There’s a change of pace on Tuesday in the Stanley Cup playoffs, as it’s just one game instead of two.
The Dallas Stars host the Winnipeg Jets (8 p.m. ET, ESPN) in Game 4 of their series to decide the Central Division representative in the Western Conference finals, with the Stars currently leading 2-1.
Read on for a game preview with statistical insights from ESPN Research, a recap of what went down in Monday’s games and the Three Stars of Monday from Arda Öcal.
The Stars are favored to win the series, at -340 according to ESPN BET, with the Jets at +270 to rally for a series victory. Dallas is also the current overall favorite to win the Cup, at +325, while the Jets are +1500.
Kyle Connor has 13 points through 10 games for Winnipeg, which is the fifth most in a single postseason all-time in Thrashers/Jets 2.0 franchise history, trailing a quartet from 2018: Blake Wheeler (21), Mark Scheifele (20), Dustin Byfuglien (16), Paul Stastny (15).
Connor Hellebuyck‘s wild postseason home/road disparities continue: he’s 5-1 at home this postseason, with a 1.99 goals-against average and .902 save percentage; he’s 0-4 on the road, with a 6.63 GAA and .772 SV%.
Mikko Rantanen continues to dominate. He’s the first player in NHL history with five three-point games in his first 10 games of a single postseason, and his career playoff PPG is now 1.31, which is sixth in Stanley Cup playoffs history; only Wayne Gretzky (1.84), Mario Lemieux (1.61), Connor McDavid (1.60), Leon Draisaitl (1.48) and former teammate Nathan MacKinnon (1.32) are higher.
Jake Oettinger‘s next victory will break a tie with Tim Thomas and Ben Bishop for sixth place all-time in playoff wins among American-born goaltenders.
Stuart Skinner makes an early save to keep the Oilers ahead vs. the Golden Knights.
The veteran had the second multigoal playoff game of his career, and it was also the second straight game an Oilers player had a two-goal first period (following Corey Perry in Game 3).
Walker had two points, including his first career playoff goal in his 22nd postseason game. His goal at 16:45 of the third period clinched the over for total goals in the game for the first time in the Canes-Capitals series (per ESPN BET).
Game 4 wasn’t a shutout like Saturday’s Game 3, but the Hurricanes looked just as dominant and are now one win away from a return to the Eastern Conference finals. Shayne Gostisbehere scored his third of the postseason midway through the first, and Seth Jarvis added playoff goal No. 3 just over a minute into the second. That lead would hold until 5:18 of the third, when the Capitals got on the board for the first time since Game 2 (via Jakob Chychrun). Taylor Hall responded for the Canes at 8:24, followed by Alex Ovechkin notching a power-play tally at 12:14 to make it 3-2 Canes. That’s as close as the Capitals would get, as Sean Walker and Andrei Svechnikov added goals in the final five minutes to close this one out. The Canes bring a 3-1 advantage to D.C. for Game 5. Full recap.
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Washington Capitals vs. Carolina Hurricanes: Game Highlights
Washington Capitals vs. Carolina Hurricanes: Game Highlights
Adam Henrique is responsible for one of the most famous playoff goals in New Jersey Devils history (defeating the New York Rangers in the 2012 Eastern Conference finals). His performance on Monday wasn’t at that level, but his two goals did get the Oilers one game away from another trip to the Western Conference finals. Henrique got the home fans rocking at 1:27 of the first period, then notched another at 13:03 of the opening frame. He was joined on the scoresheet by Evander Kane, who slotted in a goal at 7:38 of the second. That was more than enough for Stuart Skinner, who stopped all 23 shots on goal the Golden Knights could muster, pushing Vegas one loss away from elimination. Full recap.
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Adam Henrique scores again to give Oilers 2-0 lead
Adam Henrique tallies his second goal of the first period to give Edmonton a 2-0 lead over Las Vegas.
DUBLIN — Rocco Becht passed for two touchdowns and ran for another score, helping No. 22 Iowa State beat No. 17 Kansas State24-21 in the Aer Lingus Classic on Saturday.
Becht was 14-for-28 for 183 yards. He found Dominic Overby for a 23-yard TD in the first quarter and passed to Brett Eskildsen for a 24-yard score in the third quarter.
With 2:26 to go, Iowa State went for it on fourth-and-3 at the Kansas State 16-yard line. Becht found Carson Hansen for 15 yards and iced the game.
“He called a great play, he gave me two plays and let me decide and I knew we were going to have a chance to get it,” Becht said “We’ve worked on it in practice and it’s been working for us and we’re confident with it and I have trust in my guys.”
The Cyclones (1-0, 1-0 Big 12) opened a 24-14 lead in the fourth quarter after a turnover on downs by Kansas State at its own 30-yard line. Becht finished the short drive with a 7-yard touchdown run with 6:38 left.
Avery Johnson passed for 273 yards and two touchdowns for Kansas State (0-1, 0-1). He also had a 10-yard touchdown run in the second quarter.
“I mean that’s the thing, regardless of the outcome we have 11 games to play,” Kansas State coach Chris Klieman said. “We have our back against the wall, but now we’ve got to reset and regroup and get ready to play.”
Johnson threw a 65-yard touchdown pass to Jerand Bradley with 6:23 remaining, but the Wildcats never got the ball back.
Both teams struggled to deal with wet conditions in the first half. Kansas State had two turnovers and a turnover on downs, and Iowa State committed two turnovers in the first 30 minutes.
“We just made some great adjustments,” Campbell said. “We saw some things different in the first game and the opportunity to make some adjustments and to have the ability to do that, to have the staff that’s been together for so long that we have the confidence to make those adjustments.”
The Cyclones grabbed a 14-7 lead when Becht found Eskildsen in the corner of the end zone with 1:07 left in the third quarter.
Johnson responded with a 37-yard touchdown pass to Jayce Brown, tying it at 14 with 14:09 remaining in the game.
Hansen led Iowa State with 71 yards rushing on 16 carries. Joe Jackson had 51 yards on 12 carries for Kansas State.
“I thought that the (offensive line) did a really great job in the second half,” Campbell said. “Our tight ends and o-line did a great job of execution and man Carson is a really great player so we’re really proud of him.”
Iowa State has beat Kansas State in five of the past six seasons.
“I think those are great wins, any time you can beat quality opponents that’s awesome,” Campbell said. “We got a long way to go, it’s only game one and there’s a lot of football left and we’re going to have to see if we’re tough enough as a program and team to go home and get ready for a good South Dakota team next week.”
Kansas State running back Dylan Edwards was injured in the first quarter on a punt that he muffed. He didn’t return to the game.
MONTGOMERY, Ala. — The FCS Kickoff game between UC Davis and Mercer was declared a no contest after a weather delay of about 1 1/2 hours Saturday night.
UC Davis, ranked No. 7 in the FCS coaches poll, had a 23-17 lead over No. 11 Mercer when play was stopped with about 7 1/2 minutes left.
“Tonight’s 11th Annual FCS Kickoff has been declared a ‘No Contest’ due to rain and intermittent lightning that has continued to move through central Alabama,” Mercer said on social media. “All statistics from tonight’s game have been voided.”
UC Davis posted: “Mother Nature wins the day as tonight’s game in Montgomery has been called a no contest.”
LAS VEGAS — Running back Jai’Den Thomas scored three touchdowns, the UNLV defense had four interceptions, and the heavily favored Rebels held off Idaho State38-31 on Saturday in the debut of Dan Mullen as their coach.
After winning 11 games in 2024, UNLV is starting over with only two returning starters and a new coach. Mullen, 103-61 in 13 seasons at Mississippi State and Florida before becoming a college football analyst on ESPN, picked up the 12th season-opening win of his career.
“Great job by these guys, great way to come out and get a win,” Mullen said. “Obviously, it’s so hard to win, there are so many new faces on the field for us.”
Thomas gained 147 yards on 10 carries and Virginia transfer Anthony Colandrea threw for 195 yards to go with 93 yards rushing.
The Rebels trailed 31-24 in the fourth quarter and struggled to put the game away even after their defense intercepted Idaho State’s Jordan Cooke on back-to-back drives in the fourth.
After Colandrea’s 9-yard touchdown pass to Daejon Reynolds tied it at 31, UNLV cashed in one interception with Michigan transfer quarterback Alex Orji‘s 11-yard scramble for a score on a fourth-and-1 play. Now leading 38-31, the Rebels intercepted Cooke again, but Ramon Villela missed a 41-yard field goal attempt.
Idaho State drove to the UNLV 32 but Cooke was called for intentional grounding while he was being sacked for a loss of 11 yards. On fourth-and-22, Quandarius Keyes broke up a pass to seal the win for the Rebels, who closed as favorites of more than four touchdowns just before kickoff.
“The great thing is: Find a way to win,” Mullen said. “It could have been very easy for us to find a way to lose today. … And you know what? We’re going to enjoy that.”
Cooke finished 30-for-50 passing for 380 yards with one touchdown but he threw three of Idaho State’s four interceptions.
Thomas, one of the two returning starters for the Rebels (the other is linebacker Marsel McDuffie), erased a 10-0 deficit with second-quarter touchdown runs of 39 and 70 yards, but Idaho State led 17-14 at halftime after Dason Brooks scored on a 27-yard run with two minutes left in the half.
“If you’re not jumping up and down and celebrating, you’re playing the wrong game,” Mullen said, wrapping up his closer-than-expected debut. “Because our team won.”