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As the month of January continues, we are keeping an eye on the NHL standings; after all, following the All-Star Weekend, the March 8 trade deadline will be here before you know it, and then the playoff races will really heat up.

Thursday night’s streaming doubleheader features three teams currently in playoff position, and one that has fared much better since a midseason coaching change. To help get you ready for Minnesota WildTampa Bay Lightning (7 p.m. ET, ESPN+/Hulu) and Nashville PredatorsLos Angeles Kings (10 p.m. ET, ESPN+/Hulu), we’ve assembled this handy fan’s guide.

Here are the key players to watch in each matchup, along with other intel courtesy of ESPN Stats & Information:

Minnesota Wild vs.

Tampa Bay Lightning

Thursday, 7 p.m. ET | ESPN+/Hulu
Amalie Arena (Tampa, FL)

Wild

Power Rankings position: 26
Leading scorer: Kirill Kaprizov: 13 G | 22 A
Record: 18-20-5 (41 points)

  • Minnesota is 13-10-1 under John Hynes since he took over for the fired Dean Evason on Nov. 28. Evason was fired after the team started 5-10-4, their worst 19-game start since their inaugural season in 2000-01 (4-11-3). In the 24 games Hynes has coached, Minnesota has led after the first period in 10 of those games, tied for the second most in the NHL over that span. Minnesota is 9-1-0 in those games, tied for the second most wins among all NHL teams.

  • The Wild are 7-2-1 in their last 10 games against the Lightning, despite losing its last two games by multiple goals. Minnesota’s seven wins are the tied for the most over a 10-game span against Tampa Bay since the 2016-17 season with five other teams (the Boston Bruins, Toronto Maple Leafs, New York Rangers, Vegas Golden Knights, and Winnipeg Jets), and occurred during a stretch where the Lightning won two Stanley Cup titles.

  • Kirill Kaprizov is playing in his third game of the 2024 calendar year after being out from Dec. 30 to Jan. 13 with a lower-body injury. Despite missing seven of the team’s 43 games, Kaprizov leads Minnesota in points (35); if he finishes atop the list, it’ll be the fourth consecutive season he has done so. Over his last eight games, Kaprizov has 11 points (five goals, six assists), which is tied for the most points over an eight-game span by any player for the Wild this season.

  • Joel Eriksson Ek scored two goals in the team’s 5-0 shutout over the New York Islanders on Monday. With 17 goals through 43 games this season, Erikkson Ek is on pace for a career-high 30 goals this season. Eriksson Ek is taking most of his opportunities from the inner slot, with 99 shot attempts from that area of the ice this season, good for third highest in the NHL this season. Only John Tavares and Zach Hyman rank higher.

  • Marc Andre-Fleury passed Patrick Roy for sole possession of second on the NHL’s all-time goalie wins list (at 552, behind Martin Brodeur at 691) in a 5-0 shutout of the Islanders on Monday. Fleury’s shutout was his first this season, and his first since Feb. 23, 2023 against the Columbus Blue Jackets.

  • According to ESPN BET, Brock Faber has the third shortest odds (+600) to with the Calder Trophy (Rookie of the Year), behind Connor Bedard (-190) and Luke Hughes (+500). If Faber wins, he would be the first player in Wild franchise history to win the award, and would be the third defenseman in the last five years to win the trophy (Moritz Seider: 2021-22; Cale Makar; 2019-20).


Lightning

Power Rankings position: 22
Leading scorer: Nikita Kucherov: 28 G | 44 A
Record: 22-17-5 (49 points)

  • The Lightning are 22-17-5 this season, good for a .557 points percentage. That’s their lowest points percentage at the 44-game mark since the 2016-17 season when they were 20-20-4 (.500), the only time in which the Lightning missed the playoffs in a full season under coach Jon Cooper. The Lightning’s six straight playoff appearances are tied with the Colorado Avalanche for the third longest active streak, and trailing only the Bruins and Maple Leafs at seven straight.

  • Head coach Jon Cooper has won 588 games including playoffs in his career — all with the Lightning — the third most for a single franchise in NHL history, trailing Al Arbour’s 859 with the Islanders and Lindy Ruff’s 628 with the Buffalo Sabres. Since Cooper took over as Lightning head coach on March 25, 2013, no team has more wins including playoffs than the Lightning’s 589 — 22 more than any other team (Bruins, 567).

  • Nikita Kucherov’s 1.67 points per game leads the NHL. In the last 25 years, the only players with a higher rate in a season with at least 40 games are Connor McDavid in 2020-21 (1.88), McDavid in 2022-23 (1.87) and Mario Lemieux in 2000-01 (1.77).

  • Steven Stamkos has scored 204 career power-play goals, which is sixth all-time for a single franchise and one shy of tying Joe Sakic’s 205 for the Quebec Nordiques/Colorado Avalanche for fifth. Stamkos is one shy of recording his seventh straight season with at least 10 power-play goal, and 13th overall. There have been eight players in NHL history with 13 seasons of 10 power-play goals all-time: Alex Ovechkin (16), Brett Hull, Luc Robitaille (14 each), Keith Tkachuk, Brendan Shanahan, Dave Andreychuk, Dino Ciccarelli and Marcel Dionne (13 each).

  • According to NHL Edge, Brayden Point has 31 speed bursts of 22+ MPH, which is third in the NHL behind Nathan MacKinnon (62) and McDavid (35). His 270 bursts of 20+ MPH trails only MacKinnon (410) for most in the NHL. Point hit a max speed of 24.15 MPH on Dec. 27 vs the Panthers, in the third period with 17:11 remaining.

  • Andrei Vasilevskiy is 39th in save percentage this season, at .898. He has not finished a season with a save percentage below .910 and that hasn’t happened since 2015-16, which was his second NHL season.

Nashville
Predators
vs.

Los Angeles
Kings

Thursday, 10 p.m. ET | ESPN+/Hulu
crypto.com Arena (Los Angeles, CA)

Predators

Power Rankings position: 18
Leading scorer: Filip Forsberg: 22 G | 26 A
Record: 24-19-1 (49 points)

  • The Predators are 11-2-1 (.821) vs. the Kings since 2017-18, their third best point percentage against an opponent during that span, behind the New Jersey Devils (9-0-1, .950) and Islanders (10-1-0, .909).

  • Nashville has played physical this season, leading the NHL with 1,008 hits, 115 more than any other team (Islanders, 893). They also have 19 major penalties this season, tied with the Ducks for second most in the NHL behind the Wild (23).

  • Filip Forsberg has 48 points through 44 team games this season. With two more points in the next two games, that will be the fewest team games by any Predators player to reach 50 points in a season. The current fastest pace was by Paul Kariya in 2006-07 (47 team games).

  • Ryan O’Reilly has 10 power-play goals this season, tied with Nikita Kucherov and Brock Boeser for the third in the NHL behind Sam Reinhart (16) and Valeri Nichushkin (13). No other Predators skater has more than four this season (Tommy Novak and Roman Josi).

  • Roman Josi enters with 166 career goals, all with the Predators, tied with Shea Weber for third in franchise history, behind Forsberg (261) and David Legwand (210).

  • Luke Evangelista has a goal in back-to-back games. With a goal against L.A., he will be the fifth Predators skater age 21 or younger with a goal in three straight games: Forsberg (three times), Alexander Radulov (three times), Kevin Fiala (two times), and Scott Hartnell (2003).


Kings

Power Rankings position: 11
Leading scorer: Anze Kopitar: 14 G | 25 A
Record: 21-12-8 (50 points)

  • The Kings enter this game with the third most points in the Pacific Division, but only a one-point lead over the Oilers (24-15-1, 49 points) and Predators (24-19-1, 49). Los Angeles remains ahead of Nashville and Edmonton due to their hot start, winning 16 of their first 23 games to begin the season (16-4-3, .761), compared to 5-8-5 (.417) over their last 18 games (since Dec. 9). That .417 mark is the fifth worst points percentage in the NHL during that span, ahead of the Anaheim Ducks (.306), Chicago Blackhawks (.289), Ottawa Senators (.278) and San Jose Sharks (.167).

  • Los Angeles’ best period has been the first. The Kings’ +18 goal differential in the first period is second best in the NHL this season, behind the Vancouver Canucks (+22), and their 24 goals against in the opening period are tied with the Bruins for the fewest by any team. The Predators have a +2 goal differential in the first period, their only period with a positive goal differential this season.

  • Anze Kopitar has played in the second most games among active NHL forwards (1,333) behind Alex Ovechkin (1,386). He’s the Kings franchise all-time leader in games played and assists (773) while his 1,180 career points are second in team history behind Marcel Dionne (1,307).

  • Drew Doughty and Kopitar have factored on the same goal 296 times in their career. That is the third most instances by a forward-defenseman pair in NHL history, behind Wayne Gretzky-Paul Coffey (350) and Phil Esposito-Bobby Orr (306) They recently passed Sidney Crosby and Kris Letang for third (295).

  • Trevor Moore has a team-leading 20 goals this season, making him the first California-born player in NHL history to score 20 goals in a season with a California-based team (he was born in Thousand Oaks, CA). Moore has four games with multiple goals this season, one more than all his other seasons combined.

  • The line with Moore, Phillip Danault and Kevin Fiala hasn’t been as productive of late. Through Dec. 9, they averaged 4.01 goals per 60 minutes at 5-on-5; since then, the rate has dropped to 2.88.

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Rantanen’s ‘fitting’ hat trick caps Stars’ G7 win

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Rantanen's 'fitting' hat trick caps Stars' G7 win

Many of Mikko Rantanen’s greatest moments have come in a Colorado Avalanche sweater. It’s just that the most defining moment of his career came at their expense.

It wasn’t enough that the Dallas Stars were trailing by two goals. It was also the fact that Rantanen scored a hat trick in a string of four unanswered goals that saw his current team, the host Stars, eliminate his old team, the Avalanche, in a 4-2 win Saturday in Game 7 of the Western Conference quarterfinals at the American Airlines Center.

“Obviously, the feeling was incredible to win a series,” Rantanen said in his postgame media availability. “This series was not exactly what I expected. I expected a seven-game series, even before Game 1. The ups and downs in the series. … Belief was there with the group the whole time. Obviously, I was able to make a pay to get the first one and the crowd started to roll.”

The Stars, attempting to reach the conference finals a third straight time, will advance to the semifinal round in which they will await the winner of series featuring the St. Louis Blues and Winnipeg Jets. That encounter will be decided Sunday in Game 7 in Winnipeg.

Soon, the Stars’ collective focus will shift to another Central Division foe. But for now? The attention before, during, and after the game, was on Rantanen.

Part of what made the Avalanche-Stars series arguably the most intriguing first-round series in either conference was the fact it placed two 100-point teams that are in championship window against each other. But, it also came with several subplots with the notable being the team that traded quite a bit to land Rantanen — with the hope he could win them a Stanley Cup now — needed him to defeat the team that he won a championship with back in 2022.

With one assist through the first four games, there was a discussion about if the Stars could manage to win with a sputtering Rantanen on top of the fact they were already without two of their best players in defenseman Miro Heiskanen and forward Jason Robertson.

Rantanen responded with a three-point performance in Game 5, and a four-point performance in Game 6 only to then have a hand in each goal on Saturday. His first goal came on the power-play with 12:12 remaining in the third period when he found enough space to fire a wrist shot that beat MacKenzie Blackwood.

Then came the game-tying goal and the significance it carried. The Stars went on the power play went Avalanche forward Jack Drury was called for holding. Drury part of the trade package the Carolina Hurricanes used to get Rantanen in late January before they would trade him to the Stars.

Drury’s penalty opened the door for Rantanen to score a game-tying goal that might be one of, if not, his signature salvo. Rantanen skated into the Avalanche zone in a 1-on-3 before he split two players before going around the net for a wrap-around goal that went off the skate of Samuel Girard with 6:14 left.

Three minutes later, the Stars received another power-play opportunity that saw Rantanen along with another former Avalanche forward in Matt Duchene work together to find Wyatt Johnston for the game-winning goal.

In the final minute, the Avalanche pulled Blackwood in the attempt to grab a late goal and force over time. Instead? Stars goaltender Jake Oettinger withstood a barrage that officially ended when Stars forward Tyler Seguin got the puck out of the zone only for Rantanen to skate in on an open net for the hat trick with three seconds left.

“I couldn’t care less who scored for them, I really couldn’t,” Avalanche captain and left winger Gabriel Landeskog said when asked about what it was like to watch Rantanen score a hat trick. “Mikko is one of my best friends and I love him, but I couldn’t care if he scored or if somebody else scored.”

For eight full seasons, Rantanen was part of a homegrown movement that saw the Avalanche go from finishing with what was then the worst record in the salary cap era back in 2016-17 to become a perennial favorite to win the Stanley Cup, which did they did in 2023, while also becoming a model for the need to build through the draft.

Building through stars such as Cale Makar, Nathan MacKinnon, Landeskog and Rantanen allowed the Avalanche to become a success. As did the moves they made to get other key figures like Valeri Nichushkin and Devon Toews.

Like all teams in a championship window, the Avs were facing the prospect of possibly making a difficult decision. They had yet to agree to a new contract with Rantanen, who was a pending unrestricted free agent. Then, came the blockbuster trade that few throughout the league saw coming.

The Avalanche traded Rantanen in a three-team trade that saw them get Martin Necas and Drury along with two draft picks. Rantanen’s time with the Carolina Hurricanes was limited to just two goals and six points in 13 games.

Despite the fact the Hurricanes are also among that cadre of championship contenders, Rantanen struggled to find cohesion in Raleigh. Rather than run the risk of watching leave for nothing in free agency, the Hurricanes put out feelers to a few teams with the Stars being one of them.

A long-time admirer of Rantanen, the Stars packaged two first-round picks, three second-round picks and former prized prospect Logan Stankoven to get Rantanen. They then signed him to an eight-year contract worth $12 million annually.

“It’s two things: It’s where our team’s at, and it’s Mikko Rantanen,” Stars general manager Jim Nill told ESPN back in March.

Rantanen finished the regular season with five goals and 18 points in 20 games prior to the showdown with his former team.

Not only did Rantanen’s hat trick condemn his former team to their second first-round exit since winning the Stanley Cup, but it continued a theme of former Avalanche eliminating their previous employers.

The Avalanche and Stars faced each other in last season’s Western Conference semifinal that saw Duchene, a former Colorado first-round pick, score the game-winning goal.

A year later, it was another former Avalanche first-round pick who delivered the devastating blow.

“It seems pretty fitting,” Johnston said about Rantanen. “Obviously, we want to win for each other and I think that goes a little extra when it’s a guy like that who is such a big part of our team and was there for a long time and everyone knows the trade that went on. It’s so awesome. We’re so happy as a group for him.”

As if Rantanen scoring a hat trick in a four-goal comeback wasn’t enough, there’s also the fact that this is now the ninth consecutive Game 7 that Stars coach Peter DeBoer has won his career.

DeBoer’s nine wins in Game 7s broke a tie with Darryl Sutter for the most in NHL history. It was also DeBoer’s third game 7 wins with the Stars.

“I felt something was going to happen,” DeBoer said. “But I could not have predicted that.”

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Canes’ Andersen, 35, secures deal before Round 2

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Canes' Andersen, 35, secures deal before Round 2

RALEIGH, N.C. — The Carolina Hurricanes have signed goaltender Frederik Andersen to a one-year contract for next season, worth $2.75 million for the 35-year-old veteran.

General manager Eric Tulsky announced the deal Saturday, a little over 48 hours before his team starts the second round of the playoffs against the Washington Capitals.

Andersen could earn up to $750,000 in incentives for games played and his participation in a potential run to the Eastern Conference finals next season. He would get $250,000 for playing 35 or more games, another $250,000 for getting to 40 and $250,000 if the Hurricanes reach the East finals and he plays in at least half of the playoff games.

“Frederik has played extremely well for us and ranks in the top 10 all-time for winning percentage by an NHL goalie,” Tulsky said. “We’re excited that he will be staying with the team for next season.”

Andersen and the Hurricanes, the No. 2 seed in the Metropolitan Division, advanced past the New Jersey Devils in Round 1 last week. They will meet the Capitals, who won the division crown, for the right to make the NHL’s final four.

Extending Andersen could give the team a goaltending tandem with Pyotr Kochetkov for less than $6 million combined.

Anderson, a Denmark native who previously played for the Anaheim Ducks and Toronto Maple Leafs, has become coach Rod Brind’Amour’s most trusted option in net. He is expected to return to the starting role for Game 1 of the Capitals series after getting injured in the first round against New Jersey.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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Sovereignty outduels Journalism to capture Derby

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Sovereignty outduels Journalism to capture Derby

LOUISVILLE, Ky. — Sovereignty outdueled 3-1 favorite Journalism down the stretch to win the 151st Kentucky Derby in the slop on Saturday.

Trainer Bill Mott won his first Derby in 2019, also run on a sloppy track, when Country House was elevated to first after Maximum Security crossed the finish line first and was disqualified after a 22-minute delay.

This time, he knew right away.

Sovereignty won by 1½ lengths and snapped an 0-for-13 Derby skid for owner Godolphin, the racing stable of Dubai ruler Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum.

It was quite a weekend for the sheikh. His filly, Good Cheer, won the Kentucky Oaks on Friday and earlier Saturday, Ruling Court won the 2,000 Guineas in Britain.

Sovereignty covered 1¼ miles in 2:02.31 and paid $17.96 to win at 7-1 odds.

Journalism found trouble in the first turn and jockey Umberto Rispoli moved him to the outside. He and Sovereignty hooked up at the eighth pole before Sovereignty and jockey Junior Alvarado pulled away.

Baeza was third, Final Gambit was fourth and Owen Almighty finished fifth.

Rain made for a soggy day, with the Churchill Downs dirt strip listed as sloppy and horse racing fans protecting their fancy hats and clothing with clear plastic ponchos.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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