The Columbus Blue Jackets secured an 8-5 victory over the Tampa Bay Lightning on Saturday night, with Mason Marchment delivering his third career hat trick. This win snapped the Lightning’s 15-game losing streak in regulation. Charlie Coyle celebrated his 200th career goal and contributed two assists, while Adam Fantilli added a goal and two assists. Dmitri Voronkov and Sean Monahan each scored, and Zach Werenski provided two assists. Goalie Jett Greaves saved 24 shots for Columbus, and the team’s four first-period goals were the most in an opening frame since March 15, 2003.
For Tampa Bay, Jake Guentzel scored twice and assisted once, Nikita Kucherov recorded one goal and three assists, Anthony Cirelli had a goal and two assists, and Brandon Hagel assisted on two goals. Darren Radish also scored, and Jonas Johansson made 23 saves. The game featured notable ejections: Eric Cernak was thrown out late in the first period after a hit by Mathieu Olivier, and Charles-Edouard Datus was ejected in the third period following a collision near the blue line.
Columbus initially took the lead with a turnover goal by Cole Schillinger early in the first period, but Tampa Bay evened the score minutes later due to a deflected clearance by Greaves. Guentzel extended his scoring streak against Columbus to 17 consecutive games. Fantilli notched his first goal since December 16, capitalizing on a rebound. In the second period, Kucherov netted his team-leading 26th goal, and Cirelli tied the game shortly after. Columbus regained the lead for good at 9:05 after Marchment exited the penalty box. Werenski’s two assists in the second period tied him with Rick Nash for the highest number of multi-assist games in Blue Jackets history.
The Lightning will face Utah on Monday, while Columbus hosts Los Angeles the same day.
Fan Take: Though this is hockey news, its significance transcends the sport by demonstrating how resilience and teamwork can end challenging streaks and spark momentum. Basketball fans can relate to the importance of breaking losing cycles and rallying as a team, lessons that continue to resonate across all competitive sports.

