Eight games grace the schedule tonight, beginning in...
Pittsburgh, as the Penguins host the New York Islanders. Jean-Francois Berube and Marc-Andre Fleury are the masked men. Pittsburgh struck first in the first period with a Chris Kunitz goal, his fourteenth of the season, assisted by Brian Dumoulin and Sidney Crosby. New York tied it on a Kyle Okposo power play goal, his nineteenth of the year, powered by Anders Lee and Frans Nielsen. In the shootout, the Penguins won with a lone tally from Kris Letang for the 2-1 final. The three stars were Fleury (25 for 26 in saves), Berube (33 for 34 in saves), and Letang.
Over in DC, the Washington Capitals welcome the Carolina Hurricanes. Eddie Lack and Braden Holtby man the nets. Washington got going in the second period with a Justin Williams goal, his twenty-first of the season, coming off of Jason Chimera. Carolina tied it on an unassisted goal by Jordan Staal, his eighteenth of the year. The Capitals won 2-1 in overtime with an Alex Ovechkin goal, his forty-second of the campaign, set up by Evgeny Kuznetsov. The three stars belonged to Ovechkin, Holtby (25 for 26 in saves), and Williams.
Up in Montreal, the Canadiens host the Florida Panthers. Al Montoya and Mike Condon are in the blue paint. Florida led off in the first period with a Vincent Trocheck goal, his twenty-first of the season, assisted by Brian Campbell and Reilly Smith. The Panthers added on in the second period with a Nick Bjugstad power play goal, his twelfth of the year, powered by Aaron Ekblad and Teddy Purcell. Florida extended the lead as Jiri Hudler scored his thirteenth of the season, thanks to Trocheck. Montreal got on the board with an Alex Galchenyuk goal, his twenty-sixth of the year, via Max Pacioretty and Mark Barberio. The Panthers replied in the third period with an Aleksander Barkov goal, his twenty-third of the campaign, guided in by Jonathan Huberdeau and Jagr. This stood for a 4-1 win, with the three stars given to Trocheck, Montoya (27 for 28 in saves), and Bjugstad.
West to Ontario, where the Ottawa Senators bring in the Minnesota Wild. Devan Dubnyk and Craig Anderson are the average goalies. Minnesota was first to score in the first period with a Nino Niederreiter goal, his sixteenth of the season, fueled by Justin Fontaine and Erik Haula. Ottawa tied it on a Mike Hoffman goal in the second period, his twenty-sixth of the year, guided in by Erik Karlsson and Mika Zibanejad. The Wild took the lead back with a Ryan Carter goal, his seventh of the season, helped along by Mikael Granlund and Charlie Coyle in the third period. The Senators tied it again with a Zibanejad goal, his sixteenth of the year, via Mark Stone and Karlsson. Ottawa won 3-2 in overtime on a Karlsson goal, his thirteenth of the campaign, assisted by Chris Wideman and Bobby Ryan. The three stars were awarded to Karlsson, Zibanejad, and Hoffman.
Back in Pennsylvania, the Philadelphia Flyers host the Detroit Red Wings. Petr Mrazek and Steve Mason are between the pipes. Philadelphia opened in the first period with a Michael Raffl goal, his eleventh of the season, made possible by Mark Streit and Nick Schultz. The Flyers added on with a Wayne Simmonds goal, his twenty-fifth of the year, helped along by Brayden Schenn and Claude Giroux. Detroit got on the board in the second period with an Andreas Athanasiou goal, his sixth of the season, coming off of Riley Sheahan and Gustav Nyquist. Philadelphia replied with Raffl's second of the game and twelfth of the year, with assists provided by Pierre-Edouard Bellemare and Chris VandeVelde. The Red Wings pulled back with a Pavel Datsyuk goal, his fourteenth of the season, with a lone assist from Tomas Tatar. The Flyers shot back with a Shayne Gostisbehere goal, his sixteenth of the year, going in unassisted. Detroit chipped back in the third period with a Tatar goal, his nineteenth of the campaign, fueled by Datsyuk and Green. The final was 4-3 for the Flyers, and the three stars went to Raffl, Datsyuk, and Tatar.
In Canada again, the Toronto Maple Leafs welcome the Tampa Bay Lightning. Andrei Vasilevskiy and Jonathan Bernier are the mediocre goalies. Toronto dented the scoreboard in the second period with a Connor Carrick goal, via Peter Holland and Colin Greening. Tampa Bay tied it on a third period Brian Boyle goal, his eleventh of the season, courtesy of Anton Stralman. The Maple Leafs retook the lead with a Ben Smith goal, made possible by Michael Grabner and Milan Michalek. Toronto added on with an empty net goal by Zach Hyman, his third of the year, set up by Smith and Martin Marincin. The Maple Leafs iced it at 4-1 with an empty net goal by P.A. Parenteau, his seventeenth of the campaign, assisted by Hyman and Marincin. The three stars went to Smith, Hyman, and Marincin.
Down in Dallas, the Stars host the Los Angeles Kings. Jhonas Enroth and Kari Lehtonen are set to start in goal. Los Angeles began in the first period with a Kris Versteeg goal, his thirteenth of the season, coming off of Rob Scuderi and Anze Kopitar. The Kings added on with a Tyler Toffoli goal, his twenty-sixth of the year, via Nick Shore. Dallas got on the board with an unassisted Alex Goligoski goal, his fifth of the season. Los Angeles shot back with a Kopitar goal, his twenty-second of the year, made possible by Milan Lucic and Scuderi. The Kings chased Lehtonen in the second period with a Dustin Brown goal, his tenth of the season, helped along by Kyle Clifford and Jeff Carter. Antti Niemi came on in relief. The Stars got one back with a Cody Eakin power play goal, his fourteenth of the year, going in unassisted. Los Angeles extended the lead as Trevor Lewis scored his seventh of the campaign, thanks to Vincent Lecavalier. This made it 5-2, the eventual final, with the three stars handed to Kopitar, Scuderi, and Brown.
Finally, the San Jose Sharks bring in the Boston Bruins. Tuukka Rask faces a former rival in James Reimer in goal. San Jose started in the first period with a Melker Karlsson goal, his eighth of the season, assisted by Joonas Donskoi and Logan Couture. Boston tied it on a David Krejci goal, his fifteenth of the year, courtesy of David Pastrnak and Torey Krug. The Bruins took the lead with a shorthanded Loui Eriksson goal, his twenty-seventh of the season, set up by Krejci. The Sharks tied it again in the second period with a Brent Burns goal, his twenty-sixth of the year, passed from Tomas Hertl and Joe Thornton. San Jose gained the lead with a third period Donskoi power play goal, his eleventh of the season, powered by Joel Ward and Burns. This made it 3-2, the final, with the three stars given to Donskoi, Burns, and Krejci.
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