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NEW YORK — Mets luminaries from a bygone era packed a room in the bowels of Citi Field on Saturday afternoon. Most on hand were protagonists during the franchise’s last World Series championship in 1986. Doc Gooden, Mookie Wilson, Kevin Mitchell, Jesse Orosco, Ron Darling, Keith Hernandez and others were in attendance to celebrate their former teammate Darryl Strawberry, who sat on the podium for a news conference reminiscing about his eight seasons starring in Flushing.

Strawberry’s No. 18 was retired during a pregame ceremony a little later. Mets fans arrived early to watch, filling the stands on a day that will be remembered in this organization’s history. It was a timely palate cleanser, on the first day of June, after a month that will be remembered for all the wrong reasons.

The Mets are 11-21 since May 1, but the slog has been even uglier lately than that record indicates. The misery really picked up steam on May 13, when All-Star closer Edwin Díaz blew his second save of the season, and over the ensuing weeks the team has been dropping games in every way imaginable.

There was a flurry of bullpen implosions and roster moves. There were injuries, injury setbacks and injury scares. There was a called third strike that went viral, announcers voicing sarcastic optimism on air, a glove angrily thrown into the crowd, an emergency players-only team meeting and a bizarre, misunderstood clubhouse outburst. The frustration leaked onto owner Steve Cohen’s X account.

There are encouraging trends within the turmoil, but getting good offense, good pitching and good defense to align on the same day has been rare. The bullpen is leaky. Fielding miscues are too regular. The rotation lacks a front-line starter with Kodai Senga on the injured list.

There is time for the club with MLB’s highest payroll to rebound. The chaotic stretch, however, has plunged the Mets into a deep hole, with the third-worst record in the National League, and on track for a trade deadline exodus for the second consecutive summer.

The Mets head to London for two games against the Philadelphia Phillies this weekend. Facing the best team in the National League isn’t a recipe for a turnaround, but traveling across the pond might be the change of scenery the team needs to reverse course in a season careening toward disaster.

“They’ll continue to fight, they’ll continue to work and we’ll get through it,” Mets first-year manager Carlos Mendoza said. “But it’s not a secret. It’s been hard for us these past three, four weeks here.”

Here’s a look back at the lowest moments of that stretch.

May 13: Díaz melts down, again (and again and again)

Questions about Edwin Díaz’s injury comeback begin to mount as he blows his second save of the season, giving up two runs on two hits and two walks in a loss to the Phillies

Díaz, the Mets’ closer known for his festive entrances from the bullpen, has endured a nightmarish season so far, after missing all of 2023 with a knee injury sustained at the World Baseball Classic. After the May 13 loss, he would blow another save in his next outing three days later before squandering a four-run lead against the Miami Marlins two days after that. He managed a clean seventh inning in his next appearance after a five-day layoff, but less than 24 hours later, he blew another save in a loss to the San Francisco Giants.

“He’s our closer,” Mendoza said after the loss to San Francisco. “In order for us to win games and get to where we want to get to, he’s got to pitch. And I felt like that was the right spot.”

Four days later, Díaz landed on the injured list with a shoulder impingement.


May 15: Cohen’s ‘DM’ debacle

Responding to a fan arguing that the front office should unload players at the trade deadline, Mets owner Steve Cohen tweets, “All in the future, not much we can do until trade deadline,” during another Mets loss to the Phillies

Cohen often engages with fans on social media, though this time doing so backfired for the billionaire owner. The post was widely deciphered as Cohen’s acknowledgment that the Mets again intend to wave the white flag in July, as they did last year when they traded future Hall of Fame pitchers Justin Verlander and Max Scherzer.

Cohen quickly deleted the tweet. The next day, he told SNY that the tweet — which he said was meant to be a direct message — was misinterpreted. He emphasized he “fully” expects the team to reach the postseason.

Still, nine days later, after another bullpen implosion, Cohen tweeted that the team’s disastrous stretch was “mind boggling.”

“I didn’t see it,” Mendoza said when asked about the second tweet. “I said it last night: You get pissed. It’s frustrating, but we’re professionals. We know we’re going through it right now, but I just met with our hitters again, we just have to keep going.”


May 24: Another setback for Senga

Mendoza announces Kodai Senga will be shut down for three to five days after an MRI revealed inflammation in his triceps

Senga was supposed to be the Mets’ ace this season, but he hasn’t thrown a pitch yet. The diagnosis came amid his longer-than-expected recovery from a strained posterior shoulder capsule that has sidelined him since February. The Mets expected the right-hander to return before June, but Senga had already made the decision to slow down his rehab — just as he resumed throwing off a mound — to work on mechanics. The triceps inflammation reset his throwing program to playing catch upon being cleared.


May 25: Lindor caught looking — and ‘the sun will come up tomorrow’

With one out, a runner on second, and the Mets leading the Giants 2-1 in the seventh inning, shortstop Francisco Lindor decides he’s not going to swing and instead takes a breaking ball right down the middle of the plate for strike three

Lindor’s early decision not to swing at anything was clear — so clear that the clip went viral. After the game, Lindor explained he wasn’t picking up the spin on reliever Randy Rodríguez’s first five pitches. Lindor, however, swung at two of them — so he simply decided not swinging at all was the best option to reach base.

“He hadn’t thrown a strike,” Lindor said. “I made every pitch a strike, and was helping him out. My best bet was to take a pitch. It just so happened that was the one strike the whole at-bat.”

The Mets would lose 7-2 in 10 innings, producing some wry words of encouragement from SNY play-by-play voice Gary Cohen for viewers: “The Mets are now 9-22 in their last 31 games. … Remember, the sun will come up tomorrow, as difficult as that may be to realize.”


May 29 (Part 1): ‘An inflection point’

David Stearns, the Mets’ president of baseball operations, tells reporters it is too early to decide whether the team will offload veterans at the trade deadline

The Mets’ record was 22-30 ahead of a doubleheader against the Dodgers when Stearns insisted he will give the roster until the July 30 trade deadline to claw back into the postseason race. He acknowledged the Mets “haven’t played like a playoff team” but said he believed he had “plenty of time” before weighing trades.

“We haven’t won enough games,” Stearns said, “and we certainly recognize that that’s going to need [to] change.”

Stearns, who was hired after the end of the last season, inherited the most expensive payroll in the majors and a team that had massively failed to reach expectations in 2023. He and Cohen pursued free agent Yoshinobu Yamamoto during the offseason, but they settled for several minor moves once Yamamoto chose to sign with the Dodgers.

The offseason didn’t include a contract extension for Pete Alonso, making the star first baseman a prime trade candidate and intensifying speculation as the Mets struggle to win games.

“Nothing’s changed with Pete’s situation,” Stearns said. “Our goal is, on a daily basis, [to] help this team succeed as much as possible so we can win as many games as possible. And that’s where I expect we’ll continue to be.”

The Dodgers went on to sweep the doubleheader that night.


May 29 (Part 2): The Mets-less Mount Rushmore

Asked to name his Mount Rushmore of New York athletes, Mets outfielder Harrison Bader names zero Mets and three New York Yankees — Derek Jeter, Aaron Judge and Anthony Volpe. The fourth spot goes unoccupied

Bader grew up a Yankees fan in Bronxville and spent parts of the past two seasons playing in the Bronx. Still, the Mets are paying him $10.5 million this season. The bit went viral. Fans were not pleased.


May 29 (Part 3): Injuries, an outburst and a team meeting

Minutes before the first pitch against the Dodgers, the Mets announce Díaz was placed on the injured list with a shoulder impingement. Just as that was being digested, Alonso exits the game after being hit by a 93 mph pitch on his right hand in the first inning. Seven innings later, reliever Jorge López is ejected and throws his glove into the stands. After the loss, Lindor calls a players-only team meeting before López splashes gasoline on the fire, telling reporters he doesn’t regret his actions

López’s postgame comments caused a stir, both for his unfiltered candor and a subsequent debate over what he actually said in his second language. Speaking in English, the reliever called himself “the worst teammate in probably the whole f—ing MLB,” though initially there was confusion over whether he said “teammate” or “team.”

Either way, the Mets had seen and heard enough, and he was designated for assignment the next day. In a statement released shortly thereafter, López apologized for his behavior “on and off the field” and clarified his comment.

His former teammates, meanwhile, were seemingly reenergized after airing out their thoughts and concerns in the team meeting that lasted nearly an hour.

Clubhouse leaders, without offering many details, summarized the meeting to the media, with Lindor explaining he believed it was a chance for players to vent and hold themselves accountable. Brandon Nimmo, who said López’s behavior wasn’t directly addressed, called it “very constructive” and “positive.”

“It just felt like a boiling-over point,” Nimmo said. “It felt like the right time to do it.”

Reliever Adam Ottavino explained the floor was open to anyone who wanted to speak. He noted most of the team, including players who usually don’t openly express themselves, volunteered. They spoke of process and of keeping perspective.

“I mean, we stink right now,” Ottavino said. “It doesn’t mean we’re going to stink going forward.”

The good news was tests on Alonso’s hand showed no structural damage. He delivered a pinch-hit double in a win over the Arizona Diamondbacks the next night.


May 31: The roster shake-up

The Mets make six roster moves. Brett Baty, Christian Scott and Omar Narváez are sent out. José Iglesias, Dedniel Núñez and Luis Torrens are brought in

Optioning Baty, a former top prospect, to Triple-A Syracuse was largely expected, because the Mets needed a backup middle infielder and rookie Mark Vientos had outperformed Baty for the starting job at third base.

Demoting Scott, one of the team’s few bright spots this season, was explained as a temporary move as the team navigates an unusual portion of its schedule thanks to this weekend’s trip to London. Acquiring Torrens from the Yankees to replace Narváez was a production-based decision. Narváez was struggling mightily both offensively and defensively.

On the field, the Mets beat the Diamondbacks for the second straight night to open a four-game series. After Friday’s 10-9 win, Vientos noted there was a palpable difference in the vibe after the team meeting.

“Completely different,” Vientos said. “As in — we walk in, the room feels light. There’s good energy. We listen to music. We’re enjoying the game. It’s a kid’s game. So let’s just have fun and play.”

Will June play out better than May did? So far, the results are mixed. The Mets’ post-team-meeting winning streak lasted all of two games, giving way to consecutive losses to Arizona to begin the month and conclude their 10-game homestand, including another draining bullpen implosion Sunday.

Still, the Mets will try for a three-game sweep against lowly Washington on Wednesday. After two much-needed days off, the London Series begins Saturday.

“The front office, they’re going to make decisions no matter what,” Lindor said. “Whether it’s to add or subtract. And whether it’s to focus on the next season or focus on August and September.

“So they’re going to make decisions. I want to be on the side of adding. We don’t have 100-plus games for that moment. But we do have time to make sure we’re above water.”

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Who has won the Kentucky Derby? All-time winners list

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Who has won the Kentucky Derby? All-time winners list

Since its inception in 1875, the Kentucky Derby has become one of the most prestigious horse races in the world. In 2024, Mystik Dan won in a photo finish. This year, Journalism is the morning line favorite for the 2025 edition.

Here are the all-time winning horses and jockeys in Kentucky Derby history.

  • 2024: Mystik Dan, Brian Joseph Hernandez Jr.

  • 2023: Mage, Javier Castellano

  • 2022: Rich Strike, Sonny Leon

  • 2021: Mandaloun, Florent Geroux

  • 2020: Authentic, John Velazquez

  • 2019: Country House, Flavien Prat

  • 2018: Justify, Mike Smith

  • 2017: Always Dreaming, John Velazquez

  • 2016: Nyquist, Mario Gutierrez

  • 2015: American Pharoah, Victor Espinoza

  • 2014: California Chrome, Victor Espinoza

  • 2013: Orb, Joel Rosario

  • 2012: I’ll Have Another, Mario Gutierrez

  • 2011: Animal Kingdom, John Velazquez

  • 2010: Super Saver, Calvin Borel

  • 2009: Mine That Bird, Calvin Borel

  • 2008: Big Brown, Kent Desormeaux

  • 2007: Street Sense, Calvin Borel

  • 2006: Barbaro, Edgar Prado

  • 2005: Giacomo, Mike Smith

  • 2004: Smarty Jones, Stewart Elliott

  • 2003: Funny Cide, José Santos

  • 2002: War Emblem, Victor Espinoza

  • 2001: Monarchos, Jorge Chavez

  • 2000: Fusaichi Pegasus, Kent Desormeaux

  • 1999: Charismatic, Chris Antley

  • 1998: Real Quiet, Kent Desormeaux

  • 1997: Silver Charm, Gary Stevens

  • 1996: Grindstone, Jerry Bailey

  • 1995: Thunder Gulch, Gary Stevens

  • 1994: Go for Gin, Chris McCarron

  • 1993: Sea Hero, Jerry Bailey

  • 1992: Lil E. Tee, Pat Day

  • 1991: Strike the Gold, Chris Antley

  • 1990: Unbridled, Craig Perret

  • 1989: Sunday Silence, Pat Valenzuela

  • 1988: Winning Colors, Gary Stevens

  • 1987: Alysheba, Chris McCarron

  • 1986: Ferdinand, Bill Shoemaker

  • 1985: Spend a Buck, Ángel Cordero Jr.

  • 1984: Swale, Laffit Pincay Jr.

  • 1983: Sunny’s Halo, Eddie Delahoussay

  • 1982: Gato Del Sol, Eddie Delahoussay

  • 1981: Pleasant Colony, Jorge Velásquez

  • 1980: Genuine Risk, Jacinto Vasquez

  • 1979: Spectacular Bid, Ronnie Franklin

  • 1978: Affirmed, Steve Cauthen

  • 1977: Seattle Slew, Jean Cruguet

  • 1976: Bold Forbes, Ángel Cordero Jr.

  • 1975: Foolish Pleasure, Jacinto Vásquez

  • 1974: Cannonade, Ángel Cordero Jr.

  • 1973: Secretariat, Ron Turcotte

  • 1972: Riva Ridge, Ron Turcotte

  • 1971: Canonero II, Gustavo Avila

  • 1970: Dust Commander, Mike Manganello

  • 1969: Majestic Prince, Bill Hartack

  • 1968: Forward Pass, Ismael Valenzuela

  • 1967: Proud Clarion, Bobby Ussery

  • 1966: Kauai King, Don Brumfield

  • 1965: Lucky Debonair, Bill Shoemaker

  • 1964: Northern Dancer, Bill Hartack

  • 1963: Chateaugay, Braulio Baeza

  • 1962: Decidedly, Bill Hartack

  • 1961: Carry Back, Johnny Sellers

  • 1960: Venetian Way, Bill Hartack

  • 1959: Tomy Lee, Bill Shoemaker

  • 1958: Tim Tam, Ismael Valenzuela

  • 1957: Iron Liege, Bill Hartack

  • 1956: Needles, David Erb

  • 1955: Swaps, Bill Shoemaker

  • 1954: Determine, Raymond York

  • 1953: Dark Star, Henry Moreno

  • 1952: Hill Gail, Eddie Arcaro

  • 1951: Count Turf, Conn McCreary

  • 1950: Middleground, William Boland

  • 1949: Ponder, Steve Brooks

  • 1948: Citation, Eddie Arcaro

  • 1947: Jet Pilot, Eric Guerin

  • 1946: Assault, Warren Mehrtens

  • 1945: Hoop Jr., Eddie Arcaro

  • 1944: Pensive, Conn McCreary

  • 1943: Count Fleet, Johnny Longden

  • 1942: Shut Out, Wayne Wright

  • 1941: Whirlaway, Eddie Arcaro

  • 1940: Gallahadion, Carroll Bierman

  • 1939: Johnstown, James Stout

  • 1938: Lawrin, Eddie Arcaro

  • 1937: War Admiral, Charley Kurtsinger

  • 1936: Bold Venture, Ira Hanford

  • 1935: Omaha, Willie Saunders

  • 1934: Cavalcade, Mack Garner

  • 1933: Brokers Tip, Don Meade

  • 1932: Burgoo King, Eugene James

  • 1931: Twenty Grand, Charley Kurtsinger

  • 1930: Gallant Fox, Earl Sande

  • 1929: Clyde Van Dusen, Linus McAtee

  • 1928: Reigh Count, Chick Lang

  • 1927: Whiskery, Linus McAtee

  • 1926: Bubbling Over, Albert Johnson

  • 1925: Flying Ebony, Earl Sande

  • 1924: Black Gold, John Mooney

  • 1923: Zev, Earl Sande

  • 1922: Morvich, Albert Johnson

  • 1921: Behave Yourself, Charles Thompson

  • 1920: Paul Jones, Ted Rice

  • 1919: Sir Barton, Johnny Loftus

  • 1918: Exterminator, Willie Knapp

  • 1917: Omar Khayyam, Charles Borel

  • 1916: George Smith, Johnny Loftus

  • 1915: Regret, Joe Notter

  • 1914: Old Rosebud, John McCabe

  • 1913: Donerail, Roscoe Goose

  • 1912: Worth, Carroll Shilling

  • 1911: Meridian, George Archibald

  • 1910: Donau, Frederick Herbert

  • 1909: Wintergreen, Vincent Powers

  • 1908: Stone Street, Arthur Pickens

  • 1907: Pink Star, Andy Minder

  • 1906: Sir Huon, Roscoe Troxler

  • 1905: Agile, Jack Martin

  • 1904: Elwood, Shorty Prior

  • 1903: Judge Himes, Harold Booker

  • 1902: Alan-a-Dale, Jimmy Winkfield

  • 1901: His Eminence, Jimmy Winkfield

  • 1900: Lieut. Gibson, Jimmy Boland

  • 1899: Manuel, Fred Taral

  • 1898: Plaudit, Willie Simms

  • 1897: Typhoon II, Buttons Garner

  • 1896: Ben Brush, Willie Simms

  • 1895: Halma, James Perkins

  • 1894: Chant, Frank Goodale

  • 1893: Lookout, Eddie Kunze

  • 1892: Azra, Alonzo Clayton

  • 1891: Kingman, Isaac Murphy

  • 1890: Riley, Isaac Murphy

  • 1889: Spokane, Thomas Kiley

  • 1888: Macbeth II, George Covington

  • 1887: Montrose, Isaac Lewis

  • 1886: Ben Ali, Paul Duffy

  • 1885: Joe Cotton, Erskine Henderson

  • 1884: Buchanan, Isaac Murphy

  • 1883: Leonatus, William Donohue

  • 1882: Apollo, Babe Hurd

  • 1881: Hindoo, Jim McLaughlin

  • 1880: Fonso, George Lewis

  • 1879: Lord Murphy, Charlie Shauer

  • 1878: Day Star, Jimmy Carter

  • 1877: Baden-Baden, Billy Walker

  • 1876: Vagrant, Robert Swim

  • 1875: Aristides, Oliver Lewis

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    Stanley Cup playoffs daily: Two elimination games on tap, and a pivotal Game 5 in Jets-Blues

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    Stanley Cup playoffs daily: Two elimination games on tap, and a pivotal Game 5 in Jets-Blues

    The first round of the 2025 Stanley Cup playoffs has heated up, and the end of many series is approaching. How many teams will move on with clinching games Wednesday night?

    There are two potential elimination games on the docket. First up is Montreal CanadiensWashington Capitals (7 p.m., ESPN), with Alex Ovechkin & Co. on the verge of sealing the deal over the Habs.

    Staggered just 30 minutes later is the possible final game of the 2025 edition of the Battle of Florida (7:30 p.m., ESPN2). Will the Florida Panthers get win No. 4, or can the Tampa Bay Lightning draw the series to 3-2?

    Finally, the St. Louis Blues visit the Winnipeg Jets (9:30 p.m., ESPN) in a series that sits at 2-2 following the first four, including major intrigue as leading Vezina Trophy candidate Connor Hellebuyck continues to struggle in goal.

    Read on for game previews with statistical insights from ESPN Research, recaps of what went down in Monday’s games, and the Three Stars of Monday Night from Arda Öcal.

    Matchup notes

    Montreal Canadiens at Washington Capitals
    Game 5 (WSH leads 3-1) | 7 p.m. ET | ESPN

    Historically, teams that have a 3-1 series lead have gone on to win the series 90.8% of the time in Stanley Cup playoff history. The Capitals’ record in that scenario is 8-5, which is 62%.

    Cole Caufield is taking many shots. His 21 shots on goal are the second most in the playoffs (trailing Nathan MacKinnon, with 31), and he has had 11 shot attempts blocked, which is tied for second most in the playoffs, behind Jack Eichel.

    Rookie defenseman Lane Hutson is the sixth first-year blueliner in playoff history to record at least five assists in his first postseason series, joining Ray Bourque (1980), Janne Niinimaa (1997), Erik Karlsson (2010), Marc-Andre Gragnani (2011) and Quinn Hughes (2020).

    Alex Ovechkin has scored the most goals in NHL regular-season history, and he is 13th on the all-time playoff list with 75. His next will tie Mario Lemieux for 12th.

    Anthony Beauvillier is the first player in Capitals history to record an assist in each of his first four playoff games with the club, and the fourth with at least one point, following Dave Christian (five GP in 1984), Adam Oates (four GP in 1998) and Mike Knuble (five GP in 2010).

    Florida Panthers at Tampa Bay Lightning
    Game 5 (FLA leads 3-1) | 7:30 p.m. ET | ESPN2

    In the 2025 playoffs, home teams have a 23-10 record. That script has flipped in the Battle of Florida series as the road team has won three of four games.

    The Panthers are 5-0 all time when leading a playoff series 3-1, closing out three of the previous series in Game 5. The Lightning are 1-5 all-time in a best-of-seven series when trailing 1-3.

    Lightning forward Jake Guentzel is tied with Brad Marchand for the fourth most playoff goals since 2017 (40), behind Nathan MacKinnon (51), Leon Draisaitl (44) and Brayden Point (44).

    Andrei Vasilevskiy has been doing his part: He allowed five goals combined in Games 2-4 (.936 save percentage) after allowing six goals in Game 1 (.647).

    Matthew Tkachuk is tied with Nate Schmidt for the Panthers’ goal-scoring lead this series (three), and has 20 in 48 career playoff games with Florida; that is third most in franchise history, behind Sam Reinhart (22 in 59) and Carter Verhaeghe (27 in 65).

    With each game and win, Sergei Bobrovsky adds to his lead in each category since the start of the 2023 playoffs (47 games played, 31 wins).

    St. Louis Blues at Winnipeg Jets
    Game 5 (series tied 2-2) | 9:30 p.m. ET | ESPN

    Jets goalie Connor Hellebuyck has encountered another postseason rough patch. He allowed 11 goals combined in the past two games, and has now allowed four-plus goals in 10 of 14 starts the past three postseasons. That is a 71% rate, and his regular-season rate for that same stat is 17% in the same three-season span.

    After starting the series hot — with five points in the first two games, both wins for the Jets — Mark Scheifele has been pointless in the two losses in Games 3 and 4. Kyle Connor has been just slightly better, with four points in the first two and just one goal in the ensuing two.

    Although the Jets outshot the Blues 31-23, Jordan Binnington was up to the task in Game 4, stopping all but one. Overall this postseason, Binnington has a .907 save percentage and 2.29 goals-against average. In the Blues’ Stanley Cup run in 2019, he finished with a .914 save percentage and 2.46 goals-against average.

    In-season trade addition Cam Fowler is playing in his first postseason since 2017, and he’s making up for lost time, leading the Blues with eight points (one goal, seven assists) through four games. Fowler’s career-high postseason point total was 10 in 16 games in the 2015 playoffs.


    Arda’s three stars from Tuesday night

    Ullmark recorded his first career playoff shutout, becoming the second goalie in Senators franchise history (with Craig Anderson) to secure a shutout in a potential elimination game.

    Two goals, including the overtime winner, to cap a three-point night to send the Hurricanes to the second round with a 5-4 win. The Canes scored three goals in four minutes in the second to tie the game after going down 3-0 early. This was Aho’s 10th career postseason power-play goal, which ties Eric Staal for the franchise record.

    Tkachuk and Stutzle are the first Senators teammates to have three points when facing elimination in franchise history. They’ll get another chance at it Thursday at home.


    Tuesday’s scores

    Ottawa Senators 4, Toronto Maple Leafs 0
    TOR leads 3-2 | Game 6 Thursday

    Senators goaltender Linus Ullmark faced questions heading into this postseason, as his playoff career performances had not been up to par with his regular-season success. On this night at least, he was stellar. Ullmark stopped all 29 shots the Maple Leafs directed at him, and the Senators got goals from Thomas Chabot and Dylan Cozens, with empty-netters by Tim Stutzle and Brady Tkachuk capping the evening. Full recap.

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    0:32

    Dylan Cozens doubles lead for Senators in Game 5

    Dylan Cozens’ goal in the third period gives the Senators some breathing room in Game 5 vs. the Maple Leafs.

    Carolina Hurricanes 5, New Jersey Devils 4 (2OT)
    CAR wins 4-1, plays winner of WSH-MTL

    It was a wild one Tuesday night in Raleigh, with eight goals between the two teams through two periods. The goalies shut it down for 40 minutes thereafter, with the teams going scoreless in the third period and first overtime. It wasn’t until 4:17 of the second OT when Sebastian Aho scored the game- and series-winning goal. Full recap.

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    0:43

    Sebastian Aho slots in a goal for Hurricanes

    Sebastian Aho answers with the Hurricanes’ fourth goal of the second period to tie the game 4-4 vs. the Devils.

    Vegas Golden Knights 3, Minnesota Wild 2 (OT)
    VGK leads 3-2 | Game 6 Thursday

    The teams traded a pair of goals early on the same Minnesota power play — William Karlsson scoring short-handed and Kirill Kaprizov notching the power-play tally — and Mark Stone capped off the first period with a goal at 13:24. The score would remain 2-1 Knights until 3:31 of the third, when Matt Boldy tied things the game at two. The Knights needed just 4:05 of the first OT period to score the game-winner off the stick of Brett Howden. Full recap.

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    1:09

    Brett Howden nets OT winner for Golden Knights to seal Game 5

    Brett Howden’s close-range snap shot finds the back of the net to win it in overtime for the Golden Knights and claim a 3-2 series lead vs. the Wild.

    Edmonton Oilers 3, Los Angeles Kings 1
    EDM leads 3-2 | Game 6 Thursday

    After wins in the first two games of the series, the Kings are now looking up at the Oilers — the team that has beaten them the past three postseasons. The Kings were on the board first via an Andrei Kuzmenko power-play goal in the second, but Evander Kane would tie things up less than three minutes later. The eventual game-winner came off the stick of Mattias Janmark 7:12 into the third, and Ryan Nugent-Hopkins added an empty-net goal to put the game further out of reach. Full recap.

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    0:40

    Mattias Janmark puts the Oilers ahead in the 3rd

    Mattias Janmark scores off the rebound to give the Oilers the lead in the third period vs. the Kings.

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    Can the Winnipeg Jets join others that defied the Presidents’ Trophy curse?

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    Can the Winnipeg Jets join others that defied the Presidents' Trophy curse?

    Will the Presidents’ Trophy curse claim a new victim this year?

    For the past 11 NHL seasons, the winner of the trophy — awarded to the team with the most regular-season points — has failed to win the Stanley Cup. In fact, none of the last 11 Presidents’ Trophy winners have even played in the Stanley Cup Final.

    All told, of the 38 seasons when the trophy has been awarded, just eight of its victors have also lifted the Stanley Cup. With the Winnipeg Jets‘ series against the St. Louis Blues in the first round of the playoffs knotted at two games apiece, could the curse be looming large again?

    Here’s a look at the eight squads the Jets will be hoping to emulate that defied the curse:

    Chicago Blackhawks, 2012-13

    The most recent team to take home both the Presidents’ Trophy and Stanley Cup, the Blackhawks earned the regular-season crown in a campaign that didn’t start until January due to lockout. Patrick Kane would go on to earn Conn Smythe Trophy honors after a postseason in which he posted nine goals (tied for second on the team) and 10 assists (third on the team).


    Detroit Red Wings, 2007-08

    Winning the Central Division by an impressive 24-point margin, the Red Wings bolstered the best goals-against record in the league and raced to an impressive 115-point regular season. Henrik Zetterberg, the team’s top goal scorer in the regular season, won the Conn Smythe after a 27-point postseason.


    Detroit Red Wings, 2001-02

    Not to be outdone by their franchise counterparts six years later, the Red Wings turned in a regular season that not only saw them win the Central Division by 18 points, but top the overall league standings by a 15-point margin as well. The Conn Smythe went to Hall of Fame defenseman Nicklas Lidström, capping off the third of his three Stanley Cup triumphs in Detroit.


    Colorado Avalanche, 2000-01

    Combined with the Red Wings’ subsequent title, Colorado’s Stanley Cup win marks the only time in league history teams won both the Presidents’ Trophy and Stanley Cup in back-to-back years. Goalkeeper Patrick Roy was awarded his third Conn Smythe — a record that still stands today.


    Dallas Stars, 1998-99

    Dallas led the league in goals allowed, a trend that continued into the postseason. In just one of the Stars’ 12 postseason wins did the team concede more than two goals. Centers powered the squad’s offense — Mike Modano’s 81 regular-season points led the team by a sizable margin, while Joe Nieuwendyk earned the Conn Smythe.


    New York Rangers, 1993-94

    After the regular season saw the Rangers beat local rivals the New Jersey Devils to both the Atlantic Division crown and the Presidents’ Trophy, New York’s postseason didn’t lack for rivalry thrills either.

    The Rangers met New Jersey in the Eastern Conference finals, coming away victorious in a seven-game series that featured three games decided by double overtime. New York’s subsequent Stanley Cup Final series with the Vancouver Canucks would go seven games as well, with Conn Smythe winner Brian Leetch scoring the opener in the decisive final game.


    Calgary Flames, 1988-89

    The 1988-89 NHL season was all about Calgary and the Montreal Canadiens, who posted 117- and 115-point regular seasons respectively — no other team in the league amassed more than 92. Fittingly, the two squads met in the Stanley Cup Final, where the President Cup champion Flames bested Montreal again, topping the Canadiens in six games. Defenseman Al MacInnis racked up 24 postseason assists en route to Conn Smythe honors.


    Edmonton Oilers, 1986-87

    Led by Wayne Gretzky at his peak, Edmonton raced to a 106-point regular season as Gretzky led the NHL in goals, assists and plus/minus as he earned his eighth Hart Trophy. Unsurprisingly, Gretzky was a driving force in the Oilers’ postseason march as well — he totaled 29 assists as Edmonton won its third Stanley Cup in what would end up being a run of four Cups in five years for the franchise.

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