Browsing: Primed

The past couple seasons have been a rollercoaster ride for the New Jersey Devils, one that has likely triggered more stomach sickness than thrills.

If youâ€re a Devils fan, though, itâ€s very reasonable to hope the ride is about to enter another exciting upswing.

In 2022-23, Jersey — on the strength of a monster 112-point showing that marked a 49-point leap from the previous year — made the playoffs for just the second time in 11 seasons and also claimed its first post-season series victory in that span.

The next campaign, the Devils were decimated by injuries, done in by poor goaltending and tumbled completely out of the playoff picture with 81 points. Last yearâ€s slight rebound — 91 points and a first-round exit despite more bad injury luck — was at least a half-step back in the right direction.

It may be overly simplistic to suggest this club is one healthy season away from serious success, but it just might be that simple for this talented collection of players.

Of course, the injury bug has already nipped New Jersey, taking out starter Jacob Markstrom with a lower-body injury. Not to worry, though: Jake Allen is a more-than-capable backup, as he showed during a 5-3 win over the Edmonton Oilers on Saturday. The triumph was Jerseyâ€s fourth straight win after the club lost in Carolina to open the campaign and the Devils have now won three straight games with Allen in goal. Really, the cagey veteran has been rock-steady for the Devils dating back to last season. Since Jan. 18, only five goalies in the league whoâ€ve played at least 20 games have a superior save percentage to Allenâ€s .917 mark.

Up front, the chronically underrated Jesper Bratt leads the team with seven points after his two-point afternoon versus the Oilers. Seeing the likes of Jack Hughes, Nico Hischier and Timo Meier off to point-per-game starts is no surprise, but there may be an interesting development with Dawson Mercer hitting his stride on the second line with Hischier and Meier.

Mercer closed out the win over Edmonton with an ENG, giving him three tallies and five points in his past four outings. For some, Mercer always seemed destined to be trade bait in Jersey, especially when the club was trying to solve its crease issues.

Donâ€t forget, though, this guy is an 18th-overall pick with lots to offer. In particular, he plays a hard-nosed style that New Jersey could use more of to compete when it really counts, in the Stanley Cup Playoffs.

On the back end, Dougie Hamilton has just a single point this year, but all Devils fans are hoping for is to see the big guy out there every night with the club. In his previous four years since arriving in Jersey as a UFA whale, Hamilton has missed nearly 35 per cent of his squadâ€s games.

When heâ€s in the lineup, thereâ€s a nice right-left balance to the defence corps, and it will certainly be interesting to see where Luke Hughes — who, naturally, was injured at the start of next year — can go now that heâ€s locked up to a monster seven-year contract.

Could his rise dovetail with that of his teamâ€s?

Buy a ticket, take the ride.

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• The Devils are off to a great start, but nobody in the Metropolitan Division — or entire NHL, for that matter — can top what the Carolina Hurricanes are doing out of the gate. The Canes let a 3-0 lead slip in Los Angeles Saturday, but still came away 4-3 overtime winners to keep their perfect 5-0-0 record intact. How about the start by Seth Jarvis, who has four — FOUR! — game-winning goals after potting the extra-time marker that sunk the Kings.

• The Buffalo Sabres and Detroit Red Wings were by no means in the exact same sad position, but itâ€s certainly worth noting how much better both fan bases must feel after the weekend’s action compared to where they were in the earliest days of the season. The Sabres†3-0 whitewash of the Florida Panthers on Saturday was surely a bit of a salve given that the only game it had managed to win prior to that contest was a wild 8-4 victory over Ottawa that didnâ€t exactly inspire confidence.

Detroit, meanwhile, got two home wins over the weekend, downing Tampa Bay 2-1 in overtime on Friday and Edmonton 4-2 on Sunday afternoon. The Wings have now claimed five straight victories after losing their season-opener 5-1 to Montreal on home ice. That may have been only one tick in the ‘L†column, but — for a team desperate to end a long playoff drought — it felt like a bit of a statement defeat, as the club fell flat in its first game against a division rival it hopes to supplant for a post-season berth. To see the Wings turn the page so emphatically is impressive. So, too, is the play of rookie defenceman Axel Sandin-Pellikka, who potted his first NHL goal on Friday versus the Bolts. Which brings us to…

• Last year, a defenceman — Lane Hutson of the Canadiens — led the rookie class with 66 points and claimed the Calder Trophy. After Hutson, though, the crop of freshman blue-liners was grim. The second-highest point total by a rookie D-man after Hutson was Drew Helleson of the Ducks, who had 13 in 56 games. In fact, the only rookie defenceman besides Hutson to even skate in more than 60 NHL games was Albert Johansson of the Wings.

Letâ€s just say thereâ€s going to be more competition for the year-end all-rookie team on the blueline this year.

We mentioned above that Sandin-Pellikka is on the board for the Wings, and heâ€s averaging nearly 20 minutes per night. Last week in this space, we highlighted hot starts by Matthew Schaefer of the Isles and the Wildâ€s Zeev Buium; Schaefer has a five-game point streak to begin his career after grabbing an apple in Saturdayâ€s comeback win over Ottawa, while Buium is still being trusted to play 20 minutes per game in Minny. Then thereâ€s Alexander Nikishin, who was kept off the scoresheet for the first time in five games during Carolinaâ€s victory in L.A., but played 20:23 in the game, which is basically three minutes more than heâ€s seen in any other contest so far.

Now throw in an impressive start by Sam Rinzel, who picked up an apple on the OT winner for the Hawks over the Ducks Sunday night, and the potential for high-pedigree guys like Rinzelâ€s Chicago teammate Artyom Levshunov and Flames wizard Zayne Parekh to eventually hit their stride, and it could be an absolutely astounding rookie D-man crew.

Red and White Power Rankings

1. Winnipeg Jets (4-1-0): What a start to the year for Mark Scheifele, who became the Jets 2.0’s all-time scoring leader with his 813th career point during a 4-1 win over Nashville on Saturday. The first guy the Jets drafted when they moved back to Winnipeg in 2011 has six goals and nine points in five October outings.

2. Vancouver Canucks (4-2-0): Make it three straight road wins for the Canucks, who beat Chicago in extra time Friday and hung on for a 4-3 victory in D.C. on Sunday afternoon. With six of a possible 10 points already collected on its current five-game sojourn, Vancouver has a chance to make this a trip to remember. That said, Filip Chytil leaving early after being hit by Washingtonâ€s Tom Wilson on Sunday was obviously an unwelcome development.

3. Toronto Maple Leafs (3-2-1): The Leafs need to get in gear for any number of reasons. One, in particular, is to take advantage of their home-heavy schedule to start the year. The Buds have played but one road game so far, and 12 of their first 16 contests this season are at Scotiabank Arena. Merely treading water through that stretch simply wonâ€t do.

4. Montreal Canadiens (4-2-0): Sam Montembeault was not at his best during Saturdayâ€s 4-3 loss to the Rangers. Montembeault has an ugly .857 save percentage so far, while backup Jakub Dobes is rocking a .940 in two games. Just sayinâ€.

5. Edmonton Oilers (2-3-1): Back-to-back Lâ€s for the Oilers in Jersey Saturday and the Motor City 24 hours later make it a three-game road skid for Edmonton. The club was 0-for-4 on the power play versus the Devils and Wings, and the Oilers PP sits in a place weâ€re not accustomed to — 20th in the league at 17.7 per cent.

6. Ottawa Senators (2-4-0): Itâ€s cold comfort right now in the midst of a rough start for the Sens, but Ottawa has the fifth-best expected goals percentage in the league (54.05 per cent) and is the best club at the dot, winning 61.5 per cent of its face-offs.

7. Calgary Flames (1-5-0): After falling 6-1 to Vegas on Saturday, the Flames own the worst goal-differential in the NHL at minus-14.

• Lots of milestone watch going on these days, with Alex Ovechkin two goals from 900, John Tavares three away from 500 and Nikita Kucherov three points shy of 1,000 for his career. Meanwhile, Adam Henrique will play career game No. 1,000 on Thursday when the Oilers host Montreal.

• On Tuesday, Brad Marchand will face the Boston Bruins for the first time as a Florida Panther. The Panthers actually visited Boston not long after the trade deadline last year, but Marchand was injured and didnâ€t play. One can safely assume the former Bâ€s captain — who spent parts of 16 seasons in Boston — will be warmly received by the New England fans.

Meanwhile, two Canadian teams hungry for a win — the Oilers and Sens — will meet in Ottawa that same night.

• Thursday brings a heavyweight tilt as the Canes and Avalanche clash in Denver. How about the work Scott Wedgewood has put in this year, posting a .938 SV% and 1.48 goals-against average while No. 1 guy Mackenzie Blackwood is sidelined.

• We get a classic QEW back-to-back with the Leafs in Buffalo on Friday before a return tilt in Toronto on Saturday.

• Sunday brings one more awesome game to close out the week, as the Avs are in New Jersey to face the Devils.

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Check in every week for the unfiltered opinions of our writers and editors as they break down the hottest topics in the sport, and join the conversation by tweeting us at @golf_com. This week, we discuss another Tommy Fleetwood victory, a unique tournament venue, the LPGA’s latest champion and more.

Tommy Fleetwood won the DP World India Championship to earn his second victory in his last four starts (not to mention his Ryder Cup dominance). Now no longer worried about securing his first PGA Tour win (and save for the World No. 1), is there a player primed for a more dominant 2026 than Fleetwood?

Josh Berhow, managing editor (@Josh_Berhow): The stars certainly seem to be aligning for a Fleetwood breakout. He had a few close calls even before he finally won the Tour Championship, so it’s not like the last few months have been a fluke. The guy can ball-strike with the best of them, which is a good way to always stay in contention. But it’s also important to remember guys have gotten hot and looked ready to tear up the golf world before, only to disappear. (Viktor Hovland won back-to-back playoff events in August 2023 and didn’t win again for 19 months.) I don’t expect a Scottie-like 2026, but I wouldn’t be surprised if Fleetwood picked off two or even three wins next year.

Alan Bastable, executive editor (@alan_bastable): Amazing how wins so often beget more wins. Fleetwood is the latest case in point, and not necessarily because his game is any better than it was a year ago — but more so because he’s leading the Tour in SG: Confidence. We’ll see if that magic stays with him through the offseason. As he said himself on Sunday, “I know form doesn’t last forever, but I’m trying to make myself the most consistent player I can be.” But, yes, to answer the question, he’s incredibly well positioned for 2026. Another guy I’m excited to see in action next year: Cameron Young. Curious if his impressive Ryder Cup will give him a shot of sustained confidence.

Jessica Marksbury, senior editor (@jess_marksbury): It’s always interesting when players get hot in the fall and winter to see if they can sustain the momentum into the next summer major season. Although, as Josh mentioned, it’s not as though Tommy is coming out of nowhere. He’s been a favorite pick at the majors even before his PGA Tour breakthrough. But Tommy does seem to come on especially strong in Ryder Cup years. So let’s revisit this in 2027! As for next year, I’m looking forward to keeping my eye on another solid European: Alex Noren, who won two DP World Tour titles this year and is projected to earn his PGA Tour card for next season.

Fleetwood beat out a handful of stars to win on a narrow Delhi Golf Club, where it was reported that 42 percent of the field played without a driver. Should the PGA Tour visit more courses where players are forced to be more strategic off the tee? And how often?

Berhow: Delhi Golf Club is a pretty extreme example — I don’t want Rory hitting zero drivers! — but it should definitely happen more, as playing sound, strategic golf and hitting clubs the course might call for is a skill, just as much as it is to bomb driver all around the property. It gives more players a chance too. Years ago I remember Kevin Kisner rattling off a list of courses he felt he couldn’t win on simply due to the distance required off the tee. How realistic it is though is another question. Lots of logistics go into picking a Tour venue — a sponsor, the TV production, etc. — and sometimes the type of golf course isn’t always the main focus.

Bastable: Power should be a competitive advantage in golf so, yeah, it would be unfair to suddenly inject the Tour schedule with a bunch more tight and tree-choked sites. Still, this week in New Delhi was a fun reminder that there’s more than one way to test elite players who can hit a driver 330 yards, and some of the players seemed to really dig the challenge. “I like courses like this a lot more because you just hit a variety of different clubs more often,” Ben Griffin said early in the week, “whereas in America we’re so used to hitting maybe drivers and wedges a lot more.”

Marksbury: Playing a round of golf without a driver is something I will never be able to relate to! Years ago, a USGA official told me that the objective for the course setup for the U.S. Open was not necessarily to provide the most tortuous test, but for players to utilize every club in the bag over the course of the tournament. I like that idea, and I am definitely in favor of promoting more courses (or setups) where that’s possible. Six or seven times a year would be nice.

Rory McIlroy was among the players who kept the driver out of the bag and tied for 26th in India. When course setup limits drivers, is McIlroy at the biggest disadvantage?

Berhow: Although Scottie Scheffler leads the Tour in Strokes Gained: Off the Tee, I think most would argue McIlroy with a driver in hand is one of the best shows in golf, and it might be the single club that gives one player an advantage more than any other (Scottie with an iron a close second?). That said, Rory didn’t win a career grand slam by simply hitting driver, but he does probably do the most with it.

Bastable: I think it was probably less a case of the setup not suiting McIlroy’s skill sets and more a case of the target-style of golf really suiting other players, notably Tommy Fleetwood, who said the course “set up perfectly for me.” Interestingly, if you look at McIlory’s 10 bogeys from the week, most were caused not by loose tee shots but by missing greens or pins on the wrong side.

Marksbury: I agree with both of my colleagues here. Eliminating driver is a bummer for a player with so much prowess off the tee. But at the end of the day, you’re hitting way more approaches and putts than you are tee shots. So whatever advantage McIlroy was losing was still somewhat minimal, in my mind.

Sei Young Kim won the BMW Ladies Championship to become the 27th different winner on the LPGA Tour this season, where there’s been just one two-time winner on the year (Jeeno Thitikul, who won her second event, the LPGA Shanghai, a week ago). With only five tournaments remaining, how do you analyze the current player-of-the-year race?

Berhow: Jeeno Thitikul is the obvious front-runner as the only player with multiple wins, and her season’s been great beyond those weeks. She’s missed just one cut all year and has 12 top-10 finishes. Since this is decided based on points, the CME Group Tour Championship might end up deciding the whole thing. We didn’t have that drama last year with Nelly Korda running away with this.

Marksbury: Agree, Josh. That 27 first-time winner stat is incredible. It really speaks to how deep the talent runs on the LPGA Tour, and as you mentioned, Jeeno may have only two wins, but she’s contended nearly every time she’s teed it up, notched four runner-ups and would be very deserving of the crown, even without a major title this year.

Bastable: To put Jeeno’s consistency in perspective, she is 120 points ahead of the second-ranked player on the Rolex list, Nelly Korda — while Korda has only a 20-point lead on the third spot, held by Minjee Lee. In other words, Thitikul is miles ahead of her peer. Only blemish on her 2025 resume came at the U.S. Women’s Open, where she missed her only cut of the year.

Playing for the first time since he withdrew from Sunday singles and evoked the now-controversial “envelope rule” at the Ryder Cup, Viktor Hovland called the situation “upsetting” but added he doesn’t see an easy fix for the rule. OK fair. But what Ryder Cup rule would you change?

Berhow: Easy — pick the matchups like they do at the Presidents Cup, where the captains alternate their selections. That way, as long as the captains play ball, we can get a little more drama infused into the event. (And drama that doesn’t include boneheaded fans.)

Bastable: In the case of a tie at the end of singles, institute a three-hole aggregate-score playoff, pitting one player from each team selected by their respective captain. Unlike the envelope rule, though, the playoff reps would be selected in advance. The captains would pick them in the moment so, should they wish, they can nominate not necessarily their best player but the hottest one.

Marksbury: The Ryder Cup is nearly perfect, but I don’t like the “retention” rule if there’s a tie. We need a result! The envelope should be used to nominate one player from each team to face off in a sudden-death playoff for the whole thing.

On this episode of The Dunker Spot, Nekias Duncan and Steve Jones discuss the upcoming Game 5 between the Aces and Fever, put a bow on an awesome Mercury-Lynx series, then react to the All-Rookie team.

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On the NBA side, the guys break down the quotes and updates that intrigue them the most from this year’s Media Days.

If you ever have NBA or WNBA questions, email us at dunkerspot@yahoo.com.

If youâ€d like to join our Dunker Spot Playoff watch parties — they’re free, and easy to sign up for — you can do so here: https://www.playback.tv/thedunkerspot

(:43) Introduction

(2:22) WNBA Playoffs: Aces vs. Fever Game 5

(15:10) Mercury defeat Lynx to advance to WNBA Finals

(27:10) Lynx season shouldnâ€t be forgotten

(30:51) WNBA All-Rookie Team

(40:27) NBA Media Day headlines

(43:03) Excitement for the Atlanta Hawks

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(46:54) Will the Thompson twins take another leap?

(102:31) Anthony Edwardâ€s offseason improvements

(106:06) Victor Wembanyama primed for a big season

Victor Wembanyama is ready to go for the 2025-26 NBA season. (AP Photo/Darren Abate)

Victor Wembanyama is ready to go for the 2025-26 NBA season. (AP Photo/Darren Abate)

(AP Photo/Darren Abate)

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