Connect with us

Published

on

With one round in the books and eight teams sent home, the race for Stanley Cup playoffs MVP is starting to come into focus.

That focus is currently on one player who set a handful of records with his Game 7 heroism.

Here’s the first Conn Smythe Watch of the 2025 postseason. Keep in mind that in the NHL, the Conn Smythe is based on a player’s performance during the entire postseason, not just the championship round. The award is voted on by an 18-person panel of Professional Hockey Writers Association members.

We polled more than a dozen writers who are still on the beat in the playoffs for the Conn Smythe Trophy top three.

Here’s a look at some of the current leaders for MVP honors, as well as players on the cusp of breaking through in the Conn Smythe race.

The current MVP

The “Revenge Tour” against his former team the Colorado Avalanche wrapped up in spectacular fashion with 11 points in the last three games of the series (five goals, six assists). That included his third-period hat trick — along with an assist on Wyatt Johnston‘s game-tying goal with less than four minutes remaining in regulation — in the Stars’ Game 7 win.

Rantanen is the first player in NHL history to record four-point periods in back-to-back games in the regular season or the playoffs. He’s the first player to score a third-period hat trick in a Game 7. He’s also the first player with at least 10 points in Games 5 through 7 in a series. Overall, Rantanen has 12 points through seven games.

GM Jim Nill handed Rantanen an eight-year, $96 million contract extension after acquiring him from the Carolina Hurricanes for his regular-season dominance (705 points in 652 career games) and his reputation as a clutch playoff performer, as he now has 113 points in 88 career postseason games.

Rantanen was ranked first on all but one ballot we collected from our voters. He’s easily the favorite for playoff MVP at this point, and rightfully so.


The other favorites

There’s a palpable gap between Rantanen and the Connors in the playoff MVP race, but both Kyle Connor and Connor McDavid are building strong cases.

The Jets winger had 12 points in seven games against the St. Louis Blues, outscoring his team’s goaltending problems — which doesn’t accurately describe a double Vezina Trophy winner getting pulled in three road games — while leading Winnipeg to a first-round win.

Connor was awesome in Game 7: He set up Cole Perfetti‘s two goals and then picking up a secondary assist on Adam Lowry‘s double-overtime winner. He stepped up in the absence of linemate and second-leading scorer Mark Scheifele and helped Winnipeg advance past the first round for the first time in three postseasons.

It’s still surreal to think of McDavid as the reigning Conn Smythe winner, having been named playoff MVP after Edmonton’s seven-game loss in the Stanley Cup Final to Florida. If it’s the playoffs, McDavid is scoring in them. The Edmonton star has 110 points in 63 playoff games over the past five seasons, besting teammate Leon Draisaitl by 14 points.

McDavid led the Oilers with 11 points (two goals, nine assists) in their opening-round win against the Los Angeles Kings. It was supposed to be different this time for the Kings, who had lost to Edmonton in the first round for three consecutive seasons. It was different in one respect: Rather than the 2.00 points per game McDavid averaged in the three previous series wins against Los Angeles, he averaged only 1.83 points per game against the Kings in this six-game series victory.

Our voters had McDavid slightly ahead of Connor on their ballots, but they’re the clear second and third choices behind Rantanen at this point in the postseason.


Making their cases

Multiple voters expressed surprise that they were listing a member of the Leafs as one of the most valuable players of the Stanley Cup playoffs, but here we are. Toronto got past Ottawa in the first round and won Game 1 against the Florida Panthers thanks in no small part to the offensive performances by Nylander.

He is the member of the Core Four who has made the biggest impact in the playoffs, with 20 goals in 36 games since 2020-21. That’s seven more than Auston Matthews has scored in that span.

Nylander has had points in every game for the Leafs this postseason save for one: Linus Ullmark‘s Game 5 shutout for Ottawa. But Willy Styles came roaring back in Game 6 with two goals and an assist in Toronto’s Game 6 elimination of the Senators. He has three goals and two assists in the Leafs’ Game 1 wins in each round. He has been a pacesetter and a closer.

Thompson is the only goalie who made any of our ballots, getting love from a handful of voters. The Capitals goalie had a .923 save percentage and a 2.23 goals-against average in five games against the Canadiens. That he played five games against the Habs was surprising, given that he was helped from the ice in Washington’s Game 3 loss to Montreal. But Thompson was back for the Capitals’ wins in Games 4 and 5, giving up just three goals on 47 shots.

These were the only other players who were mentioned on our voters’ ballots. But there are others who could easily play their way into the conversation as the postseason continues.


On the cusp

The Oilers somehow eliminated the Kings in Game 6 without a single point from Draisaitl, but the Edmonton star made his presence known in Game 1 against Vegas with an assist and the game-tying goal, his fourth of the postseason. Draisaitl is tied for the second-most points in the postseason (12) after seven games.

Bouchard still trails the since-eliminated St. Louis’s Cam Fowler by one point for the most by a defenseman in the postseason. But the “Bouch Bombs” will continue for the foreseeable future given the Oilers’ success, as Bouchard has nine points (four goals, five assists) in seven games.

The Golden Knights’ dynamic duo. Stone leads Vegas with four goals, but both players have six points.

They didn’t have the best start against St. Louis, but they’ve hit the board in four straight games — including two goals from Stone in Game 1 against Edmonton.

Rantanen has deservedly grabbed the headlines, but don’t sleep on the contributions of Johnston to the Stars. His power-play goal gave Dallas a 3-2 lead in Game 7 with less than four minutes remaining against the Avalanche. He has seven points in seven games.

Oettinger held down the fort in the final moments of Game 7 and has posted strong numbers so far in the postseason, with a .911 save percentage and a 2.85 goals-against average.

Marner is right behind Nylander with nine points in seven games, with eight assists. He has a team-high five points on the power play. What’s a Conn Smythe Trophy worth in a contract year?

Bennett leads the Panthers with four goals in six games. As the Maple Leafs have learned, he makes frequently an impact off the scoresheet, sometimes in a game-changing way.

Andersen is playing behind a great defensive team with a forecheck that leaves him quite lonely back in the other zone. But when opponents have gotten chances against him, the veteran goalie has been a brick wall: He has a .935 save percentage and a 1.45 goals-against average this postseason.

Slavin won Game 1 of the Hurricanes’ second-round series against the Capitals with an overtime goal. His other goal in the postseason was a spirit-crusher in Carolina’s 5-2 Game 4 win over New Jersey. But scoring is never the story with Slavin: It’s his minutes (24:28 to lead the Hurricanes) and his defense, including being the linchpin of their dominant penalty kill. Plus, there’s a lot of voter goodwill built up for Slavin from his 4 Nations Face-Off performance.

Strome leads the Capitals with nine points and was one of the top scorers in the first round. Ovechkin won the Conn Smythe in 2018 when the Capitals won the Stanley Cup. He had four goals and an assist in their five-game series win over the Montreal Canadiens. They’ll need more games like that in a tight-checking series against the Hurricanes.

If Ovechkin carries the Caps in the playoffs, could voters resist the chance to cap his NHL record-breaking season with another playoff MVP award?

Continue Reading

Sports

‘You could feel it like in your bones’: Aaron Judge meets his October moment at last

Published

on

By

'You could feel it like in your bones': Aaron Judge meets his October moment at last

NEW YORK — Never were the questions of Aaron Judge‘s fitness for October particularly fair, but that’s life for the biggest man in the biggest city whose biggest failures had come at the biggest times. The burden of greatness is heavy. The burden of greatness in New York is planetary. And for those unleashing screeds on Judge’s postseasons — on hot take shows and sports-talk radio and in bars and at family dinners and everywhere, really, that anyone talks about the Yankees — it was never about whether they were fair. After all, his performances had been undeniably foul.

Judge never paid any of this any mind because he does not wire himself to do so. He cares about winning. He cares about success. He cares more than anyone who criticizes him, mocks him, derides him, leans into his past performances as if they’re predictive of an unknowable future. Judge always separated those struggles, not just because he needed to but because it is how he lives, purposely boring and boringly purposeful. He believed the moment would present itself and he would meet it. And why wouldn’t he think that? Every other endeavor in his baseball life had treated him that way.

Regardless of how the American League Division Series between the Yankees and Toronto Blue Jays breaks, what Judge did Tuesday night was the sort of thing that should put to rest questions about his October aptitude. It won’t, because it never could, but the wide-eyed, wonderstruck, childlike gawking of everyone in the Yankees’ clubhouse told the story of Tuesday night’s season-saving 9-6 victory against the Blue Jays in which Judge left jaws agape.

Poor Louis Varland. The right-handed reliever entered in the fourth inning to protect the Blue Jays’ 6-3 advantage in a game that could have clinched their spot in the AL Championship Series. He fooled Judge on a 90 mph curveball and then blew a 100 mph fastball by him and then threw another fastball at 100, up and in. Like, really in. Like, 5.9 inches off the inner corner of the plate, at triple digits, with tremendous carry, an absolute nightmare of a pitch for any hitter at any time in the game’s history to touch, let alone punish.

Nearly 400 feet later, when the ball banged off the left-field foul pole — the one place in Judge’s world where something foul is indeed fair — no one on the field could believe it. The absurdity of it all — manipulating his 6-foot-7, 282-pound body to so thoroughly alter his standard bat path, turn on 100 and keep it fair — was not lost on Varland, the Yankees who kept watching replays of the swing in the dugout, or the 47,399 at Yankee Stadium who bore witness.

“He made a really good pitch look really bad,” Varland said.

All postseason, Judge has been doing that. His 11 playoff hits lead MLB. For all of the ugliness of striking out with the bases loaded in Game 1 of this ALDS, his at-bats have been competitive all October. What he did to Varland was the culmination, precisely what the Yankees needed to see another day.

“You could feel it like in your bones,” Yankees reliever Tim Hill said. “It was crazy. It was amazing. I mean, just the pitch that he hit. All that. I’m sure my guy over there on the other side is questioning everything.”

Yes, pitching to Aaron Judge is the sort of thing of which existential crises are made. Before Tuesday, he had never hit a pitch 100 mph or faster for a home run. He hit 53 home runs this season — and none on a pitch outside the rulebook strike zone. Before Tuesday, the Blue Jays were 39-0 this season in games during which they led by at least five runs, too.

It’s impossible to overstate how out of character this was for Judge. He prides himself on good swing decisions because he knows how important they are. On pitches in the strike zone this season, Judge batted .400, 40 points higher than the next-best hitter. He slugged .867, 115 points higher than Shohei Ohtani. In his 214 plate appearances this year that ended on pitches outside of the rulebook zone, Judge batted .109 and drove in one run. All year. He didn’t have a single extra-base hit on such pitches.

One of the biggest home runs in the career of a two-time MVP favored to win a third this year was on something he never does. And if a willingness to exit his comfort zone and in the process do something that few in the history of baseball would be physically capable of doing doesn’t show that Judge isn’t just capable of success in October but destined for it, well, nothing would. And that’s fine with him. He knows emotion is the fuel that feeds the prognostications of inevitable letdown, not consistency or logic.

“I get yelled at for swinging at them out of the zone, but now I’m getting praised for it,” Judge said. “It’s a game. You’ve got to go out there and play. I don’t care what the numbers say or where something was at. I’m just up there trying to put a good swing on a good pitch, and it looked good to me.”

Inside the Yankees’ clubhouse, they’ve been yearning for Judge to have a game like this, to further validate their unflinching belief in him. The past is indisputable. Judge’s postseason OPS is more than 250 points lower than during the regular season. The Yankees haven’t won a championship during his 10 years in the big leagues. It’s real, and it’s regrettable, and it’s part of his legacy. It is also not the ink with which the future is written, which is why Aaron Boone, the Yankees’ manager with whom Judge is extremely close, said: “I don’t worry about Aaron and his state, even understanding all the outside noise.”

From Boone’s perch atop the dugout, he had the perfect view of the left-field foul pole. As the ball carried through the night, Judge stood near home plate. He didn’t pull a Carlton Fisk, trying to wave it fair. He just waited for it to land.

And when it did, helping raise his batting average this postseason to .500 and his OPS to 1.304 — nearly 300 points better than his career regular-season OPS, for the record — Judge uncorked a mini-bat flip and started his jog around the bases. When he got back to the dugout, teammates lined up and greeted him with a full high-five line.

“He’s the real deal, and as beloved a player as I’ve ever been around by his teammates,” Boone said. “They all admire him, look up to him, respect him, want his approval, and that’s just a credit to who Aaron is and how he goes about things.”

After slapping the last hand, Judge took one more step toward the end of the dugout. There awaited a television camera. Judge looked at it, pointed and turned around. He then pirouetted back and gave the audience one more stare. This was not an accident. Nothing Judge does is. It was a message, a reminder, a siren for everyone that didn’t believe.

The Yankees were still alive. And as long as that’s the case, he plans on carrying them. Even in October.

Continue Reading

Sports

Sullivan’s debut as Rangers coach spoiled by Pens

Published

on

By

Sullivan's debut as Rangers coach spoiled by Pens

NEW YORK — Mike Sullivan coached the Pittsburgh Penguins for 10 seasons, leading them to two Stanley Cup championships. On Tuesday night at Madison Square Garden, he watched them ruin his debut as the New York Rangers‘ latest head coach.

Sullivan admitted it was a peculiar feeling having Sidney Crosby, Evgeni Malkin, Kris Letang and others he coached in Pittsburgh suddenly become his opponents.

“I mean, obviously it’s different. It’s different. I knew that was going to be the case,” he said after Pittsburgh’s 3-0 victory on the opening night of the 2025-26 NHL season. “But I’m excited about the group we have here in front of me with the Rangers. I’m looking forward to working with this group.”

The Rangers were shut out by goalie Arturs Silovs (22 saves) and watched forward Justin Brazeau score two goals in the Penguins’ win. They were outshot 15-5 in the third period and couldn’t muster anything consistent offensively in Sullivan’s debut.

“Well, I think my first observation is we got a long way to go to become the team we want to become. Some of it I think we can iron out, but certainly we’ve got a ways to go,” said Sullivan, who will coach Team USA in the 2026 Winter Olympic men’s hockey tournament in Italy. “I’m not going to overreact to it. It’s one game. We’ve got a lot of hockey to play,” he said. “So is it disappointing? Yeah. We’re going to see what we can take from it. We’ve got to move on.”

Sullivan and the Penguins agreed to part ways in April despite his being under contract through the 2026-27 season. Hired in 2015-16, Sullivan was the franchise’s most successful coach with 409 wins, only the 14th coach in NHL history to win 400 games with one team. Pittsburgh won back-to-back Stanley Cups in 2016 and 2017 with Sullivan.

Days later, after he left the Penguins, Sullivan was hired by the Rangers to replace coach Peter Laviolette, signing a five-year contract that made him the NHL’s highest-paid coach. Sullivan, 57, had previously served as an assistant coach with New York from 2009 to 2013, during which time he coached Rangers GM Chris Drury as a player.

Penguins captain Crosby acknowledged it was a different feeling having Sullivan behind the Rangers’ bench instead of his.

“I just go out there and compete, but it’s always weird that first little bit,” he said.

For Crosby, it wasn’t just seeing Sullivan coaching the opponents. Sullivan brought former Penguins assistants David Quinn and Ty Hennes with him to New York.

While Sullivan took the loss against his former team, new Penguins coach Dan Muse earned a victory against his. Muse was an assistant coach under Laviolette for two seasons in New York and reportedly interviewed for the vacancy before Sullivan was hired. Crosby was happy to get Muse the win.

“Every team will tell you, especially early in the season, it’s not going to be perfect. You’re just trying to be on the same page as much as possible. And I feel like he prepared us well to start the year,” Crosby said.

Pittsburgh had Crosby, Malkin and Letang in its starting lineup, three players who have been on the Penguins team together since 2007.

“We had three guys that have been playing together for 20 years, and I thought it was important that they get to start the game together,” Muse said.

Continue Reading

Sports

Sasaki ‘primary option’ at closer, says Roberts

Published

on

By

Sasaki 'primary option' at closer, says Roberts

LOS ANGELES — Roki Sasaki hasn’t been officially declared the closer, but he might as well be. Los Angeles Dodgers manager Dave Roberts said Tuesday that Sasaki is “definitely the primary option now” in the ninth inning, but that is also contingent on his workload.

“We have to win X amount of games [to secure a championship], and he’s not going to close every game,” Roberts said before Tuesday’s workout from Dodger Stadium. “It’s just not feasible, so, you’ve got to use other guys.”

Roberts attempted to do that in Game 2 of the National League Division Series on Monday night, deploying Blake Treinen with a three-run lead in the ninth inning. But Treinen allowed the first three batters to reach, cutting the Philadelphia Phillies‘ deficit to a single run. Alex Vesia followed by facing three batters, retiring two. Sasaki then entered the game and recorded the final out in what amounted to his fifth major league relief appearance since transitioning to the bullpen in mid-September.

The Dodgers entered the postseason with a leaky bullpen they hoped to shore up with starting pitchers, most notably Sasaki but also Emmet Sheehan, Clayton Kershaw and, at times, Tyler Glasnow. The likes of Treinen, Tanner Scott, Kirby Yates and Michael Kopech — the latter two currently recovering from injuries but expected to be available for a potential National League Championship Series — were expected to anchor a dominant bullpen. All of them, to varying degrees, have fallen out of favor, but Roberts will inevitably have to trust them again at some point.

“If there’s a world where you can use five pitchers and finish a postseason and win the postseason, I think a lot of people would sign up for that,” Roberts said. “But that’s impossible. So you’ve got to use your roster at certain times and kind of pick spots where you feel best and live with whatever outcome. But that’s just the way it goes to win, for us, 13 games in October.”

In hopes of winning at least one, the Phillies, coming off back-to-back losses in Philadelphia, will turn to veteran right-hander Aaron Nola with their season on the line in Game 3 on Wednesday. Nola, 32, navigated a career-worst year in 2025, going 5-10 with a 6.01 ERA. But Phillies manager Rob Thomson will deploy lefty starter Ranger Suarez behind Nola, with Cristopher Sanchez fully rested for a potential Game 4.

Thomson said he went with Nola because of Nola’s strong finish to the regular season — eight innings of one-run ball against the Minnesota Twins — and because Nola is more comfortable starting than coming out of the bullpen. A lefty is typically a better option against the top of the Dodgers’ lineup, but the left-handed-hitting Shohei Ohtani and Freddie Freeman have combined for a 1.056 OPS against Suarez.

“I have trust in both of them, don’t get me wrong,” Thomson said. “But Nola has pitched in some really big games for us in the last couple of years.”

Thomson said center fielder Harrison Bader, who suffered a hamstring strain in Game 1, will be a “game-time decision” on Wednesday. Bader pinch hit in the ninth inning of Game 2 and was replaced by a pinch runner after his single. Starting him as the designated hitter and putting Kyle Schwarber in the outfield is not an option.

“He’s still got to run,” Thomson said of Bader. “If he can run, he’s going to play center field.”

Dodgers catcher Will Smith, nursing a hairline fracture in his right hand, has not started any of the team’s four playoff games but has caught the final innings in each of the first two games of this series. Doing so again in Game 3 makes sense, given that the Dodgers would have the platoon advantage by starting the left-handed-hitting Ben Rortvedt against Nola and later turning to the right-handed-hitting Smith against Suarez. But Roberts said “there is hope” of Smith catching the whole game.

“I’ll make the decision tomorrow,” Roberts said. “Each day, it’s gotten better, so I feel more confident that he’ll be able to start.”

Continue Reading

Trending