Thursday 29 November 2018

{coyotes} Hill gets 1st NHL shutout as Coyotes top Predators 3-0

 

NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) Coyotes captain Oliver Ekman-Larsson made sure Adin Hill took home a souvenir from his first NHL shutout.

Nick Schmaltz had a goal and an assist, Hill made 29 saves and Arizona beat the Nashville Predators 3-0 on Thursday night.

Clayton Keller and Brad Richardson scored the other goals in Arizona's second straight victory. Schmaltz's two points were his first since being acquired Sunday in a trade with the Chicago Blackhawks.

As the final horn sounded to end the game, the puck was deep in the Nashville zone. Ekman-Larsson skated the length of the ice to retrieve it for his rookie goaltender.

''You are putting a guy in that position and he wasn't nervous at all,'' Coyotes coach Rick Tocchet said of Hill. ''You're playing in a tough building, one of the best teams in the league and he did a nice job.''

Nashville has lost three of four.

''They were faster than us,'' coach Peter Laviolette said. ''They wanted it more. We didn't have enough guys with their hands on the rope pulling it our way. So that's what we got.''

Hill stopped nine shots in the first period, 14 in the second and six in the third.

''I thought of it a bit towards the end of the third,'' Hill said about the shutout. ''But I was trying to focus on the whole game just getting the win.''

Keller scored first at 1:40 of the second period.

Schmaltz carried the puck into the Nashville zone and skated around the left faceoff circle. Near the boards, he found Keller in the slot, where he beat Predators goalie Pekka Rinne with a wrist shot low to the stick side.

''We need to get skating again. We need to work hard for each other,'' Nashville defenseman Mattias Ekholm said. ''Right now it feels (so-so), but the sun will go up tomorrow.''

Schmaltz made it 2-0 with 20.9 seconds remaining in the second.

With the Coyotes on a power play, he beat Rinne with a wrist shot from just above the right faceoff dot off an assist from Ekman-Larsson.

''I just took my ice and tried to pull it and get it through,'' Schmaltz said. ''It was fortunate to go in there. It slipped through the six-hole, I think.''

Ekman-Larsson's six power-play points lead the Coyotes.

Richardson made it 3-0 at 11:23 of the third on a one-timer from the high slot.

Rinne finished with 22 saves.

NOTES: Ekman-Larsson played his 600th career game. ... Arizona is 6-3-1 in its last 10 against Nashville. ... The Predators are 11-4-1 when outshooting their opponent. ... Nashville was shut out for the second time this season.

UP NEXT

Coyotes: Host the St. Louis Blues on Saturday.

Predators: Host the Chicago Blackhawks on Saturday.

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{coyotes} Coyotes claim G Pickard off waivers

 
The Arizona Coyotes have claimed goaltender Calvin Pickard off of waivers from the Philadelphia Flyers.

Pickard was waived for the second time this year on Wednesday, having been claimed  by the Flyers off of waivers from the Toronto Maple Leafs prior to the start of the season.

The 26-year-old has a 4-2-2 record this season, with a 4.01 goals-against average and .863 save percentage in 11 games this with the Flyers.

The Coyotes were in need of a backup behind starter Antti Raanta after placing Darcy Kuemper on injured reserve on Tuesday.

Pickard had a 21-9-1 record in the AHL last season while playing with the Toronto Marlies and posted a .918 save percentage with a 2.31 GAA.

He started a career-high 50 games with the Colorado Avalanche in 2016-17 before being selected by the Vegas Golden Knights in their expansion draft. He was traded to the Maple Leafs last fall for a sixth-round draft pick.

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Wednesday 28 November 2018

{coyotes} Fry, new Coyotes adviser, aims to boost girls hockey in Arizona

 

Lyndsey Fry thought she was bound for a Wall Street-type job upon graduating from Harvard University.

But Fry, who had 108 points (50 goals, 58 assists) in four seasons with the Harvard women's hockey team, had an epiphany as she received her silver medal with the United States at the 2014 Sochi Olympics.

"I looked up at my family and started having these flashes of people who had made an impact on my life as a kid: coaches, teammates, parents of teammates, everyone who'd helped me get to that moment," said Fry, who grew up outside Phoenix in Chandler, Arizona, and graduated in 2015 with a bachelor's degree in history of science. "That's when I realized, that's what I want to do. After college, I was going to come home and see what I could do."

Fry was hired by the Arizona Coyotes as special adviser to president and CEO Ahron Cohen on Nov. 15. The 26-year-old will also be brand ambassador for the Coyotes. It's an opportunity for her to help reach more youth, especially girls, in the desert, where hockey continues to grow. Fry already had been working with the Coyotes with Small Frys, an ice hockey initiation program for girls ages 6-12.

Cohen said he got to know Fry over the summer and knew she'd be a good addition to help the Coyotes promote girls hockey in the area.

"First of all, she can make an immediate impact in terms of helping us bridge the gap and develop stronger relationships with people in the community, specifically in the hockey community," Cohen said. "But this is a long-term investment play for us. I want to look back five, 10 years from now and be really proud of the work we started putting in today, and even before when Lyndsey was involved with Small Frys, and look and go, 'Wow, we really made some significant strides and we're really proud of this.'

"It's pretty amazing when you think about it: You have Auston Matthews, [the] No. 1 (NHL) Draft pick (by the Toronto Maple Leafs in 2016), star NHL player. You have Lyndsey Fry, star player who leads the women's Olympic team, and they're coming out of Arizona. I mean, we want 10 more of those stories over the next 5-10 years, and we think we're in the right position to do that."

SOCHI, RUSSIA - FEBRUARY 10: Lyndsey Fry #18 of United States in action during the Women's Ice Hockey Preliminary Round Group A game against Switzerland on day three of the Sochi 2014 Winter Olympics at Shayba Arena on February 10, 2014 in Sochi, . (Photo by Bruce Bennett/Getty Images)

There were 8,617 players in Arizona during the 2017-18 season, according to USA Hockey. That included 757 girls and women, up from 580 in 2016-17.

"Right now, we're really seeing some explosive growth," Fry said. "I think a lot of it has to do with the Coyotes jumping headfirst into girls hockey. They're really supporting and funding it. We'll see some sustainable long-term programs thriving here for girls hockey."

The number of girls playing is especially pleasing to Fry, who played on boys teams until she was about 14.

"I played with my local house league, which at the time was very male-dominated," Fry said. "Back then it was me and a few girls scattered here and there. You see the rinks now, and the house leagues have five girls on every team, which is awesome."

There are seven ice rinks in the Phoenix area: AZ Ice in Arcadia, Gilbert and Peoria; Ice Den in Chandler and Scottsdale; and Oceanside Ice Arena and Gila River Arena, home of the Coyotes, in Glendale. There are also good women's hockey programs at Grand Canyon University and Arizona State.

Small Frys, which has an all-female staff, began in 2017. Her work with the program led to her getting a master's degree in business from Arizona State. "Marketing became a passion, finding ways to be cost effective," she said.

Fry said there were 60 girls in the program's last session, which ran from April to August, and 40 girls have already RSVP'd for next summer.

"We hear from parents, 'When my daughter was in Little Howlers (for kids ages 5-9), I didn't think she wanted to play. Now she doesn't want to leave the ice and loves being in the all-girl environment,'" Fry said. "All I knew as a kid was boys hockey, so it took a while to appreciate having an all-girls option. It provides them with a safe space. They feel more comfortable socially, so they're more comfortable trying their hockey skills."

Katie McGovern, a forward for Minnesota of the National Women's Hockey League and a Small Frys coach from Scottsdale, said of Fry, "She's done so much for the girls in our community already, and this is a big step for hockey overall in Arizona and in the West. She does a lot of clinics and camps everywhere. This will really help grow hockey on our side of the country."

Fry hopes to help keep that going in the Phoenix metropolitan area, which has about 4.7 million people.

"We have a huge population in the Phoenix area," Fry said. "We're just barely scratching the surface of the girls' population. It's just building the awareness, having people like me and our college players being ambassadors and helping girls realize, you can play hockey too."

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Tuesday 27 November 2018

{coyotes} Archibald scores twice, Coyotes rally past Wild 4-3

 

ST. PAUL, Minn. (AP) The Arizona Coyotes struggled to do almost anything right for two periods Tuesday. Early in the third period, they could do no wrong.

Josh Archibald had two goals and an assist, and the Coyotes rallied from a two-goal, third-period deficit to defeat the Wild 4-3.

Minnesota led 3-1 after two periods and appeared to have the game in hand after a dominant second period. The Coyotes didn't register a shot on goal in the first 17 minutes of the second.

But Arizona broke loose with a three-goal flurry in the first 8:39 of the third to pull ahead and held on for the win.

''The overall mood was good,'' defenseman Alex Goligoski said of the Coyotes locker room during the second intermission. ''No one was really going crazy, banging sticks or anything. It was just like, `Alright, that one's over. Let's get one here early and see what happens.'''

And that's exactly what happened, as Archibald scored his first goal of the season to pull the Coyotes to within one 3:07 into the third. Lawson Crouse, who scored Arizona's first goal, picked up a turnover in the Minnesota zone and fed Archibald, who beat Devyn Dubnyk with a wrist shot from the high slot.

Minnesota challenged the goal, alleging that Archibald was offside, but video replay confirmed the call on the ice.

The Coyotes then scored twice in less than two minutes to take the lead. Michael Grabner tied it when he took a pass from Brad Richardson, who had set up behind the net, and shot past Dubnyk.

Goligoski set up the go-ahead goal when he fired a pass from behind his own net to the Minnesota blue line, where Archibald split two defensemen, took the pass in stride and beat a diving Dubnyk for his second goal of the game and a 4-3 lead for the Coyotes.

''(Goligoski) saw me coming right off the bench and made a great pass,'' Archibald said. ''I saw that (Dubnyk) was coming out to poke check and snap the pads on me. The puck rolled on me a little bit, kind of helped me in a way, and I was just able to chip it over him and in the net.''

Charlie Coyle, Zach Parise and Jason Zucker scored as the Wild took command through two periods. Jared Spurgeon assisted on all three goals, matching his career high for assists in a game.

But for the third time in 10 days, the Wild suffered a third-period collapse at home. On Nov. 17, they led Buffalo 2-1 in the third period and lost 3-2. Four days later they entered the third period leading Ottawa 4-1. The Senators rallied to tie the game before Minnesota scored the last two in a 6-4 win.

For a team fighting for position in the tough Central Division, it's a trend that Wild players know they need to reverse.

''We've got to mature as a group. It's the same stuff that's happening,'' Spurgeon said. ''We've got to fix it now or we're not going to go anywhere.''

Dubnyk, who missed Minnesota's last game with a stomach bug, stopped 10 of 14 shots.

''It's a strange little three-game stretch here,'' said Dubnyk, who was in the nets for all three recent third-period collapses. ''But the worst thing you can do is let it affect the things that have been going well here.''

Antti Raanta stopped 17 of 20 shots before leaving with a lower-body injury after two periods. Rookie Adin Hill stopped all five Minnesota shots in the third period to help the Coyotes snap a four-game losing streak.

''It was unbelievable actually how the team rallied together there,'' Hill said. ''We played with some desperation and found a way to put the puck in the net and get the job done tonight.''

NOTES: F Nick Schmaltz made his debut with the Coyotes on Wednesday. Schmaltz was acquired from the Chicago Blackhawks in a trade for forwards Brendan Perlini and Dylan Strome. ... The Coyotes won for the first time (1-10-1) when trailing after two periods. ... Minnesota is now 6-2-1 when leading after two. ... Dumba has a point in seven straight games, tying the franchise record scoring streak for a defenseman.

UP NEXT

Coyotes: At Nashville on Thursday night.

Wild: At Columbus on Thursday.

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{coyotes} NHLPA My Top 5 | Vinnie Hinostroza

 

Although he won't take top prize in an Iron Chef competition, the 24-year-old forward definitely knows his way around a kitchen.

What's cooking with Arizona's Vinnie Hinostroza? Although he won't take top prize in an Iron Chef competition, the 24-year-old forward definitely knows his way around a kitchen.

When it comes to serving up ideas for all three daily meals, Hinostroza definitely has some food for thought for what he likes to create and share with others.

As for his one dessert weakness, the Chicago native has the scoop for NHLPA.com

What's cooking


1. Egg-cellent start to the day

"I really do believe breakfast is the most important meal of the day, so I like to experiment in making eggs in different ways, then adding different types of potatoes and veggies on the side. I usually just make two eggs scrambled, one over easy, with some sweet potatoes and peppers."

2. Toast with the most

"It's pretty simple, but I like making avocado toast with a couple eggs on top of that. I prefer the eggs over easy. I'll have that sometimes for breakfast and I enjoy it."

3. Salad days

"I cook more in the summer, but a big go-to for me when it comes to lunch is a big salad that's full of different kinds of veggies. I'll have chicken to go along with it. I make the dressing, which is a mix of olive oil and balsamic vinegar."   

4. Stirring it up

"Another dish I really enjoy having for lunch is a stir fry. I like to get a lot of vegetables in there and then have some salmon on top. Other times, I'll have ground turkey or chicken instead of salmon. I cut up a lot of peppers and some asparagus, onions, fried up, and add either the fish or meat, then throw that all together. It's pretty good."

5. Dinner time!

"I've been making this spaghetti squash a lot and I love it. It's pretty easy… you just throw it in the oven and it's pretty cool how it turns into pasta like that. I make this – I don't know if it's healthy, but it's healthier than the usual one – chicken parmigiana and slightly bread it. I sauté it a few seconds and throw it in the oven. I enjoy cooking for my girlfriend and for my sister, who has been down here visiting a lot. They're both good cooks." 

Just Desserts

"Pretty much every night I'll have some ice cream. I'll either have that by itself or I'll have a little chocolate brownie, but with ice cream on top."

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Monday 26 November 2018

{coyotes} Nov. 27: Howe reaches three milestones

 

THIS DATE IN HISTORY: Nov. 27

Gordie Howe reaches three major milestones on the same day during a span of nine years.

1960: Howe becomes the first player in NHL history to have 1,000 points when he assists on a first-period goal by Howie Glover in the Detroit Red Wings' 2-0 victory against the Toronto Maple Leafs at Olympia Stadium. Howe's 1,000th point comes in his 938th NHL game.

 

1965: Howe scores his 600th NHL goal during Detroit's 3-2 loss to the Montreal Canadiens. He is the first player in League history to score 600 goals.

 

1969: To complete his personal hat trick of milestones on this date, Howe has two assists in a 5-1 victory against the Los Angeles Kings to become the first NHL player with 1,700 points. He gets point No. 1,700 in his 1,567th regular-season game.

 

MORE MOMENTS

1941: The Boston Bruins tie an NHL record by scoring four goals in the 10-minute overtime period to defeat the Brooklyn Americans 6-2 at Madison Square Garden. Overtime is a mandatory 10-minute period before being discontinued in November 1942. When the NHL reinstitutes OT in 1983, the format is changed to a five-minute sudden-death period.

 

1946: Assistant coach Dit Clapper comes out of retirement to help the Bruins on defense, replacing the injured Jack Crawford. He gets a standing ovation from 14,000 fans at Boston Garden. The inspired Bruins defeat the New York Rangers 5-2.

Dit Clapper

 

1974: The Canadiens begin an NHL-record 23-game road undefeated streak (14-0-9) with a 3-2 win against the Pittsburgh Penguins at Civic Arena. Jacques Lemaire scores the winning goal at 11:54 of the third period.

 

1991: The Penguins hold a 10-minute candlelight ceremony in honor of coach Bob Johnson, who died one day earlier, prior to their game against the New Jersey Devils at Civic Arena. Pittsburgh then rolls to an 8-4 victory, giving Scotty Bowman, who has stepped in after Johnson becomes ill, his 750th NHL win.

Bob Johnson

 

2007: Mats Sundin becomes the first player to score 400 goals as a member of the Maple Leafs. The milestone comes in a 4-3 shootout loss to Montreal at Air Canada Centre. Sundin's 400th goal comes with 17.6 seconds remaining in the third period. Sundin scores 420 of his 564 NHL goals with Toronto, and he is inducted into the Hockey Hall of Fame in 2012.

 

2015: Dave Tippett gets his 500th win as an NHL coach when the Arizona Coyotes defeat the Calgary Flames 2-1 at Gila River Arena. Oliver Ekman-Larsson's goal with 39.9 seconds left in overtime makes Tippett the 22nd coach in League history with 500 victories.

GLENDALE, AZ - DECEMBER 29: Head coach Dave Tippett, Martin Hanzal #11 and Jordan Martinook #48 of the Arizona Coyotes looks on from the bench against the New York Rangers at Gila River Arena on December 29, 2016 in Glendale, Arizona. (Photo by Norm Hall/NHLI via Getty Images)

 

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{coyotes} Schmaltz could fill Coyotes need for go-to scorer

 

GLENDALE, Ariz. -- The Arizona Coyotes believe they found the impact scorer they were missing when they acquired Nick Schmaltz in a trade with the Chicago Blackhawks on Sunday.

The Coyotes have scored 52 goals, second-fewest in the NHL after the Los Angeles Kings (50), and have scored two goals or fewer in seven of their past eight games.

General manager John Chayka believes Schmaltz can be a major upgrade to the offense, and traded forwards Brendan Perlini and Dylan Strome to the Blackhawks to get him.

"(A trade) can spark some good chemistry, ignite some guys, and it can send a message too," forward Derek Stepan said following practice Monday. "It's not good enough around here and we've got to make sure we all pick up our games because no one is safe.

"He (Chayka) saw an opportunity to get us better up front and that's what he did."

The Coyotes have lost eight of 10 (2-6-2) following a five-game winning streak but are within five points of the third-place Vegas Golden Knights in the Pacific Division and six points behind the Dallas Stars for the second wild card into the Stanley Cup Playoffs from the Western Conference.

Chayka believes the season has come to a point where the window to climb the standings is closing.

"Sometimes when you make a trade at certain points of the season, for whatever reason … it kind of wakes up a lot of guys," coach Rick Tocchet said. "I'm not saying we have a lot of guys like that, but (there can be a sense) of entitlement, a ho-hum type of thing. You always want a tweak and sometimes it can help both dressing rooms."

Schmaltz, 22, had 11 points (two goals, nine assists) in 23 games with the Blackhawks after he had 52 points (21 goals, 31 assists) in 78 games last season.

"I think he's waiting to break out," said forward Vinnie Hinostroza, a teammate with the Blackhawks the previous two seasons. "He's had a few good years, and coming here, it's like leaving home a little bit and getting a fresh start. I think he's really going to thrive here, getting away from Chicago and the big city and getting down here. I think his skills are going to come up and show."

Schmaltz didn't make it to Arizona in time for practice Monday. He has said he prefers to play center but Tocchet hasn't decided where he'll fit in.

"We're struggling in certain areas of our game … he's got a lot of speed and can make a lot of plays," Tocchet said. "When you're struggling to score, you look for those kind of guys, a game-breaker, a guy who can make a play. Those guys are hard to find."

Arizona starts a two-game road trip against the Minnesota Wild at Xcel Energy Center on Tuesday (8 p.m. ET; FS-N, FS-A PLUS, NHL.TV). It's the first of a stretch of seven of 10 away from home.

"This is a great test for us," Stepan said. "We've got a difficult road trip coming up and what an opportunity to go into some really tough buildings and get our game back."

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Sunday 25 November 2018

{coyotes} Blackhawks trade Schmaltz to Coyotes for Strome, Perlini

 

The Arizona Coyotes traded forwards Dylan Strome and Brendan Perlini to the Chicago Blackhawks for forward Nick Schmaltz on Sunday.

Schmaltz, 22, had 11 points (two goals, nine assists) in 23 games for the Blackhawks this season. Selected in the first round (No. 20) in the 2014 NHL Draft, he had 91 points (29 goals, 62 assists) in 162 games with Chicago.

"Nick is a dynamic forward with top line potential," Coyotes general manager John Chayka told the Coyotes website. "We feel he can be a core player of our team now and into the future. He's a good complement to our evolving forward group and a rare combination of speed, skill and creativity."

Strome, who was selected by the Coyotes with the No. 3 pick in the 2015 NHL Draft, had six points (three goals, three assists) in 20 games this season. The 21-year-old has 16 points (seven goals, nine assists) in 48 NHL games, all with Arizona.

Perlini, 22, had six points (two goals, four assists) in 22 games with the Coyotes this season. A first-round pick (No. 12) in the 2014 draft by Arizona, he has 33 goals and 24 assists in 153 NHL games.

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{coyotes} MacKinnon, McDavid, Ovechkin among team MVPs in first quarter

 

There is only one Hart Trophy. It's awarded to the most valuable player in the NHL. But every team has its own MVP, and that's what this exercise covers as we speed into the second quarter of the 2018-19 NHL season.

Here's a look at all 31 teams (in alphabetical order) and the one player who should be considered its MVP:

 

Anaheim Ducks: John Gibson

Gibson's goaltending has kept his team afloat despite Anaheim's rash of injuries and inconsistent offensive play. He has a 2.49 goals-against average and .928 save percentage in 19 appearances, all starts.

 

Arizona Coyotes: Oliver Ekman-Larsson

Ekman-Larsson, the Coyotes captain and top defenseman, is second on the team with 12 points (two goals, 10 assists), all in the past 16 games. He averages the most ice time of anybody on the team by more than three minutes (23:49) and continues to have the biggest impact of any skater in all situations.

 

Boston Bruins: David Pastrnak

Pastrnak is tied third in the NHL in goals with 17. He also has nine assists to give him 26 points, tied for a team-high with injured center and linemate Patrice Bergeron. He is also second in the League in power play-goals (eight), one behind Patrik Laine of the Winnipeg Jets.

 

Buffalo Sabres: Jeff Skinner

The left wing gets the nod over center Jack Eichel because of his goal production. Skinner has 18 goals, one behind Laine for the NHL lead. He has scored at least one goal in 12 of Buffalo's past 17 games, with two or more in four games. He's a big reason the Sabres have won nine in a row.

 

Calgary Flames: Mark Giordano

Giordano, who was third in NHL.com 's voting for the Norris Trophy at the quarter mark, stands out ahead of forwards Sean Monahan, Johnny Gaudreau, Elias Lindholm and Matthew Tkachuk because of his production and his minutes played. Giordano is tied for fifth in the League among defensemen with 20 points (two goals, 18 assists), putting him fifth overall on the Flames behind Tkachuk (27), Gaudreau (26), Monahan (25) and Lindholm (23). Giordano leads the Flames in ice time per game (24:20) and is tied with Monahan for second in shots on goal (67).

 

Carolina Hurricanes: Sebastian Aho

The 21-year-old forward leads the Hurricanes with 25 points (seven goals, 18 assists), including 17 (four goals, 13 assists) during a 12-game point streak in October. He joined Wayne Gretzky and Ken Linseman as the only players in NHL history to have an assist in each of his team's first 12 games.

 

Chicago Blackhawks: Patrick Kane

At age 30, Kane leads the Blackhawks with 27 points (13 goals, 14 assists). The speedy right wing has points in 17 of the 23 games he's played, including two game-winning goals, one in overtime.

 

Colorado Avalanche: Nathan MacKinnon

Tough call between MacKinnon, Colorado's top center, who is second in the NHL in scoring with 35 points (15 goals, 20 assists), and Mikko Rantanen, his right wing, who leads the League with 38 points (10 goals, 28 assists). MacKinnon gets the ever-so slight edge because of his goal production, ability to get shots off and how he drives Colorado's top line with his speed. He leads the Avalanche goals and shots on goal (99, tied for second in the NHL).

 

Columbus Blue Jackets: Cam Atkinson

Atkinson has gotten hot of late, putting the 29-year-old forward on track to equal or better his career-high of 35 goals from two seasons ago. He has nine goals during a seven-game goal scoring streak, giving him 15 goals in 24 games this season. Columbus is 8-2-1 when he scores and 5-6-1 when he doesn't.

 

Dallas Stars: Alexander Radulov

Radulov has missed 10 games because of injury, but when he's been in the lineup he has been the Stars' most effective player, with 18 points (eight goals, 10 assists) in 13 games. His presence, especially on the forecheck, makes linemates Tyler Seguin and Jamie Benn even more dangerous. Seguin and Benn have combined for 29 points (10 goals, 19 assists) in the 13 games Radulov has played, 11 points (five goals, six assists) in the 10 games he missed.

 

Detroit Red Wings: Dylan Larkin

The Red Wings are 28th in the NHL in scoring (2.65 goals per game), but Larkin is still a near point-per-game player with 20 points (nine goals, 11 assists) in 23 games. The 22-year-old center is playing in all situations and he's generated offense in all situations, including two shorthanded goals. He also has scored two overtime goals.

 

Edmonton Oilers: Connor McDavid

McDavid, the Oilers' captain and NHL.com's choice for the Hart Trophy at the quarter mark, is third in the League with 32 points (13 goals, 19 assists). He has points in 19 of Edmonton's 22 games, including at least two points in nine games. Edmonton is 0-3-0 with three goals when McDavid has been shut out. He's had a hand in 51.6 percent of Edmonton's goals (32 of 62), the highest percentage of any player in the NHL.

 

Florida Panthers: Aleksander Barkov

Barkov, who has 18 points (seven goals, 11 assists), isn't the Panthers' leading scorer, but he's arguably the biggest reason that his wingers, Mike Hoffman (22 points) and Evgenii Dadonov (20 points), are Florida's top scorers with a combined 20 goals. Barkov drives the Panthers' top line with his three-zone play, especially with his ability to force turnovers (he leads the NHL with 40 takeaways) and win face-offs (54.1 percent). He also leads all NHL forwards in ice time per game (22:39).

 

Los Angeles Kings: Jack Campbell

The Kings have struggled, but Campbell was solid in filling the void left by a knee injury to starting goalie Jonathan Quick before he too sustained a knee injury that required surgery earlier this month. Campbell was 5-7-0 with a 2.33 GAA and .923 save percentage in 13 appearances (12 starts) from Oct. 7-Nov. 10. Three of his seven losses came in games when he allowed two or fewer goals.

 

Minnesota Wild: Mikael Granlund

The 26-year-old forward is having an impact in all areas. Granlund leads the Wild with 23 points (10 goals, 13 assists) in 23 games. He has seven points on the power play (one goal, six assists) and two shorthanded goals. He also has three game-winning goals, including one in overtime. The Wild are 13-3-1 when he gets a point and 1-4-1 when he doesn't.

 

Montreal Canadiens: Max Domi

Domi, has 11 goals in 23 games, two more than the 23-year-old forward scored in 82 games with Arizona last season. He had points in 11 straight games from Nov. 1-21, the longest point streak of any Canadiens player since Pierre Turgeon's 11-game streak from April 5-29, 1995.

Nashville Predators: Ryan Johansen

Johansen leads the Predators in assists (17) and points (21) through 23 games. He's a big reason why Filip Forsberg, Viktor Arvidsson and Craig Smith, his primary linemates this season (Smith has replaced an injured Arvidsson on the top line) have combined for 27 goals. Johansen also has the best possession numbers on the team among players who have played a full season (56.59 SAT percentage), largely because he has won 55.4 percent of his face-offs (271 of 489).

 

New Jersey Devils: Kyle Palmieri

Palmieri has been a bright spot in what has otherwise been a trying season so far for the Devils. The 27-year-old forward has a team-leading 12 goals, including five on the power play, and his 21 points are second on the Devils behind Taylor Hall (23). A lot of his production came in October, when he had 14 points (nine goals, five assists) and the Devils were 5-3-1. They've struggled in November, going 4-6-2. Palmieri has seven points (three goals, four assists) this month.

 

New York Islanders: Thomas Greiss

Greiss has taken over as the Islanders' No. 1 goalie ahead of Robin Lehner. He is 8-3-1 with a 2.40 goals-against and .928 save percentage with one shutout in 14 appearances (12 starts). Greiss is 5-0-1 with a .945 save percentage when facing 35 or more shots in a start.

 

New York Rangers: Henrik Lundqvist

Lundqvist looks more like the Lundqvist of three seasons ago than the previous two with his 8-7-2 record, .920 save percentage and 2.63 goals-against average. The 36-year-old has also bought into everything coach David Quinn is asking of his players, specifically the veterans. The Rangers have exceeded expectations and are in the Stanley Cup Playoff race largely because of Lundqvist.

Ottawa Senators: Mark Stone

Stone is trying to do it all for the Senators. He has 24 points (nine goals, 15 assists). On a team that has struggled to defend -- Ottawa is last in the League in goals-against per game (4.35) and shots against per game (38.6) -- Stone is the only Senators forward who has played at least 13 games and has been on the ice for more shot attempts than against (53.49 shot-attempts percentage). His plus-7 rating is second on the team and tops among forwards.

 

Philadelphia Flyers: Claude Giroux

Giroux, Philadelphia's first-line left wing, leads the Flyers with 28 points (eight goals, 20 assists), 10 more than anybody else on the team. The Flyers are 10-4-1 when their captain gets a point, 0-7-1 when he doesn't.

 

Pittsburgh Penguins: Evgeni Malkin

Malkin leads the Penguins and is tied for fourth in the NHL with 30 points (nine goals, 21 assists). He had 20 points (seven goals, 13 assists) in 11 games, including four three-point games, through Nov. 1 before hitting a lull for four games. The 32-year-old center has responded with points in seven consecutive games (two goals, eight assists).

 

San Jose Sharks: Timo Meier

The 22-year-old has come a long way and has arguably been San Jose's most consistent forward this season. He has 22 points (13 goals, nine assists) in 24 games. Meier is tied for the Sharks lead in goals with Joe Pavelski and with Logan Couture for the most points among forwards; defenseman Brent Burns leads the Sharks with 24 points (three goals, 21 assists). Meier, who had 36 points (21 goals, 15 assists) in 81 games last season, had 11 goals in the first 14 games.

 

St. Louis Blues: Ryan O'Reilly

O'Reilly leads St. Louis in goals (12), assists (14) and points (26). He's also one of the NHL's best on face-offs as well. The 27-year-old center, acquired from the Sabres in a trade on July 1, is sixth in the League in face-offs taken (487) and first in winning percentage (60.4 percent) among the 48 players who have taken at least 300.

 

Tampa Bay Lightning: Brayden Point

The third-year center leads the Lightning in goals (15) and power-play goals (six), and he has two game-winning goals. Point is second on the Lightning in points with 28, two behind Nikita Kucherov. He's plus-10, best among Lightning forwards. He plays 3:00 per game on the power play. The only thing he isn't doing is regularly killing penalties, which he did last season.

 

Toronto Maple Leafs: Morgan Rielly

Rielly, NHL.com's pick as the favorite to win the Norris Trophy, is second among all NHL defenseman and tied for second on the Maple Leafs with 27 points (nine goals, 18 assists). Rielly is already halfway to his point total from last season (52) in 24 games. He has scored two of Toronto's three overtime goals and leads the Maple Leafs with 10 points on the power play (one goal, nine assists).

 

Vancouver Canucks: Elias Pettersson

Pettersson, who leads all rookies in goals (13) and points (21), is NHL.com's pick as the favorite for the Calder Trophy this season. He was a unanimous selection among the 17 people who participated in the voting. Pettersson has slowed down after a torrid start that featured 10 goals and a five-point game in his first 10 games. He had two points, both goals, during Vancouver's eight-game losing streak (0-7-1) before contributing a goal and an assist in a streak-ending 4-2 win at the Los Angeles Kings on Saturday.

 

Vegas Golden Knights: Jonathan Marchessault

Marchessault, who centers the first line, has been the Golden Knights' most consistent player in what has been an inconsistent season. He leads the Golden Knights in goals (10), points (20) and shots on goal (99), and he's tied for the team lead in power-play goals (three) and points (seven), as well as game-winning goals (two).

 

Washington Capitals: Alex Ovechkin

Ovechkin has been dynamic all over the ice, leading the Capitals again in scoring with 17 goals and 27 points while backchecking and forechecking like crazy to provide energy and create turnovers. Ovechkin already has five multigoal games. The Capitals are 10-1-1 when he scores a goal.

 

Winnipeg Jets: Blake Wheeler

Even though he hasn't been scoring as many goals as he'd probably like, Wheeler has been the most consistent player on a team that is loaded with talent. The evidence comes in the form of his 11-game point streak from Oct. 18-Nov. 14, when he had 20 points, including 18 assists. Winnipeg's captain and top-line right wing has 27 points (four goals, 23 assists) to lead the Jets. He has 14 assists on the power play.

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Read More :- "{coyotes} MacKinnon, McDavid, Ovechkin among team MVPs in first quarter"

{coyotes} Hanifin, Jankowski lead Flames to 6-1 romp over Arizona

 

GLENDALE, Ariz. (AP) Calgary coach Bill Peters took one on the chin Sunday, and so did the team his Flames dominated, the Arizona Coyotes.

Noah Hanifin and Mark Jankowski each scored twice, former Coyotes goalie Mike Smith just missed his 38th career shutout and the Flames routed Arizona 6-1.

Smith, making his first start in five games, made 28 saves in his first win since Nov. 1.

Peters wasn't around to watch about 10 minutes of the game after he was hit in the left jaw with a puck while standing in his customary spot in the bench area early in the second period. He needed eight stitches and returned late in the period.

''I think it's going to hurt more tomorrow, right?'' Peters said after the game, the nasty cut and stitches clearly visible. ''One of those things. There's not a lot of room up there, you've got to be paying attention. ... They did a good job, got me stitched up and back to work. ... Hopefully, it's the last time, but I doubt it.''

The Flames have won four of five but were coming off a loss to Las Vegas. Peters liked what he saw.

''We've got a good group. We like our team,'' he said. ''When we have time to practice and work on things typically we get better. This sets up real well. We've played every other day for a long time now. Now we get a day off and then we get another practice and we've got two at home.''

Calgary led 6-0 before Clayton Keller scored for Arizona with 6:16 remaining.

Three of the Flames' goals were short-handed.

''If you have a chance to make something happen, do it,'' Hanifin said. ''They want us to make plays. A team like Arizona, they have a ton of short-handed goals this year. It just shows that if the opportunity is there, take it.''

The Coyotes have allowed five shorted-handed goals in their last two games.

''The power play is horrendous,'' Arizona coach Rick Tocchet said. ''It really cost us. The effort on the power play is not there. The 5-on-5 we're fine at, but it's just we lose juice during the power play. ... A lot of our best players are on the power play and they have to stick with the program and right now they're not, and that falls on me.''

Sean Monahan and T.J. Brodie also scored for Calgary. The Flames rebounded from a loss at Las Vegas on Friday night and have won four of five. Arizona has lost four in a row, counting in overtime loss, and has been outscored 11-2 in the two games since goalie Antti Raanta returned after missing eight games with a lower-body injury. The Coyotes finished the home stand 1-3-1.

''We have to regroup here and especially not feel sorry for ourselves,'' Coyotes defenseman Niklas Hjalmarsson said. ''That's the last thing you can do in this league. You just have to work harder, that's it, just work had and support each other and come to the rink with a positive attitude.''

About the only thing that did go wrong for Calgary was Elias Lindholm's failed penalty shot attempt, the puck knocked away by Raanta.

Hanifon's first goal came on a power play and his second was short-handed. The Flames' two other short-handed goals, by Brodie and Jankowski, came in a 24-second span in the third period.

''That was crazy. It's fresh to me,'' Hanifin said. ''I have never seen that.''

NOTES: With an assist on Hanifin's second goal, James Neal earned his 500th career point. ''A big number,'' Peters said. ... Smith has one shutout this season. ... Coyotes defenseman Oliver Ekman-Larson remains two assists shy of 200 for his career. ... Smith played six seasons for the Coyotes before being traded to the Flames on June 17, 2017. ... With an assist on Calgary's first goal, Mark Giordano earned his 200th career point for the Flames, 12th-most in franchise history. He needs one point to reach 400 for his career. ... The Coyotes entered the game at 29th in the NHL in goals per game. ... Keller's goal was his sixth of the season.

UP NEXT

Flames: Host Dallas on Wednesday night.

Coyotes: At Minnesota on Tuesday night.

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Read More :- "{coyotes} Hanifin, Jankowski lead Flames to 6-1 romp over Arizona"

Re: [cactuswings 4018] Storage & Other News

At KGYR VTS9200 was N964CE. Besides the Aruba arrival there also was A319 OE-IHC arriving from Bangor in basic Shaheen colors and National Cargo N176CA arrived from Tacoma, all on the 19th. On the 18th Project Orbis N330AU arrived from KCLT.

Steve

On Nov 25, 2018, at 8:50 AM, Dave Richardson <daveuk@cox.net> wrote:

Latest movers

Victorville – KVCV

HAL9980       A330         arr Nov 23 from Honolulu for painting = N382HA

BOE911         B738         arr Nov 23 from Boeing Field for painting = N910DU

ASA9514       A320         arr Nov 18 from San Francisco for painting = N848VA

BOE769         B738         arr Nov 17 from Boeing Field for painting = VP-BQG

QXE9986       DH8D       arr Nov 16 for painting

BOE493         B38M        dep Nov 23 to Boeing Field = B-207H

ASA9511       A320         dep Nov 18 to San Francisco after painting = N640VA

N848AU         B734         dep Nov 17 to Rockford RFD

BOE690         B38M        dep Nov 17 to Boeing Field = B-205N

N621SW        B733         dep Nov 16 to Portsmouth PSM via San Bernardino

N633VA         A320         dep Nov 16 to San Francisco after painting

N747GE         B741         dep Nov 15 to Davis Monthan AFB

Marana – KMZJ

HCCMO         A319         arr Nov 23 from Guyaquil

CPZ9880       E75L         dep Nov 17 to Los Angeles = N216NN

Kingman – KIGM

N577RP         E145         dep Nov 19 to Bangor via St. Louis

Goodyear – KGYR

ARU200         A319         arr Nov 19 from Miami = P4-AAE

VTS9200       MD83       arr Nov 17 from Queretaro via Laredo

Roswell – KROW

N354AA         B763         dep Nov 16 to Wilmington ILN

Cecil Field – KVQQ/KNZC

DHK20           B752         dep Nov 18 to East Midlands = G-DHKU

DHK20Z        B752         made local test flight Nov 17  = G-DHKU

other bits

Mobile Downtown – KBFM

HAL9981       A21N        dep Nov 21 to Paine Field = N217HA delivery flight

Dothan – KDHN

N598CB         B738         dep Nov 16 to Miami

San Bernardino – KSBD

DAL9932       B712         arr Nov 23 from Minneapolis = N975AT

DAL9931       MD88       arr Nov 21 from Atlanta = N935DL

DAL9931       MD88       arr Nov 18 from Atlanta = N945DL

Bangor – KBGR

DHX901         B762         arr Nov 21 from Leipzig, dep Nov 22 to Wilmington ILN = A9C-DHQ

N393AG         B737         arr Nov 20 from Stansted & dep to Tampa

OEIHC           A319         arr Nov 18 from Glasgow via Keflavik & dep Nov 19 to Goodyear

N320NV         A320         arr Nov 17 from Stansted & dep to Aguadila

Goose Bay – CYYR

TUI824           B738         arr Nov 24 from Hannover, dep Nov 25 to Miami = D-ATUK

Any help with missing registrations is appreciated.

Those not on FlightAware I have tried to trace using FR24, also thanks to Chris Witt/Skyliner.

All the best,

Dave.



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Read More :- "Re: [cactuswings 4018] Storage & Other News"