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Blues fan survey: Contracts for Holloway, Broberg? Trade Kyrou? Sign Marner? Offseason priorities?
Blues fan survey: Contracts for Holloway, Broberg? Trade Kyrou? Sign Marner? Offseason priorities?

New York Times

time4 days ago

  • Sport
  • New York Times

Blues fan survey: Contracts for Holloway, Broberg? Trade Kyrou? Sign Marner? Offseason priorities?

Now that I've given out report cards for the St. Louis Blues' players, coaches and management, and answered your questions in Part 1 and Part 2 of an early-offseason mailbag, it's your turn to weigh in on the team. Every offseason, The Athletic offers Blues fans an opportunity to take a survey, answering pertinent questions about their overall opinion of the team and what moves it should make in the summer. Advertisement As usual, there are some juicy topics this offseason, including how much the Blues should pay to re-sign Dylan Holloway and Philip Broberg and whether they should explore the idea of trading Jordan Kyrou. Of course, there's always a question or two about confidence levels in coaching, management and ownership. Here's your chance to make your voice heard with our 20-question survey. (Note: If you have any problems loading or filling out the survey below, you can access it directly by clicking here. Loading… (Top photo of Robert Thomas, Cam Fowler, Jordan Kyrou and Dylan Holloway: Jeff Le / Imagn Images)

Winnipeg Jets' Game 7 comeback win makes NHL history — and reminds us of their resilience
Winnipeg Jets' Game 7 comeback win makes NHL history — and reminds us of their resilience

New York Times

time05-05-2025

  • Sport
  • New York Times

Winnipeg Jets' Game 7 comeback win makes NHL history — and reminds us of their resilience

WINNIPEG — Heading into Game 7, the Winnipeg Jets faced many questions about the value of their season. What could 82 games spent setting records, winning the Presidents' Trophy and achieving myriad personal milestones mean if the Jets still couldn't make it out of the first round? Could an entire year really mean nothing if Game 7 slipped away? Advertisement What a hollow feeling that would have been. What an empty emotion, going from the roar of Canada Life Centre — the thousands of fans gasping at every shot attempt, cheering every hit, and collectively exhaling every time the puck left a St. Louis Blues player's stick and landed somewhere safe — to nothingness. To the silence and doubts. To all those nagging questions that never seemed to go away. The Jets showed their value in the dying seconds of Game 7. With a 4-3 double overtime win over the Blues, they gave meaning to an entire season's effort. They spent the year telling us, showing us and telling us again that they were a more resilient group — that they had built their scar tissue, learned their lessons and proven to each other that they'd be there in the biggest moments. It was a season set to be defined by its playoffs from the moment the puck dropped, but the Jets told us — ad nauseum — that they would focus only on the present moment, whether it was the next practice, the next shift or the next play. Winnipeg put together the worst possible start to Game 7. Jordan Kyrou torched through the neutral zone, broke through poor Jets coverage, and scored on St. Louis' first shot of the game. Six minutes and six seconds later, Mathieu Joseph made it 2-0 on the Blues' fourth shot, heaping more doubt upon Connor Hellebuyck's playoff reputation. Josh Morrissey had already been hurt once in the game on an Oskar Sundqvist hit, but was injured trying to hit Joseph before his 2-0 goal. It was the last action of Morrissey's series. The Jets were down to five defencemen just seven minutes in. But it was only the beginning of an all-time classic Game 7. Every second still left on the clock is another moment to turn a game, a series, or even the narrative about a franchise around. The story of a team is defined by a series of moments — little actions chained together over time, such that they add up into something more. Vladislav Namestnikov had missed two Grade-A chances in the second period as the Jets pushed to turn Game 7 into a competition. He'd only scored 11 goals all season, but kept pushing. With two minutes left in the third period, Alex Iafallo, Adam Lowry and Nino Niederreiter battled to recover Namestnikov's missed shot. Dylan Samberg kept Brayden Schenn's clearing attempt in at the line. And Namestnikov changed his story — and his team's — when he fired a cross-ice pass that bounced off of Ryan Suter and past Binnington. Advertisement It gave Cole Perfetti's goal the chance to make history. The Jets didn't even dress Perfetti in four out of five playoff games last year, but on Sunday, he willed them to overtime with almost no time left on the clock. Consider how many tiny, individual actions work in concert to create a massive moment that every Jets fan will remember. Namestnikov's goal made it 3-2 with 1:56 left, the clock ticking and the Jets' season slipping away. Gabriel Vilardi won the ensuing faceoff, but it took the Jets almost a minute to get back into the Blues' zone. That's when Vilardi boxed out Cam Fowler, Nikolaj Ehlers spun a pass to Perfetti in front, and Perfetti kept fighting for a goal with second- and third-effort pushes on Binnington's pad. He came so close that the NHL initiated a lengthy video review, giving Winnipeg a chance to rest its big guns in a final push to save its season. The Blues won the next two faceoffs, but Pavel Buchnevich missed Winnipeg's empty net from 150 feet away. Still, the Jets pushed, recovering a puck and dumping it in with 25 seconds left in the game. Justin Faulk got the puck first, but Kyle Connor knocked down his attempt to clear it. Colton Parayko tried to rim the puck out, but Ehlers kept it in at the line. When Ehlers' shot hit Robert Thomas, all three of Lowry, Vilardi and Perfetti converged upon Thomas to win it back. Then came the miracle. There were seven seconds left in Winnipeg's season when Ehlers fanned on his next shot, and five seconds left in the Jets' record-setting year when Lowry made yet another play to get the puck back to Ehlers at the point. There were four seconds left when Ehlers fired this puck to Connor across the ice, and three seconds left when Connor whipped it into the slot. That's when Perfetti's goal saved Winnipeg's season. WITH 1.6 SECONDS TO GO. 🤯 COLE PERFETTI‼️ — Sportsnet (@Sportsnet) May 5, 2025 Perfetti scored the latest tying goal in Game 7 NHL history. In doing so, he changed Jets history, giving Lowry the chance to complete the comeback in double overtime. 'It's euphoric. It's emotional. It's motivating,' Connor said. 'We used that in overtime.' Overtime should have been the Blues' to win. The Jets' five healthy defencemen should have been too tired to keep them in it. Pionk and Samberg played over 40 minutes each, making them the first defencemen to cross that threshold in a Game 7 since Chris Pronger and Al MacInnis in 1999. Meanwhile, Dylan DeMelo played 36:40, Haydn Fleury played 33:02, and Luke Schenn played 27:49 — almost double their ordinary workloads. Nathan Walker hit the post early in overtime, but the Jets carried the flow of play, outshooting St. Louis 19-9 in the extra 36 minutes and 10 seconds of action. Advertisement It was apropos that Lowry won it — off his shinpad, at that — after Pionk fired the puck off Sundqvist and toward the net. 'I probably dreamt it was a little nicer than just going off my leg, but it's one of those things, on the outdoor rink, in the driveway, you dream about being the hero in a Game 7 and giving yourself a chance to continue chasing a Stanley Cup,' Lowry said. 'To do it in Winnipeg at home — we have such tremendous fans, such tremendous support, just really happy we get to continue playing in front of them.' NEVER IN DOUBT — Winnipeg Jets (@NHLJets) May 5, 2025 'We gave it everything we had, down to the last second,' Perfetti said after the series ended. 'We didn't like our start (but) how are you going to respond? What are you going to do?' Connor said. 'We looked at each other and said, 'We're not done playing hockey yet.' It was special,' said Ehlers. 'I'm just really proud of the guys,' Lowry said. 'You get down 2-0, Game 7, it kind of feels like it's an insurmountable lead when it's 3-1, late. But to score two with the goalie out and to just have life … And for Fetts to bring the building to its feet with (three) seconds left is incredible.' The legacy of a Game 7 double-overtime win is that of glory. Every round a team wins as a collective inflates the big-game reputations of the people involved. Hellebuyck had a miserable series, but he dug in, locked things down and won Game 7. Namestnikov was the second-line centre the Jets wanted to improve upon with Brock Nelson, but Namestnikov scored two goals in the playoffs and Nelson scored none. Fleury was a depth signing capable of NHL or AHL duty; now he's a Game 7 performer who earns praise from his coach. Results drive those storylines, even after a single series win. The Jets are free now; it took every second of Game 7, but they've consolidated their 82-game regular-season excellence. The Dallas Stars await, starting on Wednesday, and should prove to be an even bigger test than St. Louis. But let's take a look at those lingering questions surrounding the Jets. Advertisement They weren't supposed to be able to overcome a poor start, especially after a playoff loss. Hellebuyck wasn't supposed to be able to stop the implosion, especially after giving up another early goal. No, this year's Jets weren't supposed to be frauds, but they certainly would have been discussed as such if they lost. And I don't think many people would have picked the Jets to win Game 7 without Mark Scheifele or Morrissey — but this time, the Jets came through. 'Even down 3-1, there was no doubt,' Perfetti said. 'We had belief in one another and belief that we were going to come back. I'm just so proud of this group and so proud to be a part of it.' One interesting footnote: Many of the players who factored in on the comeback win also made costly mistakes. Connor lost his coverage on the Blues' first goal and gave the puck away on the second. Ehlers mishandled a pass in the neutral zone, leading to Radek Faksa's 3-1 goal, and fought the puck again on the shift before making his inspired pass to Connor for Perfetti to tie it. Lowry had an empty net to shoot at in the third period, but found his shot blocked by Philip Broberg. Even Pionk, whose three assists and 46 minutes exemplify Winnipeg's perseverance as well as anyone in Game 7, started to wear down as overtime wore on. And in every single case, the Jets kept pushing. Would Winnipeg's regular-season success really have meant nothing if Game 7 slipped away? Thanks to one of the most dramatic double-overtime comebacks in NHL history, that's one question Winnipeg doesn't have to answer.

How to Watch Blues vs Jets Game 7: Live Stream NHL Playoffs, TV Channel
How to Watch Blues vs Jets Game 7: Live Stream NHL Playoffs, TV Channel

Newsweek

time04-05-2025

  • Sport
  • Newsweek

How to Watch Blues vs Jets Game 7: Live Stream NHL Playoffs, TV Channel

Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. The St. Louis Blues will face the Winnipeg Jets in Game 7 of this NHL Playoff matchup on Sunday at Canada Life Centre, and you can catch all the action with Sling. Jordan Kyrou #25 of the St. Louis Blues celebrates his goal during the second period against the Seattle Kraken at Climate Pledge Arena on October 08, 2024 in Seattle, Washington. Jordan Kyrou #25 of the St. Louis Blues celebrates his goal during the second period against the Seattle Kraken at Climate Pledge Arena on October 08, 2024 in Seattle, to Watch Blues vs Jets Game 7: Date: Sunday, May 4, 2025 Time: 7:00 PM ET Channel: TBS Stream: Sling (WATCH) Hockey fans are in for a treat on Sunday night as we have another Game 7 in the first round of the 2025 Stanley Cup Playoffs. The Blues avoided elimination in Game 6 by beating the Jets 5-2 on their home ice, but now the series heads back to Winnipeg. The last time out, St. Louis put in a complete team effort. Five players scored a goal, eight recorded assists, and Jordan Binnington had a .913 save percentage, holding the Jets to only two goals. It will likely take a similar effort to win on Sunday and advance, but they just showed they are more than capable of beating this team convincingly. Winnipeg has been the better team for most of the season, and they must find a way to bounce back. Kyle Connor has been productive in the series with four goals and five assists, but he might need to be even better tonight. He led the team in points this season with 97, which was seventh in the NHL. He needs to be the biggest star on the ice to give his team the best chance to survive. This is a great NHL Playoff matchup that will not disappoint; make sure to tune in and catch all the action. Live stream Blues vs Jets Game 7 with Sling: Start your subscription now! This game can be streamed nationally on TBS with a one-month subscription to Sling, which you can cancel anytime. Regional restrictions may apply. If you purchase a product or register for an account through one of the links on our site, we may receive compensation.

Winnipeg visits St. Louis with 2-1 series lead
Winnipeg visits St. Louis with 2-1 series lead

Fox Sports

time26-04-2025

  • Sport
  • Fox Sports

Winnipeg visits St. Louis with 2-1 series lead

Associated Press Winnipeg Jets (56-22-4, in the Central Division) vs. St. Louis Blues (44-30-8, in the Central Division) St. Louis; Sunday, 1 p.m. EDT BETMGM SPORTSBOOK LINE: Jets -129, Blues +109; over/under is 5.5 NHL PLAYOFFS FIRST ROUND: Jets lead series 2-1 BOTTOM LINE: The Winnipeg Jets visit the St. Louis Blues in the first round of the NHL Playoffs with a 2-1 lead in the series. The teams meet Thursday for the eighth time this season. The Blues won 7-2 in the last matchup. Pavel Buchnevich led the Blues with three goals. St. Louis has gone 44-30-8 overall with a 15-12-2 record against the Central Division. The Blues have a +19 scoring differential, with 250 total goals scored and 231 allowed. Winnipeg has a 56-22-4 record overall and a 21-8-0 record in Central Division play. The Jets rank third in league play with 275 total goals (averaging 3.4 per game). TOP PERFORMERS: Jordan Kyrou has 36 goals and 33 assists for the Blues. Buchnevich has eight goals and seven assists over the last 10 games. Kyle Connor has 41 goals and 56 assists for the Jets. Mark Scheifele has five goals and six assists over the past 10 games. LAST 10 GAMES: Blues: 5-4-1, averaging 3.6 goals, 6.3 assists, 3.7 penalties and 13.3 penalty minutes while giving up 2.7 goals per game. Jets: 7-3-0, averaging 2.8 goals, 4.7 assists, 3.6 penalties and 13.1 penalty minutes while giving up 2.3 goals per game. INJURIES: Blues: None listed. Jets: None listed. ___ The Associated Press created this story using technology provided by Data Skrive and data from Sportradar. recommended

Winnipeg visits St. Louis with 2-1 series lead
Winnipeg visits St. Louis with 2-1 series lead

Yahoo

time26-04-2025

  • Sport
  • Yahoo

Winnipeg visits St. Louis with 2-1 series lead

Winnipeg Jets (56-22-4, in the Central Division) vs. St. Louis Blues (44-30-8, in the Central Division) St. Louis; Sunday, 1 p.m. EDT BETMGM SPORTSBOOK LINE: Jets -129, Blues +109; over/under is 5.5 NHL PLAYOFFS FIRST ROUND: Jets lead series 2-1 Advertisement BOTTOM LINE: The Winnipeg Jets visit the St. Louis Blues in the first round of the NHL Playoffs with a 2-1 lead in the series. The teams meet Thursday for the eighth time this season. The Blues won 7-2 in the last matchup. Pavel Buchnevich led the Blues with three goals. St. Louis has gone 44-30-8 overall with a 15-12-2 record against the Central Division. The Blues have a +19 scoring differential, with 250 total goals scored and 231 allowed. Winnipeg has a 56-22-4 record overall and a 21-8-0 record in Central Division play. The Jets rank third in league play with 275 total goals (averaging 3.4 per game). TOP PERFORMERS: Jordan Kyrou has 36 goals and 33 assists for the Blues. Buchnevich has eight goals and seven assists over the last 10 games. Advertisement Kyle Connor has 41 goals and 56 assists for the Jets. Mark Scheifele has five goals and six assists over the past 10 games. LAST 10 GAMES: Blues: 5-4-1, averaging 3.6 goals, 6.3 assists, 3.7 penalties and 13.3 penalty minutes while giving up 2.7 goals per game. Jets: 7-3-0, averaging 2.8 goals, 4.7 assists, 3.6 penalties and 13.1 penalty minutes while giving up 2.3 goals per game. INJURIES: Blues: None listed. Jets: None listed. ___ The Associated Press created this story using technology provided by Data Skrive and data from Sportradar.

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