“Whatever we’ve got to do at this time of year, we’ve got to do it,” forward Nicolas Roy said. “If we’ve got to take a hit. If we’ve got to block a shot.”
Seated next to Roy was Mark Stone, the Golden Knights’ captain.
He has hurt. And they have won.
Like in Game 3 of the Western Conference finals, when an overly amped up Jamie Benn of the Dallas Stars cross-checked Stone in the jaw while he was flat on the ice, earning Benn a game misconduct and a two-game suspension.
“It didn’t feel good,” Stone said. “I think I was more a little bit surprised. It was my first shift of the game. I didn’t expect to get stomped on like that.”
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Jamie Benn ejected after 5-minute major penalty
Jamie Benn is ejected early in Game 3 after a five-minute major for cross-checking.
Vegas would score three times in the first period of that game to chase goalie Jake Oettinger, taking a 3-0 series lead and eventually winning the series in six games to advance to the Stanley Cup Final.
Prior to that, multiple Edmonton Oilers played amateur chiropractor on Stone’s surgically repaired back during the second round, hitting him with their bodies and their sticks at every opportunity.
“I mean, what do you expect, right?” Stone said. “I mean it’s pretty obvious that I had another back surgery. But I wouldn’t feel comfortable playing if I was putting myself at risk. If they want to do that, they can do that. It’s fine. It is what it is.”
It hurt. The Golden Knights won.
“He’s kind of the heart of the team,” Vegas winger Jonathan Marchessault said. “He’s such a calm presence out on the ice and he makes everyone look better out there. When he talks, everybody listens. I think he gained that respect from all of us.”
The Golden Knights are now one win over the Florida Panthers away from commissioner Gary Bettman calling Stone over to raise the Stanley Cup. Which is a welcome change from a few months ago, when he couldn’t really lift anything following back surgery.
His second back surgery. In less than nine months.
“I was going to do whatever it took to get back for the playoffs,” Stone said. “I wasn’t sure if it was going to be in Game 1 or Game 5 or Game 10. I was going to do whatever it took to get back.”
Stone knew there was something special about this group. He could sense it on the ice as much as he could glimpse it in the standings.
“We were in first place when I got hurt,” he said. “I knew we had a good team and I wanted to be part of it. Especially when the team kept winning. I wanted to be back there with the guys. Long, hard days. But you just put your head down and you get going.”
STONE’S BACK ISSUES were there in the 2021 playoffs and the offseason. They limited him to 37 games in the 2021-22 season. He went out of the lineup Feb. 9, and then returned April 12 in a desperate effort to get Vegas to the playoffs. But he only managed a goal and an assist in nine games. He was clearly laboring.
In May 2022, Stone underwent a lumbar discectomy.
He was back for the start of the 2022-23 season and played until Jan. 12 when he suffered a back injury against the Panthers. He hoped to avoid surgery and rehab back to health. But he suffered a setback. The decision became clear: Any chance of playing in the postseason would rest on undergoing another surgery as soon as possible.
On Jan. 31, 2023, Stone underwent successful back surgery performed by Dr. Chad Prusmack in Denver. Prusmack previously performed Vegas center Jack Eichel‘s artificial disc replacement surgery.
Then the work began.
“I went to the gym the day after the surgery with the surgeon. Basically got going right away,” Stone said. “I tried to cut out the [rehabilitation] clock where I was basically sitting around, doing nothing. I got going right away.”
Stone did a lot of walking. He was able to do core exercises. He said his goal at that point was to “strengthen the little muscles, I guess.”
Vegas coach Bruce Cassidy would see Stone plenty during his injury rehab. The Golden Knights coaches would hit the gym at their practice facility early in the morning. Often times, Stone would already be there.
“What I saw every day was a captain that was still in the room and talking to players and giving feedback,” Cassidy said. “It’s just good to have a guy around like that because when you have surgery like that and you don’t see him, it’s like out of sight, out of mind, right?”
Knights defenseman Alec Martinez said it was still hard on Stone. Being around the team wasn’t the same as being on the ice.
“When you’re not in the lineup and you’re hurt, you don’t feel like you’re part of the team,” he said. “You’ve got a different schedule. You kind of just see guys passing, just like ships in the night. You just feel disconnected. You’re out on inside jokes in the room. The fun part of it. So yeah, it’s a tough spot to be in.”
Especially when you’re the captain.
“He’s the biggest leader in this room,” Martinez said. “Being out for an extended period of time really takes a toll on you mentally.”
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Mark Stone’s power-play goal ties it up for Vegas
Mark Stone scores on the power play as the Golden Knights tie it up 1-1 vs. the Panthers.
TWO BACK SURGERIES less than nine months apart sparked speculation in NHL circles about Stone’s future. Armchair physicians saw a second surgery as a harbinger of something more chronic.
Could he be the same player that he was? Could he continue to play?
“These are not life-threatening injuries. But they can be career-ending and they can frequently be quite painful and debilitating,” Dr. Caleb Pinegar of Crovetti Orthopaedics & Sports Medicine told Ken Boehlke of SinBin.net, a Golden Knights blog. “When does that point come? The big question I have now is if he tweaks his back again, do they encourage him to hang it up? Because you don’t want to put a young guy through three back surgeries.”
Those were the whispers. But was Stone ever worried about his career?
“No,” he said.
Was that just Stone the competitor talking louder than Stone the realist?
“No, I mean, I’ve seen plenty of doctors in the last three years,” Stone said. “I guess I’ve got a lot of confidence in Dr. Prusmack, with seeing what Jack went through and the success that he’s had with that surgeon. That maybe gave me a little bit of confidence. But no, I never was worried.”
He said people were misreading the necessity for multiple back surgeries.
“You talk to a lot of guys, they don’t usually just get one back surgery,” he said. “They usually get two, because as much as you think you know the problem, sometimes you don’t. And unfortunately it didn’t work the first time, but saw a different surgeon, couple other of minor things done. And I feel great.”
How much better does Stone feel now?
“The crazy thing is that I felt pretty good during the season,” he said with a laugh. “It was an unfortunate incident. Pretty minimal play that took me out for the remainder of the season. But I was feeling good most of the season and I feel good now.”
When, exactly, Stone felt good again has been a contentious point for opposing teams’ fans.
Stone makes $9.5 million against the salary cap. That money was moved to long-term injured reserve when he had his back surgery. The open cap space helped the Knights add forwards Ivan Barbashev and Teddy Blueger as well as goalie Jonathan Quick at the trade deadline.
Stone was activated from injured reserve in time for Game 1 of their first-round series against the Winnipeg Jets on April 18 — five days after he missed the finale of their regular season, a.k.a. the last game in which they had to worry about being cap-compliant.
But the captain was back. And the Golden Knights became a much tougher team to play against.
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Mark Stone’s goal doubles the Golden Knights’ lead
Mark Stone finds the back of net as the Golden Knights extend their lead to 2-0.
STONE HAS PLAYED 584 games with the Golden Knights and the Ottawa Senators, who traded him to Vegas in 2019. He has 514 points in those games, including 196 goals.
He has 31 goals and 71 points in 94 career playoff games, including eight goals and 13 assists through 21 games in the 2023 postseason.
But it’s his defensive prowess that distinguishes him as an NHL star, having twice been nominated for the Selke Trophy as the NHL’s best defensive forward. That’s remarkable for a winger — only centers have won the award since 2003.
Cassidy coached one of those centers with the Boston Bruins: Patrice Bergeron, who has won the Selke a record five times.
“I see Stoney’s stick and ability to read plays and be a step ahead, and that’s where he’s most like Bergeron,” the coach said. “He knows where the puck’s going. He seems to have that sense to put out fires because of that.”
Cassidy noted another similarity between Bergeron and Stone: The limitations in their abilities. “They’re not the fastest guys on the ice,” he said. “I think they’ve played this way their whole life and that’s why it’s second nature.”
Marchessault agreed.
“He’s not an outrageous skater or our shooter or a great passer, but it’s his thinking of the game that’s better than everybody else,” he said. “He’s consistent, and that’s probably one of the best of the most positive things to have as a hockey player.”
Eichel has been praised as a 200-foot player in the 2023 playoffs, after years of being seen as one-dimensional. He said he’s taken some inspiration from watching Stone, and facing him in scrimmages.
“When you play against him in training camp, he’s always getting his stick on the puck and pickpocketing you and s—,” he said. “So I imagine for the opposing team, it’s a pain.”
Eichel said it’s difficult to emulate what Stone does defensively, because it comes so naturally to him. Instead, it’s been Stone’s relentless competitiveness that’s been imprinted on him since he arrived in Vegas.
“He’s not really a preacher of any sorts, but you can learn a lot from him and his mindset every day,” Eichel said. “He’s a great leader. He’s a guy that other people gravitate towards. Just being around him for a short amount of time, you realize right away why he’s the captain here.”
Stone has endured, through the surgeries and the rehabs and the sticks to the back and the neck. With just one more win, it’ll all have been worth it.
The matchup between the No. 2 Indiana Hoosiers and the Penn State Nittany Lions turned wild in the fourth quarter. The Hoosiers held a 20-10 lead before Nicholas Singleton and the Penn State offense got moving. Then IU QB, and Heisman candidate, Fernando Mendoza threw and interception that set up an incredible finish.
The volatility and unpredictability of the 2025 college football season has rippled through the group of draft-eligible quarterbacks.
ESPN repolled 25 NFL scouts and executives about who will be the first quarterback taken in the 2026 NFL draft, with the results drastically different from six weeks ago.
In the latest poll, Indiana‘s Fernando Mendoza was the top vote-getter with 13 votes, putting him ahead of Oregon‘s Dante Moore (6) and Alabama‘s Ty Simpson (3). Notably, none of those quarterbacks received a vote in the first poll, and all have eligibility remaining.
“It’s not a stellar class,” one scout told ESPN. “If you add the maybes [who have eligibility and could leave school], now it gets interesting. The top is better than last year’s class, for sure.”
The top of this year’s crop has flipped from Sept. 20, when seven different quarterbacks received votes, with Sellers (8) edging out LSU‘s Garrett Nussmeier (7). Both players and their teams have struggled this season. Others receiving votes in the first QB1 poll were Miami‘s Carson Beck (3), Mateer (3), Penn State‘s Drew Allar (2), Arizona State‘s Sam Leavitt (1) and Texas‘ Arch Manning (1).
The sentiment regarding the class has soured a bit since the initial polling. Along with the dip in play from Sellers and Nussmeier, Allar suffered a season-ending injury and Manning hasn’t resembled anything close to what his family and recruiting pedigrees projected.
While Mendoza is the top vote-getter, he has yet to establish himself as a no-brainer No. 1 overall pick. He is trending that way, but there is not yet conviction behind those projections.
Mendoza transferred from Cal and has taken a leap under coach Curt Cignetti and the tutelage of offensive coordinator Mike Shanahan and quarterbacks coach Chandler Whitmer. His completion percentage is 72.3%, up from 68.7%, and he has thrown 25 touchdowns, nine more than last season at Cal. He has also rushed for four touchdowns and is averaging 9.5 yards per attempt, up from 7.8.
What do scouts like? They start with the basics of him being 6-foot-5 and 225 pounds. He idolizes Tom Brady, which is viewed as a strong North Star for a prospect.
“He has ‘wow’ throws and playmaking passer ability,” one scout told ESPN. “He can anticipate post-snap.”
Added another: “He’s decisive, and he sees everything well. He’s got accuracy down the field and is very tough in the pocket.”
There was a play against Iowa where Mendoza hung in the pocket and got decked by a Hawkeyes linebacker while delivering a perfect ball to a receiver in tight coverage.
Moore’s emergence has been sudden. He has started 13 games, including five at UCLA in 2023 before backing up Dillon Gabriel at Oregon last season. A redshirt sophomore who entered college as ESPN’s No. 2 overall player, Moore is 6-3 and 206 pounds. He attempted just eight passes last season but has maximized his starting role in 2025, with 19 touchdowns, a 71.4% completion percentage and 1,772 passing yards.
Simpson didn’t start a game until this season, which has led to speculation in NFL circles that he will return to college. (Quarterbacks with under 25 starts don’t have a consistent track record of NFL success.) Simpson has soared onto radars with 20 touchdowns and just one interception. He has completed 67.8% of his passes and thrown for 2,184 yards.
Sorsby might be the biggest surprise. While he struggled in high-wattage spots against Nebraska and Utah, he has clearly progressed.
One scout summed him up this way: “He’s big, tough, athletic and smart. He’s a leader and can make off-schedule plays and change arm angles. He’s got the ‘It.’ I think he’s very gifted.”
Kristen Shilton is a national NHL reporter for ESPN.
Buffalo Sabres captain Rasmus Dahlin is taking a leave of absence from the team to join his fiancée in Sweden, where she continues to recover from a heart transplant.
There is no timetable for when Dahlin will return to the Sabres. Coach Lindy Ruff was able to share that Dahlin’s fiancée, Carolina Matovac, hadn’t suffered any setbacks.
“[Dahlin] said everything is OK,” Ruff told reporters Friday. “I think it’s been incredibly hard. I fully understand what this young man is going through. I don’t think you can describe it. I’m very passionate about the fact that no one would want to walk in his shoes and to have dealt with what he has dealt with. He has the support of everybody on this. This is larger than hockey.”
Matovac began feeling sick last summer while she and Dahlin were vacationing in France. She experienced sudden heart failure and received life-saving care en route to the hospital. Matovac has remained in Sweden to recover while Dahlin started the new season with Buffalo.
The 25-year-old blueliner is two years into his tenure as Sabres captain and has anchored the club’s defense practically since Buffalo drafted him first overall in 2018. Given Matovac’s health issues, it has been a distracting season for Dahlin, but he has managed nine points in 14 games and carries a heavy workload at over 24 minutes per night.
But Dahlin expressed some frustration about his performance this season following Buffalo’s 3-0 loss to St. Louis on Thursday.
“I got more to give. I’m not satisfied,” Dahlin told reporters. “I want to create more. I want to do more out there. I’m not satisfied, but I’m on the way.”
Some things are bigger than a stat sheet or standings, though, and that’s where Ruff wants to see Dahlin’s focus going for now.
“Family and personal come before hockey,” Ruff said. “Hockey’s our job, hockey’s our lifeline, but family and personal trump anything else.”