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Predators hire Chris MacFarland as team president and GM

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The Nashville Predators hired Chris MacFarland as their president of hockey operations and general manager, the team announced Tuesday.

MacFarland succeeds Barry Trotz, who announced in February he’d step down from his duties but remain in the position until a successor was found.

“I know this is a proud organization with a solid track record of putting together teams that the fans of Smashville support wholeheartedly. My goal here is to build a winner,” MacFarland said in a news release.

The Predators’ GM search was exhaustive; the team spoke to at least a dozen candidates before hiring MacFarland, who was previously the general manager of the Colorado Avalanche.

“All along, we were hopeful to interview Chris. He turned out to be a perfect fit for us — just what we were looking for to lead our organization moving forward,” Predators majority owner and chairman Bill Haslam said in the statement.

MacFarland’s executive career began in 1999 in Columbus, where he spent 16 years in the Blue Jackets’ hockey operations department. MacFarland helped with professional and amateur scouting, player contract negotiations, salary cap management and even ran the Blue Jackets’ minor-league affiliates. He joined the Avalanche organization in 2015 as an assistant general manager, working alongside franchise legend and then-GM Joe Sakic.

The Avs had ended the 2014-15 season as the Central Division’s worst team. Two years later, they were the league’s worst team. But MacFarland helped turn things around, culminating with Colorado’s 2022 Stanley Cup championship over the Tampa Bay Lightning. In July 2022, the Avs promoted MacFarland to general manager, with Sakic assuming president of hockey operations duties.

The Avalanche said in a statement that Sakic will take over GM duties “for the foreseeable future, including through this month’s draft and the start of the league year.”

Trotz had been the Predators’ GM since July 1, 2023, when he succeeded David Poile. Trotz previously spent 15 seasons as head coach of the Predators, working under Poile. Nashville only reached the playoffs once in Trotz’s three years as general manager.

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Ball bounces off Jo Adell’s head, goes over fence against Rockies

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Jo Adell runs in from the outfield in a game against the Athletics on May 21.

Jo Adell, shown here on May 21, has had his ups and downs on defense over the years. Luke Hales / Getty Images

ANAHEIM, Calif. — Jo Adell, who famously robbed three home runs in a game earlier this season, gave one back on Tuesday night.

The Angels right fielder’s head served as a springboard for a T.J. Rumfield home run. Adell whiffed on catching the fly ball, which grazed his glove, hit his head and popped over the short wall in right-center field. On replay review, it was determined to be a homer for the Colorado Rockies first baseman.

Adell authored what was arguably the greatest individual defensive performance on April 4, when he hauled in three Mariners home runs in a 1-0 win. And largely, Adell’s defense has taken significant strides in recent years, earning a Gold Glove nomination in 2024.

“Defense was something that I struggled with,” Adell said after his April masterpiece, speaking of his first few seasons in the big leagues. “Just finding ways to improve and get better and find a way to learn. At the end of the day, defense is one of those things where it’s just about trying to get the job done.”

However, his blunder on Tuesday was reminiscent of his earlier days roaming the outfield. During his rookie season in 2020, Adell was unable to field a Nick Solak fly ball in Texas, and it bounced off Adell’s glove and over the fence for a home run.

Adell’s mistake — which was not immediately charged as an error — evoked Jose Canseco’s infamous 1993 blunder, in which Carlos Martinez was credited with a home run thanks to Canseco’s noggin sending it over the fence.

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NHL 2025-26 Stanley Cup playoff chances and projected standings

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Stanley Cup

Welcome to our 2025-26 NHL projections where you will find each team’s projected point total, probability of advancing to and through the playoffs, and chances of winning the Stanley Cup. The projections are based on 50,000 simulations of the remainder of the season which factors in each team’s projected strength, current health and strength of schedule. All projections are rounded to the nearest whole number. You can read more about the model at the bottom of the page. The projections will be updated daily.

Certain graphics on this page may be affected by ad-blocking software. If portions of the page appear blank and an ad blocker is enabled, please disable the ad blocker and refresh the page to ensure full access to the content.

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Stanley Cup Final Game 1: Key takeaways from Golden Knights’ come-from-behind win over Hurricanes

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RALEIGH, N.C. — So much for a low-scoring game.

This Stanley Cup Final pits the best defensive team in the Eastern Conference through three rounds — Carolina and its 1.62 goals against per game — vs. the best defensive team in the Western Conference through three rounds — Vegas and its 2.38 goals against per game, not to mention the two goalies with the best save percentage in the league through three rounds — Frederik Andersen (.931) vs. Carter Hart (.924).

After eight combined goals in the first 56 minutes, Tomas Hertl snapped a 4-4 tie with 3:24 left with a snipe from between the circles to help lead the Golden Knights to a come-from-behind 5-4 win in Game 1 of the Stanley Cup Final at Lenovo Center.

Hertl’s goal came just 19 seconds after Hart robbed a snakebitten Seth Jarvis.

The Golden Knights stormed back from a 2-0 lead, at one point taking a 4-3 lead early in the third period on Brett Howden’s league-leading 11th goal until, after Logan Stankoven won a 50-50 puck off a faceoff, Shayne Gostisbehere tied the score with a blast past Hart.

The Golden Knights won their seventh consecutive game and, with the return of Jeremy Lauzon from injury, it was the first time since opening night that they were completely healthy. Vegas handed Carolina only its second loss in 14 playoff games.

Nikolaj Ehlers scored two first-period goals, including becoming the second player on record since 1997-98 to score on the first shot of the game (25 seconds in). Shea Theodore then scored on a deflected shot — the first of three goals on five shots by the Golden Knights as they stormed back to take a 3-2 lead early in the second on goals by Ivan Barbashev and William Karlsson.

Barbashev’s goal came 30 seconds into the second, making this the first Stanley Cup Final game in history where there was a goal in the opening 30 seconds of the first two periods.

But Hurricanes captain Jordan Staal tied the game at 3-3 with his first Stanley Cup Final goal in 6,202 days.

Theodore and Brayden McNabb had three points each.

Teams that win Game 1 of the Stanley Cup Final go on to win the Cup 76.4 percent of the time (81-25), including a 60-14 (.811) record when the home team takes the first game and 21-11 (.656) as the road team.

Game 2 is Thursday night back in Raleigh before the series heads to Sin City.

Ehlers strikes twice in the first

For years, the Hurricanes played with perfect structure in the playoffs, only to be stopped short by a glaring flaw: they lacked a game-breaker capable of shattering a game wide open. When Andrei Svechnikov tore his ACL three years ago, Florida swept them. Last year, the Panthers beat them again, winning in five games. Carolina needed an antidote to their playoff heartbreak, so they spent $51 million last summer to bring in Ehlers.

On Tuesday night, it took exactly 25 seconds for Ehlers to strike.

Rocketing down the ice on Carolina’s first shift of the Stanley Cup Final on a two-on-one, Ehlers fired the game’s first shot into the back of the net. By the time he buried a breakaway later in the period to make it 2-0, the Lenovo Center was in a frenzy. He became the third Dane ever to score on hockey’s biggest stage, logging the fastest Final opener since 1976 and matching a first-period multi-goal feat not seen since Al MacInnis in 1989. The Canes finally have their game-breaker.

Jalen Chatfield assisted on both of Ehlers’ first-period goals, the second on a beautiful headman chip when Ehlers cherry-picked behind Vegas’ defense. He became the 10th defenseman in NHL history to record multiple points in the opening period of a Stanley Cup Final, and the second in the past 33 years. — Russo

Off night for the goalies

A Conn Smythe Trophy is not lost in one game, but the playoff MVP chances of Frederik Andersen and Carter Hart took a hit with equally shaky performances to start the Stanley Cup Final.

Andersen, seen as a Conn Smythe front-runner by many after three playoff rounds, gave up three goals on his first eight shots against in Game 1 and seemed to be fighting it, especially in the second period.

Andersen was also shaky in Game 1 of the Eastern Conference final with Montreal before completely shutting down the Canadiens the rest of that series.

It has been an emotional past week for the veteran goalie, dealing with the death of his longtime agent, Claude Lemieux.

Hart, meanwhile, gave up a goal on the opening shot of the Cup Final. But it’s Staal’s 3-3 goal 12:42 into the second period that Hart needed to have. It was a great shot by Staal from the top of the faceoff circle, but that’s a save all day long by top NHL goalies. And while it was probably distracting to see Nic Dowd fall to block the shot just as Shayne Gostisbehere shot it, the 4-4 goal that beat Hart short side wasn’t pretty, either.

Hart was dominant in the Western Conference final, very much outplaying his Avalanche goalie counterparts, and that was a major reason for the four-game sweep. But Tuesday night was not his finest. — LeBrun 

Eichel vs. Staal

The matchup between Vegas’ top line, centered by Jack Eichel, and Carolina’s shutdown line, centered by Staal, was expected to be one of the biggest factors of the Cup Final. Through one game, it didn’t disappoint. The lines saw plenty of each other on Tuesday night, with Staal’s line coming out on top in Round 1.

Vegas coach John Tortorella started the game with Eichel, Barbashev and Pavel Dorofeyev. Rod Brind’Amour countered for Carolina with Staal, Ehlers and Jordan Martinook, and they scored on the opening shift. The line struck again in the first period when Chatfield intercepted Eichel’s pass at the Carolina blue line and sprung Ehlers for another breakaway goal.

Eichel’s line punched back early in the second period, tying the game 2-2 with a goal by Barbashev. It was a great shift by Vegas’ No. 1 center. He stole the puck along the wall as Carolina attempted to break it out of the zone, then retrieved his own missed shot and fed a pass to Barbashev in the slot. Barbashev rang his shot off the post and in for his sixth goal of the playoffs.

Staal answered with a goal of his own midway through the second period to tie the game 3-3. It was a snipe of a shot over Hart’s blocker following a giveaway by Vegas high in the zone. The fingerprints of this matchup were all over Tuesday’s game, on both ends of the ice, and that’s likely to continue. — Granger

Canes’ top line blanked

As good as the Stankoven line has been with Taylor Hall and Jackson Blake all postseason, it’s been perplexing how Carolina’s top line really hasn’t broken out.

Jarvis entered the game tied as the team’s fifth-leading scorer and Andrei Svechnikov and Sebastian Aho tied for seventh.

“I’d love to have more production,” Brind’Amour said Tuesday morning. “We haven’t needed it yet – fortunately for us, but obviously the amount of minutes they play and the situations they play, we’re going to need them to be on the scoresheet.”

Well, the trio finished the game with no points and six combined shots. Jarvis also flubbed a shot at a wide-open net on a third-period power play and was robbed with 3:43 left by Hart’s quick glove. Nineteen seconds later, Hertl scored. — Russo 

McNabb’s big night

Tuesday night was the 1,005th NHL game of McNabb’s career, including the regular season and playoffs. It was his first with three assists.

McNabb has served as the defensive anchor in Vegas for nine seasons, but isn’t the most offensively inclined blueliner. The puck was following him in Game 1, and he made the most of it with assists on goals by Theodore, Barbashev and Howden.

The bruising defender had only two multi-assist playoff games in his 14-year career, and had only one three-point game of any kind (in the regular season against the Arizona Coyotes on April 9, 2022).

He became the seventh different defenseman in NHL history to record three points in Game 1 of a Stanley Cup Final, and the second in the past 33 years, alongside Rob Blake.— Granger

This story will be updated.

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