Ramblings: Updates on Dobson and Karlsson; Larkin Powers Red Wings; Shesterkin Stellar; Jarvis Crushes Columbus – January 24
Michael Clifford
2025-01-24
While the extent of the injury to New Jersey Devils goaltender Jacob Markstrom hasn't been made official yet by the team, Kevin Weekes reported that it is not as serious as it looked, but that it is putting Markstrom's participation in the Four Nations Cup in peril. That would indicate that it will likely be a couple weeks as teams go on break two weeks from Saturday. We will wait for official confirmation, and it could have been worse, but still not ideal.
*
For an official confirmation from a team, the New York Islanders told us that the news on defenceman Noah Dobson isn't great:
As mentioned, the Four Nations Cup break starts two weeks from now. If Dobson is week-to-week, he may be out until the teams return from that time off. It would give Dobson lots of time to rest and rehab for a hopeful run at a playoff spot, however unlikely that may be.
*
The Vegas Golden Knights also provided an update on forward William Karlsson:
Vegas is a team that has gone through their fair share of injuries over the last few years, and add another one to the pile. Hopefully he can be back before the Four Nations break, but at this point, if a player is deemed week-to-week, I am not expecting them back before the end of February.
*
Mikhail Sergachev was not in the lineup for Utah on Thursday night, and the team said he did not travel with them for their road game in Minnesota. Utah heads to Canada for games in Winnipeg and Ottawa this weekend, and Sergachev can always hop on a plane if things change, but it looks like he'll miss a couple more on top of the three he's missed already.
*
Patrick Kane was not in the lineup for Detroit on Thursday night. He is considered day-to-day, so it's better news than Karlsson and Dobson, at least. Vladimir Tarasenko skated in Kane's spot both on the second line and the top power-play unit for the game.
Detroit laid the hammer down on Montreal in their Thursday night matchup, even if the score was just 4-2. Shots after the first period were 17-4 in Detroit's favour, and 32-16 after the second period. The shot counter was very much indicative play as Detroit was dominant pretty much from start to finish.
Dylan Larkin scored another power-play goal, his 12th PP goal of the season and sixth in the month of January alone. He added an assist on a Jonatan Berggren goal, totaled nine shots, and had a pair of blocks for good measure. Larkin now has 9 goals, 10 assists, and 61 shots in 13 games since Todd McLellan took over behind the bench.
Alex DeBrincat (one goal, five shots) and Andrew Copp (one goal, four shots) had the other tallies for the Red Wings.
Cam Talbot held the net for the win, stopping 27 of 29 shots.
Kirby Dach and Kaiden Guhle scored Montreal's goals. Guhle finished with three shots, two blocks, and a hit in a solid fantasy night. That goal from Dach, meanwhile, was his eighth in his last 14 games.
Sam Montembeault was in net for all four goals, facing 45 shots along the way. He has now faced 174 shots in his last five starts, or nearly 35 per game. That is, uh, a lot of shots against.
*
Speaking of beatdowns, the New York Rangers laid one on Philadelphia on Thursday night, too. The Rangers took a 6-1 win at home, marking the seventh time in 12 games in the month of January that they've scored at least four goals. They are 8-1-3 in that stretch.
Reilly Smith, Filip Chytil, Adam Fox, and K'Andre Miller each had a goal and an assist in the win. Chytil had four shots and a block, Fox had four shots, and Miller had two shots and three blocks. Braden Schneider also scored for the Rangers, so their blue line accounted for three of the six goals the Rangers scored on the night.
Adam Edstrom had the other tally for New York.
Just as a small aside: Arthur Kaliyev had a primary assist on Schneider's goal, and added two shots in 10:38 of ice time. That makes three primary points at 5-on-5 for Kaliyev in eight games since joining the Rangers lineup in less than 87 minutes of 5-on-5 ice time. That works out to over 2.0 points per 60 minutes at 5-on-5 which, over the course of a full season, would be a first-line rate. Just throwing that out there.
Igor Shesterkin was great in net once again, stopping 35 of 36 shots he faced.
Owen Tippett scored Philadelphia's lone goal, totaling four shots and a block. Samuel Ersson allowed five goals on 36 shots for the loss.
*
Boston rebounded well in their loss to New Jersey with a 2-0 shutout win at home to Ottawa. David Pastrnak did the thing again, figuring in on both Bruins goals with a goal and an assist, registering four total shots and three hits. Since December 14th – a span of 19 games – he has figured in on 47.5% of Boston's goals. Not goals with him on the ice – all of their goals.
Morgan Geekie was the recipient of a great pass from Pasta, resulting in Geekie's 13th goal of the season. He is now four shy of his career-high of 17 he set in 76 games last season.
Joonas Korpisalo was stellar in net, stopping all 29 shots he faced for the shutout win. It is his third shutout of the season in just his 15th start, yet his save percentage is under. 900. Hockey is a funny game.
Anton Forsberg took the loss, allowing just one goal on 25 shots faced. It was the fifth time the Senators have been shutout in their last 11 games, and the only team with a lower goals-per-minute rate since American Thanksgiving is Anaheim. That is not a great stretch.
Jake Sanderson was a game-time scratch for Ottawa. If it proves to be any sort of serious injury, Thomas Chabot was running the top power-play unit with Sanderson out of the lineup.
*
Carolina and Columbus had an absolutely wild game in Carolina on Thursday night.
Columbus got out to a surprise 2-0 lead, which is only a surprise because they had played the night before and were on the road. The Hurricanes stormed back and scored five goals in a nine-minute span in the second period, only to have the Blue Jackets score two late goals in the second to bring it to a 5-4 game.
Carolina added a pair of goals in the third to seal the game 7-4, but this was a back-and-forth game for 50 minutes. A tough loss for the Blue Jackets, but Carolina was the better team on the night.
Seth Jarvis had a monster fantasy night with two goals (one PP), two assists, five shots, and four hits. It is the kind of fantasy performance that can win a week for a fantasy manager. He now has 9 goals and 12 points in his last 10 games and has 14 goals in 29 games since returning from injury in late November.
Sebastian Aho also had a big game with a goal, two assists (one PP), and seven shots. That brings him up to a point-per-game pace with 15 goals and 34 assists in 49 games played.
Jackson Blake had a goal and an assist of his own while Jesperi Kotkaniemi, Jordan Martinook, and Eric Robinson all had solo tallies. Blake had two total shots, a block, two PIMs, and a hit in 14:18 of ice time. He remains on the top line for Carolina and is up to 11 goals in 49 games in his rookie season. Not bad.
Frederik Andersen held on for the win, stopping 18 of 22 shots faced.
Both Kent Johnson and James van Riemsdyk had a goal and an assist for Columbus. That makes six points for Johnson in his last five games while JvR is up to 10 goals in 42 games. He had 11 in 71 games last season.
Kirill Marchenko scored his 19th goal of the season and Adam Fantilli had a pair of assists. Fantilli had two shots, a block, and a hit in a balanced fantasy effort. He has seven goals and five assists in his last 10 games.
Daniil Tarasov was in net for the Blue Jackets and allowed six goals on 42 shots.
*
The Minnesota Wild got both Jared Spurgeon and Kirill Kaprizov back on Thursday night, but Utah goalie Karel Vejmelka spoiled their returns with a 26-save shutout in Utah's 4-0 win. It is Vejmelka's first shutout of the season in his 27th start, but he does have a .913 save percentage on the year. He has been very good for Utah, especially with Connor Ingram missing so much time.
Clayton Keller had a power-play goal, Barrett Hayton scored twice, and Lawson Crouse scored his first goal in nine games to push their team to the win. Those two goals give Hayton 11 on the season, the second-highest mark of his career, and he could potentially reach the 20-goal mark for the first time.
Filip Gustavsson was in net for Minnesota and took the loss, allowing four goals on 29 shots.
*
Mark Stone had a goal and an assist (PP) in the win, and he now has 20 points in 20 games since returning from injury.
Victor Olofsson, Pavel Dorofeyev (PP), and Tomas Hertl had the other tallies for the Golden Knights. Dorofeyev finished the game with five shots, and now has seven goals, 10 points, and 22 shots in his last six games.
Ilya Samsonov stopped 15 of the 17 shots he faced for the win.
Jordan Kyrou and Robert Thomas had the goals for St. Louis. That gives Kyrou an even 21 goals and 21 assists on the season.
Joel Hofer allowed three goals on 30 shots for the loss.
*
The rest of the games will be updated in the morning.