Sharks Fall Short Again, Lose 5-3 to Senators for eighth loss in a row; Sens end 5 game skid

San Jose Sharks William Eklund (72) takes a shot on Ottawa Senators goaltender Linus Ullmark (35) in the first period at the Canadian Tire Centre in Ottawa on Sat Mar 1, 2025 (Canadian Press via AP)

By Mary Walsh

The San Jose Sharks fell 5-3 to the Ottawa Senators Saturday. Shane Pinto, Brady Tkachuk, Tim Stützle, David Perron and Michael Amadio scored for the Senators. Linus Ullmark made 34 saves for the win. Tyler Toffoli, Timothy Liljegren and Will Smith scored for the Sharks. Vitek Vanecek made 27 saves in the loss.

Once again, the Sharks gave up a lead to lose the game. “It sucks. It feels like we’ve been playing pretty good hockey. So, it’s just an unfortunate loss,” said Sharks defenseman Mario Ferraro. The Sharks power play did well, scoring in three of four chances. It also did badly, giving up a short-handed goal on that fourth try, which was actually their first of the game. That was emblematic of the team’s frustrations lately. It is difficult to see the good in their game when they keep losing.

“I liked our start, we did some good things. Obviously a couple bounces. I didn’t like that line change that we had. We gave up an easy goal,” Head Coach Ryan Warsofsky said, of the fourth Ottawa goal.

Shane Pinto started the scoring at 11:05 of the first period, short-handed. After pushing the puck out of the zone, Pinto started skating while Ridly Greig gathered up the puck and passed it ahead of Pinto. Pinto skated into the Sharks zone with no one between him and Vanecek.

Tyler Toffoli tied the game with a power play goal at 5:17 of the second period. Toffoli’s shot from the goal line went off of a Senator and into the net. Assists went to Will Smith and Macklin Celebrini.

Timothey Liljegren gave the Sharks the lead with a second power play goal at 9:47. Liljegren scored with a shot from the blue line through traffic. Assists went to Alexander Wennberg and Klim Kostin.

Brady Tkachuk tied the game again at 1:26 of the third period with a power play goal. Tim Stützle carried the puck in, then passed it across and back to Tkachuk for the shot. Assists went to Stützle and Jake Sanderson.

Tim Stützle gave the Senators a 3-2 lead at the three minute mark. Greig sent the puck in and off the end boards, where it bounced to the front of the net to meet Stützle.

David Perron made it 4-2 at 8:31. Thomas Chabot carried the puck in and took a shot that created a rebound for Perron to gather up and put in the net. Assists went to Chabot and Drake Batherson.

The Sharks pulled their goaltender for an extra skater with more than two minutes left. Soon enough, they drew a tripping penalty and got a power play. Will Smith made it 4-3 with a third power play goal. Assists went to William Eklund and Macklin Celebrini.

The Sharks kept their net empty and with one minute left, Michael Amadio scored into that empty net. An assist went to Artem Zub.

The Sharks next play on Monday at 4:30 PM PT in Toronto against the Maple Leafs.

Kings Win Western Conference Battle Beating Rockets 113-103.

Sacramento Kings guard Zach LaVine (8) takes a shot over the Houston Rockets center Steven Adams (left) in first half action at the Toyota Center in Houston on Sat Mar 1, 2025 (AP News photo)

By Barbara Mason

Saturday night the Sacramento Kings (31-28) beat the Houston Rockets (37-23) 113-103. The Kings suffered a devastating loss when Domantas Sabonis injured his hamstring in the opening minute of the game.

It is still not known how severe his injury is. The rest of the team had to step up in his absence and they were spotless. Bench giant Jonas Valanciunas was magnificent finishing the game with a double double, 14 rebounds and 15 points. The Kings bench was also on task scoring 42 points collectively. The high score for the Kings was DeMar DeRozan in an impressive win for Sacramento.

Game recap: Sacramento had a 25-21 lead after the first twelve minutes of play but suffered a devastating injury in the first minute of the quarter. Domantas Sabonis was forced to leave the game due to a hamstring injury .

This was a huge blow for the Kings. Sacramento had taken a 21-5 lead mid-way through the quarter despite the loss of Sabonis. Houston came roaring back and trailed by four points going into the second quarter.

The loss of Sabonis would really come into play in the second quarter. Houston took the lead in the quarter but the Kings remained within striking distance. Sacramento had a 16 point lead in the opening quarter and the largest lead for the Rockets in the second quarter was three points. The Kings took back the lead with one minute left in the half 58-56. At the half Sacramento was hanging onto a 63-59 advantage.

The Rockets Dillon Brooks had everything with the Houston comeback scoring 9 of his 12 points in the second quarter. Alperon Sengun also had a productive first half with 17 points.

The Kings bench had scored 26 points in the first half of the game with Valanciunas leading the pack with 11 points. The starters were forced to play without Sabonis but were putting up a solid fight.

Zach LaVine finished the first half with 13 points with Keegan Murray chipping in 11 points. Malik Monk and DeRozan would both be looking for a more productive second half. The Kings had proven that they could not only keep up with the Rockets but also had the ability to win their third game in the row and come away with a in in this battle.

Sacramento got on task early in the third quarter taking as much as an eight point lead with both Monk and DeRozn starting the quarter strong. Five minutes into the quarter DeRozan got into it with Dillon Brooks no surprise to anyone.

The feisty Brooks excels in stirring the pot but it did not deter the Kings who had led for most of the quarter with five minutes left. At 5:14 Sacramento had a 80-74 lead. After leading for most of the quarter the Rockets threatened to take the lead only trailing by a basket 82-79 with under three minutes left to play. The Kings were excelling defensively in the absence of Sabonis leading after three 89-82.

Sacramento got off to a red- hot start in the fourth quarter taking a 96-85 lead needing to keep the pressure on Houston. The Rockets had not able to get out and transition a whole lot. The Kings had put the stops on Brooks who had not scored at all in the second half. With 6:36 left in the game, the Rockets were fighting to get back in the game trailing 103-94.

Both Keon Ellis and Valanciunas were working with four fouls apiece. With under five minutes left in the game the Kings would need both of these guys. Houston was still very much in this game with 3:23 left on the clock but they had to get something going trailing 109-97.

Sacramento refused to let the Rockets back in the game continuing to extend their lead and with under 2 1/2 left on the clock led 111-98. With under a minute left in the game the Kings had won their third game in a row beating the Rockets 113-103.

Despite the loss of Sabonis in the opening minute of the game, the Kings handled their business with some stellar play. DeRozan had the team high with 21 points followed by LaVine who had 20 points.

Monk and Murray both finishing with double figures. Valanciunas was red hot off the bench playing for 30 minutes and finishing with a double double; 14 rebounds and 15 points. The Kings bench was solid scoring 42 points collectively. The Kings showed a lot of grit in this game and will need it as they continue on this road trip.

Game notes: Saturday the Kings took on the Rockets in a Western Conference battle. The Kings continued their current road trip when they extended their two-game winning streak after beating the Hornets in a blow-out 130-88 Monday followed by a win against the Utah Jazz 118-101 Wednesday.

The Rockets came into this game also on a two-game winning streak beating the San Antonio Spurs Wednesday night 118-106 and the Milwaukee Bucks in a close game Tuesday night 100-97. Sacramento came into this game with no injured players.

Monday the Kings will travel to Dallas for a matchup with Kyrie Irving, Klay Thompson and the Mavericks looking for their fourth win in a row. Tipoff for that game is scheduled for 5:30 PM.

Stanford Cardinal podcast with Michael Roberson Sat Mar 1, 2025: Cardinal open up road trip with 2 games left; Tip off against Notre Dame Wednesday night

All SMU Mustangs guard Chuck Harris (3) and forward Matt Cross (33) can do is just look as the Stanford Cardinal forward Donavin Young (3) goes for the throw down at Maples Pavilion in Palo Alto on Sat Mar 1, 2025 (Stanford Cardinal X photo)

Stanford Cardinal podcast with Michael Roberson

#1 Big win for the Stanford Cardinal (19-10) they pick up their fourth win in their last six games defeating the SMU Mustangs (21-8) this win coming at Maple Pavilion in Palo Alto earlier today.

#2 Stanford’s Maxime Raynaud played hero again with a game winning slam dunk with 8.7 second left in the ball game as the Cardinal just got by the Mustangs in a tag team game 73-68.

#3 The Mustang ran off a 13-0 score after they were down ten points and took the lead 60-57 in the middle of the second half. Chuck Harris with 3:35 left in the game hit a jump shot and it was the last of the Mustang’s 68-67 for the rest of the contest.

#4 With the Mustangs missing their last four shots and turning over the ball over in a critical situation the Cardinal turned the game around. Ryan Agarwal shot a desperation shot that hit the rim and Raynaud came in without being defended from behind the 3 point line got the ball and slammed it in for the game winner.

#5 Two more regular season games left on the Stanford Cardinal (20-9) schedule both are on the road. The Cardinal take on the Notre Dame Fighting Irish (12-17) Wed Mar 5th for a 6:00pm tip. The Irish have lost their last two games and are 9-5 at home. The Cardinal are seventh and have now won three straight games.

Michael Roberson podcasts Stanford Cardinal basketball Thursdays at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

Stanford Cardinal game wrap: Cardinal Corralled the Mustangs 73-68, on Senior Day inside Maples Pavilion

Stanford Cardinal forward Maxime Raynaud (42) takes a jump shot against the SMU Mustangs at Maple Pavilion on Sat Mar 1, 2025 (Stanford Cardinal X photo)

By Michael Roberson

STANFORD, Calif. — Senior forward Maxime Raynaud’s points and four blocks helped his Stanford Cardinal (19-10, 11-7 ACC) close out their home schedule with a bang, by taming the Southern Methodist Mustangs (21-8, 12-6 ACC) 73-68, on the Farm. The Cardinal come away with a nail biter 73-68 on Saturday night at Maples Pavilion.

The Stanford Senior Trio (Maxime Raynaud, Jaylin Blakes & Cole Kastner) were determined to end their playing careers on the Tara VanDerveer Court at Maples with a bang. Raynaud tallied his obligatory double-figure (11) scoring during the initial 20 minutes of game action. Blakes on the other hand, had a tough first half with 3 fouls midway through the half, including a technical foul. Kastner did not play a minute in half number one.

SMU scored the first points of the game with a three pointer. That margin was the ,ost they led by in the first half They also had runs of 6-0 and 8-0. Stanford had a lead as high as 13, with runs of 7-0 and 9-0.

Even with Stanford’s big lead at one point, it was a very competitive first half. There were 7 lead changes and 6 ties. After all the smoke settled, the home team had a six point lead at recess, 45-39.

Raynaud’s 11 points led the Cardinal, while Matt Cross’ 10 points and Chuck Harris’ 11 paced the Mustangs.

The second half was just as competitive, as the Mustangs overcame the 6-point halftime deficit and turned it into another three points lead midway through the second half. Minutes later they extended their advantage to five.

Stanford was not going to be denied, and they forged their own comeback. There were an additional 4 more lead changes and two more ties to the conference tussle. A total of 11 lead changes and 8 ties was the tally after 40 minutes of action. The Cardinal parlayed that into a five point win, 73-68.

The Cardinal held the Mustangs to a miniscule 39% shooting in the second half, which helped them avoid the stampede from the Dallas horses. Stanford’s 20:7 assist ratio versus SMU was a huge reason they were the victors.

Raynaud finished off his last game at Maples with campus shaking thunderous tip-dunk that sealed the contest. He finished the game with 26 points, and an underwhelming 4 rebounds. However, showed a great defensive front, with 4 blocked shots. Benny Gealer contributed with 17 points and some clutch 3-pointers. Oziyah Sellers chipped in 10 points, and Jaylin Blakes had a disappointing finale with 2 points, but a quality win.

The Mustangs had four players in double-figures. Chuck Harris led the way with 17 points, while Kario Oquendo put up 15, and Matt Cross offered 13, in addition to Yohan Traore offering 10

Stanford will next be in action in South Bend, IN, Wednesday March 5, as they take on the Notre Dame Fighting Irish at 9 PM ET/6 PM PT, on ESPNU. SMU heads back to Dallas to host the Syracuse Orange, on Tuesday, March 4 at 8:00 PM CT, also on ESPNU

San Jose Sharks podcast Mary Lisa: Battle of the slides Sharks on 7 game skid vs. Senators 5 game slide Saturday nite in Ottawa

San Jose Sharks Nico Sturm (7) celebrates his goal with teammates Mario Ferraro (38) and Collin Graf (51) in the first period at the Bell Centre in Montreal on Thu Feb 27, 2025 (Canadian Press via AP News)

On the San Jose Sharks podcast Mary Lisa:

#1 The Montreal Canadians Cole Caufield got the game winner in overtime from Caufield at 3:21 to come away with a 4-3 win over the San Jose Sharks. The win was the Habs third straight since the 4 Nations Face Off break.

#2 Caulfield goal was skillful he shot the put between his legs and to get past the Sharks Macklin Celebrini and got it past goaltender Alexandar Geogiev shooting it over Geogiev’s right pad. Caulfield lead Montreal with 28 goals.

#3 Montreal’s Nick Suzuki scored two goals in the first period for Montreal and Alex Newhook scored his first goal since Feb 4th. Habs goaltender Samuel Montembeault stopped 22 out 25 shots for his third win in a row.

#4 Scorers for San Jose Fabian Zetterlund, Nico Sturm and Will Smith there effort was strong but once again San Jose fell short. The Sharks have now lost seven straight and have lost 13 of their last 14 games.

#5 Sharks hoping to snap their seven game loss streak at the Canadian Tire Centre in Ottawa. The Ottawa Senators fifth in the Western Conference at 29-25-4 and 62 points. Like the Sharks the Sens are battling a long losing streak with five loses in row.

Check Mary Lisa on the San Jose Sharks podcasts Saturdays at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

Sacramento Kings podcast with Jeremiah Salmonson: Kings take on Rockets in Houston Saturday

Sacramento Kings Matt LaVine (8) scored 22 points against the Utah Jazz at the Delta Center on Wed Feb 26, 2025 (Sports Illustrated photo)

On the Sacramento Kings podcast with Jeremiah:

#1 Sacramento Kings Keegan Murray scored 26 points his highest total for season and Zach LaVine scored 22 points as the Sacramento Kings defeated the Utah Jazz at the Delta Center on Wednesday night.

#2 Murray scored five 3 pointers and LaVine scored four 3 pointers. The Kings Keon Ellis score three 3 pointers and the Kings were 15 for 36 outside of the three point arc.

#3 The Kings handled their offense well inside the paint scoring 50 points and shot 52.9% against the struggling Jazz.

#4 Murray put on a show with his variety of slam dunks and taking some fancy jump shots and it’s also been since Nov 24 when Murray scored 21 points. Murray scored 20 on Wednesday.

#5 Next up for the Kings the Houston Rockets on Sat Mar 1 at the Toyota Center in Houston a 5:00pm PT tip. The Rockets are fourth in the Western Conference at 37-22 and are 20-9 at home. How do you see this match up?

Jeremiah does the Sacramento Kings podcasts each Friday at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

‘This is unfair’: While Giants expand Spanish broadcasts, A’s go in opposite direction

Amaury Pi Gonzalez (left) and Manolo Hernandez Douen (right) former Spanish announcers for the Oakland A’s. Their contracts were not renewed and will not be broadcasting in Sacramento with the Athletics. A decision that many say is unfair. (photo from Amaury Pi Gonzalez)

That’s Amaury News and Commentary and John Shea (San Francisco Standard)

Why Sacramento A’s are ending Spanish radio, while all other California MLB teams carry Spanish radio

“In 2025 this still happens, they tool all their English announcers to Sacramento, but not the Spanish”  -Amaury Pi-González

‘This is unfair’: While Giants expand Spanish broadcasts, A’s go in opposite direction

By John Shea (San Francisco Standard)

There’s no cheering in the press box, as any established sports reporter would tell you. But for what has transpired in the Giants’ Spanish radio booth recently, cheers are fully acceptable.

For the first time since 1998, the Giants’ Spanish broadcasters will call all 162 games and travel to all 81 road games this season— game-changing news for Spanish-speaking baseball fans, and a move that probably should have been made long ago.

Last season, the Giants broadcast 137 games in Spanish, up from 127 in 2023. It’ll be the full 162 the next three seasons, thanks to a new deal with Lazer Media that airs games on San Francisco’s KSFN (99.3 FM/1510 AM) and other Northern California stations.

“I think it shows the Giants are indeed committed to the Hispanic community,” Giants broadcaster Erwin Higueros said.

The same can’t be said for the Sacramento-bound A’s. Amaury Pi-Gonzalez and Manolo Hernandez-Douen, the long-time voices of A’s Spanish radio, were notified recently that they won’t be back in 2025. There was no announcement, no fanfare, and no public appreciation for their lengthy service.

“The A’s will always be grateful for the contributions of Amaury and Manolo to our Spanish-language broadcast,” the A’s said in a statement on Thursday. “As we move forward with our interim relocation to West Sacramento, we will be taking our Spanish radio broadcasts in a new direction with a local station and local talent.”

Technically, Pi-Gonzalez and Hernandez-Douen weren’t considered team employees as they were employed by radio station KIQI (1010 AM), which the A’s paid to broadcast 69 games last season. However, Pi-Gonzalez said he was notified about the change from the A’s in a call from D’Aulaire Louwerse, the team’s coordinating producer of broadcasting.

“I just wanted to be treated fairly. This is kind of unfair,” said Pi-Gonzalez, the dean of local Spanish baseball broadcasts, having debuted with the 1977 A’s. “They kept telling me, ‘We’ll let you know, we’ll let you know.’ They finally called the day pitchers and catchers reported [to spring training] and said they’re going in a different direction. I’m from the old school. You treat people the way you want to be treated. I don’t think I’ve been treated fairly.”

That the well-respected broadcasters were alerted this late in the offseason put them in an employment hole. Had they been notified months ago, they would have had a better chance to land elsewhere.

Pi-Gonzalez said the Atlanta Braves reached out in December about a possible broadcasting gig, but he held out because he preferred to stick with the A’s and live in the Bay Area. Hernandez-Douen, who doubles as a sportswriter, plans to continue covering the A’s through Béisbol Por Gotas.

“I’d like to keep working,” Pi-Gonzalez said. “They say they’re going in a different direction, and that direction doesn’t include me. But baseball in Spanish is a big thing. They could make money if they work at it.”

In August 2023, at a time when fan uproar was peaking with A’s owner John Fisher’s relocation plans, Pi-Gonzalez wasn’t afraid to share his strong thoughts on the team getting pulled out of Oakland. In an interview with SFGate, he was quoted as saying, “If you tell the fans right now that Mr. Fisher is selling next week, there’ll be a parade in Oakland.”

The statement captured the fans’ sentiment, but Pi-Gonzalez wonders if his Fisher commentary is the reason he’ll no longer broadcast the A’s.

“I call it like I see it,” he said. “I’m not a homer by any means. I love the game. Otherwise, I wouldn’t want to come back.”

On the Giants’ side of the dial, Higueros expressed sorrow for his counterparts who had been fixtures in Oakland. In fact, Higueros calls Pi-Gonzalez a mentor — they were in the A’s booth together as far back as 1987, and Pi-Gonzalez brought Higueros to the Giants in 1998 when they became partners, the last time the team broadcast all 162 games.

“It hurts me because he deserves better,” Higueros said. “He’s a true professional in the complete sense of the word. I’m on the outside. I don’t know what priorities are for the A’s, and I don’t know what they’re thinking, but he deserves better.”

Pi-Gonzalez is 80, and Hernandez-Douen is 74, though age isn’t necessarily a factor in broadcasting. Jaime Jarrin and Vin Scully retired from their respective Dodger booths at 86 and 88. Bob Uecker, who died last month at 90, called Brewers games last season. Rafael Ramirez called Marlins games at 93.

“When you hear Amaury, you don’t think you’re hearing someone who’s 80. He sounds very good,” Higueros said. “With what we do, as long as you can see the baseball and talk, you can keep doing this.”

The Giants are joining three other teams in the National League West — the Dodgers, Padres, and Diamondbacks — that broadcast all 162 games in Spanish. Like last year, Fuentes, the popular former infielder, will broadcast home games. For the 81 road games, producer Carlos Orellana will fill in on air. Orellana also broadcasts one inning every home game.

Meantime, the A’s broadcast plans remain up in the air with the season opener fast approaching.

“I feel a little melancholy because I’ve been doing it so long,” Pi-Gonzalez said. “I’ve been blessed. I know the A’s have a following, and I believe I’ve been a good asset to them.”

John Shea is columnist at the San Francisco Standard and has appeared on Sportstalk podcasts at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

NHL podcast with Len Shapiro: Lightning get shutout help from Vasilevskiy; Isles edge Bruins 2-1 at the Garden; plus more NHL news

Tampa Bay Lightning goaltender Andrei Vasilevskiy (88) and defenseman Ryan McDonagh (27) put the stop on the Calgary Flames right wing Matt Coranato (27) at the Amalie Arena in Tampa Bay on Thu Feb 27, 2025 (AP News photo)

On the NHL podcast with Len Shapiro:

#1 The Tampa Bay Lightning goaltender Andrei Vasilevskiy stopped all 27 Calgary Flames shots on goal for a 3-0 shutout at the Amalie Arena in Tampa Bay on Thursday. The Lightning got goal scoring from Brandon Hagel, Erik Cemak, and Nikita Kucherov.

#2 The New York Islanders just got by the Boston Bruins 2-1 at the Garden in Boston. The Islanders Alexander Romanov scored his fourth goal of the season at 16:11 in the first period and teammate Kyle Palmieri scored his 18th goal of the season at 4:21 in the second period. The Bruins got their only goal of the game at 10:04 when David Pastrnak scored in the third period.

#3 The Columbus Blue Jackets won a three goal contest against the Detroit Red Wings. Most of the game’s scoring came in the second period when the Red Wings Alex DeBrincat scored his 27th goal at 27 seconds making it 1-0, the Blue Jackets would follow up with four unanswered goals from James Van Riemsdyk, Sean Kuraly, Kent Johnson, and Riemsdyk scored his second goal of the period making it 4-1 CBJs. The Red Wings JD Compher scored at 16:30 for the final goal of the period making it 4-2. The Jackets Kirill Marchenko scored at 19:03 in the third period to round out all the goals in a 5-2 win for Columbus.

#4 The San Jose Sharks and Montreal Canadiens skated to a 2-2 after the first period. The Sharks getting first period goals from Fabian Zetterlund and Nico Sturm. The Habs got first period goals from Nick Suzuki scoring twice in the period. In the second period the Sharks Will Smith scored at 17:21 making 3-2 Sharks. The Canadiens added two more in the third period Alex Newhook and in overtime Cole Caulfield scored the game winner for the 4-3 win.

#5 The Carolina Hurricanes came away with a 5-2 win over the Buffalo Sabres on Thursday night. Wearing their Hartford Whalers uniforms the Hurricanes scored three unanswered goals in the first period taking a 3-1 lead after the first period. Carolina would score a goal in each of the second and third periods for the 5-2 win.

Len Shapiro does the NHL podcasts each Friday morning at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

Playing Your Best Basketball Now? Cal Women Say Yes in 79-65 Win Over Georgia Tech

By Morris Phillips

BERKELEY, CA–Michelle Onyiah didn’t need the obvious reinforced, but that’s what she got after Cal’s impressive 79-65 win over Georgia Tech on Thursday night.

Michelle, we need you. As much and as often as we can get.

Onyiah’s 12 minutes followed by her disqualification for fouls against Virginia Tech in a painful three-point loss wasn’t enough. Onyiah’s 33 minutes against the visiting Yellow Jackets was more like it, and she held up like Northern California wine with 24 points, 10 rebounds and superior 11-16 shooting from the floor.

“Michelle Onyiah didn’t foul until sometime in the third quarter,” coach Charmin Smith said in almost a formal declaration. “It’s the key to us winning games.”

With one regular season game remaining, the Bears (23-7, 11-6) are locked into the seventh seed in the upcoming ACC Tournament. They clinched that spot by distancing themselves from Georgia Tech with the win. After their regular season-concluding matchup with Miami on Sunday, the seeding and placement machines will churn and hopefully land Cal in a favorable location with preferrable matchups. While observers can see that a quarterfinal win against Notre Dame or North Carolina State could propel Cal into a situation that could yield an upset in the NCAA Tournament, Smith can’t. She’s wearing blinders and simply demanding that her team show up for Miami and take care of business.

“All that matters is we beat Miami. We can’t control all of that,” Smith stated.

Cal played big throughout with 42 points in the paint, and a 42-28 edge on the glass. A first quarter 12-0 run created the separation they needed, and Tech’s trio of scorers weren’t all present and accounted for. Dani Carnegie, Tech’s sensational freshman super sub played just 13 minutes, and was 1 for 7 from the floor.

Lulu Twidale scored 17 points for Cal, Ioanna Krimili added 15 in putting inside-outside pressure on Tech’s defense. Krimili continued her ascent on the all-time NCAA scoring list, with 2,550 points total, including 428 made threes. Cal’s season-long search for bench support seems to have landed on Jayda Noble, who played 18 minutes and contributed a key three-point play in the first quarter.

Utah HC Runs Wild Over Minnesota In 6-1 Outburst

Utah Hockey Club center Jack McBain (22) mixes it up with Minnesota Wild defenseman Jack Middleton (5) in the first period at the Delta Center in Salt Lake City on Thu Feb 27, 2025 (AP News photo)

By Tom Walker

SALT LAKE CITY–Clayton Keller registers Utah franchise record 5 points and nine different players made the score sheet in commanding victory over Minnesota Wild for fourth straight home win.

The Utah Hockey Club concluded their February home schedule with a bang on Thursday night, exploding with 6 goals in regulation for the first time this season against Marc-Andre Fleury and the Wild, winning the season series against Minnesota with a 3-0-1 record.  The victory gave Utah a 4-1 home record for the month during which they outscored their opponents 14-7.

Just over 3 minutes into the first period, Wild defenseman Declan Chisholm went to the penalty box for holding against Clayton Keller.  Utah forward Barrett Hayton promptly cashed it in for his 16th goal of the season, assisted by Keller and Mikhail Sergachev.  Shortly after dropping the puck, Jack McBain and Jake Middleton dropped their gloves for a spirited bout which brought the Delta Center faithful to their feet roaring with approval.  With less than a minute remaining in the period, Minnesota defenseman Jonas Brodin went to the sin bin for hooking against Nick Schmaltz, and Marcus Foligno joined him 3 seconds later with a double minor penalty for high-sticking against Nick Schmaltz who left behind a pool of blood on the ice.  The Wild didn’t have a chance against Utah’s 5-on-3 power play as Dylan Guenther scored his 22nd goal of the season on a slap shot, assisted by Keller and Hayton, giving the home squad a 2-0 lead heading into the locker room.

At 16:02 of the second period, Minnesota forward Frederick Gaudreau cut the lead in half with a snap shot for his 12th goal of the season, assisted by Matt Boldy, but Utah defenseman Sean Durzi, who returned to the ice last Sunday after a 52-game absence, restored Utah’s lead with his first goal of the season, assisted by Josh Doan and Olli Määttä.

In the third period, Utah turned on the afterburners to deny the Wild any chance at a comeback while making Marc-Andre Fleury’s life miserable.  At 3:47 of the period, forward Nick Schmaltz put Utah up 4-1 with his 12th goal of the season, assisted by Logan Cooley and Keller.  At 9:30, Keller netted his 22nd of the season, assisted by Schmaltz and Sergachev.  Finally, putting an exclamation point on Utah’s dominant performance, Cooley scored his 17th of the season, assisted by Keller – his 47th helper overall and 4th on the night – and Schmaltz.

Earning the victory, Karel Vejmelka stopped 15 of 16 shots for his 4th consecutive win, allowing just 5 goals over that span.

In the locker room, Sean Durzi talked about the team’s defense finally being healthy again.  “It’s a lot of good depth. We got six guys going right now, we got guys who aren’t playing who can do just as good. It’s so important to have that, but it’s our energy we’re bringing. Guys are rooting for each other, breakouts are huge. Just small plays that take a little bit of poise. We’re making that extra play that is allowing our forwards to get speed, and then guys like (Clayton Keller) and (Logan Cooley) to show their skill, and it shows. We do our best we can, but to have six defensemen going with good energy, shift after shift, is so important.”

Captain Clayton Keller spoke of his team’s effort on a night where he set a franchise record with 5 points.  “I think ever since the break, even the game against (Los Angeles), we’ve just had a different feel in our game. We’ve had more confidence, we’re playing for each other, we’re playing the right way, and this is the time of year that you want to do that. So we’ll enjoy this for a couple minutes and turn the page and be ready for the next one here. … Like I said, I think we’re playing with a lot of confidence, even the games where they were tight, and 2-1 we still liked our looks. Like you said, we just had some poise, some confidence with the puck and (we) got to keep it going.” When asked about the team’s recent success at home, Keller commented, “It’s great. We struggled there for a little bit at home. I liked how we bounced back. And, like I said, we’re playing with a lot of confidence right now. Just got to keep it going. Every game is so important. It’s an exciting time of year. This is when you want to play your best, and this is what you put all the extra work in for.”

Head coach André Tourigny addressed his team’s depth, with six different players finding the back of the net on Thursday night.  “It’s really important. The way we played that game was shift after shift. Everybody was connected; everybody was engaged. They were resilient. When (Minnesota) pushed, I never felt we were shaky in any shape or form.” When asked about playing with a multi-goal lead in the final period, Tourigny said, “It’s weird. I think we were consistent in the way we played. When we went up 3-1, 4-1, we did not change. We did not start to play differently or start to peel back. We stayed engaged and we stayed in the moment. We just kept going.”

Utah, which finds itself just 2 points out of a Wild Card spot, has a chance to complete a perfect homestand on Saturday night when they host the New Jersey Devils.