Islanders Prove to Rangers Why They’re Emerging

If you had any excitement for last night’s latest installment of the Battle of New York, the Islanders only needed 58 seconds to shut that down. Anders Lee put in a rebound of a Mat Barzal shot to give the Islanders the lead for good in another frustrating shutout loss for the Rangers. This time, it came on the road with the Islanders getting 27 saves from backup David Rittich in a 2-0 win at Belmont Park.

Following their win over the Caps before Christmas, it was a huge letdown for the Rangers, who can’t seem to manufacture offense consistently. They went from putting up five in a third period comeback win to getting blanked for the eighth time this season. They haven’t even reached the halfway point, but they’re on pace to break the NHL record for most times shut out in a season. If they reach 16, they’ll accomplish it. At least they’re making history in their 100th Anniversary season. They already have been shut out a record six times at home.

It feels like a comedy watching this team. They can go from one extreme to the other rather quickly. How else would you explain beating the Flyers, losing to the Predators followed by beating the Caps, and then being blanked by the Islanders over eight days? Exactly. Maybe an exorcist is needed.

While the Rangers continue to mystify our fans by relying on the same players, the Islanders continue to be the best story among the area locals.

Ever since they selected defenseman Matthew Schaefer with the number one pick in the 2025 NHL Draft, things have changed dramatically for the franchise. The teenage sensation didn’t record a goal or assist in the game. However, he was very effective throughout in logging a game-high 27:03 of ice time. The 18-year-old registered two shots on goal and had another seven attempts while playing well defensively for the Islanders.

Even with him being forced to play in his zone more by the Rangers, Schaefer handled the workload with ease. To be that young and have that much poise. It didn’t matter if the Rangers had the edge territorially. They didn’t generate any high danger chances during Schaefer’s shifts. It was the Islanders who got the only two high danger chances with their lottery prize on the ice.

One of the things that haunted the Rangers was a slow start. Before they looked up, Carson Soucy’s turnover led directly to Lee potting his 10th in the game’s first minute. There was no coverage due to the miscue from Soucy behind his own net, which gave Igor Shesterkin no chance after he made the initial stop on Barzal before Lee put in the rebound.

The Islanders were the faster team by controlling most of the first period. Barzal drew a penalty on Vladislav Gavrikov less than four minutes in with his team already up. If there was an area that let down the Islanders, it was the power play, which went 0-for-5 against a strong Rangers penalty killing unit.

By taking the collar in five opportunities, the Islanders fell to 27th in the league. Despite having Schaefer, who entered yesterday tied for the team lead with Bo Horvat in power-play goals, they only click at 15.7 percent.

While the Islanders continued to pile up shots on Shesterkin, who was very good in finishing with 24 saves, it took the Rangers nearly 12 minutes to finally get a shot on Rittich. Following a couple of Will Cuylle tried in close, they finally settled in and had seven of the last 10 shots.

Rookie Brennan Othmann probably had the best chance, but his attempt missed wide. It’s been very challenging for the 2021 first round pick to score. He’s still without a goal in 31 NHL games. Despite receiving less than six minutes while playing on the fourth line, Othmann was more noticeable during his shifts. Unfortunately, Saturday’s game was dictated by special teams. So, he hardly touched the ice in a penalty filled third period.

Early in the second period, some hard work from Othmann helped his line create some chances against the Islanders. However, Rittich shut down Matt Rempe and Sam Carrick. The 33-year-old veteran has continued to play well for Patrick Roy. Prior to the holiday break, he made 31 saves in a win over the Devils and was named the game’s first star. He’s only allowed three goals over his last three starts entering Sunday’s game at the Blue Jackets. Without Ilya Sorokin, who could be activated off injured reserve on Tuesday, Rittich has made the big stops for the Islanders.

Of course, the Rangers had to kill off a couple of penalties during the second. When Artemi Panarin finally drew a penalty on Max Shabanov to give them a power play, they thought Cuylle had tied it. But a video review showed that his shot hit both the crossbar and goalpost to stay out.

That’s how it seems to go for them with the man-advantage. It’s either Cuylle or Mika Zibanejad who score on the mind-numbing top unit that really misses Adam Fox. Encouraging is that Fox is getting very close to a return. If he isn’t activated for tomorrow’s game at Carolina, he’ll likely be ready for the Jan. 2 Winter Classic against the Panthers.

On another power play with Adam Pelech off for tripping, Cuylle came close again, but he had his shot hit another crossbar. It was the only attempt the Rangers got in a waste of two minutes. By the time Alexis Lafreniere got a tough long shot on Rittich that he handled, the power play had expired. Sullivan stuck with his first unit that included rookie defenseman Scott Morrow as the quarterback.

Rittich’s best save came when he denied Artemi Panarin on a breakaway in the first minute of the third period. He followed that up with a stop on Lafreniere, who again was more effective throughout. If only he didn’t have Soucy fumbling a pass at the blue line on one strong shift.

There in lies the problem with the Rangers’ defense. Without Fox, they’re anemic. Even Morrow isn’t producing. But he’s in his first full year after coming over from the Hurricanes for K’Andre Miller, who’s again out injured with another game versus his former team on Monday.

A dubious call on Noah Laba (tripping) led to some four-on-four action due to Tony DeAngelo (interference) also receiving a minor penalty. During it, Scott Mayfield had Shesterkin beat on the near side, but his shot ring off the goalpost. Shesterkin then made big stops on Schaefer and Horvat to keep the Rangers within range.

Fittingly, it was Soucy who got the best chance when he got behind the Islanders’ defense for a breakaway. After having his backhand attempt go wide due to rookie Cal Ritchie getting him from behind, the refs awarded Soucy a penalty shot. Not known for his offense, he asked Jonathan Quick for advice. It didn’t make a difference. Soucy’s wrist shot was shrugged aside by Rittich with 10:42 left.

With Vincent Trocheck in the box for holding, Horvat was all set up in the slot, but he had his shot ring off the crossbar. The Rangers were able to kill off the penalty to remain alive.

In what amounted to another tease which has become their trademark, they failed miserably on a late power play with Ritchie off for taking down Vladislav Gavrikov. Both Panarin and Morrow had their attempts go whistle wide. That summed it up. There was a lot of deferring to Panarin, who couldn’t seem to shoot straight.

Following the power failure, Shesterkin had to contend with Horvat, denying him twice to give his team one final chance. He really should sue for run support. The Rangers are the gang that can’t shoot straight. If it was a soccer net, they’d probably still fire it either into the crest, off the crossbar, or miss completely.

Even with Horvat taking an unnecessary offensive zone penalty by tripping Laba with 3:01 remaining, it only led to the inevitable. A couple of long Panarin shots that actually forced Rittich to make saves. With time winding down, a Morrow giveaway allowed Simon Holmstrom to score into the open net to salt it away.

In two games versus the Islanders, the Rangers have been outscored 7-0. At least this one was competitive. Right now, it’s their bitter rivals that are sitting three points behind the Hurricanes out of first place in the Metropolitan Division. They’ve figured out how to win the close games under Roy, who’s done a great job with a team that wasn’t expected to challenge for the playoffs.

The Islanders are moving in the right direction. The Rangers look like they’re stuck in neutral. Maybe getting Fox back can help change the narrative. It’s still a flawed roster that’s way too reliant on Panarin and Zibanejad. Especially without J.T. Miller. It’s getting late early.

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Rangers and Islanders Renew Rivalry After The Holidays

The holidays came and went pretty fast. With both Chanukah and Christmas gone, the NHL returns later today. Saturday’s slate will feature 13 games with 26 of 32 teams back in action. Several of the matchups include big rivalries.

The Leafs host the Senators in the Battle of Ontario. The red hot Sabres look to make it a season-high eight in a row when they face off against the Bruins. In a grudge match, the Lightning and Panthers renew acquaintances in the Battle of Florida in Sunrise. Figure that one to have the usual nastiness.

Out West, the Ducks and Kings will face off in Hollywood. In one of the best rivalries, it’ll be the sizzling Connor McDavid-led Oilers against the Flames in the Battle of Alberta. If you’re looking for a potential Western Conference Final preview, the Avalanche and Golden Knights face off in Vegas.

Of all the unique rivalries, it doesn’t get much better than the Rangers and Islanders. For over five decades, Manhattan and Long Island have battled it out. It’s like the Hatfields and the McCoys. Although the teams don’t throw em as much these days, they still hate each other. Especially in the stands. There’s no love lost between them. You either support the Rangers or the Islanders. It can never be both. The big city meets the suburbs.

For the second time this season, they’ll meet at UBS Arena at Belmont Park with a special start time of 6 PM. The Islanders dominated the first meeting by shutting out the Rangers 5-0 on Nov. 8 at Madison Square Garden. Ilya Sorokin made 33 saves to pick up the shutout. Bo Horvat scored twice and Jonathan Drouin had a goal and two assists.

It was the fifth time that the Rangers were shut out at MSG, speaking to how bad they are at home. It’s been that way the entire first half with their home record 5-10-3. However, they play much better hockey away from The Garden. The NHL’s road warriors bring a 14-6-1 mark into tonight.

In their last game before Christmas, they mounted a third period rally by scoring five unanswered goals to blow past the Capitals on Dec. 23. Taylor Raddysh and Vincent Trocheck each had a pair of goals and an assist to highlight the victory. Igor Shesterkin stopped 29 of 32 shots. Alexis Lafreniere recorded his 100th career goal along with a helper. Will Cuylle also had a power-play goal and two assists.

It’s the tale of two different Rangers’ teams. When they take on the Islanders, who will play a third consecutive game without Sorokin, who was placed on injured reserve, they’ll face backup David Rittich. A dependable goalie, who’s done well in his first season on Long Island, the 33-year-old veteran brings an 8-3-2 record into play with a 2.42 goals-against-average and .913 save percentage. In Tuesday’s 2-1 win over the Devils, Rittich made 31 saves on 32 shots, including some clutch ones in the deciding third when Adam Pelech notched the game-winner with 1:15 left.

The Islanders will have Horvat fresh off IR for the game. He’s their leading scorer with 19 goals and 31 points. He also is tied with impressive 18-year-old rookie defenseman Matthew Schaefer in power-play goals (5) to pace them.

The 2025 number one overall pick has been spectacular, with his 24 points (9-15-24) ranked third among NHL freshmen. Schaefer averages 23:40 of ice time per night. He’s been everything as advertised. One of the game’s best skaters, he can shift from defense to offense in lightning speed. Possessing a great shot, Schaefer must be contained.

Coming off the win over Washington, the Rangers will go with the same lineup. There hasn’t been any update on Adam Fox’s status. He is eligible to be activated off long-term injured reserve. However, with the injury likely being a separated shoulder he suffered on a Brandon Hagel hit on Nov. 29 against the Lightning, he probably won’t be back until the first week of January. Whether or not that means he’ll be available for the Winter Classic against the Panthers on Jan. 2 remains to be seen.

Without Fox, the Rangers have managed to go 6-4-2 to stay within range in the playoff race. They’ve needed to go extras in four of those wins. In fact, they’ve gone past regulation in half of the dozen games since Fox’s injury. The only two blemishes came in overtime defeats to the Avalanche and Golden Knights. It’s a credit to the roster for being able to stick together through adversity.

If they can come out with a win, they’d continue their road mastery. The Rangers are in the middle of a six-game road trip. They’ll visit the Hurricanes next on Monday before again facing the Caps in a matinee on New Year’s Eve. It concludes with the Winter Classic against the two-time defending champion Panthers in the new calendar year.

For a second straight game, Mike Sullivan has Jonny Brodzinski playing up with Trocheck and Gabe Perreault. Cuylle and Raddysh will play on the third line with Noah Laba. Brennan Othmann stays in the lineup for the third consecutive game. He’ll remain with Sam Carrick and Matt Rempe on the fourth line. Othmann still must prove that he’s capable defensively. It was his blown assignment that led to the Caps’ third goal scored by Aliaksei Protas in the second period.

It looks like it’ll be a mixed bag on the power play. Hopefully, they won’t get burned on special teams. If you haven’t seen Mollie Walker’s fun interview with several Rangers on their trip to Miami, it’s worth watching.

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World Juniors Day

It’s the best time of year. With the holidays finally here, it’s World Juniors Day. Following Christmas, the World Junior Championships arrive on Boxing Day. This year, the prestigious tournament takes place in the great hockey state of Minnesota.

The 2026 WJC features 10 countries participating in two groups. Entering play, Team USA are the two-time defending champions. Featuring returning stars such as Cole Hutson, James Hagens, Cole Eiserman, Brodie Ziemer, and gold medal hero Teddy Stiga, they’ll be coached by 2017 gold medal winner Bob Motzko.

Gone are key contributors Ryan Leonard, Oliver Moore, Danny Nelson, Gabe Perreault, and Brandon Svoboda. Trey Augustine was the winning goalie the past two years. The Red Wings prospect is continuing to develop nicely playing for Michigan State. He’ll one day tend the starter’s net for Detroit.

Without Augustine, USA will turn to Nick Kempf. In an interesting development, Kempf won’t play in the first game against Germany tonight. Instead, it’ll be Caleb Heil getting the start. 2026 draft eligible prospect Brady Knowling will be the backup.

USA is in Group A which features Germany, Slovakia, Sweden, and Switzerland. Sweden is expected to seriously challenge the Americans for the top spot in the group. Led by Anton Frondell, Sweden has a strong roster that includes Victor Eklund, Jack Berglund, Lucas Pettersson, and top prospect Ivar Stenberg.

In the first game of the day, Sweden jumped out to a 2-0 lead against Slovakia on power-play goals from Frondell (game-high nine shots) and Eklund.

Despite some dominant play from Frondell, who was the game’s best player, Slovakia rallied thanks to a goal from Tomas Pobezal on a 5-on-3 with less than five seconds left in the second period. They drew even in the third period on a goal from Tomas Tibiak that was set up Tobias Pitka.

With the game still tied, Stenberg broke in and beat Alan Lendbak by tucking a backhand in with less than four minutes remaining. Eddie Genborg made a good pass that led Stenberg in for his first of the tournament. An explosive player, the 18-year-old Stenberg leads Frolunda HC in scoring with 24 points (6-18-24). He’s expected to challenge Canadian prospect Gavin McKenna for the top pick in the 2026 NHL Draft.

Sweden will play USA on New Year’s Eve. In Group B, Canada should get some competition from Finland and pesky Czechia. At last check, Finland was in control with a 6-2 lead over Denmark. Roope Vesterinen has a pair of goals and Aatos Koivu has a goal for Finland.

Canada will face Czechia in the night’s late game. They’re loaded with talent that includes McKenna, Michael Misa, Tij Iginla, Brady Martin, Porter Martone, and Zayne Parekh. Carter George is the starter. Adam Jiricek and Petr Sikora are two headliners for Czechia. Adam Novotny and Adam Benak are key players as well.

Group B also includes Latvia. It probably isn’t as deep as Group A. On paper, Canada looks like the heavy favorite. We’ll see if they can deliver on US soil.

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A Holiday Treat: Raddysh Sparks Rangers to Win Over Capitals

There haven’t been many nights when things came together for the Rangers. Two days before Christmas, they gave themselves a holiday treat by coming back to defeat the Capitals 7-3 in D.C. The win was exactly what they needed entering the break.

At times, they didn’t establish much at 5-on-5 against one of the league’s best teams. Despite getting outplayed in a second period that saw the Caps outscore the Rangers 3-1 to take a one-goal lead to the locker room, it was the Rangers that responded with a five-goal explosion in the third period to stun the Washington home crowd.

It was quite a way to shrug off a dismal effort in a bad loss to the Predators. Unlike that game when head coach Mike Sullivan was forced to play 11 forwards and seven defensemen due to Gabe Perreault and Matt Rempe catching a bug that’s been going around the locker room, both were back for Tuesday night’s game. That allowed Sullivan to roll four lines and three defense pairs. Here’s the lineup he went with for last night.

Brett Berard was called up just in case Perreault and Rempe needed another game to recover. Both he and Conor Sheary were the healthy scratches. Sullivan stuck with a top six that continued to feature Mika Zibanejad between Artemi Panarin and Alexis Lafreniere. Perreault rejoined Vincent Trocheck and Will Cuylle on the other scoring line.

For once, it was the play of the supporting cast that made a difference. Coming into the game versus his former team, Taylor Raddysh hadn’t scored a goal since Oct. 30. He’d been ice cold over the last month and a half. Perhaps seeing the Caps inspired him. Playing in front of the same fans that supported him last season, Raddysh scored twice and set up another goal for his second three-point game of the season.

That included opening the scoring when he slammed in a Jonny Brodzinski feed that slipped past Braden Schneider to end a long 23-game drought. It was only his second goal since recording a hat trick on Oct. 23.

The Rangers’ lead lasted just 23 seconds into the second period. On a botched coverage from Zibanejad, Ryan Leonard and Aleiksei Protas combined to set up John Carlson to tie the score. With Alexis Lafreniere hustling back to backcheck Protas, Zibanejad left Carlson open for his eighth that beat Igor Shesterkin.

With Carson Soucy in the box for holding Nic Dowd, some controversy followed. Following a Shesterkin save on Connor McMichael, it looked like he robbed Dylan Strome on the rebound of a power-play goal. At least ref Kelly Sutherland didn’t think the puck crossed the goal line completely. However, the Caps certainly felt differently about the play.

After conferencing with Toronto headquarters, the refs overturned the call on the ice, ruling that Strome’s shot indeed had gone completely in to give the Caps the lead on the power play. As play continued during the period, they kept waiting to hear back from the NHL on an explanation. That didn’t come until near the conclusion. Apparently, the league has its own camera inside the goal that can help determine whether it’s a goal or isn’t. They sent the screenshot to the TV networks.

Here’s the thing. If you’ve watched all the replays, there isn’t any that show the puck completely across the goal line. All you can tell is that Shesterkin made what looked like an unbelievable glove save with the puck on its edge in mid-air on the line. Here’s how it sounded on MSG Network.

When Sutherland made the official announcement that put the Caps ahead 2-1, Shesterkin immediately approached him to get an explanation. He thought he prevented a goal. If you go based on what the league sent out, then the puck completely crossed the line for a good goal. For some reason, it didn’t even look like the same play. Maybe if they could’ve sent out their own replay, it would’ve prevented a lot of confusion. A still shot isn’t the same as a replay.

Regardless, the Rangers didn’t let the decision prevent them from coming back and winning. Instead, they actually took advantage of a penalty Trocheck drew on McMichael. Somewhat miraculously, the number one unit converted on the power play thanks to some nice passing from Trocheck and Zibanejad that set up Cuylle for his 10th to tie the score.

But before you could get comfortable on the couch, Protas put the Caps back ahead with his 13th only 57 seconds later. On a play in the neutral zone, Hendrix Lapierre sent Sonny Milano in for a shot that rebounded right to Protas to make it 3-2. The guilty party was Brennan Othmann, who got caught in no-man’s land. He was puck watching while Protas came in and buried the rebound. When Othmann got back to the bench, Sullivan had some choice words for him.

The Rangers were mostly outplayed during the second with the Caps scoring three times on 15 shots. They took a one-goal lead into the third without Tom Wilson, who was out with an illness. At that point, it looked like it was going to be one of those games where they didn’t do enough to get a win. However, they had other ideas in the final period.

Sullivan didn’t bench anyone for the third. He instead kept playing everyone. At times, there were some different players on lines. Whatever he decided seemed to work.

On a rush up the ice started by Noah Laba on a drop pass for Cuylle up top, he sent a pass for Raddysh, who cut in and flipped a backhand that somehow went in past Logan Thompson for the game-tying goal at 8:10. He didn’t have much choice but to throw the shot on net. Perhaps Laba being in front distracted Thompson enough which allowed Raddysh to tie the game.

Over a minute later, Panarin took a Scott Morrow feed and had his shot tipped in by Lafreniere for his 100th career goal. With Morrow driving to the net, Lafreniere was parked in front and got a piece of the Panarin shot to finally catch a break. Earlier in the game, he had Thompson dead to rights, but hit the goalpost on a great move. No Ranger has failed to bury more chances than Lafreniere, who got his eighth. It was his first since Dec. 7.

Trocheck continued the fun when he steered in a Brodzinski rebound for his second goal in three games. On a quick faceoff win by Trocheck, Perreault tipped the puck back for a Brodzinski shot that came right to Trocheck to make it 5-3.

With the Caps pulling Thompson early in hopes of getting one to make it interesting, the strategy backfired when the trio of Lafreniere, Zibanejad, and Panarin combined on an empty netter scored by Bread with 2:16 remaining. It was his team-leading 14th. He also had an assist to hike his point total to 38 in 38 games.

Trocheck added another goal when he converted in front on a Cuylle pass to give him a multi-goal game. The trio of Cuylle, Raddysh, and Trocheck all recorded three points in the victory. That’s exactly what needs to happen for the Rangers moving forward after the holiday break.

They will celebrate tonight and Christmas with their families before headed to Belmont Park for what’s a crucial game against the Islanders. Having won three of four, the Rangers sit fifth in the Metropolitan Division with 42 points. They trail the third place Islanders by two in the standings. However, the Islanders have played two fewer games and have two more regulation wins (14-12). It’ll be the second of four meetings during the regular season. The Islanders took the first one 5-0 at MSG on Nov. 8. The final two are a home and home series on Jan. 28-29.

It’s hard to figure out this team. They remain a puzzle. Then again, look at the whole division. Even the Hurricanes have had their issues lately, blowing third period leads in losses to the Lightning and Panthers twice. The Flyers suddenly sit in second place having won a couple in a row. Even with Jack Hughes back, the Devils are still struggling to score goals after giving up a late goal to Adam Pelech in a 2-1 loss on Tuesday. They’ve dropped to sixth place with 41 points. The Pens can’t seem to beat anyone lately. And the Blue Jackets just traded for Mason Marchment, who’s scored three goals so far.

Even the Red Wings, who suddenly have risen to first in the Atlantic, still have questions in net. If you can explain who the best teams in the East are, please go right ahead. Unlike the West where you have the dominant Avalanche followed by the Stars and Wild, no team has cracked 50 points in the East.

The hockey isn’t great by any stretch. It’s a mediocre product despite Connor McDavid blowing past Nathan MacKinnon to take a six-point lead for the Art Ross. Most of the league has average goaltending. There should be more moves coming once the holiday freeze is over. However, most teams won’t be selling. That’s what makes it compelling.

World Juniors On Deck

While there won’t be any NHL games until this Saturday, the World Junior Championships starts on Dec. 26. The tournament host location takes us to the great hockey state of Minnesota.

After repeating as champions in 2025, Team USA doesn’t look to have as strong a roster. Gone are Trey Augustine, Zeev Buium, Drew Fortescue, Leonard, Oliver Moore, Danny Nelson, and Perreault. Returning are Cole Eiserman, James Hagens, Logan Hensler, Cole Hutson, Adam Kleber, Max Plante, Teddy Stiga, and Brody Ziemer. Trevor Connelly will miss the WJC due to an injury.

E.J. Emery will be on the blue line. The Rangers selected him 30th overall in 2024. He’s in his second year for North Dakota. In 17 games, he has two goals and two assists.

USA won’t be in the same Group as Canada, who should be the heavy favorites. The Canadians are loaded with talent headlined by Michael Misa, Tij Iginla, Porter Martone, and Gavin McKenna. They also boast Jett Luchanko, Braeden Cootes, Michael Hage, and Brady Martin. Zayne Parekh and Harrison Brunicke lead a balanced back end that also includes Kashawn Aitcheson, Cameron Reid, and Keaton Verhoeff, who will be competing with McKenna for the 2026 top pick. Carter George returns to the starter’s net. This is a scary roster that should win the gold medal.

USA and Sweden are expected to compete for the medal round. NHL Network will air games beginning on Boxing Day.

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Othmann Buried On Fourth Line by Directionless Rangers Before Holiday Break

Two days after being forced to play 11 forwards and seven defensemen due to illnesses preventing Gabe Perreault and Matt Rempe from playing at Nashville, the Rangers will have both players back in the lineup for tonight’s final game before the holiday break.

In an interesting development, Mike Sullivan will healthy scratch Conor Sheary when the Rangers challenge the Capitals in DC. After making the roster on a PTO, Sheary has played in 35 of the Rangers’ 38 games. He’s a solid checking player who’s been overused by Sullivan, who had him in the top six quite a bit for most of the first half. That’s despite Sheary only scoring one goal with eight assists for nine points.

If things don’t make sense, that’s because they don’t with the Rangers. A mediocre team that enters play with just one regulation win in their last 11 which came back on Dec. 4 over Ottawa, they’ve managed to go 5-4-2 over that stretch to hang around in the wild card race.

Despite being offensively challenged, with some of their games mind-numbing to watch like the pitiful effort in a 2-1 loss to the Predators, Sullivan continues to prioritize veterans over younger players who might be able to help them.

A good case in point is the continued treatment of Brennan Othmann. A 2021 first round pick, who was Chris Drury’s choice after he took over as team president and general manager, Othmann hasn’t had any success with the Rangers. He’s yet to score his first goal in 29 career games. However, similar to how Peter Laviolette handled him last season, Othmann continues to be buried on the fourth line.

After recording two assists in 22 games in 2024-25, here’s how it’s gone for Othmann:

Called up to play in Calgary on Oct. 26, Othmann has a rough game with a missed coverage leading to a Flames goal. Despite Noah Laba scoring the only goal in a 5-1 loss, Othmann finishes minus-1 in a season high 12:31.

The following game, he’s a healthy scratch against Vancouver in a game that the Rangers win 2-0. Othmann sits out for the remainder of the trip before it dawns on management to finally send him back down to Hartford.

With his confidence shaken, it takes a while for Othmann to find his game in the American Hockey League. Replacement Brett Berard gets into 11 games with the Rangers, playing mostly on the third line. Despite bringing good energy and grit, he fails to record a point. Eventually, the Rangers send Berard down and bring up Othmann.

On Dec. 18 versus the Blues, he receives 12 shifts all at even strength to log 7:14 in a 2-1 overtime win. He took a bad penalty in the offensive zone that the Rangers killed off.

Facing the Flyers two days later, Othmann stays on the fourth line with Sam Carrick and Rempe. Although he only plays 4:51 in 11 shifts, Othmann shows some character by defending himself against Flyers tough guy Nicolas Deslauriers, who hit him from behind. Not knowing who it was until he noticed the tattoos, Othmann absorbs some punches to lose the fight. However, he earns some respect from both teammates and Sullivan.

Playing for a third straight game with the Rangers visiting Nashville on Sunday, he plays with Laba and Taylor Raddysh on the third line. In a lackluster game where the team isn’t able to do much, Othmann puts together some strong shifts to create a couple of chances. He finishes with two shot attempts, a hit, and a block in 10:43.

Even in a game where he played better in a more defined role, it was a one-off for Othmann, who again finds himself on the fourth line for tonight. It doesn’t even matter if Sheary is sitting this one out. Othmann can’t seem to get a longer look on the third line, with Sullivan instead using Jonny Brodzinski and Raddysh next to Laba. A puzzling lineup decision that has fans questioning what the thinking is.

Questions linger about the decision-making from both Sullivan and the organization. Who’s calling the shots? Why can Sheary with his one goal play in the top six so much after spending last year with Syracuse in the AHL? Save the whole All In The Family narrative for another day. He’s out of the lineup, but a veteran [Raddysh] who’s fallen out of favor gets precedent over a 22-year-old prospect. It’s absurd.

It’s nice that Perreault is playing with Vincent Trocheck and Will Cuylle on the second line with J.T. Miller on the injured reserve with an upper-body injury. But the clock is ticking on Othmann, who will become a restricted free agent next summer. Isn’t it about time they give him a real opportunity to prove he belongs?

This is how the Rangers operate. The coaches change, but apparently not the philosophy. We saw Gerard Gallant treat 2017 first round pick Vitali Kravtsov like he committed war crimes. He failed to become anything in the NHL, with the Rangers dumping him on the Canucks for AHL fodder and a seventh round pick. They helped kill his value.

We know what didn’t happen with 2019 second overall pick Kaapo Kakko, who vented his frustration over how he was used by Laviolette, who couldn’t wait to get rid of him. Kaako was exiled to Seattle for Will Borgen, who Drury rushed to re-sign. Borgen has been a solid defensive defenseman, but he’s hardly going to move the needle.

Alexis Lafreniere remains an enigma. It’s hard to believe that he was a consensus number one overall pick in 2020. He doesn’t possess explosive skating or great hands. He was still handled poorly by Gallant before Laviolette gave him the keys to play with Trocheck and Artemi Panarin. Ever since he got paid last season, Lafreniere looks disinterested. He shows signs of the player he was in the 2024 Stanley Cup Playoffs, but he’s never consistent.

What is it about first round picks that lead to most of them failing with the Rangers? Is it the player development that includes plummers Jed Ortmeyer and Tanner Glass? Or is it that they rarely put these players in a position to succeed? It’s likely a combination of both.

When Drury doubled down by acquiring Miller last season for Filip Chytil, Victor Mancini, and a first round pick, he thought a broken core could still make the postseason. Instead, they sunk like the Titanic.

Even by subtracting Chris Kreider, Drury didn’t replace him on an aging roster that still depends heavily on Panarin and injured star defenseman Adam Fox. Ever since Fox went down, the power play has been an eyesore. The top unit never does anything. They’ve given up four shorthanded goals while failing miserably. The little used second unit has both of their goals. It doesn’t look like Fox will be ready for Dec. 27 versus the Islanders, when he first becomes eligible to be activated off long-term injured reserve.

In an Olympic season with a hectic schedule that doesn’t seem to be helping one of the oldest rosters as evidenced by their 0-6-1 record in the second game of back-to-backs, the Rangers need an injection of youth to help out. They rely way too much on Panarin, Mika Zibanejad, and Trocheck, who’s only scored once in six weeks. They won’t get back Miller for a while.

The lack of secondary scoring has really hurt them. Laba has nobody to play with. What’s preventing them from giving Othmann the chance to see if he can make a difference? It can’t be to be committed to Brodzinski or Raddysh or whoever Sullivan’s used.

The time is now for Othmann to play. It can’t be in a minimized role that hurts his value. Asset management isn’t an organizational strength under Drury, who can do no wrong under Jim Dolan. Has he even looked at the crowds at MSG lately? They’re not selling out. Fans are sick and tired of watching a boring product that isn’t worth close to what they’re charging for tickets.

Enough is enough.

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Devils’ Star Jack Hughes Scoring On and Off The Ice in Return

On Sunday, the Devils finally activated star center Jack Hughes off long-term injured reserve. After playing in the first 17 games where he led them in scoring with 10 goals and 20 points, Hughes accidentally cut his finger at a Chicago steakhouse during a team dinner for a superfan’s birthday on Nov. 13. The incident led to him having finger surgery and missing 18 games.

Without him, the Devils went 8-10-0 to tread water. They entered yesterday hanging onto the final wild card in a very tight Eastern Conference with many teams bunched up. Their play suffered without Hughes, whose elite skating and talent made them much more difficult for opponents. Although they found a way to squeeze out eight wins, including two critical ones by identical 2-1 margins over the Golden Knights and Mammoth on a recent two-game road trip, they only won five times in regulation over the 18-game stretch.

During that span, Jesper Bratt’s scoring was an issue with him only having one goal over six weeks. Despite racking up a dozen assists, he went 16 games without a goal before tallying his sixth in a loss to the Lightning on Dec. 11. Money in the shootout, Bratt needs to start finding the back of the net with regularity. In 2024-25, he paced the team in scoring with 88 points. However, he finished with 21 goals for his lowest total over a full season since getting 26 in 2021-22. More of a playmaker the past two and a half years, his 146 assists top all Devils since the start of 2023-24.

Dawson Mercer also had his play affected by the loss of Hughes. He got off to a great start by posting nine goals and seven assists for 16 points over the first 17 games, helping the Devils to a 12-4-1 start. Following Hughes’ unfortunate finger injury, he only tallied six points (1-5-6) afterward.

Happy Return For Hughes in Loss

It was a happy return for Hughes in a 3-1 loss to the Sabres at home. Despite the outcome, the happy-go-lucky 24-year-old star heard loud cheers from the crowd when he took his first shift. Knowing his importance to the Devils’ chances, they understand how much he means. Without him, they became a fringe playoff team that fell to the middle of the pack.

As fate would have it, Hughes scored the first goal of Sunday’s game to a thunderous ovation at The Rock. Taking a pass from Mercer, Hughes entered the Buffalo zone, walked into the left circle and fired home his 11th past Ukko-Pekka Luukkonen to put the Devils ahead in the first period. He gave a big fist pump during an emotional celebration with teammates.

For starters, it showed that Hughes shouldn’t have any concerns over the repaired finger. If he can fire the puck with the same accuracy like he did in his return, that’s a good sign. Undoubtedly, the Devils need a healthy and productive Jack to make the postseason. Something they should be able to do now that he’s back along with Timo Meier and promising rookie Arseny Gritsyuk, with both returning last night.

New Jersey finally has dependable shutdown defenseman Brett Pesce back. He helped them stifle Vegas and Utah in consecutive road wins prior to the frustrating defeat in Newark. If there’s one thing that they’ll have to fix, it’s their erratic play on home ice. Once a big weapon early in the season, they’ve had their issues winning at The Prudential Center. Since losing in overtime to the Islanders on Nov. 10, they’ve lost seven of 10 at home with all seven coming over the last eight.

“For me personally, just really fun to get back out there and play,” Hughes told Amanda Stein at his locker. “Yeah. I’m just glad I’m out there again. It’s the best thing to do.”

The Devils will finish up by making the trip to Long Island to visit the Islanders on Tuesday night before the Christmas holiday break. The Islanders are one of the teams they’re now behind in the division. A point separates them in the standings entering tomorrow night’s matchup. It’ll be the second of four meetings between the old Patrick Division rivals. They’ll also meet again at Elmont on Jan. 6 after the New Year. The Devils and Islanders wrap up on Feb. 5 back in Newark.

Hughes Spotted With Famous Pop Star In City

On the day off, Hughes was spotted with famous pop star Tate McRae in New York City doing some holiday shopping. They looked pretty cozy together.

It was a month ago that the rumors circulated that Hughes and McRae were an item. They were seen eating out at a restaurant on Nov. 21. The 22-year-old pop singer is from Calgary and a big hockey fan. She was seen taking in a Flames game last season. McRae was previously linked to rap star The Kid Laroi before they mutually agreed to split up in July.

Not surprisingly, McRae was seated at Sunday’s Devils game to take in her new boyfriend in his first game back. He didn’t disappoint.

Regardless of what he’s doing off the ice, Hughes must continue to deliver on it for the Devils. They were lost without him. We’ll see if he can lead them to a third consecutive postseason where they still have higher aspirations. In a wide open East where nothing is certain, anything is possible. You can bet that Hughes will be the headliner if they’re successful in the new calendar year.

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Rangers’ Latest Listless Performance Inexplicable

It doesn’t matter who was out for the Rangers. Their listless performance was inexplicable in a 2-1 loss to the Predators in Music City.

Even if they were without Gabe Perreault and Matt Rempe, who were both ruled out by Mike Sullivan before the game due to falling ill, there aren’t any excuses for their play. For the fourth time this season, the Rangers lost to the 32nd overall team in the standings.

So much for building on an emotional home win over the Flyers the day before. In a nutshell, this is who they are. They can go out and beat good teams. But in the same sentence, they can lose to the worst teams the NHL has to offer. Mediocre is what they are, and there doesn’t seem to be any solutions coming that’ll fix a roster devoid of top tier talent as Christmas approaches. If they lose tomorrow’s game to the Capitals, there should be coal in their stockings. Of course, that’s assuming the same team doesn’t pull a 180 and beat one of the best teams in the league.

To hear Vincent Trocheck put it, they lacked pride when asked about the team’s record in the second game of back-to-backs. By losing to the Predators, the Rangers fell to 0-6-1 in such situations.

“Sucks not having everybody. Obviously, tough spot back-to-back, and then guys are getting sick and guys go down. But, I mean, that doesn’t affect how we play with pride. If there’s anything to take away from today, we didn’t play with pride,” Trocheck told Mollie Walker of the NY Post following the mind-numbing defeat that nearly was a shutout for Nashville backup Justus Annunen before Jonny Brodzinski scored with 36.2 seconds left following a Steven Stamkos empty netter that wound up as the game-winner.

What made it even worse is that none of the Rangers’ best players had good games. Both Artemi Panarin and Alexis Lafreniere were held to one shot while Trocheck and Mika Zibanejad didn’t register a single one. Will Cuylle had a night to forget as well.

Without captain J.T. Miller, who was placed on the injured reserve on Monday due to the upper-body injury he suffered following a hit from Flyers defenseman Nick Seeler, the Rangers played a forward short due to the illnesses of Perreault and Rempe. Sullivan went with 11 forwards and seven defensemen, with Urho Vaakanainen taking some shifts. He only received 3:59 of ice time.

Despite that, there’s no reason they couldn’t have scored at least one goal prior to Stamkos finishing them off at 19:12 to give the Predators enough cushion to get the win. The Rangers have nobody to blame but themselves for not generating enough offense. It wasn’t like they faced a rested opponent, either. Nashville also played the night before. They found a way to win the second game of a back-to-back by controlling most of the play. In fact, they held a 26-10 edge in shots through the first two periods and took a 1-0 lead on a Filip Forsberg goal into the third.

In three power play chances, the Rangers had only a single shot. They couldn’t or wouldn’t get anything done against an NHL doormat. The Predators wanted it more by outhustling them. By the third man-advantage that came with 3:59 left due to a delay of game, an ineffective Scott Morrow had been replaced on the point by Vladislav Gavrikov. It didn’t go any better.

They set up Panarin for the only shot which came from the outside that Annunen handled with relative ease. There was another pass over for Panarin, who got bumped off the puck on the right point. If there was one word to describe it, frustrating. Another would be unwatchable, which seems to be the theme of the Rangers’ centennial season. It looks like they’re really trying to play hockey in the Roaring Twenties. At least those teams competed.

Trocheck’s description is about as damning a postgame quote following a loss. The Rangers still don’t have a identity 38 games in under Sullivan, who again used Conor Sheary in the top six due to the situation. Maybe if they all played as hard as Sheary does, they’d have a better record.

It’s not like teams are pulling away in the wild card race. The Devils got back Jack Hughes, who scored early but they still lost to the Sabres. They remain at 41 points and moved up due to the Bruins losing against the Senators. One point separates the Rangers from the Flyers and Devils, who both have played less games. There’s a stack of teams bunched up due to parity.

If there’s one player who deserves better, it’s Jonathan Quick. He once again played extremely well. Despite making 30 saves with some of them superb to give the Rangers a chance, he took the hard luck loss.

Quick hasn’t won since Nov. 7. His numbers have been outstanding. In the five games since with the backup missing time due to an injury, he’s posted a 2.20 goals-against-average and .927 save percentage. In the 4-1 loss to the Canucks on Dec. 16, he allowed one bad goal, which has been a rarity. In nine games this season, he’s 3-5-1 with a 1.79 GAA and .937 save percentage.

It’s unthinkable how brilliant he’s been in his third year on Broadway. If only the players played better in front of him. What a novel concept.

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Rangers Show Character In Shootout Win Over Flyers

For once at least, the Rangers proved that they could win on home ice. They showed a lot of character in rallying from a two-goal deficit to come back and defeat the Flyers 5-4 in a shootout at Madison Square Garden.

After losing back-to-back games earlier in the week at MSG, they dug really deep to earn an important win over the bitter rival Flyers. In doing so, they gained a valuable point in the division to inch closer to the wild card race. They’re up to 40 points in 37 games, which is one behind Philadelphia, who have played three less games.

Regardless, it was big for the Rangers to follow up a 2-1 overtime triumph over St. Louis on Thursday with a second consecutive win. They need to start banking points to give themselves a chance of staying in the playoff race.

They overcame a subpar performance from Igor Shesterkin, who allowed three consecutive goals over a 3:42 span to put them down 3-1 during a dismal second period. After getting a late goal in the first period from Artemi Panarin to grab the lead, the Rangers were undisciplined during the second. Bad penalties and poor special teams led to the Flyers getting all four of their goals in the period.

It started with Will Cuylle being sent off for interference on Matvei Michkov. With Cuylle in the box, Michkov and Flyers rookie Denver Barkley combined on a Travis Sanheim power-play goal that tied the game at 6:42. The defenseman had his long shot beat Shesterkin clean on the blocker side.

Before you looked up, Owen Tippett then used a similar shot by going high blocker only 23 seconds later to give the Flyers the lead. He’s a better shooter than Sanheim, but it was clear what area they were targeting.

With Panarin just off for a slash on Barkley, who recorded two assists in his first career NHL game, it took the Flyers all of three seconds to make it three in a row. This time, leading scorer Trevor Zegras had his one-timer go right past the blocker of Shesterkin to suddenly put the Rangers behind by two.

They got a reprieve when Panarin took advantage of a turnover and scored unassisted for his second of the game. He wired a shot inside the far goalpost by Samuel Ersson.

But with the Rangers on a power play trailing by one, a careless Scott Morrow turnover led to Rodrigo Abols converting a three-on-one for a shorthanded goal that restored the two-goal lead for the Flyers.

At that point, Mike Sullivan called a timeout to regroup his team, which looked out of sorts. Was it going to be another one of those bad losses at home? It sure felt like it. During the stoppage, Sullivan had some strong words for his players.

Already having seen Brennan Othmann stand up to Nicolas Deslauriers for a hit from behind, they responded well to the timeout. Even with Othmann taking a beating from one of the game’s toughest enforcers, it showed some heart. He didn’t play much, but Othmann earned some kudos from his teammates.

They first had to kill off a Noah Laba penalty to hang around. Earlier in the period, Laba was interfered with by Emil Andrae, who wasn’t called for it. That led to Cuylle taking the only penalty, which resulted in Sanheim tying the score.

Unlike when Shesterkin failed to pick up Cuylle, the Rangers got the job done on the penalty kill by only allowing one shot from the outside.

With time running down, Morrow nearly redeemed himself. But he had his shot from in close stopped by Ersson.

After failing to capitalize on a man-advantage (man-disadvantage), the Blueshirts got back in it thanks to Vincent Trocheck putting in his own rebound to cut the deficit to 4-3 with 10:47 left.

After Gabe Perreault led J.T. Miller, he made a good pass for Trocheck, who was able to sneak a backhand through Ersson for his first goal since Nov. 26. That ended an 11-game scoring drought.

With time starting to get short, Trocheck played a key role in helping the Rangers tie the score. During a forecheck, he applied enough pressure on Rasmus Ristolainen to force him to clear the puck out of play. After careful discussion from the refs, they made the right call for a delay of game that gave the Rangers one more power play with exactly three minutes remaining.

This time, they made it work thanks to some good teamwork. After playing catch with Zibanejad, Morrow moved the puck back for a quick one-timer that beat Ersson to tie it with 2:34 left in regulation.

Zibanejad’s goal was his 115th power-play goal as a member of the Rangers, putting him within one of tying both Camille Henry and Chris Kreider for the franchise record. The goal also moved him into a tie for sixth place with Vic Hadfield on the all-time Rangers franchise list. Zibanejad is up to 262 goals. Next up is Andy Bathgate (272).

The game went into overtime. With a crucial point up for grabs, the Rangers got themselves in penalty trouble. First, Panarin was called for slashing when he accidentally broke the stick of Cam York. He was incensed by the call due to it being soft. 

But the Flyers were their own worst enemy on the four-on-three by continuing to pass the puck around instead of setting up shots. Shesterkin was only called upon to make two saves on Cam York with neither difficult.

After Panarin returned, he got a tough shot that Ersson shrugged off. On a play in his own zone, Morrow gave away the puck in the neutral zone, which led to him taking down Zegras. It was another lousy puck decision that put the Flyers back on the power play with less than 51 seconds left.

Following a Flyers timeout taken by Rick Tocchet, they set up a good shot that Travis Konecny got a piece of. This time, Shesterkin made the big save. It was the only shot the Flyers got which meant a shootout.

In Round One, Panarin went to the backhand on a deke after getting Ersson to bite on the fake to make it 1-0. Shesterkin denied the dangerous Zegras.

In Round Two, Trocheck came in from the right side before going far side to make it 2-0. With Konecny needing to score, Shesterkin went to an aggressive poke check that forced Konecny to go high with his shot grazing off the crossbar to give the Rangers a well deserved victory on home ice.

Happy teammates gave it to Shesterkin, who overcame a bad period to get the win. Maybe that will be a confidence boost for the emotional goalie, who clearly needed it after how frustrated he was following the home loss to Vancouver on Tuesday.

We’ll see if the Rangers can follow it up when they visit Nashville tomorrow night. They really need to make it three straight wins. There are no excuses.

Miller Exits With Upper-body Injury

After picking up a primary assist on Trocheck’s goal that made it 4-3 in the third period, Miller exited the game with an upper-body injury.

On a play in the neutral zone, Miller absorbed a clean open ice hit from Nick Seeler that sent him down. Unfortunately, he was favoring his shoulder as he went to the locker room.

It didn’t look good. Miller is just starting to find his rhythm offensively. If he’s lost for a stretch, it would be another blow to the Rangers. In his place, Cuylle moved up to play with Trocheck and Perreault, who picked up his third point in five games this season.

I wouldn’t expect to see Miller tomorrow or on Dec. 23 versus the Capitals.

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Despite Win, Rangers Need to Make Changes

In case you missed it, there was a game last night in St. Louis. Ultimately, the Rangers were winners by defeating the Blues 2-1 on captain J.T. Miller’s third overtime goal of the season. The victory snapped a two-game losing streak.

As has been the case throughout the first three months, the Rangers do most of their winning on the road. They improved to 13-5-1 away from Madison Square Garden. Astonishingly, 13 of their 17 wins have come while on the road, where they’ve outscored opponents 60-43. The plus-17 goal differential ranks fourth in the NHL, trailing the Avalanche, Lightning, and Stars.

There’s one big difference between the Rangers and those teams. They are abominable at home with a 4-10-3 record that ranks near the bottom of the league. Statisically, their minus-23 goal differential (30 GF 53 GA) is the worst in the NHL. In consecutive defeats to the Ducks and Canucks earlier this week, they were held to only one goal, getting booed off the ice. They’ll return to MSG to host the Flyers early tomorrow afternoon for their final home game of the calendar year. Expectations will be low.

When it comes to evaluating this team, there isn’t much cause for optimism. It isn’t a big deal that they came away with two points against the woefully bad Blues. Even on a night that rookie Gabe Perreault scored his first career NHL goal when a Will Cuylle feed deflected off his skate on the power play, there are more reasons to be concerned about how they played.

Somehow, facing an opponent who played the night before, they were outplayed by a significant margin in the third period. It looked like the Rangers were the team that was playing the second game of a back-to-back. After outshooting the Blues 25-15 through two periods, they spent a lot of time in their defensive zone during a lopsided third that saw the home team test Igor Shesterkin with 11 shots while they managed just five. It was mind-numbing to watch.

In overtime, Vladislav Gavrikov did a good job escaping a check to move the puck for Vincent Trocheck. He then skated into the St. Louis zone and made a back pass in the high slot for an open Miller, whose shot beat Jordan Binnington top shelf to give the Rangers the win.

Miller seems to play better during three-on-three when there’s more open space. He has to figure out a way to get it done at five-on-five in regulation. Of his 10 goals so far, three have come on the power play and three have come in overtime.

There hasn’t been enough consistency or production at even strength for a player who’s making $8 million over the next four years, with his contract expiring in 2030. For at least this season and next, he has a full no-movement clause (NMC). It becomes modified starting in 2027-28. He’ll be 34.

Drury’s Commitment to Veteran Centers Problematic

If there’s a dilemma with the current roster, it’s the commitment from Rangers team president and general manager Chris Drury to veteran centers in their thirties. I already highlighted Miller’s deal above. At least, he’ll become eligible to be moved sooner rather than later.

Mika Zibanejad is in the fourth year of a contract that doesn’t expire until 2030. Similar to Miller, he’s 32 and has a full NMC that allows him to stay in the New York City until the final year of the deal. He signed an eight-year, $68 million contract extension on Oct. 10, 2021. He’ll be 36 entering 2029-30. Even more noteworthy, Zibanejad’s contract doesn’t become modified until seven days prior to the 2030 trade deadline when it converts to a 21-team No-Trade List.

Zibanejad loves playing for the Rangers and being part of the city. He has a family that includes wife Irma and two-year-old daughter Ella. Why would he want to uproot his family when they live in the greatest city in the world? Such concerns matter when it comes to asking a player to sign off on waving their NMC.

Miller was comfortable with doing it when Canucks general manager Jim Rutherford approached him last January about a trade to the Big Apple. However, that was a different situation. He didn’t get along with Elias Pettersson, and also took a personal leave of absence before returning. It was obvious that something was going to happen. There was no way Rutherford could keep both happy. So, Miller was happy to accept a deal back to the Rangers where his career started.

On Jan. 31, Miller was traded with Jackson Dorrington and Erik Brannstrom from the Canucks to the Rangers in exchange for Filip Chytil, Victor Mancini, and a conditional 2025 first round pick. From a team perspective, Drury doubled down on a roster that never hit its stride. Even though Miller found chemistry with Zibanejad and Cuylle, the Rangers remained inconsistent enough to miss the playoffs.

If there was a positive, Miller put up 13 goals and 22 assists for 35 points in 32 games to average over a point-per-game. Zibanejad also finished 2024-25 well by tallying 33 points (11-22-33) over the final 32 games. That included reaching the 20-goal mark for the eighth straight season. However, his 62 points were the lowest total over a full season since he had 47 in 2017-18. He also finished last year with a minus-22 rating for the second lowest of his career.

The thing about investing long-term in players into their thirties is that the contracts normally don’t age well. Zibanejad had already started to show decline in 2023-24 when the Rangers won the Presidents’ Trophy. He went from achieving career bests in points (91), even-strength points (50), and power-play goals (20) to 72 points, 35 even-strength points, and 12 power-play goals.

While the numbers were still respectable, there was already concern about his effectiveness at five-on-five. Especially following a disappointing performance in the Eastern Conference Final. Zibanejad didn’t score a goal and had only two assists while Chris Kreider finished with a goal and assist. Neither distinguished themselves in a six-game series loss to the Panthers. Unfortunately, that downward spiral carried over into last year. Injuries limited Kreider, who was put on the block by Drury in a very unpopular league memo.

So far, Zibanejad has been better thus far in 2025-26. His 11 goals are tied with Artemi Panarin for the most on the team. Zibanejad ranks third on the team in scoring with 25 points, with his six power-play goals leading the Blueshirts.

When it comes to the center position, the Rangers also have Vincent Trocheck, who used to play with Panarin and Alexis Lafreniere. However, he’s mostly been working with Miller, who’s shifted to the right side.

Trocheck has been worth the contract Drury gave him. The $5.625 million cap hit is in line for a capable second center who is trusted in all situations, including the penalty kill. In fact, Trocheck tied for the league lead with six shorthanded goals last season. That followed up a great 2023-24 that saw him set personal bests in assists (52), points (77) and even-strength points (52) while centering Panarin and Lafreniere. Unfortunately, the trio fell apart defensively, which led to them not being as dependable.

Similar to Miller and Zibanejad, Trocheck is the same age. The 32-year-old Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania native is in the fourth year of his contract. Unlike the first three when he had a full NMC, he now has a moderated No-Trade Clause which includes a 12-Team No-Trade List for 2025-26. It then becomes a 10-Team No-Trade in 2026-27. The final two seasons, it dwindles down to six.

The question right now for Drury is what happens if the Rangers bottom out. They’re still hanging around due to how much parity there is. Entering Friday, they sat in sixth place in the Metropolitan Division with 38 points in 36 games. With teams continuing to move up and down in the playoff race, the Rangers only trail the wild-card leading Flyers by two points.

The Lightning sit in the final wild-card with 39 points. They remain in that spot ahead of the Devils due to the first tiebreaker, with their 15 regulation wins more than every other team except the Panthers, who came in with 16 headed into their home game against the Hurricanes.

It’s hard to predict what will happen. But if the Rangers continue to lose games, perhaps Drury might have to start considering his options. If you believe the reports, the organization isn’t ready to have a firesale. They still think it’s possible to improve the roster and qualify for the postseason. If you’ve watched them, you know how offensively challenged they are.

At some point, things could change. If they wind up going the wrong way, like the classic scene in Planes, Trains and Automobiles, Trocheck could start drawing interest around the league. His contract makes him a good candidate for contenders to ask Drury about. He has value for teams who can use an upgrade at center. Especially considering how versatile he is. We’re talking about a player who’s over 54.0 percent on faceoffs for his career. He brings grit and physicality to most of his shifts.

If there’s a reason that the Rangers should be weary about having over $22 million tied into three veteran centers, it’s that they’re all 32. If you start to look around, it’s a young man’s league. Outside of Nathan MacKinnon and Connor McDavid, who are the game’s best players, we’re starting to see the meteoric rise of Connor Bedard, Leo Carlsson, and Macklin Celebrini, who are all franchise players that haven’t even turned 21 yet. Celebrini is setting records as a teenager in his super sophomore campaign in San Jose while Bedard and Carlsson have emerged for their respective teams in Chicago and Anaheim.

The Big Panarin Question

Since he chose the bright lights and big city in July 2019, Panarin has been the best ever free agent signed by the Rangers. At 34, the uber talented Bread Man continues to pile up points on Broadway.

Panarin has paced them in scoring every season since agreeing to a seven-year, $81.5 million contract that made him the highest paid player in franchise history. That included posting a career best 49 goals and 120 points in 2023-24. One of the best years ever by a New York Ranger. His 120 points rank second behind Jaromir Jagr for the most in a single season by a Blueshirt. Jagr broke Jean Ratelle’s record in 2005-06 when he scored 54 goals and had 123 points. Both are still franchise marks.

In 465 games with the Rangers, Panarin has registered 197 goals with 387 assists for a total of 584 points, which put him well over a point-per-game. There’s no debating how much he’s produced. Even if his postseason track record hasn’t been as good, he certainly is making a strong case to stay in his walk year.

The big question is whether or not it’s the right move for the team moving forward. With basically all the premier free agents of the 2026 class gone due to signing contract extensions with their current teams (big shocker), there aren’t many big names left. Unless you think Alex Tuch is going to be worth north of the $10 million that he’s rumored to be seeking while stuck in Buffalo. There’s not much else out there.

Entering the season, Panarin was unwilling to take a home team discount for an extension. Is he going to be worth it when he turns 35 on his next deal? He keeps himself in great shape. The skating and dynamic playmaking are still there on most nights. He also possesses a worldclass shot, which he connected on much more over the past two seasons – scoring a combined 86 goals. It hasn’t been as easy to finish on a lousy roster that lacks elite talent.

Part of it might be Rangers head coach Mike Sullivan’s defensive system. They pay much more attention to the details, which include having a solid structure and coming back defensively. The team remains one of the league’s worst offenses, ranking near the bottom in scoring. At the forefront is their Jekyll and Hyde act with the lack of offense at The Garden leading to them getting shut out a franchise record six times in a season.

What does Panarin want? If the team’s going nowhere while stuck in mediocrity, wouldn’t it make sense for him to consider waving his NMC to go try to win a Stanley Cup? He has the final say on whether he wants to stay or go. If they continue to look like a non-contender, the communication between Drury and Panarin will be important.

If you believe the rumors that circulated earlier this season, a number of teams would be interested in acquiring Panarin. How they plan to fit that salary into their cap remains to be seen. Figure any such deal would have the Rangers picking up a portion of the $11.667 million salary. As the calendar year changes, we’ll have a better idea of where things stand.

The Need to Get Younger

On some nights, the lack of speed is evident. It’s hard for the Rangers to keep up with some of the younger and more talented rosters. They were outgunned by Bedard in Chicago. His line dominated most of their shifts with Bedard scoring and setting up a goal in a Blackhawks 3-0 win on Dec. 10.

There hasn’t been much success in regulation this month. In December, the Rangers are 4-3-2. Three of those four victories have come in overtime. In fact, their only win in regulation came on Dec. 4 when they defeated the Senators 4-2. Since then, they’ve lost five of their last seven (2-3-2).

If the big guns aren’t leading the way, the Rangers don’t stand much of a chance. After the top three of Panarin, Zibanejad, and Miller, Cuylle and Lafreniere are the closest. Neither is having a good season.

For the second consecutive year, Lafreniere seems to coast during games. The seven goals and 18 points is underwhelming for a former top pick who gets paid over $7 million. It’s rather pitiful that he only has seven goals, which follows a disturbing trend that started after he was signed long-term.

Cuylle puts more of an honest effort in on most nights. Though not as skilled as Lafreniere, he makes up for it with a willingness to go to the front of the net. He also finishes checks and is more effective on the forecheck. He ranks fourth among Rangers forwards with 19 points (9-10-19). Unfortunately, his defensive game has suffered due to some costly turnovers leading to goals against.

Outside of that, there’s rookie Noah Laba. After making the roster from camp, he’s certainly an effective player while centering the third line. The trouble is that he doesn’t have much to play with.

On a roster devoid of talent, Laba has somehow put up decent numbers. He has five goals and six assists, a plus-1 rating, and is over 52.0 percent on faceoffs as a first-year player. He is even trusted enough by the coaching staff to kill penalties. Laba picked up his 11th point of the season with a nice cross-ice pass that set up Perreault’s first. It was a head-up play by him to get the puck across for Cuylle to find Perreault.

Laba has both the size and speed that most of the roster lacks. However, it’s hard to conclude what his ceiling is. He looks like a capable third line player who’s fundamentally sound. On a team that doesn’t possess much speed, the 22-year-old center has stood out as one of the bright spots. It’ll be interesting to see if he can maintain his play in the second half.

Look no further than Sullivan using Conor Sheary more often than not in the top six. Without Panarin, who missed Thursday’s game due to illness, the 33-year-old veteran was on the first line. For a player who made the team on a PTO, that shouldn’t be the case at this point. He has one goal and eight assists in 33 games. In a recent game, Sheary had what should’ve been a two-on-one, but he butchered the puck, turning it into nothing.

If they want to play him, it should be in a reduced role. He isn’t a bad player, but he shouldn’t be receiving more ice time than Perreault or Brennan Othmann, who was stuck on the fourth line yesterday. What’s even the point of bringing up the 2021 first round pick if he’s not going to play in a top nine role? They’ve absolutely tanked his value. He’s still young enough to be given a look with Laba on the third line and second power play unit, where he should replace Sheary.

Depth scoring remains an issue. Taylor Raddysh hasn’t scored since Oct. 30. He once led the Rangers in goals with five. Now, he’s an afterthought. Why did Drury sign him for two years? Juuso Parssinen was exiled to Hartford and got hurt. He was inexplicably signed for two years last spring. Nothing like Drury doubling down on a failed prospect before he even hired Sullivan.

They’ve tried unsuccessfully to bring up prospects. Brett Berard got 11 games, playing mostly with Laba. Despite providing energy and grit, he didn’t record a point. Jaroslav Chmelar was back up for the second time to play with Sam Carrick and Matt Rempe on the fourth line. His skating and size make him a possible NHL player. But like Berard, he didn’t contribute offensively. His physicality is a plus.

If you could believe it, they actually miss Adam Edstrom. He had only two goals and two helpers in 24 games. He’s still on LTIR. Edstrom has the size, skating, and speed to become a trusted fourth liner. Whether or not he can improve his goal scoring remains to be seen.

With most of these guys, including Rempe, who provides energy on the forecheck and by screening goalies, they’re severely limited. Outside of Perreault, who’s a top prospect, there’s hardly any reason to get excited. The best we can hope for is that Perreault follows up getting his first goal by proving he belongs. At only 20 years old, there’s cause for optimism.

Still Missing Fox

When the Rangers host the Flyers tomorrow, it’ll be without Adam Fox. Remarkably, he still ranks second on the team in points with 26 (3-23-26). He suffered an upper-body injury (shoulder) against the Lightning in the second period on a Brandon Hagel hit on Nov. 29.

Without Fox, the power play is a horror show. Sullivan has tried a five-forward top unit that didn’t have any success. They’ve given up three shorthanded goals, with one being an empty netter against Vancouver. The little used second unit has actually been okay producing both power-play goals since Fox went down.

In the most recent game, Scott Morrow was on the point of the number one unit. A rookie defenseman who’s a good skater with offensive instincts, Morrow is a player to watch. Acquired from Carolina as part of the K’Andre Miller deal that included a first round pick in return, Morrow has one assist in 11 games so far.

On what’s mostly a defensive oriented blue line that features Gavrikov, at least he’s provided offense. The former King has six goals and eight assists for 14 points, which ranks second among Rangers defensemen behind Fox. He isn’t shy about shooting the puck when there’s an opening. The problem is he’s the only defenseman who’s proven capable of contributing from the back end.

Will Borgen, Braden Schneider, and Carson Soucy are offensive to the eyeballs. That isn’t meant to be disrespectful to each. It’s not in their DNA to jump into the play and create offense. To his credit, the defensive-minded Soucy has three goals and three assists to lead that trio. Borgen has two goals and two helpers. Schneider has a goal and five assists. None are capable of playing top minutes.

Sullivan has trusted Schneider enough to have him work with Gavrikov on the top pair. They’ve given up more goals than they’ve been on for, getting outscored 9-3. If they aren’t getting it done, why not try someone else instead? He probably doesn’t want to bump the inexperienced Morrow up. He would have difficulty matched up against better quality competition. Sullivan doesn’t seem interested in breaking up Soucy and Borgen.

If there’s been a player who’s stood out, it’s Matthew Robertson. An unproven commodity entering the season due to Laviolette’s reluctancy to use him, the 2019 second round pick has proven capable of playing sound defensively on the third pair. He’s a stay at home defenseman who uses his size well.

Most intriguing is that when he’s been in the offensive zone, Robertson has made some smart reads that resulted in shots getting through. As evidenced by his two goals and four assists in 27 games, the 24-year-old has proven himself under Sullivan, who seems to favor him over the less physical Urho Vaakanainen. Robertson and Morrow have gotten better as a third pair. Of course, there’s still growing pains, but it’s been mostly positive.

If ever a team needed an infusion of young talent, it’s the Rangers. They still must wait until Fox is cleared before he can return from LTIR. He doesn’t become eligible until Dec. 27 against the Islanders. However, that might not be a realistic timetable for his return. According to Mollie Walker of the NY Post, Fox skated for the first time with the team yesterday. He might not be ready until the new calendar year.

Looking Ahead

Following Saturday’s game against the Flyers, the Rangers head out for Nashville to face the Predators on Sunday night. It’s the first of a six-game road trip. They’ll visit Washington two days before the Christmas break.

Afterwards, they visit the Islanders on Dec. 27 at Elmont Park. In another puzzling schedule snafu, they have to go back to Washington following Carolina for an early New Year’s Eve game. In two days’ time, they’ll meet the Panthers in the Winter Classic on Jan. 2 at LoanDepot Park in Miami. That’s assuming the weather cooperates.

These next seven games could help determine what happens with the season. Of course, there’s no guarantee that any of the teams they’re jockeying with will go on a hot or cold streak. The bottom line is that there’s too many unwatchable games in a league that has invited chaos. The archaic point system isn’t helping. More emphasis must be placed on winning in regulation.

Even worse is that you have potentially three playoff contenders all playing in the same division. If you’ve been paying attention, you know exactly which teams I’m referring to. If not, your hint is where Quinn Hughes now plays. With the current playoff format, only one of those teams will reach the Conference Finals. That is an indictment on the current playoff system.

I’ll have more on other league stuff around the holidays. It sure beats writing about the Rangers.

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Othmann and Perreault Return to Struggling Blueshirts

Following a woeful display in a mind-numbing 3-0 loss to the NHL worst Canucks on Tuesday night, the Rangers made some changes. Brett Berard and Jaroslav Chmelar were sent back down to the Hartford Wolf Pack.

Brennan Othmann and Gabe Perreault returned to the struggling Blueshirts, who have already set a franchise record for most times shut out at home in a season. By losing to an opponent that was without their leading scorer Elias Pettersson, and playing for the second time since former captain Quinn Hughes was traded to the Wild, the Rangers’ offensive futility at MSG hit rock bottom. Thatcher Demko stopped all 23 shots to shut them out for the sixth time on home ice. That included another collar on the power play with them going 0-for-4.

Even the return of Mika Zibanejad, who sat out against the Ducks due to getting stuck in traffic due to an accident on Monday, wasn’t able to make a difference. For some reason, the Rangers don’t score goals at home, which is what made the 5-4 come from behind win over the Canadiens so rare. They have won a league low four games at MSG. Now 4-10-3, they’ve been outscored by opponents 53-30. Nobody has scored less goals at home than these Blueshirts, who are the gang that can’t shoot straight.

By sending down Berard and Chmelar, they’re obviously searching for more scoring. Despite doing some good things early in his recall, Berard failed to record a point and only had 10 shots. After getting seven shots in his first three games, he only totaled three over the last eight, which included none in his last three. A good skater who brings energy and hustle, the 23-year-old Berard needs to regain his confidence in Hartford. He can’t stay up if he’s unable to contribute on the third line.

For Chmelar, it was his second brief stint with the big club. He got into four games while bringing some physicality to the fourth line, which looked more in sync with the return of Matt Rempe. Chmelar has no points in six games this season. If he can continue to develop nicely in the American Hockey League (AHL), it probably won’t be the last time we see him.

Once Rempe was activated off long-term injured reserve (LTIR) on Monday with Zibanejad missing the game against the Ducks, it was a matter of time before some roster moves were made. Especially with the offense reverting back to what it’s been for most of the first half.

With Perreault continuing to prove himself in the AHL by pacing the Wolf Pack in scoring with 10 goals and seven assists for 17 points over 20 games, he earned another chance to come up. In three games, he recorded his first career point by assisting on a power-play goal. Now, the 20-year-old will have another opportunity to show what he can do with the Rangers, whose offense ranks near the bottom of the league entering tonight’s match at St. Louis. Ironically, it’s a matchup between two of the worst scoring teams. At the very least, Perreault will be featured on the second power play unit.

Artemi Panarin is sick, which means he’s a game-time decision. The Rangers could very well be without their leading scorer. If he can’t go, someone else will have to step up.

Othmann is finally back up for another chance. After having a rough outing in a blowout loss at Calgary, he never played another game earlier this season. Eventually, he was sent down to Hartford. It took a while for the 2021 first round pick to regain his confidence. Something he didn’t shy away from when speaking to reporters.

The question for Mike Sullivan is, why is Othmann playing with Carrick and Rempe on the fourth line? What’s he going to prove playing with two grinders who have a combined two goals and seven points? It doesn’t make any sense for him to not at least be on the third line with Noah Laba. Conor Sheary could easily slide down to play on the fourth line. They can’t ever have vets on PTO’s doing that. Especially when they’re family, for Christ sake.

This is how the Rangers operate. Why mess with success? They’re masters at getting the most out of their first round picks. Excuse me if I don’t have much excitement for the game. If it’s anything like the last two, I’ll change the channel.

At this point, they have to earn my respect.

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