Hockey Booth dives into one of the wildest slates of the season as an absolutely loaded holiday weekend delivers drama in every corner of the hockey world.The episode opens with Friday, November 28th’s chaos: a rare clash of historic winning streaks in Minnesota, where the Wild edge the Avalanche 3–2 in a shootout. The hosts break down Jesper Wallstedt’s ridiculous 39-save night, his unbeaten 7-0-2 run, and how his early surge stacks up against Igor Shesterkin’s Vezina-level breakout. From the decisive shootout stop on Cale Makar to Gabriel Landeskog’s late tying goal, they unpack what this game says about both contenders.Out West, it’s “California chaos” as the Ducks storm back to stun the Kings 5–4 in a shootout in the first Freeway Faceoff of the year. You’ll hear how Anaheim’s young core — Leo Carlsson, Pavel Mintyukov, Olen Zellweger, Mason McTavish — turned a rivalry game into a statement about their future, and why LA’s inability to close is becoming a real red flag for a team with playoff ambitions.In Washington, the focus shifts to one of the league’s hottest defensemen. The Capitals rally from 2–0 down to beat the Maple Leafs 4–2, powered by Jacob Chychrun’s fifth straight game with a goal and a 10-game point streak that has him tracking toward a 30-goal, 75-point season. The crew puts his numbers in historical context and examines his dominant pairing at 5-on-5 — then wades into the officiating firestorm after a hot-mic moment from referee Kelly Sutherland reignites the league’s zero-tolerance stance on “even-up” calls.From there, it’s a full tour around the league. In Montreal, a convincing win over the slumping Golden Knights sets the stage for the Canadiens’ big move of the day: a five-year, $30 million extension for Mike Matheson. The hosts explain why the bonus-heavy structure makes this deal a calculated risk rather than a cap anchor, and how it helps define the Habs’ emerging blue-line core.Chicago and Detroit’s spirals get a hard look, from the Blackhawks’ systemic second-period meltdowns and broken power play to the Red Wings’ transition-defense issues and “catch-up hockey is losing hockey” reality check. The Sharks’ win over the Canucks becomes a mini-clinic in simplifying the power play, with Will Smith, Macklin Celebrini, William Eklund, and goalie Yaroslav Askarov all earning praise for driving a much-needed identity shift.Injury news looms large: Jack Roslovic’s absence pushes the already reeling Oilers closer to a forced move in goal, Charlie McAvoy’s facial surgery leaves a gaping hole in Boston’s lineup, and depth losses in Anaheim and Seattle complicate the run-up to the holiday roster freeze. The show also pauses on a deeply human moment: Clayton Keller playing for Utah just days after the death of his father, and what that says about leadership, grief, and perspective.Looking ahead, the hosts dig into early projections for Team USA at the 2026 Winter Olympics. With management openly prioritizing checking, versatility, and defensive reliability, they explore why players like Brock Nelson and Vincent Trocheck may be locks — and why pure offensive stars such as Cole Caufield, Logan Cooley, Jason Robertson, or even Adam Fox could find themselves on the bubble if they don’t meet a strict two-way standard.The episode closes with quick hits from the AHL and NCAA, including standout performances from Pheonix Copley and Boston College’s rising talent, before returning to the central question hanging over both the Olympics and the NHL at large: in the modern game, when the stakes are highest, does elite offense still trump safe, structured defense — or has the balance finally tipped the other way?
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