Kristen Shilton is a national NHL reporter for ESPN.
There are division rivals a team can’t wait to face. Others, not so much.
Take the Washington Capitals for instance, who’ve already seen enough of their Metropolitan Division rivals in New Jersey.
“Thankfully, we’re done with the New Jersey Devils this year,” Capitals’ coach Spencer Carbery joked in late December. “They’ve got a great team. We had some good battles against them. They’ve got a real good team, a well-rounded hockey team.”
Theirs was an evenly matched series in the end — with New Jersey the overall victor at 2-1-0 — but Carbery’s relief in being free of the Devils (for this regular season, at least) is testament to how strong their rivals up I-95 have been this season. Washington is leading the Metro after all, but the Devils are hot on their heels battling for second place.
New Jersey is coming off a brutal 2023-24 campaign that produced a 38-39-5 record, and missed playoff berth for the 10th time in 12 seasons. One year prior, the Devils had been the league’s Cinderella story, surging through their season (at 52-22-8) to make a powerful playoff push, and advancing past another major Metro rival — the New York Rangers — in the first round before falling to the Carolina Hurricanes in the second.
The Devils’ abysmal follow-up to that feat led to layers of fallout within the organization — including coach Lindy Ruff’s firing — while raising red flags about the club’s readiness to be true contenders. GM Tom Fitzgerald had tinkered long enough; when would we start seeing consistent results?
Well, we’re about to find out. New Jersey sits fourth in the Eastern Conference at 25-15-4, and is firmly on track towards the playoffs as the season’s season half approaches. But will the Devils stay on course, and are they built to last? Other teams have been through setbacks and eventually flourished. There’s a blueprint out there to go from zero to (postseason) hero.
What would that look like for New Jersey? And which past success stories could they use as a roadmap to reach such status?
The great ones, it seems, all start with good bones.
Let’s go back to 2016-17. Colorado finished last in the league that season, with a 22-56-4 record while allowing the most goals against and scoring the fewest. It was the worst season on record for the Avalanche since they moved to Denver in 1995, and the second worst season in franchise history overall.
So how did Colorado go from hot mess to making seven consecutive playoff appearances and winning a Cup in 2022? Glad you asked.
Then there was picking the right coach. When Patrick Roy abruptly resigned in 2016, Sakic tapped rookie NHL head coach Jared Bednar as successor. And yes, Bednar’s first go-around ended with the Avs as bottom-dwellers. But since then, he has soundly stabilized Colorado from behind the bench.
All in all, it took years for Colorado to peak. But the climb was clearly worth the cresting views. And the Devils are attempting to follow a similar blueprint.
Fitzgerald has expanded the Devils with other key skaters — he signed Dougie Hamilton in 2021 and continued bolstering the blue line with free agents Brett Pesce and Brendon Dillon this offseason. The offense got a boost from Fitzgerald signing two-time Cup champion Ondrej Palat and trading for Timo Meier. His best work was trading for goaltender Jacob Markstrom from the Calgary Flames in July, finally giving his team the consistent goaltending it lacked in recent years.
The GM is confident after letting go of Ruff — and his interim replacement Travis Green — that he’s invested in the right coach with Sheldon Keefe. The Devils hired Keefe just days after he was fired by the Toronto Maple Leafs in May after four seasons there. New Jersey is only the second NHL head coaching gig for Keefe, but the transition to New Jersey has been fairly smooth — and generally well-received, based on early returns.
Piece by piece, Fitzgerald — like Sakic — has tried creating a roster to stand the test of time, where players align in a coach’s system designed to take New Jersey over the top.
Jacob Markstrom makes a brilliant save for the Devils
Jacob Markstrom makes a nice save in the third period for the Devils.
It’s not easy. Health has been an issue for New Jersey; last season, Hughes was limited to 62 games, while Hamilton was out for all but 20 (after he posted 74 points in 82 games the year prior), Meier was sidelined for 13 games and Hischier was gone for 11. Injury absences are among the inevitabilities that every team must simply endure. Much like a few growing pains.
Colorado found that out, too. Once they were back in the postseason field, the Avalanche failed to get past the second round for four consecutive years before the Cup victory. New Jersey might need the same postseason learning experiences — something most of the roster doesn’t have yet — to be properly seasoned for a Cup Final run.
Because scaling that mountain requires a steady ascent, and Keefe believes his approach will provide New Jersey will the correct footing.
“Our vision is to win the Stanley Cup, and that’s very clear,” Keefe said during his introductory press conference. “To win the Stanley Cup, you have to make the playoffs, and it’s about establishing a process we’ll adhere to on a daily basis and ultimately see the sustained, high performance that will lead us to have an opportunity to compete for the Stanley Cup.”
Barring a second-half collapse, the Devils are on their way to seeing spring hockey return to The Rock. But how well positioned is New Jersey to make the most of what opportunity awaits when they arrive?
FITZGERALD HASN’T LOOKED FAR for inspiration in retooling the Devils.
His goal was to recreate New Jersey in its own image, with a strong offensive skill set that would also have fans “reminiscing of the past Devils teams of being heavy [and] harder to play against.”
He’s referencing, of course, that star-driven golden age of New Jersey hockey which included three Cup wins from 1995-2003. Whether Fitzgerald is crafting a club with such capability will be reflected in — and determined by — New Jersey’s postseason performance.
The biggest overhaul Fitzgerald had to make on this quest to contend was in the crease. Last season, the Devils churned through five different goaltending options and never landed on a suitable starter. Fitzgerald eventually traded would-be No.1 Vitek Vanecek (and his .890 save percentage) to San Jose and brought in Jake Allen to finish out the campaign. The Devils finished with the fifth-worst goals-against average (3.43) in the league.
The GM was aggressive in patching that particular hole when he acquired Markstrom from Calgary for a 2025 first-round pick and defenseman Kevin Bahl. That move projected to shore the team up where they most needed support — and Markstrom has delivered in fine form. The veteran is tied for the second-most wins among goalies (20-8-3) with a .911 save percentage and 2.20 goals-against average. And Allen is proving to be a fine backup (.901 SV%, 2.76 GAA).
That tandem gives the Devils peace of mind in goal that they haven’t enjoyed of late. However, the goalies can’t be all that makes New Jersey a tough out like Fitzgerald wants them to be. And the Devils’ recent skid is a prime example of what happens when the team’s offense dries up — and defensive details take a hit.
The Devils have been focused on grooming Hughes and Nemec to carry their back end. Hamilton, Pesce and Dillon are meant to be guiding that process. Markstrom should provide ample confidence that what does get through has a good chance to staying out. That’s the way Fitzgerald drew it up, anyway.
“The fun part is building around the edges, building the complementary guys you need,” Fitzgerald said. “Now you’re putting together a contender, and you’re checking off all the different boxes that contenders have. The last thing I was worried about (entering free agency) was the offense on this team. It was everything else that we needed to build up and check boxes, and we’ve done that.”
The Devils haven’t been immune to setbacks, though. On a six-game stretch from December into January the Devils were a woeful 1-4-1, getting outscored 19-11. There’s been blame to go around — the top skaters (especially Hischier) have slowed at 5-on-5, the Devils’ bottom six isn’t producing at all and outside of the Jonas Siegenthaler-Jonathan Kovacevic pairing, there wasn’t complete defensive buy-in. Markstrom did an admirable job holding the Devils in just about every game, which is further proof of his difference-making ability. But again, he can’t do it alone.
And therein lies the Big Question for New Jersey: When their offense goes cold, is there enough juice defensively to keep them in contention? It’s a problem Keefe is intimately familiar with from his time in Toronto. When the Maple Leafs’ so-called Core Four (Auston Matthews, Mitch Marner, William Nylander and John Tavares) didn’t make it on the scoresheet, Toronto was generally headed for another L (particularly in the postseason). Is New Jersey doomed for the same fate?
“It’s hard to predict what the playoff Devils can look like,” one Eastern Conference executive said. “Can you compare this team to the one two years ago? Maybe. But they’ve arguably changed for the better since then. It does feel a bit like Toronto, though. Regular season success won’t matter if New Jersey can’t turn Hughes and those guys into playoff performers.”
WHAT ELSE CAN Fitzgerald do to ensure New Jersey’s best outcomes are still ahead? Turn his attention fully towards the trade deadline — where the Devils can’t be complacent in their approach.
The team would benefit from boosting its center depth, and a source confirmed the Devils’ interest in Montreal Canadiens‘ pivot Jake Evans as a potential target. Evans is having a career-best season in Montreal, with 10 goals and 23 points in 41 games, and he’d be an ideal addition to New Jersey’s third or fourth line. The Devils might also look at bringing in pending UFAs like Brock Nelson or Yanni Gourde as low-risk, bottom-six depth options.
The Devils could explore some insurance for their back end too, what with the club’s injury history there (Hughes and Pesce have already been sidelined by ailments this season). Cody Ceci — another pending UFA — is an intriguing veteran option with playoff experience.
Any changes would have to complement what Fitzgerald has done to date. The hard work of building New Jersey up is already done. It just hasn’t manifested in playoff success — potentially until now.
Colorado showed how to go from worst to first. New Jersey’s trajectory to this stage — let’s call it base camp — has mirrored the Avalanche’s past journey in multiple ways.
The NHL is a results-driven league, though. The Devils haven’t anything to show for themselves yet. But it feels like the door has been cracked on New Jersey’s time to contend, and usher in the franchise’s next winning era.
Are they ready for it? Let the (real) games begin.
Jake Trotter covers college football for ESPN. He joined ESPN in 2011. Before that, he worked at The Oklahoman, Austin American-Statesman and Middletown (Ohio) Journal newspapers. You can follow him @Jake_Trotter.
Penn State junior standout running backs Kaytron Allen and Nicholas Singleton both announced Monday that they will be returning to the Nittany Lions for the 2025 season.
“We still have goals we want to reach as a team, and I want to be alongside my teammates as we reach those goals,” Singleton wrote in his announcement.
Allen, meanwhile, said that “it’s clear that we still have a lot more to accomplish.”
This past season, the two teamed up to give Penn State one of college football’s top rushing duos — Allen rushed for 1,108 yards and eight touchdowns while averaging 5.0 yards per carry; Singleton rushed for 1,099 yards with 12 touchdowns and ranked fourth in the Big Ten with 6.4 yards per carry.
Singleton also led Big Ten running backs with 375 receiving yards on 41 receptions.
Singleton ran for three touchdowns in Penn State’s 27-24 loss to Notre Dame in the College Football Playoff semifinals Thursday. Allen rushed for 134 yards in the Nittany Lions’ quarterfinal victory over Boise State on Dec. 31.
Penn State quarterback Drew Allar previously announced he was coming back. With Allen and Singleton joining him, the Nittany Lions will enter next season with one of the country’s most prolific and experienced backfields.
Quarterback Carson Beck‘s college career might not be over yet.
The Georgia starter came into this past season as one of the top-rated passers available for the 2025 NFL draft, and an early favorite to go No. 1 overall. But after a season in which he threw nine interceptions during a four-game stretch (and three more in a 41-34 loss at Alabama) and struggled mightily in other games, his draft stock fell sharply.
Making matters worse, Beck was injured on the final play of the first half in Georgia’s 22-19 overtime victory against Texas in the Dec. 7 SEC championship game. Beck had season-ending surgery to repair the ulnar collateral ligament in his right, throwing elbow on Dec. 23. Five days later, he announced he was entering the NFL draft.
Then on Thursday, Beck entered the transfer portal. On Friday, Beck committed to Miami, where he’ll replace record-setting QB Cam Ward. Due to his injury, Beck, however, isn’t expected to resume throwing until sometime this spring. — Mark Schlabach
Why is he heading to Miami?
There were lots of rumors linking Beck to Miami back in December, which he briefly put to rest when he declared for the draft. But just as they did last year with Cam Ward, Mario Cristobal and the Hurricanes stayed patient and eventually won out for one of the top quarterbacks in the portal.
Ward was worth every penny with the remarkable season he put together in 2024 and the leadership he brought to the program. He seriously boosted his NFL draft stock as a result of his 2024 season and could end up being the No. 1 overall pick. If you’re Beck, that’s the goal in coming back for an extra season. Miami won’t have the same supporting cast of playmakers back for 2025, but they had a lot to sell as Beck’s ideal destination.
Beck won a lot of games with the Bulldogs but never got an opportunity to start in a College Football Playoff game. Two November losses knocked Miami out of the ACC title game and the 12-team CFP this season. Both sides are highly motivated to make the most of 2025, and Beck’s arrival will once again mean big preseason expectations for this program. It’s fair to call this another playoff-or-bust season for Cristobal and the Canes. — Max Olson
What’s next for Georgia?
Beck’s replacement, third-year sophomore Gunner Stockton, played well enough in the second half of the SEC championship game and in a 23-10 loss to Notre Dame in a College Football Playoff quarterfinal game at the Allstate Sugar Bowl that he’ll likely go into spring practice as the favorite to replace Beck.
Stockton, one of the most productive quarterbacks in Georgia high school history, led the Bulldogs back from a 6-3 deficit in the second half to defeat Texas in Atlanta. In his first college start, he completed 20 of 32 passes for 234 yards with one touchdown and no interceptions against a very good Notre Dame defense.
Stockton should improve with a full offseason to prepare as the starter. He’ll have to hold off freshman Ryan Puglisi, the No. 9 pocket passer in the class of 2024, according to ESPN. The Bulldogs signed two quarterbacks in their most recent recruiting class: Ryan Montgomery of Findlay, Ohio, and Hezekiah Millender of Athens, Georgia.
The Bulldogs might still bring in another experienced quarterback from the portal. They were linked to former Alabama backup Dylan Lonergan and Cal starter Fernando Mendoza before those two signed with Boston College and Indiana, respectively. — Schlabach
Did Beck fall out of favor with NFL scouts?
After entering the season as a candidate to be the No. 1 pick in 2025, Beck didn’t live up to expectations, finishing with solid statistics — 28 touchdown passes, 12 interceptions and 3,485 yards — but up-and-down performances. He had three games at midseason in which he threw a combined eight picks, which raised eyebrows among NFL scouts. I dropped him in my rankings to the No. 5 quarterback in the 2025 class.
Speaking to evaluators in the league, Beck’s draft grades were all over the place, as some thought he would go in Round 2, while others thought he could go as low as Round 5. After his announcement that he was declaring for the draft, one scout said: “I was surprised.”
At Miami, Beck should have an opportunity to recapture his 2023 form, when he threw just six interceptions. Drew Allar (Penn State) is the early headliner of the 2026 class, and Beck needs a big season to get back into the Round 1 discussion. — Jordan Reid
What’s the latest with Beck’s injury?
On the day of Beck’s surgery, a Georgia statement indicated the procedure was successful, and he was expected to begin throwing again in the spring. Not much else — about the severity of the injury or his recovery time — is publicly known.
According to the Mayo Clinic’s website, UCL injuries are common among gymnasts, wrestlers, football players and baseball pitchers. The length of Beck’s recovery would depend on whether he partially or completely tore the ligament and where it was torn (proximal, distal or mid-substance).
“For patients who have full thickness tears and need to return to high demand throwing type activities, surgery may be considered,” the Mayo Clinic website says. “Surgery typically entails either a repair (fixing your current ligament by sewing and anchoring it back down to the bone) or reconstruction (replacing your injured ligament) of the UCL.”
Beck wouldn’t be the first quarterback to come back from UCL surgery. San Francisco 49ers quarterback Brock Purdy injured the UCL in his right, throwing elbow against the Philadelphia Eagles in the NFC Championship Game on Jan. 29, 2023. He had surgery to repair his UCL on March 10, 2023, and returned to throwing less than three months later. He started the 49ers’ opener on Sept. 10, 2023.
The Mayo Clinic website said athletes who experience UCL injuries have a 95-100% return rate to athletics for non-throwers and 85-95% for throwers. — Schlabach
What are the rules about entering the portal after declaring for the draft?
Beck announced his intentions of entering the NFL draft, but he has until Feb. 7 to remove his name from the draft by sending an opt-out letter to the league office.
College football players whose teams’ seasons had already ended had until Jan. 6 to declare for the draft. Players on teams that are still competing in the CFP (Notre Dame, Ohio State, Penn State and Texas) have until Jan. 27 to decide whether to leave their names in the draft. — Schlabach
Former LSU wide receiver Kyren Lacy, accused of causing a crash that killed a 78-year-old man on Dec. 17 and then fleeing the scene without rendering aid or calling authorities, turned himself in to authorities Sunday night, was jailed and then released on $151,000 bail, according to police records.
Lafourche (Louisiana) Parish Sheriff’s Office records indicate that Lacy was charged with negligent homicide, felony hit-and-run with death and reckless operation of a vehicle.
According to a news release from Louisiana State Police on Friday, Lacy was allegedly driving a 2023 Dodge Charger on Louisiana Highway 20 and “recklessly passed multiple vehicles at a high rate of speed by crossing the centerline and entering the northbound lane while in a designated no-passing zone.”
“As Lacy was illegally passing the other vehicles, the driver of a northbound pickup truck abruptly braked and swerved to the right to avoid a head-on collision with the approaching Dodge,” a Louisiana State Police news release said.
“Traveling behind the pickup was a 2017 Kia Cadenza whose driver swerved left to avoid the oncoming Dodge Charger. As the Kia Cadenza took evasive action to avoid impact with the Dodge, it crossed the centerline and collided head-on with a southbound 2017 Kia Sorento.”
Police alleged that Lacy, 24, drove around the crash scene and fled “without stopping to render aid, call emergency services, or report his involvement in the crash.”
Herman Hall, of Thibodaux, Louisiana, who was a passenger in the Kia Sorento, later died from injuries suffered in the crash, according to state police. Hall was 78.
The drivers of the Cadenza and Sorento also sustained moderate injuries, according to police.
Lacy’s agent, Rocky Arceneaux, said in a statement that his client is “fully cooperating with the authorities.”
Lacy played two seasons at Louisiana before transferring to LSU in 2022. This past season, he had 58 catches for 866 yards with nine touchdowns and declared for the NFL draft on Dec. 19, two days after the crash.