Having passed the midway mark of the 2023-24 NHL regular season, we have our eyes on the standings as the playoff races heat up during the cold winter months.
Saturday’s schedule is packed, with all 32 teams in action. The first matchup of the day sees the New York Rangers (currently first in the Metropolitan Division) visiting the Washington Capitals (three points back of the second Eastern wild card) at 1 p.m. ET on ABC and ESPN+.
Here are the key players to watch, along with other intel courtesy of ESPN Stats & Information:
The Rangers have the best power play in the league at 30.0%, which would be their highest in a season since the stat was first tracked in 1977-78. Their highest current mark is 28.8%, set in that 1977-78 season. The Rangers last had the best power play in a season in 1996-97 (22.0%). They have had the best power play three times since the stat was tracked, (1990-91, 1993-94, and 1996-97).
The Rangers’ penalty kill ranks top six in the NHL, at 84.4%. Its 18 power-play goals allowed are tied for the second fewest in the NHL with the Philadelphia Flyers, only behind the Los Angeles Kings (14). The Rangers are one of two teams that rank top six in both power play and penalty kill, along with the Boston Bruins.
New York has scored first in 23 games this season, tied for the fourth most in the NHL. The Vancouver Canucks lead the NHL with 27 games scoring first. Of those 23 games, the Rangers have won 18 of them.
Artemi Panarin currently leads all Rangers players in goals (26), assists (32) and points (58) this season and his 1.45 points per game rate is sixth best in the NHL. His 57 points and 32 assists through his team’s first 40 games of the season is the most he’s had in his career.
Chris Kreider currently has 285 goals in his career, which is the third most in Rangers franchise history, trailing Rod Gilbert (406) and Jean Ratelle (336). Kreider is signed through the 2026-27 season, and at his current goals pace for his career (0.37), he would pass Ratelle in 141 games (early part of the 2025-26 season). However, he wouldn’t break Gilbert’s record by the time his contract ran out (current pace is 330 games, which would be the 2027-28 season).
Igor Shesterkin was named to the 2024 All-Star Game in Toronto as the Rangers representative. He has won six of his last eight starts, and has allowed two or fewer goals in five of those.
The Capitals started the season with a 12-6-2 record (.650 points percentage) which was the eighth-best points percentage in the NHL through Nov. 30. Since the start of December, Washington is 7-7-4, with its .500 points percentage in that time tied for 22nd in the NHL with the Vegas Golden Knights and Calgary Flames. Washington is 2-4-1 since the return to action after Christmas, allowing the second-most goals per game in that span (4.29). Only the San Jose Sharks are worse (4.43).
Most of the struggles for this team revolve around generating offense — the Capitals are averaging 2.39 goals per game this season, the third-lowest mark in the NHL with only the Sharks (1.98) and Chicago Blackhawks being worse (2.32). The Capitals’ 2.39 goals per game is on track to be their third worst in a season in franchise history, after 1974-75 (2.26) and 2003-04 (2.27). The franchise selected Alex Ovechkin first overall in the 2004 NHL draft following that 2003-04 campaign (he didn’t make his debut until 2005-06 due to NHL lockout in 2004-05).
It’s been a struggle in every period for the Capitals this season, as the team has been outscored in the first period (minus-4 goal differential), second period (-7), and third period (-12). Washington is one of five teams in the NHL that have been outscored in the first, second, and third period this season, alongside the Montreal Canadiens, Anaheim Ducks, Blackhawks, and Sharks.
Alex Ovechkin has eight goals in 38 games played this season, his fewest goals in his first 38 games of a season in his NHL career. His fewest goals through the first 40 games of a season is 14 in the 2010-11 season. Ovechkin’s shooting percentage is 6.0%, which would be the lowest rate of his career (current season low is 8.7% in 2010-11). His eight goals are tied for last among the 43 forwards who have played at least 20 games and are averaging at least 3.0 shots on goal per game this season.
The Capitals have seven goals and 59 points from their defensemen, the second-fewest in the NHL this season respectively (Blackhawks have six goals from blueliners, Sharks have 55 points from rearguards). John Carlson leads the team’s defensemen with 23 points this season, and he’s the only Caps defenseman with more than two points on the power play (nine).
Goaltender Charlie Lindgren was activated off injured reserve on Jan. 9. Among goaltenders to make at least 15 appearances this season, Lindgren has the second best save percentage (.928), behind Vegas’ Adin Hill (.933). Lindgren also has a 2.27 goals-against average, fourth best among goaltenders with at least 15 appearances.
ESPN baseball reporter. Covered the Washington Wizards from 2014 to 2016 and the Washington Nationals from 2016 to 2018 for The Washington Post before covering the Los Angeles Dodgers and MLB for the Los Angeles Times from 2018 to 2024.
HOUSTON — Five times Juan Soto stepped into the batter’s box during his debut with the New York Mets against the Houston Astros on Thursday. And five times baseball’s $765 million man received steady boos from the Daikin Park crowd, none louder than in the ninth inning, with the game on the line.
Soto, fittingly, represented the game-winning run when he walked to the plate to face left-hander Josh Hader with runners on the corners and two outs. Hader, one of the best closers in the sport, quickly fell behind 3-0, then recovered with two strikes before unleashing a slider that darted away from Soto and out of the strike zone.
Soto waved and whiffed. He was, shockingly, fooled to end the Astros’ 3-1 win.
“His best pitch is the fastball,” Soto said, “so I was sitting on the fastball.”
Thursday’s Opening Day game, matching two clubs that expect to play in October, had a few pregame storylines. Future Hall of Famer Jose Altuve‘s first game as a left fielder in his age-35 season. Cam Smith, a 22-year-old slugger, making his major league debut less than a year after he was drafted. Clay Holmes, the former New York Yankees All-Star closer, starting his first game since 2018.
But it was, above all, about Soto.
A year ago, Soto also made his debut as the right fielder for a New York club in Houston to launch a pressure-packed season. But that team was the Yankees, the stadium was called Minute Maid Park and the pressure stemmed from the desire to impress with free agency waiting in November.
This time, he’s a member of the Mets, an air conditioning company owns this ballpark’s naming rights and the pressure stems from looking to prove he’s worth the largest contract in professional sports history.
Batting second, Soto cracked a single in his first plate appearance as a Met against veteran left-hander Framber Valdez. He walked in the third inning, flied out in the sixth and walked again — on four pitches — in the eighth. It was a typical Soto showing, skillfully patient but willing and able to pounce on mistakes.
And yet the Mets did not score for eight innings. Valdez began his platform season by holding the Mets’ potent lineup scoreless over seven innings on 90 pitches. New York showed signs of life against right-hander Bryan Abreu but still didn’t manage to score. It wasn’t until the ninth inning, when Hader clearly wasn’t in peak form, that the Mets finally pushed a run across.
Starling Marte singled, Tyrone Taylor singled and Luisangel Acuna worked a 12-pitch walk to load the bases to begin the inning. After Hayden Senger struck out in his first career at-bat, Francisco Lindor delivered a sacrifice fly to pull the Mets within a run, bringing Soto to the plate.
“You feel it. I think everybody’s like, man, let’s get Juan up and see what happens,” said Holmes, who surrendered three runs (two earned) over 4⅔ innings in his Mets debut. “And we’re able to do it. More times than not, we feel really good about it. And they made him work, and we were right there close. At the end of the day, if we got Juan up with a chance to win the game, anybody likes those chances.”
What followed was a one-on-one battle between two players elite in their respective crafts. Soto said he saw Hader, a five-time All-Star, “really well” even though he presented a difficult lefty-lefty matchup with a three-quarters delivery.
“We all want to do something in a big spot,” Soto said. “We all try to get the knock and try to bring the runs in and try to help the day in any way. But, for me, I don’t mind taking a walk right there. I have Pete [Alonso] behind me, and he’s a really good power hitter.”
Soto would have walked if he had laid off the 3-2 slider. But he didn’t, and his first signature Mets moment will have to wait at least another day.
WASHINGTON — The jeers greeted the announcement of Bryce Harper‘s name during pregame introductions at Nationals Park on Thursday. And when he stepped to the plate in the top of the first inning. Again in the fourth.
And, once more, when it was his turn to bat in the seventh, with his current team, the Philadelphia Phillies, trailing his first club in the majors, the Washington Nationals, 1-0 on Opening Day. As Harper does so well, and so often, he lived up to the moment, hammering a first-pitch fastball to the deepest part of the stadium, getting Philadelphia’s offense going in what became a 7-3 victory over Washington in 10 innings.
“I love coming in here and playing in this stadium,” Harper said when asked about the booing. “I’ve got a lot of great memories in here, as well. Everywhere I go, it’s exactly like this. Some places are louder than others. It’s all the same.”
He also pivoted on the topic, saying about his returns to the ballpark in the nation’s capital: “All the workers, really — I love my relationship with them a lot. Going through the tunnel and talking to everybody, they still tell me they love me. All the workers in [the visitor’s clubhouse], as well. They know who I am. They know exactly what type of person I am and player and all that kind of stuff. Fans — it’s part of it.”
His long ball Thursday was the sixth of his career in his team’s first game of a season, tied for the most among active players. The first five Opening Day homers for him came while playing for Washington, where he was the 2012 NL Rookie of the Year and the 2015 NL MVP before leaving for Philly as a free agent after the 2018 season.
“I love hitting in this ballpark,” Harper said. “Always have.”
The eight-time NL All-Star connected off reliever Lucas Sims after striking out twice against Nationals starter MacKenzie Gore as shadows crept across the field on account of the 4:06 p.m. start on a sunny day.
Gore finished with 13 Ks; Nationals pitchers accumulated a total of 19 strikeouts.
“We couldn’t see,” said Alec Bohm, whose two-run double broke a 3-all tie in the 10th. “[That’s] part of it.”
Harper’s take?
“Obviously we don’t want to punch [out] 19 times. That’s comical, right? It’s not fun to do that,” Harper said. “And we can’t do that as a team. But today, made it happen, made it work.”
He hadn’t homered in a spring training game and said his “timing was just a little off” heading into the regular season.
The first baseman chuckled when he mentioned that hitting coach Kevin Long joked with him that there was, actually, a home run off Harper’s bat down in Florida — but it came during live batting practice on a back field.
The 415-foot solo shot off a 96 mph fastball Thursday was a good sign.
“Definitely felt good on that swing,” Harper said. “Felt like it all came together right there.”
Jesse joined ESPN Chicago in September 2009 and covers MLB for ESPN.com.
ST. LOUIS — Nolan Arenado‘s eighth-inning blast didn’t give the St. Louis Cardinals the lead — they were already in front at the time — nor did it complete a big day for him at the plate.
But it had plenty of extra meaning, and the crowd knew it. It’s why they asked for and received a curtain call from the 12-year veteran, who was on the trade block all winter.
“I wasn’t expecting the current call,” Arenado said after the Cardinals’ 5-3 win Thursday over the Minnesota Twins on Opening Day. “I’m actually surprised I got it. I don’t think I got one last year.”
Arenado took Twins right-hander Griffin Jax deep to left to pad the Cardinals’ lead, giving him two hits, but it was before the game that he really began to feel the emotion of the afternoon. Arenado received a huge ovation from the sold-out crowd during player introductions, giving him a reason to take things in more than normal.
“I usually don’t, but today I did, and the way they cheered for me, it meant a lot to me and it got me motivated, and I was just fortunate to give them something to cheer about again,” Arenado said. “Usually, they don’t do curtain calls if you hit one homer, but it was a big homer.”
The emotions from Arenado’s blast and the ensuing curtain call stemmed from the uncertainty that loomed over his future in a Cardinals uniform following an unproductive 2024 campaign in which he hit just 16 home runs. Over the winter, he invoked his no-trade clause, turning down a deal to Houston, though many observers thought he would eventually be moved.
Another trade never materialized, but that doesn’t mean one won’t happen this summer. Arenado understands that.
“I don’t know,” he said. “There’s different things going through your head, so you just think of all the uncertainty. I was like, I don’t know if this is going to be my last time.”
His teammates recognized the meaning of the moment as well.
“Significant to him,” outfielder Lars Nootbaar said. “Significant to us. Cool for the fans to bring him out like that.”
St. Louis is going through a transition phase as longtime executive John Mozeliak has already announced this will be his last year. Unless the Cardinals are in the race, there is an expectation they will move some veterans later this summer.
But that wasn’t the narrative on Thursday when St. Louis played a solid opening game, led by veterans such as Arenado and starter Sonny Gray. It’s possible that Gray will eventually be moved as well, along with closer Ryan Helsley, who locked down the save against the Twins.
But that’s for the future. The present was about a fan favorite getting his due after a rough season.
“That was a pretty nice bow on it,” manager Oliver Marmol said of the home run. “This is a guy that’s worked really hard this offseason to come back and show what he’s capable of doing. That’s a big homer. It’s probably more meaningful than people think.”