I just happened to be the open guy a couple of times,” he said.

Coach Lindy Ruff said Kreider had “some fortunate [goals]” on friendly bounces, but stressed that his team had to be better.

“We have to take his stick away. We had blown coverage [in Game 2],” Ruff said. “Our forward at the top can do a better job of being in that shot lane.”

That’s easier said than done. Kreider believes that the Rangers’ power-play success has been slowly building after the trade deadline acquisitions of Patrick Kane and Vladimir Tarasenko.

“It’s not a video game. You can’t just throw together lines and expect them to work,” said Kreider, who had eight power-play goals in 79 regular-season games. “We’ve been working as a group on the power play and 5-on-5. It’s starting to come.”


Changes for Devils

Like almost everything else in this series, the Devils’ regular-season success at even strength hasn’t transferred to the postseason. They were fourth in 5-on-5 goals (197). This series, they’ve yet to score a goal at even strength.

In an effort to generate offense, Ruff mixed lines again at practice ahead of Game 3. He moved Ondrej Palat up with Nico Hischier and Jesper Bratt; moved Hughes in the middle with Tomas Tatar and Haula; and dropped trade deadline coup Timo Meier down to a line with Michael McLeod and Dawson Mercer.

The real intrigue is in the crease. Vitek Vanecek has an .827 save percentage in two games. The Devils have 26-year-old Mackenzie Blackwood and 22-year-old Akira Schmid waiting in the wings.

“We’ve used all three goalies this year,” Ruff said. “So if we decide we’re going with a different goalie, it’s because they’ve been part of our group and helped us win games all year.”

Notes from ESPN Stats & Information

Devils

  • The Devils’ only series win after falling behind 2-0 in a best-of-seven came in the 1994 conference semifinals against the Bruins. They dropped a pair of one-goal games at home before winning the next four, including three in Boston. Their reward for winning that series was a conference finals date with their Hudson River rivals. The Rangers won in a memorable seven-game series.

  • The Devils’ four power-play scoring chances have come from Haula (two), Hischier and McLeod. This means none from Hughes, Bratt, Dougie Hamilton or Meier, who combined to score 29 power-play goals for the Devils this season.

  • The Rangers have disrupted the Devils’ passing lanes in every zone (New Jersey has 28 giveaways in two games after averaging 9.07 per game during the regular season), but especially when New Jersey is in the offensive zone. According to Stathletes, New York is averaging 17.0 defensive zone deflection causing turnovers per game in the series (14.5 in the regular season; 11th in NHL).

  • Vanecek has allowed nine goals on 52 shots and ranks at the bottom among playoff goaltenders in goals saved above expected (-4.01).

  • Rookie Schmid was on the bench as the backup for the first two games, and Blackwood is also available, though neither has any playoff experience. If Schmid gets the nod, he would be the first Devils rookie goalie to start a playoff game since Martin Brodeur in Game 7 of 1994 Eastern Conference finals, which was against the Rangers at Madison Square Garden.

  • According to Stathletes, the Devils were the top team in generating scoring chances off the rush during the regular season at 5.1 per game. Bratt (first) and Hughes (third) were among the top three in the NHL in rush scoring chances per 60 minutes during the regular season (Colorado’s Evan Rodrigues was second), but have combined for just five scoring chances (and no goals) off the rush in the first two games.


Rangers

  • The Rangers won just twice on the road in last season’s Stanley Cup playoffs, which ended for them in Game 6 of the Eastern Conference finals against the Lightning. The Rangers matched that total before the first week of this season’s playoffs ended.

  • Tarasenko has gotten the Rangers on the board with a goal in each of the two games. He is the seventh player in Rangers playoff history, and the first since Steve Vickers in 1978, to open the scoring in two straight games to open a postseason (no Rangers player has done so in three consecutive games).

  • Tarasenko has scored 43 playoff goals since 2014 and ranks third in the league over that span behind only Nikita Kucherov (53) and Palat (48).

  • Kane has been the difference-maker the Rangers had hoped when he was acquired from the Chicago Blackhawks in February. He is seeking to become the first active skater to win four Stanley Cup titles and possibly add another Conn Smythe, which he won in 2013. In Game 2, Kane scored his 53rd career playoff goal, matching Jeremy Roenick for fourth-most on the league’s all-time list among U.S.-born players behind Joe Pavelski (64), Joe Mullen (60) and Mike Modano (58).

  • Kreider has been the story for the Blueshirts, becoming the first player in NHL history with four power-play goals through the first two games of a playoff series. The last skater to have just three PPG through the first two games was Bill Guerin in 1998 with the Edmonton Oilers.

  • The only Rangers skater with five power-play goals in a single playoff series is Adam Graves in the 1996 conference quarterfinals vs. the Canadiens (six games). The NHL record for most PPG in one series is six by Chris Kontos (Los Angeles Kings) in the 1989 division semifinals against the Oilers (seven games). The record for most power-play goals scored in a single playoff run is nine by Mike Bossy (New York Islanders) in 1981 and Cam Neely (Boston Bruins) in 1991.

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Suárez out at Trackhouse Racing at end of 2025

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Suárez out at Trackhouse Racing at end of 2025

CONCORD, N.C. — Daniel Suárez, the only Mexican-born driver to win a NASCAR national series race, is out at Trackhouse Racing at the end of the 2025 season.

Trackhouse and Suárez officially called the parting a “mutual decision” that allows the driver an earlier opportunity to pursue a new ride for next season.

While Trackhouse did not name a replacement in the No. 99 Chevrolet, Suárez’s departure opened the door for the team to promote teen sensation Connor Zilisch into the ride. Zilisch, who drives in the Xfinity Series for JR Motorsports, has run three Cup races for Trackhouse this season, including Saturday night at Atlanta.

Suárez has just two wins in 305 career Cup starts, and is a distant 29th in the points standings this season. The 33-year-old Suarez is in his fifth season with Trackhouse Racing and was the team’s first driver in 2021. He made NASCAR’s playoffs two times with Trackhouse.

“We took a team nobody had even heard of in 2021 and in just a couple of years we were winning races and running upfront on a weekly basis,” Suárez wrote on social media. “Just like the seasons in a year, sometimes things change and we have agreed to each go in our own direction.”

Trackhouse founder and owner Justin Marks thanked Suárez for his contributions.

“The role Daniel has played in the Trackhouse origin story and its first five years will remain a valued part of the company’s history forever,” Marks said. “His commitment, work ethic and dedication to the effort is one of the most impressive things I personally have seen in my career.”

Trackhouse Racing also has Ross Chastain and Shane van Gisbergen under contract, along with Zilisch is its development driver. Chastain has six career wins and was the 2022 Cup Series runner-up while van Gisbergen has a win this year and is in the playoffs.

Suárez, who became an American citizen last year, also has three Xfinity Series wins and one Truck Series win. His 2016 championship in the second-tier Xfinity Series made him the only foreign-born driver to win a national series title.

He made a triumphant return last month to his home country when he won the Xfinity Series race in Mexico City driving for JR Motorsports at Autodromo Hermanos Rodriguez.

Yet the balance of celebrating a homecoming with looming contract negotiations weighed on Suárez.

“It’s not the first time that I’ve been in this position. Definitely the first time with the Mexico race, but it’s not the first time that I’ve been in the position that we have to win or in the position that we have a contract negotiation in the middle of the season,” Suárez said. “It’s definitely a distraction. I won’t sit here and tell you that it doesn’t really matter. I’m trying to be as smart as possible and to put all this stuff on the side and just do my thing on the track.”

He’ll do his thing at the track in 2026 with yet another new team.

Suárez started his Cup career with Joe Gibbs Racing and has raced for Stewart-Haas Racing and Gaunt Brothers Racing. He has Cup wins in 2022 at Sonoma and last year in Atlanta.

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NASCAR’s downtown Chicago future unclear

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NASCAR's downtown Chicago future unclear

CHICAGO — When it comes to NASCAR’s upcoming return to downtown Chicago, Julie Giese has a long list of responsibilities. The track president is monitoring an ambitious construction schedule for the street course, to go along with everything else that goes into the busy weekend.

What happens next is going to have to wait.

The future of NASCAR in Chicago is murky going into its third edition on the first weekend in July. The three-year contract between the motorsports organization and the city that was announced in 2022 has two mutual options, and their fate is unclear.

Giese said there have been “good conversations” between NASCAR and the city, and there is time to work on the possibilities beyond the event.

“So really right now the focus is on let’s execute a really great 2025,” Giese said. “We’ll continue to have the conversations with the city. But right now, honestly, the more consistent conversations are the planning conversations.”

Jason Lee, a senior adviser to Mayor Brandon Johnson, praised NASCAR for its involvement in the community and its improvements with the event. He described almost parallel discussions going on inside of the organization and the city when it comes to the future of the partnership.

Johnson’s predecessor, Lori Lightfoot, was in charge when the original agreement for the weekend was finalized.

“We remain available to have any conversations about the future,” Lee said Monday. “I know they’ve been laser focused on executing this year’s event because there are lessons they’ve learned that they want to apply. And I think some of that, whether you successfully do that, will play a role in how they want to proceed.”

One possible change that could interest the city is moving to a different weekend, something it has discussed with NASCAR in the past.

“It may make more sense to move that event to a different weekend where we don’t have as many demands on our law enforcement and other emergency personnel,” Lee told the AP. “And so that’s definitely something that we’ve contemplated, but there is also some constraints in terms of other events in the city of Chicago and the NASCAR schedule.”

The Athletic reported June 18 that NASCAR was nearing an agreement to put a street race in the San Diego area next year. An announcement could come as soon as July.

Asked if she had spoken with NASCAR or anyone in the San Diego area about a Southern California street race, Giese said her focus is on Chicago. She also said she believes there is room for multiple street courses on NASCAR’s calendar.

“We have multiple road course races on the schedule,” she said. “So I mean … I’ve not ever heard where it has to be one or the other. I mean there is room. This event, we went into it that first year knowing full well it was a proof of concept. And we showed that it is possible.”

The Xfinity and Cup Series races in Chicago — held on a 12-turn, 2.2-mile course against the backdrop of Lake Michigan and Grant Park — are the main events in a festival-like weekend that also includes music and entertainment options.

It is geared as much to a new audience in one of NASCAR’s most important regions as it is to the most ardent racing fans. NASCAR used to race at Chicagoland Speedway in Joliet, a 45-mile drive from downtown, but it pulled out after the 2019 season.

“This is a top-three market for us, worldwide frankly, for NASCAR fans,” NASCAR executive Ben Kennedy said when the Chicago event was announced in 2022.

There was some concern for drivers and their teams about the course ahead of the first weekend, and it wasn’t exactly warmly received by local businesses and residents because of the street closures in a heavily trafficked area for tourists in the summer.

But organizers have shrunk the construction schedule from 43 days in 2023 to 25 this year. Based on input from fans, they also have made adjustments to the race viewing areas and moved the concert stage to the start-finish line. Admission is free for kids 12 and under on Saturday and Sunday this year.

The weekend also has won over at least some people inside of NASCAR.

“This was very different. But now it’s fun to see and hear from people in the industry that are coming in early, and they’re going to just enjoy the city for a few days,” Giese said. “The one piece that I hear from our drivers, especially, is they love just staying right at a hotel right across the street. They’re walking across Michigan Avenue and they’re at the course.”

Quite often with an umbrella. Wet weather had a major effect on each of the first two editions. Heavy rain nearly scuttled the inaugural weekend, and last year’s Cup Series race was shortened because of a rain delay and fading sunlight.

When the drivers were on the course, the racing was compelling. Shane van Gisbergen outdueled Justin Haley and Chase Elliott en route to a historic Cup victory in 2023, and Alex Bowman stopped an 80-race drought with his victory last year.

“They’ve been up against it as far as conditions are concerned,” Joe Gibbs Racing driver Denny Hamlin said. “The track has been good, it’s been racy and has passing zones and the scenery is fantastic as far as the backdrop we are racing in. There’s a lot of positives for the Chicago Street Race.

“It will probably move around in the future, but it’s in the mold in which I would like to see any street race they continue to implement in the future.”

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Elliott uses last lap to post ‘unbelievable’ win

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Elliott uses last lap to post 'unbelievable' win

HAMPTON, Ga. — Home-state favorite Chase Elliott passed Brad Keselowski on the final lap and won the crash-filled NASCAR Cup Series at Atlanta on Saturday night for his 20th career victory.

Elliott, the popular driver from Dawsonville, Georgia, earned a spot in the NASCAR playoffs with his first victory since April 2024 at Texas. It was his first win in Atlanta since 2022.

“I’ve never in my whole life, this is unbelievable,” Elliott said. “This is something I’ll remember the rest of my life.”

The race’s second crash early in Stage 2 took out many of the sport’s biggest names and left others with damaged cars. Pole winner Joey Logano, who led the first 36 laps before light rain forced the first caution, was among the many drivers caught up in the big crash.

Among others knocked out of the race: William Byron, Austin Cindric, Ross Chastain, Josh Berry, Corey LaJoie and Daniel Suarez.

“It wrecked the whole field,” Logano said. “I still don’t know exactly how it started … but it was total chaos. Cars were sideways and on the brakes. I got hit from every corner possible.”

Added Denny Hamlin, who suffered damage to his Toyota in the crash: “Some zigged. Some zagged. Most crashed.”

The Atlanta race at EchoPark Speedway, formerly known as Atlanta Motor Speedway, was the debut of the 32-driver In-Season Challenge, a five-race, bracket-style tournament.

The parade of highly regarded drivers to be knocked out so early in the race showed the perils of trying to pick NASCAR winners on a March Madness-style bracket sheet. The top two seeds were among the early casualties.

Hamlin, the No. 1 seed in the tournament, finished 31st and lost to Ty Dillon, who finished eighth.

Chase Briscoe, who held off Hamlin for his first win for Joe Gibbs Racing last week at Pocono Raceway, was the No. 2 seed before being knocked out in a crash and losing to Noah Gragson in the tournament.

A $1 million prize awaits the winner as part of a new media rights deal that includes TNT.

Elliott and Keselowski were on the front row when a caution with 33 laps to go forced a decision on whether to pit for fresh tires. Both stayed on the track, and Elliott faded following the restart until making his decisive charge at the very end.

Ryan Blaney was knocked out on a wreck late in the first stage. Christopher Bell hit the wall, triggering the crash that ended the stage with Cindric in the lead.

Cindric was involved in the bigger crash early in Stage 2. Kyle Busch, Hamlin and Bubba Wallace were among others involved in the crash.

Photo finish

Tyler Reddick beat Elliott to the finish line by 0.001 to win Stage 2 in a battle between drivers looking for their first stage win and overall victory of the season.

Weather woes

Lightning and rain delayed qualifying Friday and the Xfinity race won by Nick Sanchez late Friday. More lightning and rain threatened Saturday night’s race. Fans were encouraged to leave the stands about 90 minutes before the race due to severe weather in the area but were allowed to return as the pre-race was conducted as planned.

Up next

The Cup Series moves to Chicago for the Chicago Street Race on July 6.

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