Lian Bichsel’s expected return welcomed as rookie brings unmatched physicality to Stars
Dallas Stars forward Roope Hintz named NHL’s second star of the week
The Dallas Stars are in the home stretch of the season and are playing some of their best hockey yet. Having won five of their last six games, they welcome the New Jersey Devils to the American Airlines Center on Tuesday.
The game is the third of the Stars’ four-game homestand before they go on a four-game road trip that includes three games in Canada.
Here is what you need to know for Tuesday night’s matchup.
When: Tuesday, 7 p.m.
Where: American Airlines Center
TV/Streaming: Disney+, ESPN+, Hulu
Radio: 96.7 FM/1310 The Ticket (KTCK-AM)
The Dallas Stars (39-19-2, 2nd in the Central Division) host the New Jersey Devils (33-23-6, 3rd in the Metropolitan Division) after Wyatt Johnston’s hat trick against the St. Louis Blues in the Stars’ 6-3 win.
Dallas has a 22-7-1 record in home games and a 39-19-2 record overall. The Stars are fourth in league play with 204 total goals (averaging 3.4 per game).
New Jersey has an 18-13-2 record in road games and a 33-23-6 record overall. The Devils have a +32 scoring differential, with 185 total goals scored and 153 conceded.
The teams square off Tuesday for the second time this season. The Stars won 4-2 in the last matchup on Feb. 22.
Johnston has 21 goals and 34 assists for the Stars. Jason Robertson has eight goals and five assists over the last 10 games.
Jack Hughes, who suffered an injury in the Devils’ Sunday night game against Utah, has 27 goals and 43 assists for the Devils. Ondrej Palat has scored three goals and added one assist over the past 10 games.
Stars: 7-2-1, averaging 4.7 goals, 8.1 assists, 3.4 penalties and 8.2 penalty minutes while giving up three goals per game.
Devils: 5-5-0, averaging 2.6 goals, 4.4 assists, 4.2 penalties and 10 penalty minutes while giving up two goals per game.
Stars: Lian Bichsel (day-to-day), Ilya Lyubushkin (day-to-day), Tyler Seguin (IR-LT), Mavrik Bourque (day-to-day), Miro Heiskanen (IR)
Devils: Jack Hughes (day-to-day), Jonas Siegenthaler (IR), Mico Hischier (IR), Jacob Markstrom (IR), Erik Haula (IR)
Find more Stars coverage from The Dallas Morning News here.
The six-county region — Bergen, Essex, Hudson, Morris, Passaic and Union — is home to 2.6 million residents, six major league teams and four NCAA Division I athletic programs that collectively drew 12.7 million in attendance during our study.
Home base: The region is home to sports business companies including: 16W Marketing; BetMGM; Goldklang Group; Mars Wrigley (U.S. operations); Prudential Financial; Samsung; Skanska; and ZRG Partners.
Over the past three years, MetLife Stadium (which will host eight 2026 FIFA World Cup matches, including the final), and Prudential Center (which added the PWHL Sirens to its busy roster) each reported record revenues, and Sports Illustrated Stadium snagged a new naming-rights deal and will be the official NY/NJ World Cup 26 Jersey Fan Hub.
Recent events and wins for the area include WrestleMania in 2019; the SheBelieves Cup, presented by Visa in March; 2025 NCAA Division I Men’s Basketball East Regional; and Brazil’s base camp at the Red Bulls’ Columbia Park Training Center.
2023: #2 (with New York City)
2024 Event Hosting: #7 (with New York City)
2025 Soccer: #2 (with New York City)
A black bear was spotted in the area of Frederick Court in Princeton on Saturday night, according to an alert issued to residents. A bear was also spotted May 15 in the area of Heather Lane between Cherry Valley Road and Great Road. It is unclear whether the latest sighting is the same bear.
Residents are advised not to approach the bear and to remain indoors if they see it.
According to the New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection’s Division of Fish and Wildlife, black bears are common in parts of New Jersey, and they sometimes travel through residential neighborhoods as part of their natural movement patterns.
Residents should not leave food or garbage outdoors because bears can quickly become attracted to human food sources. Bears may eat garbage, pet food, birdseed, and other easily accessible items. Bears that gain access to food in residential neighborhoods may lose their fear of people and repeatedly return to the area. Some nuisance bears eventually must be trapped.
State wildlife officials urged residents in bear-prone areas to take precautions to reduce the chances of attracting bears.
Recommended precautions from the The information was provided by the NJDEP Division of Fish and Wildlife include:
Officials also advised residents to watch for warning behaviors from bears, including huffing sounds, jaw popping, and swatting at the ground, which can indicate the animal feels threatened.
Bears may stand on their hind legs to get a better view or detect scents in the air, which is not always considered threatening behavior.
Residents can report black bear damage or nuisance behavior to the NJDEP’s 24-hour hotline at 1-877-WARN-DEP, or 1-877-927-6337.
Worldwide shortages of oil could cripple the global economy by the early 1980s if nations do not immediately pivot toward conservation and alternative energy. That was the stark warning issued on the front page of the Asbury Park Press on this date from the Workshop on Alternative Energy Strategies, a respected international think tank, as reported by the Associated Press.
Organized in 1974 by Carroll L. Wilson, a professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, the 35-member panel of government and business leaders concluded that the supply gap would likely reach a critical breaking point between 1985 and 1995, the AP wrote. While the experts suggested that aggressive conservation efforts might push the crisis as far back as 2010, the consensus was that the era of abundant, cheap energy was over.
MARLBORO ― Two convicted murderers escaped early this morning from the Rahway Prison Unit located on the grounds of Marlboro Psychiatric Hospital, according to township police.
Raymond Bukowski of Plainfield, serving up to 25 years for murder and armed robbery, and Nicholas Gallicchio of Newark, serving up to 30 years for murder, were both reported missing at 1:30 a.m. today; police said.
Mayor Arthur Goldzweig, who has previously asked the state to close the prison unit here, said early today that the township will now seek a court order to close it.
The mayor, who is a Democratic candidate for state Assembly, said he will also ask the governor to provide immediate additional security at the prison unit, either through the New Jersey State Police or with increased security staff.
The Marlboro Township Police Department did not release details early today on how the murderers got out of the unit. Three other prisoners have escaped from the hospital grounds recently.
TRENTON ― Jersey City Mayor Paul T. Jordan yesterday withdrew as a candidate for the Democratic gubernatorial nomination and endorsed Gov. Brendan T. Byrne as the party’s standard-bearer.
Previously, Jordan said Byrne’s nomination would be a “disaster” and that New Jerseyans would breathe a “collective sigh of relief” if the governor did not run for re-election.
Jordan, whose withdrawal from the primary election race came after the one-sided defeat of his candidate in the Jersey City mayoral election last week, said he will now campaign actively for Byrne.
Byrne, through a spokesman, welcomed the endorsement, saying that Jordan’s philosophy closely paralleled his own.
Richard Coffee, Byrne’s campaign director, said the move “projects the governor as the solid front-runner” in the Democratic primary field.
EATONTOWN ― Firemen battled a smoldering, smoky blaze at the Monmouth Mall for nearly two hours last night and into this morning.
Fire Chief Joseph Gaetano of the Eatontown Fire Department said the blaze was confined to rear portions of the Rite Aid Pharmacy and the Puppy Love Pet Shop in the northwest section of the main level of the mall.
He said this morning it still had not been determined whether the fire started inside or outside the drug store, although most of the fire damage was located in the storeroom of the pharmacy.
All animals in the pet shop, including a prize monkey and cockatoo, were rescued by firemen who groped through thick smoke in the store.
Several firemen were treated at the scene for smoke inhalation by the Eatontown First Aid Squad, said Assistant Fire Chief William Stalfa.
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