Sharks, Nashville Predators
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The San Jose Sharks are preparing for their biggest game of the season as they get set to host the Nashville Predators on Saturday night. San Jose (36-31-7, 79 points) holds the tiebreaker over Nashville (35-31-9,
Tyson Jost set up the game winner, the insurance marker and added an empty-netter in the third period as the visiting Nashville Predators doubled up the San Jose Sharks 6-3 on Saturday night.
SAN JOSE – San Jose Sharks goalie Yaroslav Askarov reached the conclusion during the 2024 offseason that he didn’t have much of a future with the Nashville Predators — at least not as their No. 1 netminder.
Filip Forsberg had two goals and one assist for the Nashville Predators in a 6-3 win against the San Jose Sharks at SAP Center on Saturday. Nashville moved into the second wild-card spot into the Stanley Cup Playoffs from the Western Conference,
The Daily Galaxy on MSN
Once the ocean’s supreme predator, great white sharks are now being hunted by a smarter killer
Scientists have now documented killer whales hunting great white sharks across three separate oceans, using surgical precision to extract the sharks’ livers while leaving the rest of the carcass largely intact.
Two weeks ago, I called the San Jose Sharks’ matchup with the Nashville Predators a must-win game. I was obviously referring to this Saturday’s matchup. Please don’t check the paper to verify that. Despite losing convincingly to those exact same Predators on March 24 to fall seven points adrift of the Western Conference’s final wild-card spot,
The Kings (30-26-19) are even with the Predators and Sharks in the race for the second wild card in the West but have just 19 regulation wins, so they will need to pass both in points to clinch a playoff berth for a fifth consecutive season. The Maple Leafs (32-31-13) have been eliminated from postseason contention.
6don MSN
Great hammerheads maintain peak hunting across wide temperature swings, biologging data suggest
Most predators slow down when ocean temperatures shift. Great hammerhead sharks don't—not significantly anyway. These ocean predators are masters of the "thermal hustle," maintaining peak hunting performance across a surprisingly wide range of ocean temperatures between winter and summer months,