Leon Draisaitl and Taylor Hall keep on scoring, a couple of win streaks were halted, and two teams combined for a phenomenal goal-fest in the first period.

Here are four things we learned in the NHL on Thursday night.

Draisaitl heating up

Leon Draisaitl is seemingly back to his best.

Draisaitl scored the opener in the Edmonton Oilers’ 4-2 loss to the Nashville Predators, which was his fourth goal in five games. He also has six points in that span.

The past month in general has been excellent for Draisaitl. He has nine goals, nearly half of his total for the season, and 18 points since Feb. 1. Unfortunately for him, the Oilers’ form is still as inconsistent as ever.

No stopping Hall

Taylor Hall is on an absolute rampage.

The New Jersey Devils may have lost 3-2 to the Florida Panthers, but Hall’s opener extended his impressive points streak to 23 games.

Hall is on pace to shatter his previous best points total of 80 from the 2013-14 season. He’s currently at 68 for the season after 58 games. The Devils are also within reach of the Atlantic Division lead thanks in large part to the forward’s contributions.

Flyers, Wild stop streaking; Predators stay hot

The Philadelphia Flyers and Minnesota Wild owned two of the current longest winning streaks entering Thursday.

Both ended in disappointing fashion, with the Flyers losing 4-1 to the Carolina Hurricanes and the Wild falling 5-3 to the Arizona Coyotes. Philadelphia’s streak was snapped at six games, as was Minnesota’s at five.

The Nashville Predators kept up their streaking ways, though, coming from behind to topple the Oilers 4-2 to give them their sixth win in a row. Additionally, general manager David Poile became the winningest GM in NHL history.

With the regular season coming to a close, these late runs of form will make a significant difference in playoff seeding.

First-period goal fest

Most hockey fans love goals. If anyone happened to watch the Boston Bruins face the Pittsburgh Penguins, they likely enjoyed a thrilling first period.

Both teams combined for eight goals in the opening frame, with Boston taking a 5-3 lead heading into the intermission. It’s the first time this has occurred since March 2013.

The Penguins weren’t able to keep up the pace in the second period, which ultimately led to Boston’s convincing 8-4 win.