College Sports
Alexis Smith joins women’s soccer staff as associate head coach
Story Links ORONO, Maine – University of Maine soccer head coach Scott Atherley has announced the addition of Alexis Smith as associate head coach ahead of the 2025 season. Smith comes to Orono after spending the last seven seasons at Southern Illinois University Edwardsville, including the last two seasons as associate […]

ORONO, Maine – University of Maine soccer head coach Scott Atherley has announced the addition of Alexis Smith as associate head coach ahead of the 2025 season.
Smith comes to Orono after spending the last seven seasons at Southern Illinois University Edwardsville, including the last two seasons as associate head coach.
“We are thrilled to welcome Alexis to our team and family,” said Atherley. “From the beginning of the search process it was apparent that her personal values were in complete alignment with ours. Alexis brings a wealth of collegiate experience to our program and is someone who has a proven record of developing student-athletes. Above all, Alexis is a great person and she will serve as an exemplary teammate as a member of our staff and role model for our players.”
While at SIUE, Smith worked primarily with the goalkeepers and helped lead the Cougars to three straight Ohio Valley Conference Tournament titles and three consecutive NCAA Tournament appearances (2020, 2021, 2022) as well as the OVC regular season title in 2021. Overall, Smith worked with 23 All-OVC selections and five major award winners including two Defender of the Year winners, one Midfielder of the Year winner and two Forward of the Year honorees. Off the field, Smith oversaw recruiting, team film breakdown, scouting reports and all team travel breakdown.
Prior to SIU, Smith was an assistant coach and goalkeeper coach at her alma mater, Bowling Green State University. While with the Falcons, she mentored five All-MAC selections. Additionally, Smith spent six years as a coach with St. Louis Scott Gallagher Soccer Club Illinois as well as time coaching with the Bowling Green Soccer Club, Pacesetter Soccer Club and the Perrysburg Soccer Club.
A goalkeeper, Smith played collegiately at Bowling Green and Schoolcraft College. After graduation, she played one season with the Cleveland Ambassadors of the Women’s Professional Soccer League.
Smith earned the USSF B license in 2022 and holds C, D E and F licenses as well as the NSCAA Advanced National Goalkeeping Diploma.
The Livonia, Mich. earned a bachelor’s degree in Psychology from Bowling Green in 2016 and graduated with an associate of art’s degree in Psychology from Schoolcraft College in 2014.
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College Sports
Lonergan Selected To IWLCA Senior All-Star Game
Story Links Senior Tobin Lonergan has been selected to represent the Colorado College women’s lacrosse team for the IWLCA DIII Senior All-Star game. Lonergan will be on Team White, along with numerous student-athletes from across DII, and will compete against Team Blue on Saturday, May 31. The Senior All-Star games will […]

Senior Tobin Lonergan has been selected to represent the Colorado College women’s lacrosse team for the IWLCA DIII Senior All-Star game. Lonergan will be on Team White, along with numerous student-athletes from across DII, and will compete against Team Blue on Saturday, May 31.
The Senior All-Star games will be held on Tierney Field at USA Lacrosse Headquarters in Sparks, Md. The Division II team will play the first game at 10:00 a.m. ET, followed by the Division III game at 12:30 p.m., and the Division I teams will conclude the event with their game at 3:00 p.m.
Lonergan capped her senior season at CC by leading the Tigers to their second-straight NCAA Tournament appearance and a Wisconsin Intercollegiate Athletic Conference title. The Vermont native was named an IWLCA All-Region and an All-WIAC selection for a second consecutive year.
She led the Tigers with 41 assists, the fifth most in a season in team history. She is third all-time with 106 career assists. Lonergan also racked up 41 goals, 74 shots, 13 ground balls, and six draw controls.
College Sports
SEC’s spring meetings: The future of college sports is in the balance at Florida resort
MIRAMAR BEACH, Fla. — Nothing less than the future of college sports is being hashed this week out in conference rooms spread throughout a sprawling seaside resort in Florida. These are the Southeastern Conference’s annual spring meetings — a gathering of school presidents, athletic directors and coaches. It might be argued that the 2025 […]

MIRAMAR BEACH, Fla. — Nothing less than the future of college sports is being hashed this week out in conference rooms spread throughout a sprawling seaside resort in Florida.
These are the Southeastern Conference’s annual spring meetings — a gathering of school presidents, athletic directors and coaches. It might be argued that the 2025 affair carries more weight than it ever has.
Among the topics are the future of the College Football Playoff, the SEC’s own schedule, the transfer portal and the NCAA itself. All are influenced by the fate of a multibillion-dollar lawsuit settlement that hovers over almost every corner of college athletics.
As a reminder of what’s at stake, a handful of football coaches detailed the uncertainties they faced with the start of practice closing in, one of which is still not knowing how many players they’ll be able to suit up for the upcoming season.
“It’s challenging when you’re trying to figure out what you can do for football camp on July 30th, when we really don’t have much of a resolution of what that’s going to look like,” Texas A&M coach Mike Elko said.
Some of the topics being discussed this week and the SEC’s role in sorting them out:
COLLEGE FOOTBALL PLAYOFF
The SEC and Big Ten will decide whether to expand the CFP from 12 to 14 or 16 teams, and will ultimately have the final say on how many automatic bids they and other conferences will receive. Among the proposals is one in which those two conferences would receive four automatic bid, and another that allots one automatic bid to five conferences and 11 at-large slots.
“The best system with 16 should be the 16 best,” said Ole Miss coach Lane Kiffin, a critic of the system last year when his team was left out of the first 12-team field. “I don’t know exactly how that’s figured out”
The Big 12 and Atlantic Coast conferences, which are the other two members of the Power Four, will be able to offer their input — but that’s all it is — along with the rest of the smaller conferences who are involved in the CFP structure.
Asked about the relationship with his fellow commissioners, the SEC’s Greg Sankey relayed a recent conversation he had with one of his predecessors, Roy Kramer, who had his share of contentious arguments with leaders of other conferences.
“He said, ‘We’d walk out of some of those rooms, and we weren’t going to talk to each other for a year. We hated each other, but we always figured a way out,’ ” Sankey said. “I take great comfort in that. And I take the responsibility to figure that out.”
At stake is not only what the six seasons starting in 2026 will look like, but — if the SEC and Big Ten create an unrepairable rift with the other Power Four leagues — what college football might become once ESPN’s $7.8 billion contract to televise the games ends after the 2031 season.
The SEC’s decision on whether to add a ninth league game and a possible shift from a conference title game to a series of “play-in” games for newly created automatic qualifying spots are also related to the CFP’s next format.
THE TRANSFER PORTAL
If only there weren’t that little problem of the “student” in “student-athlete,” some of the decisions about the transfer portal would be so much simpler.
Because schools try to sync the timing of the window when players can leave one school for another with the academic calendar, football finds itself having to choose between a window that opens during the playoff — around the time the spring semester kicks off — or one that opens in the spring and predates the fall semester.
The playoff option might be more convenient for some coaches, who could build their roster and do offseason workouts with those players from January through the spring. But that could lead to a repeat of some of the awkward moves from last season, with players on teams contending for a title leaving for better offers.
“It’s really hard to be playing in a championship setting and have to be dealing with that,” Georgia coach Kirby Smart said. “When I brought that up as a complaint or a problem, it was told to me, ‘There’s no crying from a yacht.’”
Ultimately, members of the American Football Coaches Association agreed that January is the way to go. The NCAA will ultimately make this decision, likely with heavy input from the new entity being formed by the Power Four conferences that will run key aspects of college sports.
THE NCAA’S FUTURE
Most people at these meetings agree that the SEC isn’t looking to break away from the NCAA completely.
Then again, Sankey said, “I’ve shared with the decision-making working group (at the NCAA) that I have people in my room asking, ‘Why are we still in the NCAA?’”
This has lent urgency to the proposals being considered for even more autonomy for the Power Four, who are looking to streamline decision-making and put the most important topics — finances, litigation and infractions not related to the settlement — in their hands.
The current proposal for a slimmed-down board of directors would give the four biggest conferences enough voting power to total 65% of the vote even if the other nine board members all disagreed. It does not give the Power Four enough voting power to pass a measure if one of the four dissents.
That might not be enough.
“I think 68% is a number that’s been on our mind, because you can’t just have someone walk away at that level among four and everything stops,” Sankey said of a formula that would give three of four conferences the voting power to pass legislation. “We need to talk through those things in depth.”
College Sports
Four Bombers Named to CSC Academic All-District Team
Story Links ITHACA, N.Y. – Four members of the Ithaca College softball team have been named to the 2025 College Sports Communicators (CSC) Academic All-District® Team, as announced by the organization on Tuesday. The CSC Academic All-District® program honors the nation’s top student-athletes for their combined excellence in the […]

ITHACA, N.Y. – Four members of the Ithaca College softball team have been named to the 2025 College Sports Communicators (CSC) Academic All-District® Team, as announced by the organization on Tuesday.
The CSC Academic All-District® program honors the nation’s top student-athletes for their combined excellence in the classroom and on the field. To be eligible, student-athletes must be at least sophomores both academically and athletically, maintain a cumulative GPA of 3.5 or higher, and meet minimum participation requirements. Honorees are recognized across four divisions: NCAA Division I, II, III, and NAIA.
Graduate student Belle de Oliveira and senior Anna Cornell earned Academic All-District honors for the third consecutive year, while junior Haley Petrucci received the distinction for the second straight season. Junior Kailen Winkelblech was recognized for the first time in her career.
Both Petrucci and Cornell have also been named CSC Academic All-America® finalists and will advance to the national ballot. The Academic All-America® teams will be announced on June 17, 2025.
College Sports
Texas Tech Red Raiders – Official Athletics Website
CARLSBAD, Calif. — Texas Tech’s Connor Graham picked up a pair of honors during the week of the 2025 NCAA Division I Men’s Golf Championships, first being named to the PING All-Region Team and later named to the GCAA All-Freshman Team. Graham led Texas Tech during the 2024-25 season with a 71.1 scoring average over […]

Graham led Texas Tech during the 2024-25 season with a 71.1 scoring average over 13 events and 41 rounds of golf. He also led the Red Raiders with seven Top 20 finishes, rounds carded below par (16) and rounds recorded even-par or better (25). He tied for the team lead in eagles (7), and ranked second on the team for rounds shot in the 60s (11) during the year.
For the annual NCAA Division I PING All-Region honorees, players across six regions and 82 schools earned all-region honors in 2025. Graham was a part of the Central team and one of 25 players named to it. Other schools in the Central region included those recognized from programs such as Houston, Iowa State, Kansas, Oklahoma, Oklahoma State, Texas and Texas A&M.
Graham was one of five players in NCAA Division I college golf who was named to the All-Freshman Team. He was joined by Daniel Bennett (Texas), who was named the recipient of the 2025 NCAA Division I Phil Mickelson Outstanding Freshman Award, along with fellow All-Freshman team honorees Wheaton Ennis (Texas A&M), Gunnlaugur Árni Sveinsson (LSU), and Clark Van Gaalen (Oklahoma).
Graham is the first Red Raider named to the GCAA All-Freshman Team (utilizing GCAA records dating back to 2005).
About the GCAA
Established in 1958, the Golf Coaches Association of America (GCAA) is the professional organization of men’s collegiate golf coaches. The GCAA’s mission is to support its member coaches from six divisions, including the NCAA, NAIA and NJCAA, by creating educational opportunities, providing resources, and promoting its members with the purpose of enhancing their overall performance as coaches, mentors, and teachers. The GCAA also recognizes the excellence and achievements of its members and their student-athletes in academic, athletic and civic endeavors.
About PING
PING designs, manufactures and markets a complete line of golf equipment including metal woods, irons, wedges, putters and golf bags. The family-owned company was founded in 1959 in the garage of the late Karsten Solheim, a mechanical engineer with an extensive background in the aerospace and computer industries. His frustration with his putting inspired him to design his own putter, which created a “pinging” sound when striking a golf ball. This sound was the source of the name now synonymous with innovation, quality and service throughout the world of golf.
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Facebook: TTUMensGolf
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College Sports
Muckalt meets the media | News, Sports, Jobs
Michigan Tech head coach Bill Muckalt addresses the media during a press conference Tuesday morning at the MacInnes Student Ice Arena in Houghton. (Photo courtesy of Michigan Tech University) HOUGHTON — Tuesday morning, Michigan Tech University introduced Bill Muckalt as the 23rd head coach in its hockey program’s history. He had previously been at Michigan […]


Michigan Tech head coach Bill Muckalt addresses the media during a press conference Tuesday morning at the MacInnes Student Ice Arena in Houghton. (Photo courtesy of Michigan Tech University)
HOUGHTON — Tuesday morning, Michigan Tech University introduced Bill Muckalt as the 23rd head coach in its hockey program’s history. He had previously been at Michigan Tech as an assistant coach under Mel Pearson from 2011-15 before he left the university to become the head coach of the Tri-City Storm in the United States Hockey League from 2015-17, where he won a Clark Cup in his first season with the team.
He went on from there to return to his alma mater, the University of Michigan from 2017-23, where he served as the lead recruiter. He moved on from Michigan to become the head coach of new NCAA program Lindenwood last season.
Muckalt is excited to be back in the Copper Country.
“(I am) extremely excited,” he said. “I mean, it’s such a special place, rich tradition. It’s an honor.”
He has nothing but fond memories of his time here as an assistant coach.
“People in the Copper Country are amazing,” he said. “They’re really down to earth, extremely loyal, and they have a real sense of community up here. So, those are things from a hockey standpoint, just building back up a brand, speaking about the first time when I got here, just rebuilding it and restoring it, how proud that people are of Michigan Tech and how proud they are of the Husky brand.”
When Pearson was hired in 2011, Muckalt was one of the first people he reached out to in the hopes that he wanted to be a part of the process of returning the Huskies to the national tournament, somewhere the school had not been since 1981.
“Obviously, I think the program is in a lot better shape, the locker room, the facilities, everything,” said Muckalt. “It’s truly an honor and privilege to be back here, and I think the expectation doesn’t change. It’s still the same, win a championship, get in the tournament and try and win the last game of the year. That’s the expectation.”
Prior to the 2024-25 season, the Huskies had made the NCAA Tournament three straight seasons under then-coach Joe Shawhan. When asked if he believed he could get the Huskies back to the tournament quickly, he did not hesitate.
“It’s a belief,” he said. “You have to have a belief in them, and they have to have a belief in themselves that they can achieve that. We have to kind of steer that ship for them and keep them on course at times, or when you’re out and if you’re out in a storm, it’s hard, maybe, to see the land, but you got to get back to the land, and that’s what we’re doing.
“In a parallel to hockey, that championship, it’s not going to be easy. There’s going to be ups and downs, and (we’ve) got to steady the course and right the ship, so to speak. But, I think the part is them going through and learning. We’re growing together on a journey. The good news is we need each other, pick each other up along the way, and pat each other on the back when things are going well.”
Muckalt has faith in the team already assembled.
“We haven’t lost a game yet, so everybody likes their chances,” he said. “Right now, I’m positive (and) optimistic, and I’m going to believe in our players and believe in our staff. We’re going to do everything we can to get better every day.There’s no way that I would put a handicap on this group or us. We’re going to go and try to win the race.”
One thing is for certain, Muckalt is excited to be back in the MacInnes Student Ice Arena for game day.
“There’s so many things I should have pointed out for this press conference that I forgot to touch on. The Mitch’s Misfits bring so much energy,” he said. “Specifically I remember playing Wisconsin here the first weekend we were here, and we beat them and how electric that was. Even just traveling with the Misfits down to Duluth, and just how well the GLI is attended by alumni, so the Mac, there’s no better place to be when the Mac is full, and it’s full all the time.”
Why make the change now?
Michigan Tech’s Vice President for Athletics and Recreation Suzanne Sanregret spoke to the timing of the coaching change.
“I think that if anyone read the comments from Coach Shawhan in the TV6 articles, we just couldn’t come to agreement on an extension of a contract,” she said. “With that being said, and having two assistant coaching positions open, it becomes really difficult to make any of those hires. (I am) really pleased with the work that Coach Shawhan did, but I think it’s time for a change and to move into this new direction.
“With a rapidly changing college hockey landscape, it just felt like the right time to do it, to make the switch.”
Sanregret is excited to bring Muckalt back at this point in time.
“There certainly is an intensity about Bill Muckalt, and just a championship pedigree,” she said. “I think all coaches seem to have that, but his relationships, his connections, his relationships with family, advisors, experience in the USHL, and, I think, in the modern era of where the collegiate landscape is going, he has an ability to work with me, to work toward, toward the requirements, I think, of what college hockey is going to look like in the next few years and already is looking like.”
Changing landscape of college sports
With the changing landscape of college hockey, from the transfer portal to Name, Image, Likeness, to the addition of players from the branches of the Canadian Hockey League, timing has become something very important.
“I think that if we aren’t nimble, and don’t respond that way, we fall behind and you lose opportunity,” Sanregret said. “I want to set the bar where we can be in the same conversations as several of the higher end institutions and hockey programs. This gives us a shot at it.”
At the same time, Sanregret is proud of how both Pearson and Shawhan set up the hockey program in the past decade-plus.
“Well, first, I think Coach Pearson and Coach Shawhan did incredible work for us,” she said. “I appreciate everything that they’ve done. I think this is just another evolution of the next steps we can’t sit on. We have to keep moving forward, and it’s with a lot of change.
“Coach Pearson gave us national relevancy, again brought the program back. Coach Shawhan enhanced that, continued with that, and now I think there’s an opportunity for Coach Muckalt to continue to raise that bar and that level. It’s going to require us modernizing with where collegiate athletics is today. I can’t wait.”

Michigan Tech head coach Bill Muckalt stands in the team’s locker room after a press conference Tuesday morning at the MacInnes Student Ice Arena in Houghton. (Photo courtesy of Michigan Tech University)
College Sports
NHL Playoffs 2025: Stanley Cup schedule, bracket, scores, as Oilers outlast Stars in Game 4
The Edmonton Oilers have taken full control of the Western Conference Final after their 4-1 win over the Dallas Stars in Game 4 on Tuesday night. Edmonton leads the series 3-1 and is one win away from advancing to the Stanley Cup Final for the second consecutive year. Unfortunately for the Stars, the story of […]

The Edmonton Oilers have taken full control of the Western Conference Final after their 4-1 win over the Dallas Stars in Game 4 on Tuesday night. Edmonton leads the series 3-1 and is one win away from advancing to the Stanley Cup Final for the second consecutive year.
Unfortunately for the Stars, the story of Game 4 was a familiar one. Just like in Game 3, Dallas played well through 40 minutes but trailed going into the third period. As was the case last time out, the Stars ran out of steam in the final frame, throwing just four shots on Stuart Skinner.
One of the heroes of the game for the Oilers was Corey Perry, who became one of five players aged 40 or older to score in a conference finals game. His power-play tally in the second period proved to be the game-winner as the Oilers locked down the Stars late.
Stars vs. Oilers: Scores, schedule, odds, where to watch as Edmonton wins Game 4 to take 3-1 series lead
Chris Bengel

Ryan Nugent-Hopkins also recorded his fourth straight multi-point game of this series, assisting on each of Edmonton’s first two goals. He’s now up to nine points in four games against the Stars, and he has elevated his game after an underwhelming regular season.
A Stars offense that had been so explosive all season has suddenly gone ice cold. Dallas has just two goals in the least three games, and some of its top players have been no-shows in the series. Mikko Rantanen hasn’t scored in seven games, and Matt Duchene and Jamie Benn are stuck on one goal apiece in the playoffs.
Now, we are on the brink of a rematch of the 2024 Stanley Cup Final between the Oilers and Florida Panthers. On Wednesday night, the Panthers will roll into Raleigh with a chance to oust the Hurricanes in Game 5.
For the complete schedule and results for every matchup, follow along right here at CBS Sports.
Eastern Conference Final
(2) Carolina Hurricanes vs. (3) Florida Panthers
Game 1: Panthers 5, Hurricanes 2 | Recap
Game 2: Panthers 5, Hurricanes 0 | Recap
Game 3: Panthers 6, Hurricanes 2 | Recap
Game 4: Hurricanes 3, Panthers 0 | Recap
Game 5: Wednesday, May 28 | 8 p.m. | at CAR | TNT, truTV, Max
*Game 6: Friday, May 30 | 8 p.m. | at FLA | TNT, truTV, Max
*Game 7: Sunday, June 1 | 8 p.m. | at CAR | TNT, truTV, Max
Western Conference Final
(2) Dallas Stars vs. (3) Edmonton Oilers
Game 1: Stars 6, Oilers 3 | Recap
Game 2: Oilers 3, Stars 0 | Recap
Game 3: Oilers 6, Stars 1 | Recap
Game 4: Oilers 4, Stars 1 | Recap
Game 5: Thursday, May 29 | 8 p.m. | at DAL | ESPN/ESPN+
*Game 6: Saturday, May 31 | 8 p.m. | at EDM | ABC/ESPN+
*Game 7: Monday, June 2 | 8 p.m. | at DAL | ESPN/ESPN+
Round 2
(1) Toronto Maple Leafs vs. (3) Florida Panthers
Game 1: Maple Leafs 5, Panthers 4 | Recap
Game 2: Maple Leafs 4, Panthers 3 | Recap
Game 3: Panthers 5, Maple Leafs 4 (OT) | Recap
Game 4: Panthers 2, Maple Leafs 0 | Recap
Game 5: Panthers 6, Maple Leafs 1 | Recap
Game 6: Maple Leafs 2, Panthers 0 | Recap
Game 7: Panthers 6, Maple Leafs 1 | Recap
(1) Washington Capitals vs. (2) Carolina Hurricanes
Game 1: Hurricanes 2, Capitals 1 (OT) | Recap
Game 2: Capitals 3, Hurricanes 1 | Recap
Game 3: Hurricanes 4, Capitals 0 | Recap
Game 4: Hurricanes 5, Capitals 2 | Recap
Game 5: Hurricanes 3, Capitals 1 | Recap
(1) Winnipeg Jets vs. (2) Dallas Stars
Game 1: Stars 3, Jets 2 | Recap
Game 2: Jets 4, Stars 0 | Recap
Game 3: Stars 5, Jets 2 | Recap
Game 4: Stars 3, Jets 1 | Recap
Game 5: Jets 4, Stars 0 | Recap
Game 6: Stars 2, Jets 1 (OT) | Recap
(1) Vegas Golden Knights vs. (3) Edmonton Oilers
Game 1: Oilers 4, Golden Knights 2 | Recap
Game 2: Oilers 5, Golden Knights 4 (OT) | Recap
Game 3: Golden Knights 4, Oilers 3 | Recap
Game 4: Oilers 3, Golden Knights 0 | Recap
Game 5: Oilers 1, Golden Knights 0 (OT) | Recap
Round 1
(1) Toronto Maple Leafs vs. (WC1) Ottawa Senators
Game 1: Maple Leafs 6, Senators 2 | Recap
Game 2: Maple Leafs 3, Senators 2 (OT) | Recap
Game 3: Maple Leafs 3, Senators 2 (OT) | Recap
Game 4: Senators 4, Maple Leafs 3 (OT) | Recap
Game 5: Senators 4, Maple Leafs 0 | Recap
Game 6: Maple Leafs 4, Senators 2 | Recap
(2)Tampa Bay Lightning vs. (3) Florida Panthers
Game 1: Panthers 6, Lightning 2 | Recap
Game 2: Panthers 2, Lightning 0 | Recap
Game 3: Lightning 5, Panthers 1 | Recap
Game 4: Panthers 4, Lightning 2 | Recap
Game 5: Panthers 6, Lightning 3 | Recap
(1) Washington Capitals vs. (WC2) Montreal Canadiens
Game 1: Capitals 3, Canadiens 2 (OT) | Recap
Game 2: Capitals 3, Canadiens 1 | Recap
Game 3: Canadiens 6, Capitals 3 | Recap
Game 4: Capitals 5, Canadiens 2 | Recap
Game 5: Capitals 4, Canadiens 1 | Recap
(2) Carolina Hurricanes vs. (3) New Jersey Devils
Game 1: Hurricanes 4, Devils 1 | Recap
Game 2: Hurricanes 3, Devils 1 | Recap
Game 3: Devils 3, Hurricanes 2 (2OT) | Recap
Game 4: Hurricanes 5, Devils 2 | Recap
Game 5: Hurricanes 5, Devils 4 (2OT) | Recap
(1) Winnipeg Jets vs. (WC2) St. Louis Blues
Game 1: Jets 5, Blues 3 | Recap
Game 2: Jets 2, Blues 1 | Recap
Game 3: Blues 7, Jets 2 | Recap
Game 4: Blues 5, Jets 1 | Recap
Game 5: Jets 5, Blues 3 | Recap
Game 6: Blues 5, Jets 2 | Recap
Game 7: Jets 4, Blues 3 (2OT) | Recap
(2) Dallas Stars vs. (3) Colorado Avalanche
Game 1: Avalanche 5, Stars 1 | Recap
Game 2: Stars 4, Avalanche 3 (OT) | Recap
Game 3: Stars 2, Avalanche 1 (OT) | Recap
Game 4: Avalanche 4, Stars 0 | Recap
Game 5: Stars 6, Avalanche 2 | Recap
Game 6: Avalanche 7, Stars 4 | Recap
Game 7: Stars 4, Avalanche 2 | Recap
(1) Vegas Golden Knights vs. (WC1) Minnesota Wild
Game 1: Golden Knights 4, Wild 2 | Recap
Game 2: Wild 5, Golden Knights 2 | Recap
Game 3: Wild 5, Golden Knights 2 | Recap
Game 4: Golden Knights 4, Wild 3 (OT) | Recap
Game 5: Golden Knights 3, Wild 2 (OT) | Recap
Game 6: Golden Knights 3, Wild 2 | Recap
(2) Los Angeles Kings vs. (3) Edmonton Oilers
Game 1: Kings 6, Oilers 5 | Recap
Game 2: Kings 6, Oilers 2 | Recap
Game 3: Oilers 7, Kings 4 | Recap
Game 4: Oilers 4, Kings 3 (OT) | Recap
Game 5: Oilers 3, Kings 1 | Recap
Game 6: Oilers 6, Kings 4 | Recap
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