Forwards Jason Robertson and Nicholas Robertson stole the show around the NHL on Sunday with multiple goals the same day.
Sunday marked a family incident on the NHL ice when the brothers netted Jason and Nicholas Robertson in a multi-goal game.
“Yeah, I think it’s exciting and exciting for my parents,” Nicholas Robertson told reporters. “They got (two TVs) so they’ve jumped off the couch five times tonight, so it’s good to see him do well, and play a good game too. .”
Pavel Bulle, known as the “Russian Rocket,” played for the Vancouver Canucks from 1991 to 1989, followed by a stint with the Florida Panthers and New York Rangers until 2003. 1994 and 2004.
Bures comes from a country where hockey is crazy in Russia, and the Robertson brothers come from California. This is not a national hockey breeding ground. The Robertsons played youth hockey, growing up in California, before moving to Michigan to get more opportunities in the sport.
Both siblings found a niche in junior hockey before being drafted. The Stars selected Jason Robertson on the No. 39 pick in 2017, while the Leafs acquired Nicholas Robertson on the No. 53 pick in the 2019 draft.
Jason Robertson has been a successful star with 156 goals and 212 assists over his six-year career. He has scored 50 goals twice in the season. Nicholas Robertson has 27 goals and 21 assists in his five-year career with the Leafs, but has done it in 136 career games.
Jason Robertson also noted that they trained together like they did last week. The NHL was suspended from February 17th to February 20th due to a showdown between four countries.
“We were training together last week, so it’s great to see him pay off,” Jason Robertson said.
Nicholas Robertson tied things together for Leaf 1-1 in the second season, facing the Blackhawks in a snapshot. He puts 3-1 on another snapshot in the second season. Chicago answered with another goal, but the Leafs achieved two more goals in their third term.
Jason Robertson also dealt all the damage in the second season. He scored the first of three goals on a wrist shot with a 2-1 star lead over the Islanders before Kyle Palmieri tied things together 2-2.
Jason Robertson advanced his watch with a pair of wrist shot goals to get a 4-2 advantage. The star then held back the islanders in the third term, despite the islanders’ goal leaving winger Anthony Duclair in the final period.
Nicholas Robertson couldn’t get the hat trick himself, but it was on his radar on Sunday.
“I was thinking about it, but I hope for another time,” he said.
Anyway, he and his brothers did something that hadn’t happened in the NHL for a quarter century.
“As a family, I think it’s a great night for us,” Jason Roberson said.