Monday, 20 April 2026

‘You’re not going to back down’: Penguins’ Kindel unfazed by playoff chaos

CRANBERRY TOWNSHIP, Penn. — In the days leading up to this first-round bout, Sidney Crosby had tried to put it into words. The mercurial, indescribable feeling that comes with first stepping into the chaos of playoff hockey.

“You’ve got to prepare as best you can, but until you’ve actually experienced it, there’s only so much you can do to try to prepare,” the Pittsburgh Penguins captain had said. “Anybody who’s played in the playoffs, you remember that first game, that’s for sure. You remember that first shift, that first period — those tend to stick out.”

Amid all the weathered experience and trophy-laden resumés housed in the Penguins’ locker room, for one member of the squad in particular, it’s felt especially novel.

Rookie Ben Kindel wasn’t even alive the first time Crosby played in a playoff game. The young Penguin was in fact born on the same day his captain was eliminated from his first post-season series — 19 years ago today — a Game 5 loss to Ottawa in April 2007.

On Saturday, the teenager got his first taste of the chaos himself, as the Penguins and Philadelphia Flyers waded through a hard-fought Game 1 to open their first-round series. He got his first experience of the frenzy around the playoffs, too — the raucous crowd filling the PPG Paints Arena stands, the 18,000 golden towels waving in unison, the larger-than-life cut-outs of his own face plastered against the glass as he skated out for warmups.

“It was a great experience,” the birthday boy said Sunday, fresh off a skate at the Penguins’ practice facility. “I mean, it was very intense. Very fun to play in that game. The crowd was great, brought a lot of energy to the building. Just looking forward to the next one.”

For a series so steeped in history, so deeply intertwined with the decades-long rivalry between these two cities and their fanbases, Game 1 was all about the fresh-faced newcomers. On the other side of the sheet, Philadelphia’s own teenage phenom, Porter Martone, wound up the story of the night, the 19-year-old wiring home the eventual game-winner in the dying minutes.

Much has been made of Martone’s immediate impact on the Flyers since joining their group three weeks ago — the Peterborough, Ont., product put up four goals and 10 points in his first nine NHL games to close out the regular season, before coming up with Saturday’s heroics. And while the Penguins’ own teenager impacts the game in a quieter, more nuanced fashion, Kindel has been no less critical to his club’s efforts this season.

Originally not expected to crack the big club at all this year after being tabbed with the 11th-overall pick in the 2025 NHL Draft, Kindel has been a revelation for the Penguins since Day 1 in Pittsburgh. The Coquitlam, B.C., native didn’t necessarily tear up the score sheet in Year 1 as an NHLer, but what he did accomplish in a Penguins sweater was no less impressive, establishing himself as a reliable, everyday centreman in the big leagues and allowing the Penguins to roll out a dangerous third line that played a key role in booking this team’s playoff ticket. 

On Saturday night came the next step, the next test, as the Penguins battled through an exceptionally physical opening bout against the Flyers. The five-foot-11, 182-pound Kindel didn’t back down from any of it.

“Obviously it’s a physical game. That’s just how it’s going to be in the playoffs,” he said from the Penguins’ locker room Sunday. “You’ve got to be physical yourself. And I don’t think our team, or myself personally, shied away from that. I think we were on the attack all night as well. So we’ve just got to continue to do that. It’s a long series. We’re going to wear them down.”

If there was any question of whether the youngster would be able to cut it in the grind of the post-season, Kindel put those doubts to bed early in Game 1, roughing it up with Rasmus Ristolainen — who clocks in at six-foot-four, 208 pounds — in the opening minutes of the tilt, after the Flyers defender took down Kindel’s teammate Elmer Soderblom.

“You know, when it comes to the stuff that happens in between whistles, the physicality part, he’s done a pretty good job this year,” Penguins head coach Dan Muse said Sunday. “One, protecting himself, but also being engaged in battles. I mean, he’s going to back up a teammate when the time is necessary. I don’t think he’s going to shy away from that stuff. 

“He’s got a full season in the NHL now under his belt, too. I think he’s starting to figure those things out.”

For Kindel, it wasn’t only about defending Soderblom — who’s got four inches and 40 pounds on Ristolainen, and likely would’ve been just fine — it was about sending a message to Pittsburgh’s opponent.

“It doesn’t really matter your size, or the size difference — I think no matter what, you’ve just got to play bigger than you are, and engage physically, and not back down,” Kindel said. “I think that’s important. To show that you’re strong, show the other team that you’re not going to back down. It’s a mental game as well.”

For Pittsburgh, part of that mental game is the question of how much to engage with that physicality against a Flyers team that did well in goading the Penguins into a scrappy Game 1 — a style that benefited the visitors more than the hosts. Then there are the other wrinkles to iron out: how to quell a Flyers team that used its elite transition game to stack breakaways on Stuart Skinner, how to get the Pens’ usually elite power play humming once more, how to generate more offensively in general.

  • Watch the Stanley Cup Playoffs on Sportsnet
  • Watch the Stanley Cup Playoffs on Sportsnet

    The quest for the Stanley Cup begins with 16 teams and ends with one champion. Don’t miss a moment of the Stanley Cup Playoffs with every game on Sportsnet and Sportsnet+.

    Broadcast schedule

It could be an overwhelming slate for a teenager to keep at the top of his mind heading into Game 2. But Kindel has the advantage of playing alongside some of the game’s most seasoned vets — playoff regulars and Stanley Cup champions. 

Kris Letang has played in nearly 30 Game 1’s over the course of his two decades in Pittsburgh, some won, some lost. Regardless, every time, the approach heading into Game 2 has been the same.

“That’s the playoffs. You have to be able to turn the page quick,” the veteran defender said Sunday. “You forget about Game 1. It’s just one game. You have to focus on the aspects you didn’t do well, and build your game from there.”

In his view, that means ramping things up come Monday night.

“I think it’s just to go quick,” he said. “I think we slowed the pace down a little bit in the neutral zone. As defencemen, we can get the red line quicker, transition quicker. … We just have to focus on what we do well. And what worked all year long for us. Which is having a great forecheck, playing with a lot of speed. I think we have to focus on that.”

For Muse, who himself is navigating his first playoff series as an NHL head coach, that even-keeled approach from his veterans has been crucial. So has his group’s short memory.

“The emotions of the playoffs are different, but at the same time, I think throughout the course of the regular season, we moved from one day to the next fairly well. Actually, we did it very well — and we kept getting better at it as the year went on,” Muse said Sunday. “I think in the playoffs, it becomes especially important that you’re ready to turn the page quickly. And that can be coming off a game that you really like, or that can be coming off a game that you don’t like, like last night.

“So, that’s what we had to do. Guys came in, they came ready to work, they had good energy. I thought we got something out of our day today. Now, we move on to tomorrow.”



from Sportsnet.ca
via i9bet

Senators look forward after Game 1 loss while Zub’s status remains unclear

Thomas Chabot felt his team handled things fairly well.

The Ottawa Senators expected an early surge from the Hurricanes to open their first-round playoff series.

And after captain Brady Tkachuk and Carolina opposite Jordan Staal dropped the gloves three seconds into proceedings at a pulsating Lenovo Center, the Eastern Conference’s top seed tried to impose its physical will Saturday.

One of the Senators’ key drivers from defence, Chabot was clearly targeted in a move to soften the blue-line corps. 

Ottawa survived and pushed back before ultimately being undone by two strange goals — one on a fanned five-hole effort and another where the puck bounced around Linus Ullmark’s crease — on the way to a 2-0 setback against the stingy Hurricanes in a contest where the home side held a 57-39 edge in hits.

“You play in Carolina, that’s what they do,” Chabot said Sunday. “Probably until the first TV timeout, they try to create some momentum in hitting and throwing every puck at the net. We knew that was coming.”

The Senators can expect the same when the teams meet Monday for Game 2.

“They (played) hard,” Ottawa centre Tim Stutzle said of Carolina’s forecheck. “We gotta find a way to chip them a little better, give our (defencemen) more time without taking penalties.”

Chabot, who logged close to 27 minutes after shutdown defender Artem Zub left in the first period with an undisclosed injury, said the significant uptick in physicality was expected. 

“It’s that time of the year,” he said. “That’s what makes playoff hockey so fun to be part of. It’s the energy, it’s the shenanigans post-whistles, it’s everything that goes into it.”

Zub’s status remains unclear for a club that survived having to use 12 defencemen for various ailments across 82 regular-season games.

“Big loss when he goes out,” said Senators head coach Travis Green, who didn’t have an update on Jake Sanderson’s usual partner on the back end. “Someone’s gotta step up and play those minutes against top lines … I thought they did do a pretty good job.”

But there’s a clear trickle-down effect when a player like Zub is absent.

“His presence in our own zone, the way he wins his battles, the way he shuts the top guys down,” Chabot of the Russian’s attributes. “Huge piece of this team.”

Apart from dealing with Carolina’s pressure, Ottawa needs to do a better job of creating its own. 

The Senators were held in check for 40 minutes with just nine shots before coming on in the third period, including a power-play goal from Drake Batherson that was called back on video review after Hurricanes netminder Frederik Anderson held the line with a terrific glove stop.

“This is going to be a series where I don’t know if either team, every game, is going to love their game,” Green said. “One team is going to love the outcome … going to be a series of singles, not a lot of home-run plays. 

“I thought they played their game a little better than we played ours.”

Trailing the best-of-seven series is hardly the first time the Senators have dealt with adversity in a season that included lots of injuries, outside noise and a second-half charge to make the playoffs.

“We hold each other accountable and we know there’s a lot of guys in this room that want to do better and play better,” Chabot said. “We’re going to bring it. It’s a hell of a hockey team that we play. They finished first for a reason.”

Green and Carolina head coach Rod Brind’Amour — both former NHL centres — have similar philosophies in a matchup of teams with plenty in common despite the Hurricanes, who are competing in their ninth playoff series over the last four springs, finishing 14 points clear in the standings.

“Not gonna be lots of opportunities, not a lot of fancy plays,” said Stutzle, whose group exited last year’s post-season in the first round after the franchise failed to make the Stanley Cup tournament seven years running. “Gotta find a way to get more in front of their goalie and make it harder on him. Experience always helps, and they’ve been there a lot. 

“We gotta find a way to just play our game.”

Along with being ready for another early volley of shoulder pads.

“They’re going to try and do the same thing,” Chabot said. “And we’re going to be ready for it once again.” 



from Sportsnet.ca
via i9bet

Raptors’ Immanuel Quickley questionable for Game 2 vs. Cavaliers

The Toronto Raptors will hope to have some backcourt reinforcement when they take the court for Game 2 of their first-round playoff series against the Cleveland Cavaliers.

Immanuel Quickley was listed as questionable for Monday’s contest after missing Toronto’s Game 1 loss with a hamstring strain.

Quickley suffered the injury in the Raptors’ regular-season finale. He played 16 minutes in the first half, putting up four points, two rebounds and five assists.

The 26-year-old averaged 16.4 points, a career-high 5.9 assists, four rebounds and 31.9 minutes over 70 games this season.

Quickley’s standout skill is his three-point shooting, and after struggling over the first half of the season at 34.7 per cent from deep, he shot 41.5 per cent over the second half to bring his season mark to 37.4 per cent.

The Havre de Grace, Md., native battled plantar fasciitis through the final portion of the season, missing eight consecutive games from late March through early April, and was frequently seen in a walking boot.

Game 2 goes Monday at 7 p.m. ET / 4 p.m. PT in Cleveland.

— with files from the Canadian Press



from Sportsnet.ca
via i9bet

Blue Jays tie franchise record with eight runs in first inning

Boy, did the Toronto Blue Jays need that.

Coming into Sunday’s contest against the Arizona Diamondbacks amidst a major slump, the Blue Jays’ bats woke up in a big way.

Toronto tied a franchise record with eight first-inning runs, sending 12 batters to the plate, collecting eight hits and walking once.

The Blue Jays had previously scored eight runs in the first inning twice.

They reached the mark against the Baltimore Orioles on Sept. 26, 2007, and against the New York Yankees on July 14, 2011.

The Blue Jays opened the game with seven straight hits off Arizona starter Ryne Nelson, with the big blow coming off the bat of Kazuma Okamoto.

Coming to the plate with the bases loaded, Okamoto lined a double off the left-field wall, plating two runs. It marked the first Blue Jays extra-base hit of the season and snapped a 1-for-20 stretch with the bases juiced.

The seven straight hits before recording an out also tied Toronto’s franchise record to begin a game.

While Okamoto’s double put the Blue Jays up five, the lineup kept working against Nelson.

After the Diamondbacks righty finally struck out nine-hole hitter Brandon Valenzuela for his first out, Nathan Lukes followed Okamoto’s big swing with a bases-loaded double of his own. It was Lukes’s second knock of the inning and marked the end of Nelson’s afternoon.

Arizona turned to reliever Andrew Hoffmann, who was able to stop the bleeding by getting Ernie Clement to pop out and Vladimir Guerrero Jr. to strike out.



from Sportsnet.ca
via i9bet

Sunday, 19 April 2026

Jenner, Larocque propel Charge to key win over Sirens

OTTAWA — Brianne Jenner and Jocelyne Larocque led the way for their younger counterparts Saturday afternoon in the Ottawa Charge’s 5-1 win over the New York Sirens.

Jenner, 34, had a goal and two assists, while Larocque, 37, chipped in a goal and an assist. Ronja Savolainen, Peyton Hemp and Rebecca Leslie also scored.

Gwyneth Phillips stopped 23 shots.

Paetyn Levis scored the lone goal for the Sirens (9-2-3-1) and Kayle Osborne made 24 saves.

The win gave the Charge (8-7-1-12) a five-point lead on the Sirens and Toronto Sceptres for the fourth and final playoff spot with two games remaining.

The Sirens are winless (0-0-1-7) in their last eight road games.

New York opened the scoring with a power-play goal midway through the first period when Levis took a pass in the slot and beat Philips on the stick side.

With 61 seconds remaining in the period, Jenner attempted to find Leslie in front, but the puck was redirected and went in off Leslie’s shoulder. The play underwent a lengthy review before the call on the ice was upheld.

The Charge took the lead at 7:54 of the second period.

Larocque blocked a shot to spark a short-handed rush as Jenner picked up the puck and broke in on Osborne. She gave up a big rebound that Larocque buried for her first of the season.

Just over six minutes later, Hemp won a race for the puck and knocked it free. That allowed Alexa Vasko to take possession and she sent it back to Hemp, who gave the Charge a 3-1 lead.

Ottawa scored a pair of goals in the third to put the game out of reach.

Savolainen made it 4-1 by scoring from just inside the blue line through traffic. Larocque had a shot ring off the crossbar and Jenner buried the rebound with just over seven minutes remaining.

Takeaways

Charge: Penalties were an issue again for the Charge.

Sirens: New York had a solid first period and struggled to match Ottawa’s pace through the final 40 minutes.

Key moment

Larocque blocking a shot on the power play was key to setting up Ottawa’s first short-handed goal.

Key stat

Gwyneth Philips played her league-leading 16th consecutive game.

Up next

Charge: Ottawa visits Boston on Wednesday.

Sirens: New York plays Toronto on Tuesday.



from Sportsnet.ca
via i9bet

Kevin Gausman looks to help Blue Jays avoid sweep against Diamondbacks

The Toronto Blue Jays are sending out their ace in hopes of stopping the bleeding.

Kevin Gausman will start Sunday against the Arizona Diamondbacks as the Blue Jays look to avoid a sweep and end a four-game losing skid (4 p.m. ET / 1 p.m. PT, Sportsnet, Sportsnet+).

It’s been a frustrating series for Toronto, with its offence once again struggling to generate timely hits, putting pressure on the starters to keep the score close.

Gausman (0-1, 2.82 ERA) has been one of the few steady presences early in the season, pairing a strong WHIP (0.90) with 31 strikeouts. The 35-year-old has dominated the Diamondbacks over his career with a 6-2 record, 3.23 ERA and 64 strikeouts over 53 innings across 10 appearances.

For the season, Toronto (7-13) has struggled to find consistency, especially on the road, where it has dropped seven of eight. Vladimir Guerrero Jr., who has a home run, 12 walks and eight RBIs while hitting .315 this season, has lacked the power that dotted his epic post-season run last year.

Another question mark surrounds Daulton Varsho, who did not play Saturday due to left knee discomfort. The 29-year-old is 12-for-36 with three doubles, three home runs and six RBIs over his last 10 games.

The Blue Jays will also need to think about their high-leverage situations after Jeff Hoffman surrendered a go-ahead grand slam to Corbin Carroll in Saturday’s 6-2 loss, renewing questions about the bullpen hierarchy even as manager John Schneider publicly backs his closer.

“I know that’s a that’s a hot topic, or if you’re moving a batting order or you’re taking a guy out of a role, man. Again, I have a lot of confidence in Jeff Hoffman,” Schneider told reporters after Saturday’s loss. “I feel for him right now because he’s going through it and I get it. When you’re in that spot, it gets magnified. And that’s part of it. He’s man enough to handle it. So, yeah, if there’s a situation to close out a game, I’ll take Jeff Hoffman.”

  • MLB on Sportsnet
  • MLB on Sportsnet

    Watch the Toronto Blue Jays, Blue Jays Central pre-game, marquee MLB matchups, Jays in 30, original documentaries, the wild card, divisional series, championship series and entire World Series on Sportsnet and Sportsnet+.

    Broadcast schedule

Opposing Gausman is Ryne Nelson (1-1, 3.54 ERA), who has put together solid outings to begin the year. For his career, the 28-year-old has a 1-0 record with a 2.45 ERA, 12 strikeouts and two walks over 18.1 innings and three appearances against the Blue Jays in his career.

Arizona (13-8) enters the series finale with momentum, going 8-2 over its last 10 games while outscoring opponents by 21 runs. The Diamondbacks been particularly strong at home (7-2), backed by a pitching staff that ranks among the National League’s best with a 3.72 ERA.



from Sportsnet.ca
via i9bet

‘It’s a special thing’: Why playing in Montreal means so much to Caufield



from Sportsnet.ca
via i9bet

‘You’re not going to back down’: Penguins’ Kindel unfazed by playoff chaos

CRANBERRY TOWNSHIP, Penn. — In the days leading up to this first-round bout, Sidney Crosby had tried to put it into words. The mercurial, i...