College Sports
Off the ice: Conor Peterson
From only “half expecting” to make the team following tryouts his freshman year to being named club president for his final season, defenseman Conor Peterson saw more success as part of the Clemson club ice hockey team than he initially anticipated. However, Peterson learned over his four years with the program that the most special […]

From only “half expecting” to make the team following tryouts his freshman year to being named club president for his final season, defenseman Conor Peterson saw more success as part of the Clemson club ice hockey team than he initially anticipated.
However, Peterson learned over his four years with the program that the most special part of playing on a team is the people you get to do it with.
“It’s more of the bonding that’s the best part,” Peterson told The Tiger in an interview. “I’ve had hockey friends since I was five, since I started playing on my first team. That bonding, the special moments, is really what stood out to me about the game.”
The defenseman from Wilmington, Massachusetts, stepped onto the ice at the rink just 10 minutes from his childhood home for the first time at age 5, with encouragement from his father and cousins.
“I just loved the game from there,” Peterson said.
By the time he graduated from high school, that little kid who loved the game had yet to quiet his voice in Peterson’s head, and he knew it was only right to continue playing in college.
“All my cousins went to schools down south,” Peterson explained. “When I was visiting South Carolina, I got the notice that I was accepted to Clemson. It was only two hours away, so my family and I decided ‘Yeah, might as well give it a shot.’ So, we drove over here and didn’t even get a tour — we just walked around. I was like, ‘Yeah, I like this place.’”
And the rest was history.
Peterson discovered Clemson’s club ice hockey team through his cousin, who was the club hockey team captain at the College of Charleston.
“He mentioned, like, ‘Hey, I’m playing club hockey. I love it.’ And I wasn’t looking to go anywhere with it,” Peterson told The Tiger. “I just wanted to go to college, have some fun and keep playing the sport. So, I came down here … was only half expecting to make the team … It’s been unbelievable since then.”
Of course, the prospect of continuing to play the sport you love at your dream school sounds more than ideal for most young athletes. For Peterson, being a part of this team shaped his Clemson experience into something even better than he ever could have imagined.
“It’s the best. Even the community here is unbelievable … when we played in Huntsville (last spring), a guy in the (North Alabama) Clemson club came and talked to us after one of our games. He was breaking down and crying, telling us how much it meant to him that we were there and representing the team … I couldn’t imagine that it would be anything like this.”
Peterson’s favorite memory as an Ice Tiger was the team’s trip to Knoxville, Tennessee, two years ago. Despite falling short in both games, he noted that the memories and time spent with his friends made it worthwhile.
“All the older guys were there,” he explained. “We were able to travel with them, hang with them for the day, and see Tennessee beat Alabama … just being in that football element with all my best friends from here. That was pretty unbelievable.”
The support from the Clemson community and the off-ice memories are just a fraction of why he’s loved being a part of this program for the last four years. To Peterson, the most special part of the Clemson club ice hockey team is the same thing that kept him in the game as a child: the friendships.
“It’s 100% the bond (that makes this team special),” he said. “I came to Clemson and knew one family friend from home, and that’s it … I was trying to figure out, like, ‘who am I gonna be friends with?’ And since I made the team, these have been my best friends for four years.”
Following his departure, the team president hopes to be remembered as “a team player. A team guy who always tried to put others before himself for the team goal.”
Peterson can only hope that, as the program grows, the future generations of Clemson club ice hockey players get the same experience as he did.
“When I was a freshman, we had maybe 40 kids at tryouts,” Peterson said. “That’s more than doubled now … It’s all only getting better and more popular from here, but I hope it keeps the club hockey aspect of just guys, having fun, trying to play the sport.”
Following graduation, the senior finance major plans to move to Greenville, South Carolina, and obtain his Corporate MBA from Clemson.
College Sports
Denver Hockey Mourns the Loss of Randy Ward
Story Links DENVER – The University of Denver hockey program mourns the loss of former Pioneers defenseman Randy Ward, who passed away on May 9 at the age of 78. Ward played three years at Denver from 1966 and 1969, helping the Pioneers win back-to-back National Championships in his final two […]

DENVER – The University of Denver hockey program mourns the loss of former Pioneers defenseman Randy Ward, who passed away on May 9 at the age of 78.
Ward played three years at Denver from 1966 and 1969, helping the Pioneers win back-to-back National Championships in his final two seasons. Denver dispatched North Dakota 4-0 in 1968 in Duluth, Minnesota, before holding off Cornell in a 4-3 victory in 1969 in Colorado Springs.
The Calgary, Alberta, native suited up in 84 games in crimson and gold and registered 46 points on 12 goals and 34 assists in his career.
Following his time on the DU hilltop, Ward continued his other passions of the outdoors and farming. A gifted cattleman, he hunted and fished across North America and was also an avid golfer, who held course records and holes-in-one too numerous to count.
Born on Jan. 25, 1947, Randy is survived by his wife Marilyn, sons Jeff & Andrew (Allison) and his four grandchildren, Kalen & Keira (Jeff), Declan & Liam (Andrew), brother and sister in-law Peter & Nita Burdon, Judith Paquet along with numerous nephews, nieces and cousins.
A memorial service is being held on Monday, May 26 at 2 p.m. MT at Eden Brook Funeral Home, 24223 Township Road 242, Calgary, AB T3Z 3K2. To join the service remotely, go to https://youtube.com/live/ZwzeIT7ELV8?feature=share.
In lieu of flowers and if so desired, please consider a donation in Randy’s honor to The Summit: Marian & Jim Sinneave Centre for Youth Resilience, Alberta Children’s Hospital Foundation (https://www.childrenshospital.ab.ca/).
College Sports
Ohio State women’s ice hockey 2025-2026 season schedule revealed
The Ohio State women’s ice hockey team is arguably the best program around right now. Only Wisconsin can match what the Buckeyes have done with two national titles in four years and several Frozen Four appearances. OSU came within a whisker of winning another national championship last season and will look to build on that […]

The Ohio State women’s ice hockey team is arguably the best program around right now. Only Wisconsin can match what the Buckeyes have done with two national titles in four years and several Frozen Four appearances. OSU came within a whisker of winning another national championship last season and will look to build on that and continue the positive momentum this coming year.
To do it, Ohio State will have to navigate a difficult 2025-2026 schedule, one that was just announced by the program on Wednesday. There are games against traditional powers like Minnesota, Wisconsin, Minnesota-Duluth and others that the Buckeyes will have to contend with.
Head coach Nadine Muzerall has never shied away from competition and you can bet she’ll have the team ready to gear up for another run at a potential WCHA conference title, NCAA Tournament, and Frozen Four appearance that could lead to another national championship.
Here’s a look at the complete schedule that was released on Wednesday:
We’ve still got some time before we can cheer the Lady Bucks on, but once October rolls around, it’ll be go time again. There are nine home games for you to get involved in the action as well.
Contact/Follow us @BuckeyesWire on X (formerly Twitter) and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Ohio State news, notes and opinion. Follow Phil Harrison on X.
College Sports
Conference expulsion? No penalty structure? Frustration mounts as college sports enforcement comes into focus
As the college sports world eagerly awaits a final approval for the historic House v. NCAA settlement, the focus has centered on how this new revenue-sharing world will be policed. The key, according to those directly involved in shaping this new era of college athletics, is a collective buy-in on following the rules and not […]

As the college sports world eagerly awaits a final approval for the historic House v. NCAA settlement, the focus has centered on how this new revenue-sharing world will be policed.
The key, according to those directly involved in shaping this new era of college athletics, is a collective buy-in on following the rules and not looking to break a system before given time to stabilize. The penalties for disobeying could be severe.
In a yet-to-be-finalized and evolving discussion around potential penalties, universities could face anywhere from fines to suspension to even conference expulsion if they do not follow the rules of the new enforcement system, including agreeing not to sue the new entity, according to those directly involved in that conversation.
Yahoo Sports first reported on expulsion as a possible enforcement penalty to schools that don’t obey the rules.
“We’re trying to structure in a way that there is significant incentive to follow the rules and significant disincentive if you don’t,” says one source directly involved in the process.
Confusion, frustration mount
The language was included in the newest draft of a membership agreement for the newly formed College Sports Commission, which will be tasked to police and enforce NIL and revenue-sharing rules tied to the House settlement terms. Several drafts of the membership agreement have been authored in recent months, but the latest document included stiffer language. Many athletic directors within the power conferences were not surprised by the harsh penalties, though some were unaware of its existence.
“While we have heard as ADs that the penalties would be steep, this is the first I had seen the expulsion and no-lawsuit pledge,” an ACC athletics director told CBS Sports.
At the Big Ten’s spring meetings in California this week, it was a hot topic of discussion Tuesday in a joint meeting of Big Ten conference officials, athletic directors and coaches. Very few people, even high-ranking athletics officials, have seen a full draft of what will be included in the new entity, eliciting some confusion and frustration in light of media attention around the latest draft. It prompted plenty of questions from administrators and coaches that boiled down to: What exactly are we signing up for?
Enforcement agreement aims to end college sports’ ‘wild west’ era, but stiff legal battles are sure to follow
Richard Johnson

What’s the purpose of College Sports Commission?
In essence, the CSC is set to become a smaller, more agile version of the NCAA’s enforcement arm. The new organization will be led by a CEO expected to have no ties to collegiate sports and with a legal/regulatory background. The CEO will have final say on settlement-related items and enforcement of fair market value NIL deals of greater than $600, according to sources, and could be named shortly after the House settlement is approved; multiple insiders believe the eventual hire has been zeroed in on but cannot be officially brought on board yet.
Scrutinized NIL deals would be subject to arbitration, and if the third party sides with the CSC’s findings, players and universities would face penalties – the severity of which is not yet entirely known. The new CEO is expected to have considerable latitude to penalize as they see fit, according to those familiar with the situation, and won’t be boxed into a strict penalty structure that must be followed.
An athlete who accepts a deal flagged by a Deloitte-administered clearinghouse called “NIL Go” as “pay for play” and does not meet a fair market value range would be ruled ineligible. While the NCAA’s investigations typically take months to years, the CSC is expected to conduct and close investigations in a considerably more timely manner. The hope is that the process will be more transparent, too, and give schools more opportunity to have a say in it.
Meanwhile, the membership agreement for the CSC has prompted questions about its legality in a system that has been under attack in the court system for years, from the O’Bannon case to Alston to House, which was filed in 2020 and helped lead to the implementation of NIL regulations from the NCAA in 2021. Those regulations, however, have proven toothless in the face of legal challenges and legislation in more than 30 states. The question that arises now anytime new rules are introduced: Is this legally enforceable?
The thinking among college leaders is the CSC will have some legal protection because of the House settlement. Current players who opt into the settlement are bound to the terms, which include the formation of the CSC as an enforcement entity. That entity, as explained in the settlement terms, is required to install a binding arbitration process, which players are required to follow as members of the settlement. Essentially, the athletes cannot sue over a deal flagged as not meeting fair market value.
“Unless the new state laws specifically create a new legal claim that gives them right to sue, which I don’t think they do, the players’ legal claims would still be wiped out by the settlement,” said Sam Ehrlich, a sports law professor at Boise State. “And even if the rules do allow players to sue, there’s a strong argument that the settlement also blocks similar claims under state law since it’s a similar field of law.”
States gearing up for the chaos
Tennessee, which successfully sued to stop the NCAA’s enforcement of NIL-related “pay to play” rules, has already passed a state bill that bars its schools from participating in rules that restrict athlete pay and prevents the NCAA from penalizing it for following its state law. That bill has roiled other power conference leaders and runs contrary to the hope that the House settlement can bring some level of stability after years of unregulated spending and player movement has upended college sports.
A bill introduced in the New Jersey Senate on Tuesday also intends to protect universities and athletes from athletics associations pursuing punishment and would allow those athletes to seek legal remedies against the CSC or NCAA if they are penalized by the association(s). Arkansas passed similar legislation earlier this year, including protections from open records laws and punishment from athletics associations, but not if a university has “expressly agreed” to be a member of that athletic association. In other words, Arkansas universities and players will be required to follow the CSC’s rules and regulations if the university is a member of the association.
CEO to oversee college sports rules enforcement after House v. NCAA settlement is finalized, per report
Carter Bahns

Questions, skepticism over legal process
There has been considerable industry skepticism on whether the new fair market value-driven clearinghouse would hold up to a legal challenge. As player compensation went through the roof over the last calendar year, a combination of front-loaded NIL deals with the impending revenue share money, would salaries really come crashing down to Earth if a school only had $15 or so million to spend on football? Multiple Power Four ADs recently expressed concern to CBS Sports that schools would look for loopholes and continue to spend “pay for play” NIL money to get around the cap. With football rosters that have reached upwards of $30 million, according to industry sources, they questioned whether they’d abide by a cap and clearinghouse system that would halve that number.
That, according to those involved in the House settlement and enforcement process, would defeat the entire purpose.
“We all signed off on the settlement, we all signed off on the framework,” said a source directly involved in the process. “I don’t think it should be particularly surprising that we’re going to have membership rules and regulations that say you have to follow our rules and regulations. If you don’t, then there will have to be consequences. You can’t have people saying they’re going to come together for a stable framework with rules and regulations and just simply choose not to follow the rules and regulations.”
Within that is an emphasis that the Power Four conferences named as defendants in the House lawsuit — the ACC, Big 12, Big Ten and SEC — are voluntary membership organizations. The belief, among those involved at the Power Four level, is that membership rules have legal precedence for being upheld and wouldn’t subject the organizations to the type of antitrust issues that have typically been a loser for the NCAA and others. Naturally, there is confidence amongst the agreement’s authors that it can be enforced and stand up to legal scrutiny.
Critics, including some prominent sports law attorneys, believe it will spur another avalanche of lawsuits. It could evoke intervention from state attorneys general as the NCAA has faced on multiple issues. There are also questions about whether state immunity would provide protection to universities.
Still, this is a line in the sand that those involved feel has to be made. They know they will be sued, most likely on Title IX, after revenue share goes into effect, but the threat of lawsuits shouldn’t supersede the need to give the settlement a real chance to be successful.
Every university that has opted into the settlement needs to follow the rule, they say.
And if they don’t want to — they can seek membership elsewhere.
College Sports
30 Spanish Springs High athletes to sign national letters of intent at college level
Thirty Spanish Springs High athletes will sign national letters of intent with colleges Thursday during a signing-day ceremony at 12:30 p.m. in the Cougars’ main gym. Those players, which were provided by the school’s athletic administration, include: Division I * Amaya Chapman (Track & Field), Nevada * Norhan Abdel Halim (Track & Field), Portland State […]

Thirty Spanish Springs High athletes will sign national letters of intent with colleges Thursday during a signing-day ceremony at 12:30 p.m. in the Cougars’ main gym. Those players, which were provided by the school’s athletic administration, include:
Division I
* Amaya Chapman (Track & Field), Nevada
* Norhan Abdel Halim (Track & Field), Portland State
* Morgan Carlton (Cheer), Nevada
Division II
* Owen Hensley (Baseball), Lane College in Eugene, Ore.
* Lily Delamora (Softball), Northwest Nazarene University in Nampa, Idaho
* Tegan Canadian (Track & Field), Northwest Nazarene University in Nampa, Idaho
* Jaxon Reddig (Swim), Concordia University in Irvine, Calif.
* Elliot Lacey (Soccer), Dominican University in River Forest, Ill.
Division III
* Dylan Kawachi (Baseball), Adrian College in Adrian, Mich.
* Taylor Fewins (Gymnastics), Springfield College in Springfield, Mass.
* Millie Grieve (Swim), Swarthmore College in Swarthmore, Pa.
* Scarlett Smith (Volleyball), Sewanee: The University of the South in Sewanee, Tenn.
NAIA
* Charli York (Softball), Nelson University in Phoenix, Ariz.
* Walter Addison (Football), Lewis-Clark State College in Lewiston, Idaho
* Nia Duncan (Volleyball), Montana Western in Dillon, Mont.
* Kadrick Lewallen (Wrestling), Arizona Christian University in Glendale, Ariz.
* Justin Ruiz (Wrestling), Life University in Marietta, Ga.
* Tyden Schultz (Wrestling), Briar Cliff University in Sioux City, Iowa
Junior college
* Noah Kiley (Baseball), Umpqua College in Roseburg, Ore.
* Ben Kiserow (Baseball), Clackamas College in Oregon City, Ore.
* Logan Kuster (Baseball), Shasta College in Redding, Calif.
* Kellen McCaffrey (Baseball), Orange Coast College in Costa Mesa, Calif.
* Daniel Barajas (Baseball), Lassen College in Susanville, Calif.
* Landon Phillips (Baseball), Lassen College in Susanville, Calif.
* Lucas Tiernan (Baseball), Clark College in Vancouver, Wash.
* Preston Snyder (Baseball), Ohlone College in Fremont, Calif.
* Joey Jacobs (Softball), Folsom Lake College, Calif.
* Allie Hayes (Basketball), Sierra College in Rocklin, Calif.
* Reese Wakefield (Basketball), Folsom College in Folsom, Calif.
* Dominic Puno (Basketball), Monterey Peninsula College, Calif.
College Sports
Five Monks Earn USTFCCCA All-Region Honors
Story Links NEW ORLEANS, La. – The U.S. Track & Field and Cross Country Coaches Association (USTFCCCA) has announced the 2025 NCAA Division III Outdoor Track & Field All-Region teams, with six Saint Joseph’s College of Maine student-athletes earning recognition for their performances this spring. To qualify for All-Region honors, athletes […]

NEW ORLEANS, La. – The U.S. Track & Field and Cross Country Coaches Association (USTFCCCA) has announced the 2025 NCAA Division III Outdoor Track & Field All-Region teams, with six Saint Joseph’s College of Maine student-athletes earning recognition for their performances this spring.
To qualify for All-Region honors, athletes must rank among the top five in their event in their respective region or be part of a top-three ranked relay team, based on data compiled by the NCAA Regional TFRI.
Men’s All-Region Selections
The Monks’ 4×400 relay team, which set a new program record at the MIT Final Qualifier, earned All-Region honors after ranking among the top three in the East Region. Ramadan also collected individual accolades in the 400 meters (48.98, at SNHU Spring Invite) following a breakout season that featured multiple program records and podium finishes in the 400, 800, and 1500.
Women’s All-Region Selection
In her collegiate debut season, Leech emerged as one of the East Region’s top javelin throwers, earning All-Region distinction with a personal-best mark set at the Maine State Pine Tree Classic (40.04m / 131’4″).
These selections highlight the continued rise of the Saint Joseph’s Track & Field program, which celebrated numerous program records and podium performances throughout the 2025 outdoor season.
College Sports
NHL Playoffs 2025: Stanley Cup schedule, bracket, scores, as Panthers crush Hurricanes in Game 1
The Florida Panthers just kept rolling in Game 1 of the Eastern Conference Final. Two days after hammering the Toronto Maple Leafs in Game 7, the Panthers went into Raleigh and dominated the Carolina Hurricanes for a 5-2 win in Game 1. The Panthers pounced on the Hurricanes in the first period when Carter Verhaeghe […]

The Florida Panthers just kept rolling in Game 1 of the Eastern Conference Final. Two days after hammering the Toronto Maple Leafs in Game 7, the Panthers went into Raleigh and dominated the Carolina Hurricanes for a 5-2 win in Game 1.
The Panthers pounced on the Hurricanes in the first period when Carter Verhaeghe roofed a silky smooth backhand shot over the shoulder of Hurricanes goalie Frederik Andersen. Aaron Ekblad doubled the lead a few minutes later, and the game was never really in doubt after that.
Carolina captain Sebastian Aho made it a 2-1 game late in the first with a somewhat controversial goal, but that was as tight as the score got. Five different players scored for the Panthers as their offensive depth gave them an edge yet again, and Sergei Bobrovsky turned in another quality start with 31 saves on 33 shots against.
The Hurricanes’ Eastern Conference Final woes continued with a 13th straight loss in this round. That streak dates back to 2009, and Carolina’s next chance to snap it will come in Game 2 on Thursday night.
Before that, the Dallas Stars and Edmonton Oilers will go head-to-head in a rematch of last year’s Western Conference Final. The Stars are coming off an intense six-game battle against the Winnipeg Jets, but the Edmonton Oilers have been off for a while after taking care of business against the Vegas Golden Knights in five games.
There will be plenty of firepower on the ice when that series begins. Mikko Rantanen, the leading scorer in these playoffs, leads the Stars against Connor McDavid, Leon Draisaitl and the rest of the Oilers.
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: Thursday, May 22 | 8 p.m. | at CAR | TNT, truTV, Max
Game 3: Saturday, May 24 | 8 p.m. | at FLA | TNT, truTV, Max
Game 4: Monday, May 26 | 8 p.m. | at FLA | TNT, truTV, Max
*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: Wednesday, May 21 | 8 p.m. | at DAL | ESPN/ESPN+
Game 2: Friday, May 23 | 8 p.m. | at DAL | ESPN/ESPN+
Game 3: Sunday, May 25 | 3 p.m. | at EDM | ABC/ESPN+
Game 4: Tuesday, May 27 | 8 p.m. | at EDM | ESPN/ESPN+
*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
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
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
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
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
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
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
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
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
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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