New Jersey
Broken Plays, Bad Bounces, and Blackwood; New Jersey Devils Shut Out 1-0 By San Jose Sharks
What an immensely frustrating night.
Searching for their first winning streak of four or more games in two seasons, the Devils welcomed the lowly San Jose Sharks to town. There’s a little talent on their roster, but make no mistake, this is a very bad team. On the eve of a road trip that will feature a significant step up in competition, it was important that the Devils got a positive result against arguably the worst team in the league. That didn’t happen, as New Jersey failed to solve former Devil Mackenzie Blackwood in a 1-0 loss to the Sharks.
Any Devils fan who watched Blackwood in his five seasons in New Jersey knows that he is capable of breathtaking goaltending in both good AND bad ways. His time in the Garden State was mostly negative, with plenty of outings that featured horrific rebound control, embarrassingly soft goals against, generationally bad puck handling, and just so many games in which he failed his team in a big way. But the reason he kept getting so many chances in New Jersey was because he was also capable of games like tonight: a 44-save shutout. His rebound control was great, his puck tracking was on point, and his poise was unshakable. Based on his overall track record, it was more likely that the Devils would see the bad version of Blackwood tonight, but instead they got the good version. According to Natural Stat Trick, Blackwood saved 4.12 Goals Above Expected in all situations tonight, a truly remarkable number. After Blackwood found ways to “lead” the Devils to so many losses in his time here, he found a way to lead his old team to yet another loss.
Meanwhile, how did the lone goal of the game happen? Was it a tremendous display of skill from this past draft’s number one overall pick, Macklin Celebrini? Was it a rocket off the stick of former Devil, Tyler Toffoli? Was it a terrific passing play featuring another former Devil, Fabian Zetterlund?
Was it in any way a normal goal?
No, it was not.
A random fling of the puck off the shinpads of Timo Meier somehow bounced into the back of the New Jersey net. That was the only puck that got past Jake Allen, who was pretty great himself tonight. If there’s one positive to take from this game, it’s the continued strong play of Allen, who stopped 26 of 27 shots he faced, though it really is hard to fault him for the one “shot” that eluded him.
And aside from the goaltending and the one lucky bounce, the Devils sunk themselves with generally sloppy play. I did not think the energy level was a problem, to my admittedly untrained eye New Jersey had their legs. The problem was a severe lack of crispness. Passes off the mark, passes not handled cleanly, shots fanned on, shots passed up on (looking at you, Dawson Mercer), breakdowns in communication, losing board battles, and on and on and on. I know this was the second half of a back-to-back (more on that in a bit) but the seeming fatigue on display tonight was concerning. Again, I thought the compete the Devils showed was fine. But while the weariness didn’t show up in the effort level, it showed up in the sharpness of their play. They’re lucky they played a bottom feeder, otherwise we could have been looking at way more lopsided of a final score.
As stated, this was an immensely frustrating night. Blackwood coming out on the right side of his Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde act, when it was more likely he would do the opposite, was frustrating. The one goal the Sharks scored being a result of extreme luck was frustrating. The insane lack of crispness from the Devils skaters was frustrating. New Jersey getting a late power play, peppering Blackwood with shots, but failing to get anything past him in both 6-on-4 and 6-on-5 situations, was frustrating.
And a 1-0 loss to one of the worst teams in the league is as frustrating as it gets.
The Game Stats: The NHL.com Game Summary | The NHL.com Event Summary | The NHL.com Play by Play Log | The NHL.com Shot Summary | The Natural Stat Trick Game Stats
The Game Highlights: Courtesy of NHL.com
Grain Of Salt
I usually like incorporating advanced stats into these recaps, as while they aren’t perfect, they generally do a solid job of capturing who played well and who played poorly on any given night. But this is one of the rare games where I feel like the numbers just won’t tell the story of the evening. According to Natural Stat Trick, the Devils controlled play at 5-on-5 with an Expected Goals For% of 57.78%. Meanwhile more Devils than not were on the right side of 50% xGF% at 5-on-5, with only the Nico Hischier line and Luke Hughes-Brett Pesce pairing having particularly poor nights per the fancy numbers. And on the flip side of the coin, there were five Devils above 90%: The entire third line, plus Tomas Tatar and, incredibly, Kurtis MacDermid.
But honestly, I’m not putting too much stock into these numbers tonight. The advanced stats and lopsided shot total don’t tell the story to me. San Jose parked the bus in the third period, and the Devils got to inflate their numbers as a result. Even Blackwood, who genuinely played great this evening, was not tested nearly as much as the final stats would indicate. The numbers would tell you the Devils played well tonight. They really did not.
The Search Goes On
As mentioned near the start, the Devils missed out on reaching four straight wins tonight. It has been a frankly unacceptable amount of time since New Jersey put together a winning streak of four or more games. You have to go all the way back to a five-game winning streak from January 7th-16th, 2023 to find the last time it happened. You know who the fifth and final victory in that streak happened against? Yup, the San Jose Sharks. It would’ve been fitting for the Devils to beat the Sharks to end the drought tonight.
But it wasn’t meant to be. At this point it’s getting ridiculous. I have no doubt that the New Jersey Devils franchise will experience a winning streak of four or more games again at some point, but the fact that it hasn’t happened in almost two calendar years is insane. It’s not like we’re talking about an eight-game winning streak or something, we’re talking about a four-game heater, a very modest goal.
The Devils schedule gets very difficult after tonight. They draw the Florida Panthers on Tuesday and Thursday this coming week, both on the road (yes, really), then games against the Tampa Bay Lightning, Carolina Hurricanes, and the surprisingly stellar Washington Capitals follow. I can’t fathom New Jersey putting together four or more wins during that stretch, so they really missed their chance tonight.
Same Old Story
One of the big storylines from last season was the Devils’ ineptitude in the second half of back-to-backs. New Jersey played 16 back-to-backs in 2023-24, and they went a dismal 3-11-2 in the second half of those situations. That’s eight out of a possible 32 points, which is genuinely hard to do.
Fast forward to this season, and the results haven’t been much better. Thanks to tonight’s loss, the Devils are now 1-2-1 in the second half of back-to-backs, which translates to three out of a possible eight points. New Jersey actually won their first second-half B2B of the year, which took place in their season-opening Prague games against the Buffalo Sabres. That means the Devils are winless in their last three tries.
New Jersey always gets saddled with a ton of back-to-backs thanks to their geographical placement. They need to figure out how to not be terrible when playing for the second night in a row, and fast. Otherwise it could tank their season just like it did last year.
Added Responsibility
Take a look at this tweet from this evening:
Jack Hughes has played 1:22 shorthanded tonight which brings him to 4:12 on the season already more than he had all of last season [4:04]
— nick cahill (@devilstatguy) November 11, 2024
Sheldon Keefe has been deploying Jack Hughes in defensive situations far, far more than any other coach Hughes has had at the NHL level. Hughes was out defending a one-goal lead against Montreal with the Canadiens’ net pulled last game, and here he is logging notable shorthanded minutes tonight.
The entire team defense has been worlds better this season than it was at any point under Lindy Ruff in 2023-24, and Hughes is certainly a part of that. I’m not trying to tell you he’s Patrice Bergeron all of a sudden, but Hughes’ boosted commitment to defense has been noticeable. Credit to both Hughes for putting in that work, and Keefe for coaching him up on the defensive side of the game and trusting him in those situations.
Next Time Out
New Jersey hits the road for a road trip through Florida. Their first game on the trip is a meeting with the Panthers on Tuesday. Puck drop is scheduled for 7:30pm ET.
Your Take
What do you make of tonight’s game? Are you as frustrated as I am at the result and the lack of sharpness? What do you think of Hughes’ newfound defensive game? What are you expecting on the upcoming road trip? As always, thanks for reading.
New Jersey
Rising health insurance costs strain local government budgets in New Jersey
As the University moves to cut employee benefits amid rising healthcare costs, officials in the Municipality of Princeton and across Mercer County are confronting similar budget pressures. Mercer County has already taken steps to reign in spending on the state health plan.
The State Health Benefits Program (SHBP) for local governments, which is used by around 55 percent of New Jersey’s eligible employers, saw a 36.5 percent increase in cost last year, with further double-digit increases expected this year, pushing some entities to take their employees off the state health plan.
Mercer County, which contains Princeton, began pulling its employees out of the SHBP last year. In his budget address on March 26, Mercer County Executive Dan Benson said that the county worked with its unions to find a different, cheaper option with the same benefits. He added that the county will work with “other county agencies,” including the Mercer County Improvement Authority, to move more employees off the SHBP.
“Thanks to that partnership, we were able to reduce the expected increase in health care costs for active employees from approximately 31 percent over prior year cost to approximately 17.5 percent annualized,” Benson stated in the address. However, he noted that healthcare costs are rising significantly across the board, resulting in a $12.3 million cost increase overall.
In a statement to The Daily Princetonian, Theodore Siggelakis, director of communications and intergovernmental affairs of Mercer County, wrote that year-over-year SHBP cost increases have made the program unsustainable for both the county and the employees. “By transitioning to a new plan, we were able to reduce projected [healthcare cost] increases by 13 percent,” Siggelakis wrote.
The Municipality of Princeton is still on the SHBP, despite learning last year about the expected increase in the state plan premium. According to councilmember Brian McDonald ’83, an alternative private plan the municipality considered would have increased premiums by more than 20 percent, still significantly less than the recent 36 percentage point cost increase in the SHBP. However, discussions with the municipality’s police, fire department, and public works unions did not conclude in time to switch plans last year, according to McDonald.
“We are currently beginning the process of looking for an alternate health insurance plan for 2027, and if we can find one, we will begin conversations with the unions much earlier this year,” McDonald wrote to the ‘Prince.’
“In the case of health insurance, 36 percent this year. That alone, as you will see, is about $1.9 million higher than it was last year,” McDonald said at the March 23 Princeton Council meeting. “If we just pass that expense on to taxpayers, it would require a one-year increase of 6 percent. So we’ve had to work extremely hard and again make very challenging choices.”
At the March 23 meeting, the municipality’s Chief Financial Officer Sandra Webb shared that the current proposed budget would increase the municipal tax rate by 2.87 percent.
Although the municipality of Princeton remained on the SHBP this year, McDonald wrote that the “recent level of health insurance increases is totally unsustainable” in the long term. He added that if increases cannot be curbed, “there really are only two options: pass the increases at all levels of government on to taxpayers, who already pay some of the highest property taxes in the country, or reduce services and, potentially, staff levels.”
Princeton Public Library is also still on the state plan. The library is also facing challenges with its budget — in January, it shortened its hours by one hour each day due to increased operational costs. Currently, the library is seeking greater funding from Princeton municipality in the municipal budget and is in negotiations with the Princeton Council.
“As a public institution, Princeton Public Library has limited options for trimming our health insurance costs,” Jennifer Podolsky, executive director of the library, wrote to the ‘Prince.’ “We did eliminate the most expensive employee plans as a cost-saving measure last fall, and … trust me, we have explored every other coverage option available to us. The SHBP is still the most cost-effective.”
Princeton Public Schools (PPS) is not enrolled in the School Employees’ Health Benefits Program (SEHBP) — the SHBP plan for public schools — because of a cheaper cost offered by their private insurance plans. In a statement to the ‘Prince,’ PPS Superintendent Michael LaSusa wrote that the rising costs of health benefits are “largely passed on to the taxpayers through the local tax levy increase,” which is the focus of their current budget discussions.
At the district’s March 17 Board of Education meeting, LaSusa explained that the total premium increase for the SEHBP was 31.9 percent, including a prescription cost increase of 58.6 percent. Since PPS is privately insured, their projected total premium increase, including prescription costs, was 15.2 percent.
According to a March press release from the New Jersey Department of the Treasury, some entities with “lower-cost employees” who use fewer health services are switching to cheaper plans, leaving “higher-cost” employees to make use of the plan but with less premium revenues to cover the cost.
This exodus of lower-cost entities from SHBP has further increased burdens for employers still on the program. In a May 2025 report about the SHBP, the Treasury noted that, although the program was initially designed to offer “affordable, high-quality coverage to public employees,” the program is no longer financially viable partly due to declining enrollment.
This and various other factors, according to the report, “have created a self-reinforcing loop of premium increases and employer exits — what actuaries commonly refer to as a ‘death spiral.’”
It remains unclear how extensively University employees will be impacted by benefit cuts. In a memo about general benefits cuts in February, Executive Vice President Katie Callow-Wright and Provost Jennifer Rexford ’91 wrote that the University would be cutting employee benefits and limiting pay raises, citing “dramatically rising costs of medical and prescription benefits.”
They added that “forthcoming changes to the University’s benefits offerings” have been previewed, and that these changes were “made necessary by dramatically rising costs of medical and prescription benefits here and nationwide.”
Elizabeth Hu is a senior News writer, assistant head Copy editor, associate Data editor, staff Podcast producer, and contributing Features writer from Houston. She can be reached at exh[at]dailyprincetonian.com.
Oliver Wu contributed reporting.
Please send any corrections to corrections[at]dailyprincetonian.com.
New Jersey
New Jersey boardwalk crowned best boardwalk in USA TODAY 10BEST list
Spring fever heats up Seaside Heights beach and boardwalk in April
Warm weather draws crowds to the Seaside Heights boardwalk and beach on April 15, 2026.
Ready to take a stroll on the best boardwalks along the coast?
According to USA TODAY 10BEST Readers, the Garden State has three. Vistors planning to travel to Shore will bask in the golden days of summer at 3 of best boardwalks New Jersey has to offer where good food and fun meet.
The USA TODAY 10BEST Readers’ Choice Awards is an annual survey designed by panel of industry experts to nominate their favorite attractions across a wide range of categories in which 10Best editors nominate contenders to the public for a winning vote.
Three New Jersey beaches were voted on the list by readers. And here’s what editor’s said about Wildwood, Atlantic City and Point Pleasant Beach:
No. 1 Wildwood
Originally a 150-yard boardwalk at its inception in the 1890s, the boardwalk in Wildwood, New Jersey, now stretches for 38 blocks and is packed with shops, restaurants, bars, water parks, and an amusement pier featuring over 100 attractions.
This is the second year in row that Wildwood has topped the list.
No. 5 Atlantic City
The Atlantic City Boardwalk ranks among the most famous in the nation. Built in 1870, the boardwalk is lined with everything from high-end retailers to classic candy shops, casinos, and beach bars, all with ocean views.
No. 10 Point Pleasant Beach
Point Pleasant packs an incredible amount of fun into its mile-long boardwalk. Jenkinson’s Aquarium and Boardwalk Amusements are the crown jewels of this Jersey Shore venue, though there are classic arcade games, local eateries, an antique emporium, and plenty of gift shops too. The nightlife scene transforms the area into a colorful evening playground where visitors can enjoy live music, comedy shows, and fun bars and restaurants.
USAT 10BEST Readers’ Choice Public Spaces: Best Boardwalk
- Wildwoods Boardwalk (Wildwood, New Jersey)
- Kemah Boardwalk (Kemah, Texas)
- Ocean City Boardwalk (Ocean City, New Jersey)
- Carolina Beach Boardwalk (Carolina Beach, North Carolina)
- Atlantic City Boardwalk (Atlantic City, New Jersey)
- Venice Beach Boardwalk (Venice, California)
- Ocean Beach Park Boardwalk (New London, Connecticut)
- Santa Cruz Beach Boardwalk (Santa Cruz, California)
- Virginia Beach Boardwalk (Virginia Beach, Virginia)
- Boardwalk at Point Pleasant Beach (Point Pleasant Beach, New Jersey)
New Jersey
Dan Levy’s new Netflix comedy ‘Big Mistakes’ was filmed at these New Jersey locations
Filming Big Mistakes in New Jersey was no mistake at all.
The Netflix comedy series, which debuted earlier this month, has already hit the streaming service’s Global Top 10 English TV List, making it one of the most-watched shows out right now.
As per Netflix, the comedy series co-created, executive produced, written and starring Emmy winner Dan Levy, follows Nicky (Levy) and Morgan (Taylor Ortega), two deeply incapable siblings who are in over their heads when a misguided theft for their dying grandmother accidentally pulls them into the world of organized crime. Blackmailed into increasingly dangerous assignments, they clumsily fail upwards, sinking deeper into chaos they’re ill-equipped to handle. The dark comedy, which has only eight episodes, has a 79% on Rotten Tomatoes so far.
RECOMMENDED: Where was ‘Beef’ season 2 filmed? Behind the locations of the dark Netflix comedy
Set in the fictional New Jersey suburb of Glenview, the series was fittingly filmed primarily in numerous towns and cities in New Jersey, including Caldwell, Cranford, Franklin Lakes, Irvington, Jersey City, Union, Warren and Weehawken for a total of 40 filming locations. (The cartel storyline in Episode 7 was shot in San Juan, Puerto Rico, where its coastline and architecture doubled as Miami’s waterfront, luxury estates and yacht life.)
“I’ve really enjoyed shooting in New Jersey,” location manager Mia Thompson said. “We have quite a number of recurring locations that have all just been wonderful—not only the home owners, but the business owners, the towns, the local police, the local fire departments, the town clerks. It’s been a really great experience.”
More than 300 cast and crew and 500 vendors took part in the production. Ortega, who plays Morgan, is actually a New Jersey native and was surprised to film in her backyard.
“It was surreal getting to film in my home state,” she said. “I grew up in New Jersey and was obsessed with film and television and never thought I’d be returning home for such a major project and moment in my life.”
The show filmed the scenes at Morelli’s Hardware, run by Nicky and Morgan’s mom (Laurie Metcalf), at Edison Millwork & Hardware, a more than 50-year-old, family-owned hardware store in Edison.
“It’s one of the few mom and pop hardware stores that are left anywhere, really, so it was really great to find this location that fits very perfectly with our story,” Thompson said.
The show was also filmed at Wyoming Presbyterian Church in Millburn—the backdrop for Nicky’s day job as a pastor and his living space.
“We’ve utilized every inch of space of that church inside and out,” said Thompson. “They’ve enjoyed the experience just as much as we have.”
Other spots they filmed at include Deerfield School, Essex County Airport, Fosterfields Living Historical Farm, Hatfield Swamp, Springfield Municipal Building and the Crystal Inn in Eatontown.
“One thing about New Jersey is that it’s so diverse. The various neighborhoods offer different kinds of looks and aesthetics,” said Thompson. “You have everything that you could ask for.”
See Jersey in all eight episodes, streaming now on Netflix.
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