News Islanders Team Notes

Islanders Gameday: Rebound in Buffalo; Pilon’s horse business

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With a second consecutive regulation loss last night, the Isles have now dropped back into the wild card positions, though their 41 points would be good enough for first in the Atlantic and has them still in the large Metro pack that is several points behind Metro leader Carolina.

Bo Horvat is still out, and with the back-to-back we’ll wait to see if there are any changes, such as on the third pair.

The Sabres are now just a hair above the conference floor after winning four games in a row, which spans before and after their GM firing/hiring.

First Islanders Goal picks go here.

Islanders News​

  • Last night: Home streak snapped, two-game losing streak begun, “probably our worst night at home all year.” [Newsday | LHH | Post]
  • Previewing tonight, a 5 p.m. start in Buffalo. [Isles]
  • David Rittich, who gets the start today, has proven his worth. [Newsday]
  • Looking at the NHL Edge stats to see if there’s any dropoff in Mat Barzal’s skating post-knee injury. (There isn’t, really.) [THN]
  • Rich Pilon, part of the 1993 team, has a horse-drawn carriage business. You read that right. But more seriously, it’s helping him help others: “Pilon, 57, has been vocal about his struggles with mental health, addictions, and his attempted suicide. Four years ago, he started his own mental health initiative – Horses and Hockey Let’s Talk. He travels to northern communities to support youth mental wellness. He brings his horses and puts on hockey sessions.” [CTV]
  • A Bridgeport check-in: The good and the bad from Friday night. [THN]

Elsewhere​


Last night’s games included the Hurricanes blowing a 3-0 third-period lead but still picking up a regulation point in their shootout loss to the Panthers. And there were some trades before the holiday roster freeze.

  • The Oilers pinned their McDavid Window hopes on an injury-prone goalie with a checkered performance history, and Tristan Jarry is on IR before they could even get back to Edmonton. [Oilers Nation]
  • That and other injuries (Zach Bogosian is still in the league???) in the NHL status report. [NHL]
  • So, heh, could the Oilers make another goalie trade? [Sportsnet]
  • Seth Jarvis flew into the post in overtime and looks like he’ll be out “a while.” Ribs, presumably. Remembering now there was a time when the goal posts were essentially fixed into the ice. [NHL]
  • The Leafs’ continued quest to refind joy in their game. [Sportsnet]
  • Bourne: “It’s impossible to see what the Leafs are trying to do some nights.” [Sportsnet]
  • Montreal made an interesting trade, cap-wise, reacquiring Phillip Danault from the Kings for a 2nd-round pick. [Sportsnet]
  • The Blue Jackets acquired Mason Marchment — who didn’t last long in Seattle — for 2nd- and a 4th-round picks.
Philip Danault, acquired by MTL, is a two-way centre who plays a smart and stabilizing game at both ends of the ice. Is not exactly having the most productive season of his career but his track record is steady. #GoHabsGo pic.twitter.com/meOWgzphsa

— JFresh (@JFreshHockey) December 20, 2025

Source: https://www.lighthousehockey.com/is...meday-sabres-barzal-skating-rich-pilon-horses
 
Islanders News: Pause before the break

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The Islanders have one more game before the brief Christmas break, Tuesday at home to the Devils. After the Dec. 24-26 break, the schedule gets heavy again with three games in four nights leading into the new year.

The Devils will have Jack Hughes, who returned from injury last night.

For now, the Islanders are in a non-wild card playoff spot, though the Flyers are in action tonight and could leapfrog them with a win.

Islanders News​

  • Takeaways from the shootout loss in Buffalo: Resilient/bounced back from the 0-2 hole, at least. [Isles]
  • A bit there and here from Roy on Barzal stepping up in Bo Horvat’s absence, too. [THN]
  • The Skinny, and how tight is the East: “The Isles are 19-10-4 since they opened 0-3-0; the 42 points since October 16th are the most of any team in the Eastern Conference.” [Isles]
  • What’s behind Emil Heineman’s breakout? (Other than being healthy, not being hit by a car.) He’s focused on all parts of his game, being a 200-foot player, using his strength and good teammates. [Isles video]
  • CBC on the making of Matthew Schaefer:

Elsewhere​


Sunday’s scores included the Sabres continuing their rampage through the metro (and Metro), winning again in New Jersey.

  • The Devils got Jack Hughes back. [Sportsnet]
  • The Leafs also lost again, and are feeling as low as they’ve felt, according to William Nylander. [Sportsnet]
  • The Sabres have added Marc Bergevin to their front office. [TSN]
  • Sidney Crosby scored to pass Mario Lemieux for the most points in Penguins history. [NHL]

Source: https://www.lighthousehockey.com/is...s/43580/islanders-news-barzal-heineman-hughes
 
Islanders vs. Devils Gameday: Sorokin rested, Hog returns

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David Rittich will get the start as the Islanders host the Devils tonight, but it’s still worth noting a little headline they dropped yesterday: Marcus Hogberg has been recalled from Bridgeport so Ilya Sorokin can get extra rest with the coming winter break and a “small nagging issue.”

Rest up and heal, Ilya, we’re gonna need on the other side of Christmas.

First Islanders Goal picks go here.

Islanders News​

  • The day-to-day, noting the Hogberg/Sorokin news [Isles], as well as Bo Horvat skating but in no-contact jersey.
  • Those Horvat and Sorokin updates in Newsday and the Post as well.
  • A wee line remix after three games without a win. [THN]
  • Dan and Mike talk about the annoying dip in form, and the Newsday article and reaction about reaching/growing the Isles fanbase. [Islanders Anxiety podcast]
  • Another version of the “Barzal stepping up in Horvat’s absence” storyline. [Post]
  • Prospect Report: Both top picks from the summer make their country’s respective WJC teams, meanwhile Luca Romano keeps pumping in goals. [Isles]
  • With season-long injuries, Isles’ trade needs are clear, but it’s complicated. [Po$t +]

Elsewhere​


Yesterday’s smaller slate of games included the Flyers winning to leap the Islanders (and Capitals) in the standings, and Columbus collecting a win while remaining in the Eastern basement.

  • Injury updates: Tristan Jarry will be “a couple of weeks” (this time), while the Hurricanes will be without Seth Jarvis “week to week,” which is also the updated estimate now for Jaccob [sic] Slavin. [NHL]
  • That’ll fix it: The Leafs fired PP coach Dr. Marc Savard. [Sportsnet]
  • After mental health battles, Connor Ingram is grateful for another NHL chance with the Oilers. [NHL]
  • The ECHL’s players union will go on strike Friday if an agreement isn’t reached. [Sportsnet]

Source: https://www.lighthousehockey.com/is...slanders-vs-devils-news-sorokin-horvat-barzal
 
Islanders Anxiety – Episode 352 – A Revolting Display of Almost Hockey

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Mike and Dan lament the Islanders three loses last week and how poorly they looked through most of them, before discussing a recent article about growing the team’s fanbase.

Losing three games because one of your best players is hurt is one thing. Looking like you forgot how to play hockey is something entirely different. That was how the Islanders’ week went, with seven plus periods of chasing other teams around the ice and generally looking sloppy, slow and tired. They salvaged half of one game and got a point, and the standings didn’t totally get away from them, but they’ll need better performances from a lot of players down the lineup if they’re going to right their course. That starts with three games against division rivals this week and whether they have Bo Horvat back or not.

In the second half, we also have a lengthy discussion about a Newsday article in which the team’s head of business operations Kelly Cheeseman talks about their plans for expanding the team’s customer base. It’s a lot of marketing speak that, while perhaps technically true, seems to be disconnected from the actual fans they’re trying to reach. Islanders fans are a unique group, and understanding how the existing fan thinks would be a great first step in getting new fans to sign up.

Finally, we have a good laugh at the New York Rangers MSG broadcast, which didn’t show the in-arena tribute videos for Chris Kreider and Jakob Trouba to home audiences. That’s some bush league stuff from a world class grudge holder, but let’s hear from Rangers fans about how they feel (Example: “Had to get in their fan duel commercials.”).

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Please subscribe, download, rate, review or spread the word about Islanders Anxiety, Weird Islanders: The Podcast! and all of our podcasts any way you can. All of it helps to raise the show’s profile and maybe could get us another fancy sponsor to sell out to in the near future. Leave us a five star review on Apple Podcasts or Spotify.

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Islanders 2, Devils 1: Late Pelech goal starts break on a high

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The Islanders and Devils entered the Christmas break with a tight, cagey match that Adam Pelech tipped in the Isles’ favor with a tiebreaking goal with 1:15 left in regulation.

There were no penalties as the refs put their whistles away, which may have favored the Islanders at the pivotal moment: on another night, you could totally see Scott Mayfield receiving a tripping call as he battled in the left corner of the Isles zone on the change of possession that led to Pelech’s winning goal.

[NHL Gamecenter | Game Summary | Event Summary | Natural Stat Trick]

That sequence started with a near-odd-man rush where Anders Lee set up Simon Holmstrom, who shot wide. An alert Pelech pinched in to fire the puck after it caromed off the end boards, catching Jacob Markstrom by surprise.

ADAM PELECH LATE IN THE THIRD!! 😱

The @NYIslanders have the lead! pic.twitter.com/TjoA0HgJup

— NHL (@NHL) December 24, 2025

Both Markstrom and David Rittich had solid games when called upon, as the Isles had long stretches of really strong play and forechecking interrupted by dangerous counterattacks from New Jersey.

Rittich received the first star and got the chance to greet Isles fans via Shannon Hogan. One of his best moments was stopping a third-period breakaway that led to him losing a skate blade and sledding himself to the bench on one skate like he’s done it before.

His counterpart was not so graceful on the other Isles goal. Markstrom had trouble playing the puck all night, and that proved costly in the second period when he vacated his net and delivered the puck to Simon Holmstrom, who easily put it in the empty net to tie it at 1-1.

Though that tying goal came on a gift, it felt earned as the second period was by far the Islanders’ best. In the third, while the Isles had several stretches of sustained possession, they didn’t generate the scary chances the Devils did to earn Rittich the game honors.

For Rittich, it’s another big moment as he had consecutive starts for the first time with the Islanders. It cannot be overstated how important his performance has been in providing consistent, solid backup play to allow Ilya Sorokin rest — particularly for situations like now, when Sorokin is trying to rest a nagging injury.

In other notes: Cal Ritchie had an injury scare when he left the ice after a hit, but he was back and performed fine. Also, the club noted this was just the seventh time in franchise history they played a game where neither team was penalized. Merry Christmas, cretins.

Adam Pelech currently ranks as the best defensive defenceman in hockey at 5v5. #Isleshttps://t.co/uJ8kmZo24f https://t.co/gq7tiT77MJ pic.twitter.com/0uzGvC0rQX

— JFresh (@JFreshHockey) December 22, 2025

Up Next​


The whole league is now off for three days, and the Islanders return to action on Saturday when they host the Rangers.

With the win, the Islanders climb back into third in the Metro and put three points between them and the Devils.

Source: https://www.lighthousehockey.com/ga...ils-1-late-pelech-goal-starts-break-on-a-high
 
Weird Islanders: The Podcast! – Episode 77 – Parker Wotherspoon and Dmytro Timashov (with guest Matthew Strauss)

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Joined by friend Matt Strauss, we remember two modern Weird Islanders who felt like they were around more than they actually were; Parker Wotherspoon because of his many years in the AHL and Dmytro Timashov because of how he came to the Islanders.

Parker Wotherspoon is not an exciting player. As a defensive defenseman, his value is in doing his job effectively and without notice. After almost 300 games in the minors, he finally got a chance in NHL and got to play in his hometown, where picked up his only point with the Islanders before was sent back down again. But he emerged the next season – and is currently – giving other teams the kind of defensive stability the Islanders, frankly, could use a little of right now. We recount his short time in blue-and-orange and the few memorable moments he had.

Dmytro Timashov was an exciting player – for a moment, at least, and in a city that makes a big deal out of any tiny thing that seems to have some kind of juice. But his Islanders tenure was even shorter than Wotherspoon’s, and whatever we thought he would be, he wasn’t. What he lacked in longevity, Timashov made up for in bizarreness, so at least we have that.

We thank Matt again for coming on and picking two great current Weird Islanders. Check out the Weird Islanders Extra! bonus episode at our Patreon to hear more about Matt’s work at Pitchfork and our debate on the Islanders goal song.

WEIRD BONUS MATERIAL

  • After 293 games in their AHL system, Wotherspoon finally got a chance to play for the Islanders against his boyhood team in Vancouver. Lots of cute pictures. He also scored his only Islanders point in this game! A secondary assist on a Casey Cizikas goal.
  • It’s paywalled, but here’s the lead to a Boston Globe article about Wotherspoon: “No matter the assignment, defense partner, or dance partner, the first-year Bruin has proven he is a player his teammates — and the coaching staff — can depend on.” Okay then.
  • Wotherspoon finally got an NHL goal as a member of the Bruins last season against the Lightning.
  • Here’s another glowing article from the Boston Herald.
  • This possibly AI-written article wraps up Wotherspoon’s time with the Bruins. As a depth defenseman, he had a quality 2023-24 and a disappointing 2024-25.
  • Penguins fans were… underwhelmed by his signing with their team this offseason. (But Pens fan JFresh seems optimistic!)
  • One thing we can say Parker Wotherspoon is good at: naming European nations.
  • We’re sure Leafs fans were rational and level-headed when Timashov scored his first career goal against the Bruins.
  • This about sums up the very bizarre Dymtro Timashov Islanders experience.
  • Ranked No. 19 in The Athletic’s 2019 prospects rankings. Amusingly above actual NHLers Mason Marchment (No. 24) and Pontus Holmberg (No. 25), and well below Freeport native Jeremy Bracco (No. 2) and Pierre Engvall (No. 9).


What makes a “Weird Islander?”

We’re always open to suggestions about other Weird Islanders to discuss. Remember the criteria. Candidates must fulfill one of the two of the following:

  • Played one (1) season or less for the Islanders or very short stints over multiple seasons.
  • Be a veteran NHLer who is not generally associated with his time on Islanders.


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Islanders News: Having the Rangers for dinner

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The Islanders and 25 other teams across the NHL return to action today and tonight (6 p.m. start for the Isles) as the league emerges from the holiday break, welcomed by a blanket of snow.

It wouldn’t be the holidays without at least one visit from your awkward, overbearing relatives with an inflated sense of self-importance and ugly outfit. Fitting, thenm that tonight’s visitors are the Rangers, who are just two points behind in the ever-tight Metro Division. The pre-break regulation win over the Devils — thanks to Adam Pelech’s late GWG — added two points to their ledger and none for the Devils, creating a three-point gap there. It looks like the standings are going to be an up-and-down theater all season long, but if things concluded today the Islanders would open the playoffs as the road team against the Flyers.

And yet, both teams (and the Rangers, too, currently just outside the wild card) could very easily miss the playoffs when it’s all said and done.

First Islanders Goal picks go here.

Islanders News​

  • Previewing tonight: Ilya Sorokin is expected to be available, but we’ll probably hear more this morning. [Isles]
  • There should be no shortage of motivation for the Isles coming out of the break and hosting the Smurfs. [Newsday]
  • And this WWII vet — the excessive C in his name must be for captaincy — a 104-year-old saxophonist and immigrant, will perform the national anthem today. [Newsday | Post]
  • With five Islanders in this year’s WJC, some active Islanders reflect on their experience in the annual holiday-bridging tournament. [Isles]
  • Speaking of which, goals in the WJC openers for Tomas Poletin (Czechia), Cole Eiserman (USA) and Victor Eklund (Sweden). [THN]
  • WJC roundup: Poletin scored twice for the Czechs, but they fell to Canada, 7-5. [NHL]
  • Meanwhile, these Islanders are in the conversation for their countries’ Olympic teams. [Post]
  • The latest Weird Islanders covers a Snow draftee who has finally become a depended-upon NHL regular (for other teams) after nearly 300 games in the minors, plus a Ukrainian waiver claim who was a mirage. [Weird Islanders podcast]
  • Marshall Warren enjoyed finally getting to play for the Isles on Long Island. [Post]
Some better looks at the Cole Eiserman goal🚨#Isles pic.twitter.com/Lh6cNaFJjS

— The Elmonters (@TheElmonters) December 27, 2025

Elsewhere​


No games over the three-day break, but 13 on the docket tonight.

  • Here’s a WJC guide of teams and players to watch. [ESPN]
  • The ECHL players went on strike. [Sportsnet]
  • After firing Marc Savard, the Leafs have added Steve Sullivan as an assistant. He had been working with their AHL team. [Sportsnet]
  • They’ll also finally get Chris Tanev back, someon they sorely missed. [TSN]
  • Marc-Andre Fleury may not be done after all. [Sportsnet]

Source: https://www.lighthousehockey.com/is...s/43603/islanders-news-rangers-anthem-sorokin
 
Islanders 2, Rangers 0 (EN): Rittich shuts down the Rangers

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Well, that was fun (and stressful!)

Thanks to an early goal by Anders Lee, the New York Islanders maintained a lead essentially all game, despite some scary moments and frankly pretty sloppy play against the New York Rangers.

Of course, holding on to that lead wouldn’t have been possible without incredible play by David Rittich, who turned away all 26 shots taken by the Rangers, including a penalty shot. He really earned his shutout; lots of those saves were tough ones, and he was key during the late 6 on 4 and 6 on 5 opportunities for the Rangers.

The power play really was atrocious tonight, going 0 for 5 and giving up a penalty shot. It’s hard to pinpoint one specific issue, but it seems like they’re way too preoccupied looking for perfect chances, and there’s also a few too many passers on PP1. It definitely looked stronger with Emil Heineman replacing Jonathan Drouin (who has been pretty mediocre overall, it must be said), but still, it’s pretty terrible to go 0 for 5 on the power play in any game, especially a rivalry one you’d like to put away.

But still, the Islanders pulled it out thanks to Rittich and the penalty kill, and Simon Holmstrom made sure we’d have nothing to worry about in the last 16 seconds of the game, giving fans one more goal to cheer about and sending Rangers fans home unhappy.

[NHL Gamecenter | Game Summary | Event Summary | Natural Stat Trick]

First Period​


Less than a minute in, Anders Lee put the puck past Igor Shesterkin to give the Islanders the lead.

View Link

Then, Mat Barzal had a good chance, but Vladislav Gavrikov took him out, earning himself a tripping penalty, but the Rangers killed that.

Marshall Warren hit the post, Scott Mayfield had a shot tipped on goal, but Shesterkin made the save.

David Rittich made a big save on Will Cuylle on a 2 on 1, which was the first shot for the Rangers after 12 minutes of play.

Casey Cizikas had a chance saved on a partial breakaway, and Shesterkin also made saves against Tony DeAngelo and Max Shabanov on the same shift.

Second Period​


Shesterkin and Rittich exchanged saves, and then Alexis Lafreniere was called for holding Jonathan Drouin. Bo Horvat had a shot saved and Simon Holmstrom put a great chance wide, and the Rangers killed the penalty.

Rittich made saves on Artemi Panarin and Vincent Trocheck, and then Shabanov drew a penalty on Braden Schneider, who tripped Shabanov into Shesterkin. Shesterkin was down for a while but stayed in the game, and the Islanders went to the power play.

On that power play, Shesterkin saved Drouin’s one timer, and the Rangers killed the penalty.

Then, Adam Pelech was called for interference, sending the Isles to the penalty kill. Cuylle had a shot hit the bar and post, and it was called a goal but clearly never crossed the line, and the Islanders got the kill.

Barzal took a hit with some head contact from Cuylle as he was turning on his skates. He went down the tunnel with two seconds left in the period, despite the Isles icing the puck.

Third Period​


Barzal was back for the third, looking fine, so it was likely for precautionary purposes that he was pulled from the second period.

Rittich made a good save on Panarin on a 2 on 1, and also saved an attempt by Lafreniere, while Drouin had a backhand saved by Shesterkin.

Noah Laba and Tony DeAngelo both went to the box, for tripping and interference respectively, giving us some 4 on 4 hockey.

On that 4 on 4, Mayfield put a shot off the post, Matthew Schaefer had a shot saved, and a Barzal backhand was also saved after a strong backcheck from Simon Holmstrom set him up.

After the 4 on 4, Cuylle ran into Rittich behind the net, and the Islanders went to the power play as he was called for goaltender interference. On this power play, Emil Heineman replaced Drouin on PP1 and had some good looks, but then Cal Ritchie slashed Carson Soucy on a shorthanded break, and Soucy earned a penalty shot.

Rittich saved that penalty shot, and the power play continued, but the Isles couldn’t convert. They soon had another power play chance, when Trocheck took a holding penalty, but they couldn’t score on that one, either.

Then, Ritchie was called for tripping, and the Islanders killed that penalty, only for Bo Horvat to be called for tripping as well, just about 10 seconds after the kill.

The Rangers pulled Shesterkin with 2 minutes left in the period and about a minute left on their power play for a 6 on 4, but the Islanders, largely thanks to Rittich and some crafty work by JG Pageau, killed the penalty and stopped the Rangers’ chances on the 6 on 5.

Simon Holmstrom shot the puck into the empty net with 16 seconds left, closing out the Islanders’ 2-0 win with a late goal to match Lee’s early one.

View Link

Up Next​


Next, the Islanders face another division rival, heading to Columbus to take on the Blue Jackets tomorrow at 5pm EST. Assuming the team sticks to the plan they announced, Rittich will play again given Ilya Sorokin’s injury.

Source: https://www.lighthousehockey.com/ga...ders-vs-rangers-rittich-shutout-lee-holmstrom
 
Blue Jackets 4 (EN), Islanders 2: Out of gas after Barzal ejected

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Playing twice in less than 24 hours (great job, schedule makers), the Islanders had far from their best but nearly pulled out a point or two before falling late to the Blue Jackets in Columbus, 4-2.

The Isles held a slim 2-1 lead till the final five minutes, when a fortunate deflection canceled several previous game savers by David Rittich, who handled both starts on this traveling back-to-back. But it was always going to by the skin of their teeth if they were going to scrape anything from this.

[NHL Gamecenter | Game Summary | Event Summary | Natural Stat Trick]

They got their 2-1 lead after killing off a 4-on-3 and a five-minute major when Mat Barzal was ejected just 22 minutes into the game for a righteous yet still harmless slash at the foot of Mason Marchment, who took several runs at Matthew Schaefer in the first and second periods.

For a longtime NHL fan, it’s truly something to see Marchment go after one of the game’s brightest young stars, as his father was among the unquestionably dirtiest players of his era, regularly delivering knee-on-knee hits and elbows to the head, more than once causing long-term injury, garnering 13 suspensions. The younger fella’s career has also been marked by shady incidents across his five teams. (“The douche does not fall far from the bag,” is I believe how the saying goes.)

Just before this sequence, Marchment tried to take out Schaefer with a high “oh, I’m trying to get out of the way” hit long after he’d released the puck, then he circled around and tried it again.

Mathew Barzal doesn't have time for "Mason Marchment."

Glad Matthew Schaefer is okay. #Isles pic.twitter.com/BtmcDb4It2

— Isles Den (@IslesDen) December 28, 2025

Somehow, miraculously, Marchment was able to continue on.

Alas, although Bo Horvat gave the Isles the lead not long after the post-Marchment dust and penalties settled, the Islanders looked out of gas in the third and were punished for trying to hang on for the entire frame. This after their start to the game was even more lifeless, with Patrick Roy ranting during a TV timeout as they trailed 1-0 in goals and 9-1 in shots midway through the first period.

After the eventful second period and a little too much passivity int he third, Columbus finally tied it when Ivan Provorov’s hopeful volley from the point found its way in off a body at 15:27. Then just over a minute later came the go-ahead, after Kirill Marchenko backhanded through a screen on the rush and the shot tricked Rittich to go off his body and in, short-side.

It was a tough result for Rittich, who logged a lot of miles in 24 hours. It was a script flip for this fixture after the Islanders stunned the Blue Jackets late to take a regulation game on Long Island in November. But it was ultimately a pretty fair result for the quality of performance from both sides, Marchment’s nature-or-nurture? shenanigans notwithstanding.

Other Notes​

  • Anthony Duclair was one of the few who had life and jump throughout the game — though he should, after being scratched last night. He generated a few chances by using speed to create separation, a welcome sight.
  • The first Columbus goal was completely avoidable, following the teams trading chances and structure getting lax. Tony DeAngelo was deep in the Columbus zone with no one covering, leaving Adam Pelech in no man’s land as Marchenko got behind him for his first of two goals.
  • At least the penalty kill was a bright spot, killing off several chances, though Rittich of course played a huge part in that.

Up Next​


This short road trip continues Tuesday in Chicago.

Source: https://www.lighthousehockey.com/ga...s-barzal-schaefer-marchment-rittich-marchenko
 
Islanders Anxiety – Episode 353 – High Road Week

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Mike and Dan look back at a week that was great for the Islanders until it wasn’t, and an annoying week ahead.

With wins over the Devils and Rangers on either side of the Christmas break, the Islanders gave their fans a great holiday. Whether it was a surprise game-winning goal from Adam Pelech or an incredible performance by David Rittich against a team of scumbags and nobodies, there was a lot to like. Sunday’s game in Columbus looked as if it might be another reason to smile but in a one-minute-plus span in the third period, those feelings got wiped away. The Islanders ran out of gas and missed out on two points, but we award Rittich with a brand new weekly prize for his efforts.

The upcoming week features two winnable games against wounded Western Conference opponents and another meeting with the hated Maple Leafs at UBS Arena. This one is going to be more annoying than usual as it’s the first meeting of the last two Islanders to be drafted first overall. But while John Tavares does his usual classy thing and gets fawned over by The Weirdest Media Circus in All of Sports, Matthew Schaefer might be coming face-to-face with his past as a Leafs fan. We can only hope that someone (ahem… Matt Martin?) teaches him about the significance of these games for Islanders Fans. We bring forth a brand new Master Leaf Theatre to remind us that things are different up there.

REFERENCES



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Source: https://www.lighthousehockey.com/is...-high-road-week-rittich-rangers-shutout-leafs
 
Islanders Back-to-Back: Smurfs shutout, Sorokin IR, Horvat back

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The Islanders had a lot of developments coming out of the holiday break to shut out the Rangers again. Injury updates and a return, plus more Hogberg presence while Ilya Sorokin recovers.

They’re back at it tonight in Columbus for a 5 p.m. start. Quick turnaround, hopefully not a letdown.

Leave First Islanders Goal picks for tonight here.

Islanders News​

  • It was nervy and tight, but they did it: David Rittich shut out the Rangers. [LHH | NHL]
  • Anders Lee scored the main goal and received the Ironman mask, though kind of by default since rightful mask-wielder Rittich was the guy to pass it on. [Isles]
  • Takeaways: “He’s such a gamer,” Lee said of Rittich. “He was a complete stud tonight.” [Isles | Newsday]
  • Rittich is expected to start back-to-back tonight because Ilya Sorokin still isn’t ready, and is on IR retroactive to Dec. 20. [Isles]
  • Bo Horvat also doesn’t sound 100%, but he was good enough to return in last night’s win. [Isles]
  • “Islanders growth” and “statement win.” [Post]
  • Mike Sullivan is asked about Matthew Schaefer, fawns obligingly. [Post | THN]
  • The Smurfs wasted “another Igor Shesterkin gem.” Sure. [Post]

104 years and still saxing strong:

104 year old World War II Vet plays National Anthem! Amazing pic.twitter.com/qr7F6wF4WX

— YESUV🚙 (@IslesWhiteSUV) December 27, 2025

Elsewhere​


Sooo many other games last night, including the Sabres winning their eighth in a row, the Leafs winning a goalfest over Ottawa, and the Capitals beating the Devils in a (alas) three-point game.

  • The Panthers and Lightning were warned not to get out of hand ahead of their latest meeting, which still featured plenty of rough stuff and penalties. [Sportsnet]
  • In just his second season, J.J. Moser gets an eight-year extension from the Lightning. [Sportsnet]
  • The Jets were stunned late and lost in OT to Minnesota after a late call and a non-call. [Sportsnet]
  • The ECHL strike may be over after two days. [TSN]
  • At the WJC, Cole Huston was stretchered off after a puck to the head. The news seems good though as he returned from the hospital to be with his team. [ESPN]

Source: https://www.lighthousehockey.com/is...s-rangers-rittich-horvat-sorokin-blue-jackets
 
Islanders Gameday News: Blackhawk town

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The Islanders wake up still in second place in the Metro after the Capitals lost in regulation to Florida last night.

They are in Chicago to try to rebound from the loss in Columbus and build some cushion in the ever-close Eastern standings — where Buffalo is now two points behind.

After a promising but illusory start to the season, the Hawks are now near the bottom of the Western Conference and the league, spending an extended stretch without Connor Bedard. They’re 2-8 over their last 10, but a bad record didn’t stop the Blue Jackets.

First Islanders Goal picks for tonight go here.

Islanders News​

  • The Skinny: “Adam Pelech and Ryan Pulock each played their 599th game, putting them in position to be the 3rd and 4th defenseman in club history to play 600 games as early as Tuesday. … Pulock recorded his 231st point, passing Noah Dobson (230) for 6th on the club’s defenseman point list.” [Isles]
  • Takeaways: Couldn’t break the third-period pressure. [Isles]
  • Mat Barzal was fined $5,000 for that slash on Mason Marchment, Son of Marchment. Marchment, it appears, was not fined for embellishment. [Newsday]
  • For their latest Islanders Anxiety podcast, Dan and Mike discuss some good wins, some David Rittich love and some anticipated new Leafs tomfoolery. [LHH]
  • Farewell, Neil Best: Longtime Newsday reporter and columnist joins Andrew Gross to not talk about his retirement, talk more about the Isles. [Island Ice podcast on SoundCloud]
  • The Isles including Patrick Roy were just fine with Barzal taking a whack in defense of Matthew Schaefer. [Post]
  • “I was never trying to hurt him there in the middle, just get in his way,” Son of Marchment effluviated. [THN]
  • WJC updates: Kashawn Aitcheson had a couple of points as Canada romped over the Country Of Frans. [Isles]

As the Isles recover from the disappointing ending in Columbus, maybe things will be better in Chicago…

Elsewhere​


Lots of games last night, including the Sabres winning their freaking ninth in a row. Also, the Blue Jackets handled their back-to-back just fine, with Jet Greaves getting his second win in as many nights.

  • Chris Pronger discusses the Olympics, says there’s two schools of thought on Schaefer — take him as insurance, or let him get a rest after playing only 17 games last year. [NHL]
  • The Blue Jackets found a landing spot for wantaway Yegor Chinakhov, who heads to Pittsburgh. [TSN]
  • A bunch of random extreme predictions for 2026. [Sportsnet]
  • Why things are falling apart with the Oilers and Andrew Mangiapane. [Sportsnet]
  • The NHL will make some sort of snow at the Winter Classic in Miami, which I totally did not forget is happening and will certainly change my schedule to watch. [Sportsnet]

Source: https://www.lighthousehockey.com/is...landers-news-blackhawk-barzal-bedard-schaefer
 
Islanders 3*, Blackhawks 2 (*SO): Horvat shootout winner salvages 2 points

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The New York Islanders picked up a two goal lead early, only to let it slip away from them in the second period. It’s becoming a bit of a bad habit lately that the team just stops playing with a lead, and letting teams like the Blackhawks sans Connor Bedard and Frank Nazar get back into the game is pretty rough. Good to pick up two points on the road though, no matter how ugly they might be.

And… as much as I enjoyed Mat Barzal sticking up for Matthew Schaefer last game, he really shouldn’t be the one to play enforcer. Where is everyone else when a guy like Emil Heineman gets hit a bit late?

Speaking of Matthew Schaefer, tonight he hit another milestone/record, becoming the youngest defenseman in NHL history to record 25 points. And with Schaefer picking up a secondary assist on Bo Horvat’s power play goal, the Islanders now have 49 combined points from rookies this year, third in the NHL.

[NHL Gamecenter | Game Summary | Event Summary | Natural Stat Trick]

First Period​


Cal Ritchie, returning to the lineup in place of Kyle MacLean, opened the scoring early, wristing his 5th of the season past Spencer Knight.

View Link

Andre Burakovsky took a penalty for holding Adam Pelech, and Bo Horvat made it 2-0 on the power play.

View Link

Then, the Blackhawks had some chances as David Rittich made a save on Burakovsky and Artyom Levshunov hit the post.

Knight made a big save on a great chance from Ritchie, and the Blackhawks hit another post near the end of the period.

Second Period​


Nick Foligno hit Emil Heineman and knocked his helmet off after the whistle in front of the net and earned a penalty for it, giving the Islanders another PP opportunity, which Mat Barzal hit the post on and the Blackhawks killed.

Later, Barzal got hit by Foligno’s stick in the neck/shoulder area. He was down and slow to get up and to the bench, but was back on for his next shift.

Teuvo Teravainen made it a one goal game, and then Heineman hit the post after.

Horvat was called for a double minor for high sticking Foligno, and Lardis made it 2-2 with just 1.7 seconds left in the period.

Third Period​


Both teams exchanged chances, but the Blackhawks looked more dangerous overall.

Then, Casey Cizikas hit Landon Slaggert near the Blackhawks bench, drawing some attention, and then after Knight saved a shot by Heineman, Colton Dach hit Heineman, and Barzal and Ilya Mikheyev both took roughing penalties.

Neither team could get anything done on the 4 on 4, but the Blackhawks continued to have chances throughout the period, while the Islanders struggled to get much offense going.

In the last minute of the period, the Blackhawks had a flurry of chances, and hit yet another post, sending us to overtime.

Overtime/SO​


In OT, the Islanders got lucky as Ryan Greene couldn’t connect on a shot into an empty net.

Heineman drew a penalty on Levshunov, but the Isles couldn’t convert on the 4 on 3 despite some looks.

Then, we went to a shootout, and Horvat scored the only goal to give the Islanders a 3-2 win on the road to close out 2025.

Up Next​


Next, the Islanders head back to UBS Arena to take on the Utah Mammoth on New Year’s Day. See you all next year for more recaps and hopefully a strong second half of the season!

Source: https://www.lighthousehockey.com/ga...vs-blackhawks-horvat-ritchie-rittich-shootout
 
New York Islanders 2025 in Review: Mid-decade sea change

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The calendar year 2025 for the New York Islanders comes to a close in a jarringly different state compared to one year ago.

Instead of being a drifting, dull team guided by a GM that seemed…stuck in neutral, they are now a more entertaining (if risky) team, with new life, in the thick of a playoff race with a conference that has helpfully descended to a similar level of okay-edness around them.

This year will always go down as the transition point from the league’s oldest GM to one of its youngest. It will always be remembered for the beginning of the Matthew Schaefer era.

But for posterity, here are the significant turning points from 2025 that have the next year looking far more interesting, to say the least.

Fare Thee Well, Brock​


The first sign of a looming transition was one that Lou Lamoriello did not want, one that he fought until the end: Trading Brock Nelson instead of getting his agreement on a long-term extension. The details of whether the sticking point was money, term or setting were never revealed, but you have to wonder if Nelson knew in his heart that now — and elsewhere — was his best chance at contending. The aging roster and wheel-spinning that was becoming the norm under Lamoriello did not elicit hope for the near future.

He’s arguably the best Islanders forward of his era, and now he’s living his best life with Devon Toews on a Cup contender in Colorado. Winnipeg reportedly pursued him hard but was not a destination he fancied.

Nelson Traded: Farewell to the King of Brock

Fortunately, in what would become his final great act as GM, Lamoriello covered all the bases and fetched a top prospect — potential future Brock, Calum Ritchie, now a regular — and a (top-10 protected) first-round pick.

Lou Lamoriello Departs…Mostly​


The bombshell that was sought by many fans but expected by few: Lamoriello’s contract “would not be renewed.” His time as GM would end. (His time with the franchise did not, as he was retained as an advisor to ownership — though that’s apparently something that was always in his exit plan for Toronto and Long Island.)

Former NHL exec and current ownership member John Collins, with all his connections, was set to lead the search for the new GM.

History may hold that Lamoriello’s best move was one of his very first: hiring Barry Trotz as head coach to bring his disciplined, structured approach, carrying an average-talented team to more playoff success than it had seen in more than two decades. The consecutive conference finals will be remembered most, but the way the roster brushed off the loss of John Tavares, made the playoffs and promptly swept the Pittsburgh Penguins was — in that moment at least — equally gratifying.

Anyway, that’s all in the past, and it wasn’t papering over two playoff misses and two first-round losses in the final four years of Lamoriello’s tenure. It was time.

Mathieu Darche (and Fun) Arrives​


Apparently it could’ve been Ken Holland, if only he’d agreed.

Or maybe it would’ve been Marc Bergevin.

Whatever the case and the sequence, the Isles dodged at least one bullet when they landed Mathieu Darche instead. There would not be a much-rumored one-president, another GM setup. Just Darche, at the head.

Immediately, the team became more accessible. Behind-the-scenes video was possible again. Facial hair, non-military cuts and non 1-31 uniform numbers, too.

But more importantly, there was a fresh approach, a modernized/expanded staff and a realistic look at the roster and the near future.

Noah Dobson is Traded for Picks and a Guy You Don’t Trade​


You don’t trade a guy like Emil Heineman…but the Canadiens did.

Okay, in truth, Heineman felt like a throw-in to Darche’s first major decision, that of trading Noah Dobson rather than give him the long-term top-dollar contract he sought.

But once he made that calculation, Darche got himself some serious assets, including Heineman, who’s a Swiss Army knife with a sizzling shot, producing 12 goals, 18 points and a couple of decisive shootout winners in his first 40 games as an Islander. Montreal’s two mid-first-round picks (16 and 17) were ammo to possibly trade down — alas, Boston wouldn’t bite — but ended up getting the Islanders a couple of very good prospects anyway.

Matthew Schaefer Changes Everything​


Darche arrived already knowing the Islanders had won the lottery. John Collins had one job and he did it. {/tinfoil}

He and the staff didn’t overthink the pick, but Bossy almighty did the top prospect turn out better and sooner than anyone imagined. After a junior season shortened by illness and injury, Schaefer’s 17 games in 2024-25 gave some pause about what kind of first-overall pick he might be.

But immediately upon landing in training camp, his skating and decision-making had observers in awe. It wasn’t a question of whether he would make the opening roster, or if he’d stick around beyond nine games — it became a question of how big of a role he would grab and how much the Isles could lean on him in his rookie year.

Through the first half season, the answer is a lot. A lot. They started conservatively, pairing him with Scott Mayfield on the third pair. But he quickly escaped that, began logging key power play minutes and consuming all the minutes on a pairing with Ryan Pulock and Whoever Else is Fresh.

Honorable Mention: Fountain of Youth​


Not a pivotal story for 2025, maybe not even a real one — or maybe heavily influenced by the presence of 18-year-old Schaefer: Several Islanders who are closer to the end than the beginning are having revival seasons.

Anders Lee (35) and J-G Pageau (33) are not lighting it up, but they are productive and {knock on wood} halthy through the first half of the season. Bo Horvat (30) is off to a blazing start that does not hint at imminent decline.

On the blueline, “the Cobra” version of Adam Pelech has returned as he logs minutes and gobbles up opponent passes.

And Ilya Sorokin — though managing a nagging injury as the calendar turns — has put in several sterling performances, no doubt aided by the Islanders’ ability to confidently put David Rittich (10-4-2, .918) into a regular backup rotation.

All of which has helped the Islanders be far more competitive than pretty much anyone though they could or would be in the second half of the year 2025. Whether that continues in 2026 and ends up in a wild card or even regular playoff (or even home-ice advantage??) spot is, of course, an unknown that is why we watch the games.

Fortunately, thankfully, right now it’s actually fun to do so.

***

Thanks, everybody for reading and commenting and sharing and joking along with us here at Lighthouse Hockey. Happy New Year!

Source: https://www.lighthousehockey.com/bi...slanders-2025-in-review-mid-decade-sea-change
 
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