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
 
Islanders vs. Mammoth Gameday: New year, new Olympian

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The year 2026 is upon us, Bo Horvat is an Olympian and something called the Utah Mammoth is in town to kick the new year off with a 3 p.m. EST start.

Before the calendar flipped, the Islanders eked out a shootout win in Chicago in far-from-convincing performance against a injury-laden squad. Hopefully they’ve got their heads screwed on straight this afternoon.

No practice on New Year’s Eve and no morning skate for this matinee, so lineup news will come shortly before gametime. Ilya Sorokin’s status and which forward gets scratched are among the open questions.

First Islanders Goal picks go here.

Islanders News​

  • Previewing this afternoon: The Mammoth have lost their last two, though Islander killer Dylan Guenther — who absolutely will score today — has been hot. [Isles]
  • Looking back at some franchise turning points in 2025. [LHH]
  • Bo Horvat was named to the Team Canada Olympic team that will play at the short rink in Italy! Exciting for him, hopefully he doesn’t get hurt, exhausted, etc. He’s thrilled, shared the moment with family. [Newsday | Isles]
  • Here’s full video of Horvat’s media availability, post-Olympic news. [Isles]
  • Canada GM Doug Armstrong raved about Matthew Schaefer, said it’s unbelievable how he entered the Olympic conversation at age 18, and after not being on the radar three months ago. [Sportsnet]
  • There are players who have been asked to “stay ready” in case of injury heading into the Olympics. Armstrong did not disclose who they are. [Sportsnet]
  • Mat Barzal was asked about his slash on Mason Marchment. [Newsday]
  • Chatting with Matt Maggio on rebounding in Bridgeport, where he’s started to produce and said he’s improved his overall game under Rocky Thompson. [Isles on the Sound]
Bo Horvat said Matthew Schaefer already reached out to him with congratulations. "He's going to be at a lot more Olympics to come, for sure."

— Andrew Gross (@AGrossNewsday) December 31, 2025

Elsewhere​

  • Here’s the full Team Canada roster. [NHL]
  • The Sabres have now won 10 in a row. They are now in a wild card spot, two points behind the Isles. [Sportsnet]
  • The Flyers and Penguins swapped a couple Who? guys. [TSN]

Source: https://www.lighthousehockey.com/is...43655/islanders-vs-mammoth-bo-horvat-olympics
 
Mammoth 7, Islanders 2: Unhappy new year, injured Olympian

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The New York Islanders started off their New Year afternoon with intent but could not beat Karel Vejmelka on 11 first-period shots, and then the game swiftly slipped away into a blowout 7-2 loss to the Utah Mammoth.

In accordance with the prophecies, Islanders killer Dylan Guenther not only scored but absolutely torched the Isles for his first NHL hat trick, while the Islanders penalty kill was burned twice early in the third period to firmly put the game away.

On balance, it was another discouraging performance by an Isles squad whose recent form has featured either losses or eked-out wins since just before Christmas. Making matters worse, a day after being named to the Olympic team, Bo Horvat left the game with what appeared to be another lower body (re?)injury after an awkward low-speed collision in the third.

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

It obviously wasn’t a great game for David Rittich either, though the quality of shots was pretty high on the backup who started his sixth straight while Ilya Sorokin is on the mend. Marcus Hogberg came in for mop-up duty midway through the third and gave up two more, including Guenther’s hat trick tally on a 2-on-1.

Patrick Roy’s opening thoughts on the game lamented missed chances and good looks in the first period, as the Isles had the first seven shots on goal.

“After that, it was in the details of the game. We lost battles, lost one-on-one battles, took offensive zone penalties…” Roy said.

As for a forward who has been the target of some fan ire lately, Roy was asked, “What are you seeing from Jonathan Drouin right now?” and did not criticize his game:

Jonathan Drouin, with an assist today, has three assists and no goals in his last 18 games. Patrick Roy: "He's playing really well five on five. I just feel like maybe his confidence is not as high offensively. Because he's gotten a lot of looks."

— Andrew Gross (@AGrossNewsday) January 1, 2026

With the game still scoreless, Guenther opened scoring in the first minute of the second period with a burst of speed around Tony DeAngelo, leaving Adam Pelech to slide over for a quasi- 2-on-1. Guenther made a body move and nice shot to the far side, hitting the net after getting a piece of Rittich’s arm.

But the Isles answered quickly when Max Shabanov froze the Utah defense with a fake dump in only to sweetly drop a lead pass into Calum Ritchie, whose shot from the top of the circle tied it at 2:35.

Guenther answered again though, on a lightning one-timer following a brilliant Lawson Crouse backhand pass from the corner — this after Scott Mayfield turned the puck over with a soft biscuit tossed behind the net, allowing the Mammoth to make quick work of it. Not sure what Mayfield thought was available there; maybe their protocol calls for Barzal or Pageau to retrieve that but neither expected it.

The NHL tweeter could’ve offered an alternate tweet: “Can we talk about that Mayfield pass?!”

Dylan Guenther's got two in the second period! 🚨🚨

And can we talk about that Lawson Crouse pass?! pic.twitter.com/9QMc3TSMaK

— NHL (@NHL) January 1, 2026

Utah never looked back after that. Nick Schmaltz scored at 16:19 to make it 3-1 at the second intermission, then Utah’s power play got two early goals in the third to make it a laugher.

Matthew Schaefer got one back on the Isles power play, adding to his incredible rookie season (the latest stat update is he’s now the youngest defensemen to reach 10 goals) as the lone solace on an ugly afternoon.

Schaefer's 10th of the season! pic.twitter.com/09h7pv4Vgp

— New York Islanders (@NYIslanders) January 1, 2026

Horvat Injured​


The Isles don’t look like a team that can afford to go long without their top center again. Here’s a look at the sequence that injured Horvat, whom Roy said would see a doctor tomorrow to learn more:

Bo Horvat left this afternoon's game in third period…we will see what is said postgame. Hopefully, not as bad as it looked pic.twitter.com/0DTdIw9VVc

— Elliotte Friedman (@FriedgeHNIC) January 1, 2026

Up Next​


The Isles’ three-game homestand continues Saturday night with a visit from the Maple Leafs, who have trended up over the last week or so.

Source: https://www.lighthousehockey.com/ga...-vs-islanders-guenther-hatty-bo-horvat-injury
 
Islanders Gameday: Brother, can you spare more than two goals?

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The Islanders host the Toronto Maple Leafs Saturday night on Long Island with a couple more lineup updates.

Marshall Warren has been returned to Bridgeport, which — along with yesterday’s practice — would seem to indicate another run of Adam Boqvist on his offhand on the third pair with Scott Mayfield.

And Bo Horvat, as expected, is out after leaving the Mammoth loss injured. Patrick Roy said he won’t play “this week” so hopefully that means a shorter term on the shelf, though maybe it means they’re trying to avoid surgery but won’t know until whatever he hurt has a chance to calm down.

Finally, Ilya Sorokin is “available,” as they say in the Premier League, and will back up David Rittich.

Beyond all that, there is the matter that the Islanders have gone eight games without scoring more than two goals, leading to some line shuffling by Patrick Roy yesterday:

Lines and pairs and goalies:
Lee-Barzal-Heineman.
Shabanov-Pageau-Tsyplakov.
Drouin-Ritchie-Holmstrom.
MacLean-Cizikas-Gatcomb.
Schaefer-Pulock.
Pelech-DeAngelo.
Boqvist-Mayfield.
Sorokin.
Hogberg.
Extra: Duclair.
Note: Defensemen are rotating; lines are static.#NHL #Isles

— Denis P. Gorman (@DenisGorman) January 2, 2026

The Leafs are coming off a big comeback — three goals down — win over the Jets, where Auston Matthews had a hat trick to pass Pat LaFontaine for most hat tricks by an American. The Leafs have rebounded lately to climb to two points shy of the wild card in the East’s Crapola Soup, but they are again without Chris Tanev.

Islanders News​


In link form:

  • Sorokin set to be backup tonight, start against New Jersey on Tuesday. Horvat to be reevaluated in a week. And Max Shabanov and Max Tsyplakov will play together for the first time. [Isles | Newsday | THN]
  • Warren returned to Bridgeport. [Isles]
  • Previewing tonight, with lots of the same info. [Isles]
  • Matthew Schaefer is handling not getting called to the Olympics at age 18 just fine, stop calling it a “snub.” [Newsday | THN]
  • The Swedes also dealt with not getting selected. [Post]

Elsewhere​

  • Yesterday for the NHL was about a warm-weather Winter Classic, where Mika Zibanejad woke up and scored a hat trick in a Rangers 5-1 win in Miami. [Sportsnet]
  • Olympic team news: Here’s Team USA | Here’s Team Sweden | Here’s Team Finland [NHL]
  • How super sophomore and Olympian Macklin Celebrini made himself impossible to ignore. [Sportsnet]
  • Continuing the Olympic curse started by Bo Horvat, Seth Jones left yesterday’s game with an injury after being named to the U.S. squad. [NHL]
  • Apparently Adam Fox is supposed to have some divine right to be on the Olympic team? Lots of hay being made about his exclusion. Although when you see Jones on there instead… [Post]
  • Bill Guerin praised the chemistry of the Four Nations squad — with only three changes since then (so maybe Fox just has too much Stench of Ranger on him?) [NHL]
  • Rasmus Andersson will carry on a family tradition as a member of Team Sweden. [Sportsnet]

Source: https://www.lighthousehockey.com/is...s-maple-leafs-gameday-sorokin-horvat-matthews
 
Islanders 4, Maple Leafs 3 (OT): This kid’s incredible

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Matthew Schaefer scored two highlight reel goals, including a tying goal and an overtime winner, as the Islanders came back and beat the Maple Leafs, 4-3, Saturday night on Long Island.

Rumors of Auston Matthews’ demise have been greatly exaggerated, as the maligned Maple Leafs captain continued his tear with two goals*, but the Islanders’ own #1 overall pick of a decade later matched him goal for goal.

*Interestingly, the Leafs emptied the bench for his second goal, as it moved him past Mats Sundin into first place all-time among Maple Leaf goal scorers. It seems the bar for stop-the-game-and-empty-the-bench** activities, even on the road, gets ever lower.

Barzal’s two assists, including a spinaround turn that drew away both defenders on Schaeffer’s winner, moved him past John Tavares to fifth on the Islanders all-time assist leaderboard. **The Islanders promptly emptied the bench after the that one, but that’s because they had won the game.

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

The OT bonus point nearly went the other way when Simon Holmstrom, stretching to prevent a Matthews hat trick and game-ender, knocked down a low-slot pass out of the air and off the post behind David Rittich. Thankfully, the script makers had a different narrative in mind tonight.

Indeed, the Islanders were not in position to take even one point until Emil Heineman tied it at 3-3 with under three minutes to go, a one-timer off a swift pass from Barzal.

The Isles entered the third period trailing 2-1 and that score stood at the halfway mark when Schaefer scored a stunning goal, knifing through and around the entire Leafs’ defense, then completing it with a move that mirrored Matthews’ first goal.

This was, simply, beautiful:

MATTHEW SCHAEFER THAT WAS DISGUSTING! 🤢

📺: @Sportsnet or stream on Sportsnet+ ➡️ https://t.co/4KjbdjVctF pic.twitter.com/G8PM2dawzk

— NHL (@NHL) January 4, 2026

Alas, Schaefer’s first highlight did not last long. The home crowd was still singing “Mat-thew Schae-fer” when the Isles third pairing — more on them later — was victimized again, yielding an open look for Nicholas Robertson.

That was frustrating and deflating, but the Isles tied it once again before Patrick Roy could even pull Rittich for a sixth attacker. Heineman’s goal allowed him to stay ahead of Schaefer’s pace…at least temporarily.

You don’t trade a guy like Heineman pic.twitter.com/5km8XBrR7n

— YESUV🚙 (@IslesWhiteSUV) January 4, 2026

Mercifully, there was no more deflation in store. The teams made it to overtime and Barzal and Schaefer worked their magic to give the Isles the extra point and another highlight to remember:

THIS KID IS INCREDIBLE!! 😱

Matthew Schaefer secures the win in @Energizer overtime! pic.twitter.com/ybKEHERH3d

— NHL (@NHL) January 4, 2026

Notes​

  • The Isles’ latest trial on the third pairing, after sending Marshall Warren back to Bridgeport, was not Adam Boqvist Part XIII. This time they recalled Ohio State product Cole McWard, a right shooter, for his seventh NHL game, and Mayfield slid over to his off hand.
  • Being next to Mayfield right now is no easy assignment, and likewise I’m sure it’s tough for Mayfield to have a revolving cast for his partners. But for the night, they were well underwater along with the Isles’ fourth line. Highlights-wise, Mayfield was turned around on Matthews’ first goal, and McWard was caught behind the net on Robertson’s go-ahead.
  • Adam Pelech opened scoring in the second period with a seeing-eye shot through traffic from the point after a Jonathan Drouin faceoff win against Tavares. That meets Pelech’s annual quota of three for the season, and two in the last couple of weeks — affirming that nothing in hockey is more random than goals by stay-at-home defensemen.
  • The Max’s got their first look on a line together, with Shabanov and Tsyplakov first flanking J-G Pageau and then Calum Ritchie. They didn’t get a lot of ice time and didn’t do a ton with what they were given. By the very end, Shabanov was taking shifts with Casey Cizikas and Marc Gatcomb while Tsyplakov was sitting.
  • Ilya Sorokin is alive: As announced yesterday, he was dressed as backup thought David Rittich got his seventh consecutive start. Sorokin is scheduled to start Tuesday against the Devils.

Up Next​


Ah yes, speaking of which: The Isles host the Devils on Tuesday. New Jersey beat wily Utah tonight to stay four points behind the Isles.

Source: https://www.lighthousehockey.com/game-recaps/43677/islanders-4-maple-leafs-3-ot-this-kids-incredible
 
Islanders Anxiety -Episode 354 – This Kid’s Incredible and Episode 355 – The Search for Breathing Room

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Two episodes for the price of one!

In our first ever positive emergency podcast, we hash out all of the many emotions we went through during the Islanders’ 4-3 overtime win over the Maple Leafs on Hockey Night in Canada starring Matthew Schaefer.

For two periods, it looked like the game and the season might be over. The Islanders were down 2-1, Auston Matthews had scored twice to become the Leafs’ all time leading goal scorer, and UBS Arena was quiet as the home team gave fans very little to cheer about. But after a crosscheck from noted scumbag Max Domi, the 18-year-old Schaefer decided he had seen enough. He scored an incredible goal to tie the game, then after two more goals that sent the game to overtime, blew the roof off the place by scoring an insane game-winner off an equally insane pass from Mathew Barzal.

While the feeling afterward was beyond euphoric, there were a lot more emotions before and after. Why does an 18-year-old need to put this team on his back? Why do the Islanders continue to allow other teams to score record-setting goals at their arena? How good will Schaefer be as he matures? How did this play to the Hockey Night audience back in Toronto? And who is Cole McWard? We try to address all of these and more in the moment before sleep and the rest of the weekend kicks in.

We’ll be back at our regular time for an episode to release on Monday morning as always. But this game deserved its own podcast and it might not be the last time Schaefer spurs us to do this.



Mike and Dan run down a surprisingly busy week for the Islanders – feel bad wins, rock bottom losses and one huge OT victory – while taking stock of the first half of their season.

We’ve gone over the Saturday night game against the Maple Leafs in depth on our special emergency podcast, so now we look back at a lucky shootout win over Chicago and a disastrous New Year’s Day home game against Utah. The Islanders didn’t play well in either, but the game they tried to lose yielded two points and the other was another bad game at the worst time and left an entire arena and fanbase perplexed and angry. Lost points against beatable teams might end up haunting them later, as the entire Eastern Conference continues to be a dog fight.

In the second half, we look ahead to a non-negotiable home game against a division rival that proceeds another long road trip, this time through some places the Islanders have rarely, if ever, won in. Getting two points against New Jersey is key to getting off on the right foot before heading to Nashville (on Dan’s birthday) and St. Paul, MN and hoping to stay above water. We also take a look back at as good a first half as the Islanders have had in many years. But other teams are right behind them, and a four game losing streak would feel like the end of the world. So some of the players that have been on ice will need to step up in the face of injuries and mounting pressure.

REFERENCES

  • I forgot to post the article for the emergency podcast, Episode 354, on Sunday. We recorded late and I meant to do it in the morning. This is why we don’t do too many Saturday night podcasts. Apologies.


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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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Source: https://www.lighthousehockey.com/is...oom-matthew-schaefer-ot-goal-first-half-recap
 
Islanders News: One more for the road

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The Islanders are in a Tuesday-Thursday-Saturday pattern over the next couple of weeks as they finish their brief homestand with the Devils on Tuesday before a seven-game western road trip. That one starts with Nashville and Minnesota before crossing the border for Winnipeg and a full northwestern four-pack.

But first, one more at home with New Jersey, who lost in regulation Sunday night to Carolina.

  • Gross: Logging so many minutes and hitting so many highs in his rookie year at age 18, maybe not playing during the Olympic break will be good for Matthew Schaefer. [Newsday]
  • On the Isles’ OT win over the Leafs: [LHH recap | Takeaways – Isles | Cinematic recap – Isles]
  • The Skinny: The Isles’ “50 points since October 16th are the most of any team in the Eastern Conference,” and Schaefer is the youngest player ever to have multiple OT goals in a season. [Isles]
  • Of course the Isles’ previous 1st overall pick John Tavares was asked about Schaefer. [THN | Newsday]
  • Cole McWard called his Islanders debut “a confidence builder.” [Post]
  • In another wild Canada-Czechia at the WJC, the Czechs knock Canada out for the third consecutive year. They’ll face Sweden for gold in the final while the Canadians meet Finland. [CP]
  • Isles prospect Tomas Poletin was credited with the winning goal after he battled Michael Misa for position as the puck went in off his skate:
Tomas Poletin ELIMINATES Canada 😳

The Islanders prospect has been all over the ice this tournament.#WorldJuniors #Isles pic.twitter.com/oxHTWa3tOh

— Isles Rumor (@IslesRumor) January 5, 2026

Elsewhere​


The weekend scores included the Penguins getting the extra point over the Blue Jackets, and the Panthers handing Colorado just its third regulation loss.

  • Gabriel Landeskog was injured and will miss some time but it’s not a re-injury of his problematic knee. [Sportsnet]
  • Pending UFA Alex Wennberg, 31, reached a three-year extension, signaling a new phase for the rebuilding Sharks. [AP]
  • In a common refrain, the Oilers need more than Connor McDavid to show up. [Sportsnet]
  • Matthew Tkachuk’s return for Florida looms. [Sportsnet]

Source: https://www.lighthousehockey.com/islanders-news-headlines/43704/islanders-news-schaefer-wjc-poletin
 
Islanders vs. Devils Gameday: Schaefer health watch

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Matthew Schaefer scored two roof-raising goals in Saturday night’s win despite feeling unwell with what at least one report said was the flu. As he missed Monday’s practice and was listed “day to day (illness),” I’m struck that I’m not so much concerned that the Isles are less likely to win with him out of the lineup as I am concerned that Islanders games are much less fun to watch without him.

I think that’s what’s so fun about this season, whichever way it leads (and I’m still not feeling like it leads to playoffs, current standings be damned): Matthew Schaefer is just plain fun to watch. He logs a lot of minutes as a defenseman; he wows with his break-the-mold approach that only a handful of defensemen at any age can do and get away with in the NHL; and of course his personality, approach and maturity is not what you expect from an 18-year-old superstar-in-the-making.

So anyway, Schaefer is a gameday decision for tonight’s meeting with the Devils. This is the final game before a very, very long trip.

First Islanders Goal picks go here.

Islanders News​

  • Previewing tonight, which is on ESPN+/Hulu for the national viewers. [Isles]
  • Day-to-day: Ilya Sorokin will get the start. [Isles]
  • Double episode of Islander Anxiety! The regular turn, but also the emergency podcast celebrating Schaefer’s big night against the Leafs (and also ranting about the Leafs emptying the bench for their own franchise-specific milestone…“You kind of which Scott Mayfield had gone Micheal Haley on them”). [LHH]
  • The latest 32 Thoughts Podcast (where are the written thoughts???) acknowledges a wonderful night on Long Island for Schaefer and the Isles. [Sportsnet]
  • Duh, he’s now the Calder favorite. [NHL]
  • Not totally sure why they’re showing us this (but I appreciate the effort), but here’s a short clip of Patrick Roy praising his team’s “next man up” mentality. [Isles video]
  • Speaking of Roy, here’s his post-practice availability, with lots of acknowledgment of David Rittich’s effort. [Isles video]
  • Victor Eklund scored, blocked shots and killed penalties to win Player of the Game and help Sweden win gold over Tomas Poletin’s Czech Republic at the WJC. [THN]
  • For the love of Bossy, even Newsday published something about this stupid Tom Brady self-promo video mentioning Matthew Schaefer. Click! Click! Click! Does no one have any shame anymore? [Newsday]
  • Rumor has it there’s a new alternate jersey series, City-like or “hometown remix” maybe, and if this is all true then it looks like the Islanders color base is…white. [Sportslogos]
  • Thanks to commenter 10 to 27 to 23 for posting this Schaefer post-game from the HNIC side:

Elsewhere​


Last night’s scores included the Capitals winning, the Rangers losing in overtime and the Wings passing the Senators in regulation.

  • In proof that Bettman’s Peak Parity is here, the reigning President’s Trophy holding Jets are currently last in the NHL standings and nine points out of the wild card. [NHL]
  • In terrible news for the Russian Olympic Te— oh wait, they can’t attend because dumbass dictator invasion — Igor Shesterkin had to be helped off the ice after what appeared to be a serious knee injury. [ESPN]
  • Five years, $25.75M extension for Christian Dvorak from the Flyers. [TSN]
  • The Hurricanes have acquired left-shot defenseman Juuso E-Z “you may have a lot of umlauts but I got much more” Välimäki from the Mammoth for future considerations. He’s a former 16th overall pick (Calgary) who’s been toiling in the AHL and will remain there for now. [TSN]
  • Longtime Blackhawk (actually, I guess it’s technically Black Hawks player and Blackhawks exec) Bob Pulford has passed away. [AP]

Source: https://www.lighthousehockey.com/is.../islanders-vs-devils-matthew-schaefer-sorokin
 
Islanders 9, Devils 0: Franchise records ‘n fun

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Mat Barzal scored the game-winning goal 68 seconds in and then the New York Islanders decided to add eight more, just for insurance.

There was more, of course — much more — to their 9-0 blowout of the New Jersey Devils, including a classic story of hockey goaltending. Ilya Sorokin made a triumphant return from injury to set the Islanders franchise mark for shutouts (again, the Islanders emptied the bench after the milestone…but that’s because they won the damned game).

Sorokin absolutely earned it, keeping the score close, then comfortable, then laughable on his way to making 45 saves. At the other end, the Islanders scored on three of their first four shots as they picked corners on Jacob Markstrom all night long.

The Islanders didn’t have tons of chances early on, but most of them emerged from an increasingly frustrated Devils squad getting stymied at one end, then letting the Isles cruise down to the other.

Oh, also: Anthony Duclair returned from two games of healthy scratches to get his fourth NHL hat trick and first with the Isles. (Also: he was +6.) It was a five-point night for Duclair, who only figured in just over half the Islanders goals, as they tied the franchise record for nine-goal margin of victory.

It should be noted that all of this happened with top scorer Bo Horvat still out of the lineup, and all of this could have gone very differently if Sorokin didn’t make some seriously acrobatic saves to keep the score 1-0, 2-0, 3-0 in the first period.

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

J-G Pageau and Jonathan Drouin get the raspberry award for being the only two Islanders not to be a plus on the +/- ledger. On the other side, someone who goes by the name of Arseny Gristyuk was the only Devil not hit with a minus.

Barzal’s opener was a rare but incisive one-timer, but he also had another beautiful long cross-slot pass to set up Duclair’s hat trick goal. The one-timer to make it 1-0:

Tic-tac-toe. What a shot from Barzal. pic.twitter.com/mc9ORsD5hY

— Rob Taub (@RTaub_) January 7, 2026

Here’s Duclair’s hat trick goal:

ANTHONY DUCLAIR HAT TRICK! 🎩 pic.twitter.com/utN0Sj48E3

— Islanders Videos (@SNY_Islanders) January 7, 2026

Duclair’s first two goals were from nearly identical spots — this one was his first (but his second later in the first period came from the same angle after a brilliant backhand stretch pass from Casey Cizikas):

Duclair makes it 2 shots, 2 goals for #isles pic.twitter.com/wR4dVRdQp2

— YESUV🚙 (@IslesWhiteSUV) January 7, 2026

Simon Holmstrom — using his crazy long reach to slip it around Markstrom from below the goal line — Casey Cizikas, Tony DeAngelo and Calum Ritchie also scored.

The final two goals were in the final 90 seconds and would’ve felt gratuitous if the Sheldon Keefe-coached Devils hadn’t just handed easy turnovers and odd-man rushes to the Isles. After the eighth goal, there was a little bit of “rough” (to put it generously) stuff at the ensuing faceoff, but it amounted to nothing. The Devils took zero penalties in the game and then let Cizikas finish scoring at 19:02 on a 2-on-1 pass from Duclair.

Run up the score? Sure. But what else are you supposed to do when the baby is just handing you candy?

What a crazy, lopsided, fun and historic night.

Notes​

  • Sorokin looked good. Reeeaaallly goood. The rest definitely helped whatever ailed him, he did not labor at all while making the kinds of “are you kidding me?” saves that crush spirits.
  • Cole McWard played his second game. Tough to evaluate anything in a 9-0 laugher.
  • Emil Heineman was one of six Islanders skaters who failed to record points, but he easily could’ve had two or three.
  • The Devils are still battling through injuries and clearly had an off night but…not a lot of fire and brimstone in that squad. Wondering if Keefe’s “talented but not playoff ready” rep is going to stay with him.
  • Ryan Pulock pulled ahead of Kenny Jonsson on the franchise all-time list for assists by defensemen. And of course Sorokin now stands alone atop the franchise shutout list, ahead of Chico Resch and Billy Smith.
  • It’s funny to think back on how, as prospects, we worried that both Anders Lee and Sorokin might never wear the uniform, and now they are on the franchise leaderboard.

Heh. “In terms of offensive chance generation, probably the best we’ve played in a long time.”

Sheldon Keefe talks to the media following tonight's game. pic.twitter.com/Z7jk4ujC8x

— New Jersey Devils (@NJDevils) January 7, 2026

Up Next​


What a way to send them off on a season-long road trip. Seven games, spanning all time zones, starting Thursday with a visit to Uncle Barry in Nashville.

Source: https://www.lighthousehockey.com/ga...wout-duclair-sorokin-franchise-shutout-record
 
HOLY CRAP WHAT A WEEK FOR THE ISLES!!! 🔥🔥🔥

Look, I'm a Bills guy through and through but you gotta respect what's happening on Long Island right now. Matthew Schaefer is absolutely RIDICULOUS. An 18-year-old kid putting the team on his back like that against the Leafs? AND doing it while sick with the flu? That's the kind of mentality we love to see. Kid's got that Josh Allen "I don't care about the circumstances, I'm gonna make a play" energy.

And then the Devils game... NINE TO NOTHING?!?! Duclair with the hatty, Sorokin setting the franchise shutout record, and they're doing all this WITHOUT Horvat in the lineup. That's absolutely insane. The Devils looked completely lost out there. Keefe's gotta be sweating bullets after that embarrassment.

Gotta give massive props to Sorokin too. Coming back from injury and immediately looking like a brick wall with 45 saves? That's a statement game right there. The whole "is Sorokin okay?" narrative can take a hike for now.

The only thing that concerns me is this brutal road trip coming up. Seven games across all time zones is no joke, especially when you're riding this kind of high. Nashville, Minnesota, Winnipeg, then the whole northwest swing? That's gonna test this team big time. But hey, if Schaefer can score OT winners while battling the flu, maybe this group is built different.

LET'S GO ISLES! (And Bills Mafia forever, but I can appreciate good hockey when I see it!)
 
Islanders Gameday: The journey begins…

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The hangover (hopefully not) from the Islanders’ raucous and absurd 9-0 romp over the New Jersey Devils Tuesday has hopefully subsided as they begin the first stop in a season-longest seven-game road trip tonight in Nashville.

They’ll presumably continue without Bo Horvat in the lineup, though he is skating and on the road trip with the team.

First Islanders Goal picks go here.

Islanders News​


Of all the trivia that came out of that singular night, maybe the most depressing was this, per NHL media and the team’s post-game notes: “The last time the Islanders had two or more hat tricks in a single season was 1993-94 (Pierre Turgeon and Derek King).” Anthony Duclair’s adds to Bo Horvat’s earlier this year to make two in 2025-26.

  • Lots, lots more trivia like that in the Skinny. This one is definitely indicative of our times: “Ilya Sorokin is the first goalie in NHL to record seven career shutouts in which he faced 40 or more shots.” [Isles]
  • Previewing tonight. [Isles]
  • The Isles bring “confidence” into this big road trip, though that can change in a hurry. [Newsday]
  • Full video of Ilya Sorokin’s post-game remarks after setting the franchise shutout record. [Isles]
  • Islanders players praise Jonathan Drouin’s overall play. [Newsday]
  • Islanders react to the WJC results, with this nice line from Czech David Rittich: “That’s why the U.S. media is a little quiet here today and [the] Canadians are not even here.” [Isles]

Mathieu Darche on the Daily Faceoff podcast. For your sanity, his appearance begins after the 7-minute mark. For me the most gratifying part was frank recognition of why the team should, you know, provide more media/social access for fans in a market with a dozen other pro sports teams:

Elsewhere​


Tuesday’s scores included the Sabres winning yet again, the Flyers defeating the Ducks; Wednesday’s scores included losses for both nations’ capitals.

  • Sad news on a NHL legend and gentlemen: Glenn Hall has died at age 94. [NHL]
  • Can Quinn Hughes catch Cale Makar for the Norris? (They better get theirs now before another fella becomes a regular candidate…). [Sportsnet]
  • Or no no, maybe it’s Moritz Seider challenging Makar for the trophy. [Athletic]
  • And speaking of trophy musing, a case for Ilya Sorokin (among a few other no-chancers) go get MVP votes. [Athletic]
  • Yet another Luke Fox jukebox temperature check on the Maple Leafs. [Sportsnet]
  • Ontario’s other team is also struggling. [TSN]
  • Utah will host a Winter Classic against the Avalanche. Should call it the Butch Goring Grizzlies Bowl. [NHL]

Source: https://www.lighthousehockey.com/islanders-news-headlines/43725/islanders-gameday-the-journey-begins
 
Predators 2*, Islanders 1 (*SO): Back to earth

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The New York Islanders followed up their gate-busting nine-goal romp over New Jersey with one measly goal against the Predators, falling 2-1 via shootout in Nashville.

The outcome gives them a valuable point and keeps them in second place in the Metro (for now) as they begin their seven-game road trip, though they’ll feel it was a missed opportunity to get two.

Then again, though Juuse Saros made some great saves and blanked the Isles in the shootout, David Rittich had some big moments at the other end, including a late scramble where the Isles benefited from some healthy bounces and accidental blocks when regulation was still up for grabs.

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

Saros made 30 saves including three stops across two non-threatening Isles power plays, one of which gave up the only Nashville goal. The Predators had just one power play of their own; the teams played 4-on-4 on three separate occasions, as the officials otherwise avoided creating special teams situations.

But there was occasional ill tempers, including when Casey Cizikas was basically slew-footed by Tyson Jost and Cizikas took an offsetting roughing minor. (Officially, it was tripping by Jost and unsportsmanlike conduct by Cizikas, though the ref announced roughing for both through a mangled in-arena mic.)

Another occasion was when Saros made a meal out of contact with Anders Lee above his crease, losing his stick and his earthly balance, while Lee tried to slide a rebound home — Saros stopped it — and then Adam Pelech put it into the net but after the whistle had blown. That brought extended shoving and heated discussion from all on the ice, save Rittich, who likely came up with some Czech one-liners as he observed things from his legal perch 200 feet away.

Simon Holmstrom scored the only Isles goal, midway through the first period with a tired Nashville unit falling victim to a cycle activation by Scott Mayfield(!!), who pinched down the boards, around the net, and threw a pass that threaded through legs to find Holmstrom.

Mayfield “activating.” Holmstrom scores! 🚨1-0 #Isles pic.twitter.com/3cadiBKyjW

— The Elmonters (@TheElmonters) January 9, 2026

Alas, the Isles power play gave it back seven minutes later when Cole Smith and Ryan O’Reilly out hustled everyone on a broken clear. Smith hunted down the puck, finding the soft spot in the backcheck, then O’Reilly sprinted just ahead of Jonathan Drouin to get free for the one-timer:

Ryan O'Reilly gets one to trickle into the net, tying the game 1-1 before the intermission.

It's O'Reilly second shorthanded goal of the season and 13th overall. Great feed from Cole Smith.pic.twitter.com/Ve3Do4lV3h

— Russell Vannozzi (@RussellV_MSP) January 9, 2026

There were chances, some good saves and posts the rest of the way, but — after an OT largely controlled by the Isles but with few threats other than Matthew Schaefer from the slot — it came down to just one shootout conversion.

In that breakaway drill that defines a “winner” and a “oh, that’s a loser point” in our modern times, O’Reilly and Steven Stamkos were stopped (though Stamkos hit the post) by Rittich, while Mat Barzal, Holmstrom (who also hit the post) and Emil Heineman were stopped by Saros. Filip Forsberg’s slick backhand while Rittich readied a pokecheck proved the difference.

Up Next​


Before they cross the border, the Isles have date with the surging Minnesota Wild and Quinn “not even close to being a Devil” Hughes on Saturday night.

Source: https://www.lighthousehockey.com/ga...islanders-holmstrom-oreilly-forsberg-shootout
 
Weird Islanders: The Podcast! – Episode 78 – Richard Zednik (with guest Ted Starkey)

Weird_Islanders_art.jpg


Along with author and Capitals expert Ted Starkey, we remember Richard Zednik, a talented player and borderline legend for three NHL teams, but a footnote in Islanders history.

Zednik started his career with the bang, as an exciting rookie on the Capitals 1998 Stanley Cup final team. He hit a new level after being traded to Montreal and blossoming into a big scorer. But after a disappointing return to Washington, he found himself again shipped off to Long Island. In one of the strangest seasons in Islanders history, Zednik was a true passenger. Ten games, one goal and a disappearance during an electric run to the playoffs, in which he would also play briefly. Later, he had a renaissance with the Panthers and used the Islanders for one final highlight reel goal after coming back from a horrific injury,

Ted talks to us about Zednik’s folk hero status in Washington – including a hilarious and era-appropriate promotional event – and what he meant to that fun squad that made a surprise run to the Cup final. We marvel at Zednik’s numbers with the Canadiens and Panthers and laugh about his incredibly disappointing short time with the Islanders. He showed up, got some fans excited, did very little, dipped out for a while and came back just in time for a five-game playoff wipeout. It was yet another strange element to the extremely strange 2006-07 season, one we can’t get enough of.

Thanks again to Ted for coming on and all his support over the years. Follow his work at Hockey Hot Stove and check out his books, Red Rising: The Washington Capitals Story and Chasing the Dream: Life in the American Hockey League.

WEIRD BONUS MATERIAL

  • Here’s an overview of Zednik’s hockey career. From his rise through the Slovakian hockey system to the Caps, the Habs and his other stops.
  • Zednik was a quality young player for the Caps and even scored a goal in the 1998 Stanley Cup final against future fellow Weird Islander Chris Osgood.
  • But like Ryan Smyth, Jason Blake, Viktor Kozlov and Tom Poti, he decided to leave Long Island that summer, signing a two-year deal with the Panthers.
  • Sadly, it was when he was with Florida that Zednik suffered a terrible skate cut to his neck, courtesy of teammate Olli Jokinen. Fortunately, doctors acted quickly and Zednik was able to play again the next season.
  • More on the skate cut and the immediate medical attention he needed. He talked about it years later as well. At the time, the decision to continue the game was a controversial one.
  • This goal, scored against the Islanders when he was with Florida, is some Spider-Man/Matrix shit.
  • Man, this stuff just seems to find him. In 2012, Zednik was skating with youth players in his native Slovakia when the arena’s roof collapsed and just missed him.


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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Source: https://www.lighthousehockey.com/ny...guest-ted-starkey-capitals-canadiens-panthers
 
What a wild swing of emotions for Isles fans this week. Going from that historic 9-0 demolition of the Devils to dropping the shootout in Nashville has to be a bit deflating, but honestly a point on the road to start a seven-game trip isn't the worst outcome.

Sorokin setting the franchise shutout record was a nice moment. The guy has been so solid when healthy, and 45 saves in a game where your team scores nine times is almost absurd. He was clearly the reason it stayed close early before the floodgates opened.

The Nashville loss felt pretty typical for a team coming off a huge emotional high. Sometimes you just don't have the same jump, and Saros is capable of stealing games on his own. That shorthanded goal against was rough though - power play giving up goals the other direction is never a good look.

Duclair having that kind of breakout game after being a healthy scratch is interesting. Sometimes guys just need a reset. Being +6 with a hat trick and five points is about as emphatic a response as you can give.

That road trip is going to be a real test. Minnesota's been playing well and traveling through all those time zones wears on teams. Should be telling to see how they hold up without Horvat still. Hopefully he's back soon.

The Zednik podcast episode sounds like a fun throwback. That 2006-07 season really was strange. Barely remember him in an Isles sweater at all.
 
Islanders Gameday: Wild about Quinn

gettyimages-2178681134.jpg


The Islanders road trip chapter 2 is Saturday night in Minnesota, where Bill Guerin is riding high after acquiring Quinn Hughes while absorbing shots for not taking Your Favorite Player on the U.S. Olympic team that will play next month in the half-constructed rink in Italy.

The Wild are tied with Dallas at 60 points in the insane Central Division arms race: Runaway leader Colorado has 70 points while the top Pacific teams are 20 points behind. Basically, the Wild look destined for one of those devastating 2 vs. 3 first-round matchups with Dallas that gets people so worked up about the current playoff format.

Minnesota has only won five of its last 10 (plus three bonus-round losses) but they are in dangerous form with the addition of Hughes.

The Islanders, despite only getting a point in Nashville, enter the day hanging on to second place in the Metro by a point, but with more games played — and of course the Metro and East in general remains one big slog of meh teams that can be in the playoffs one day, teetering on the basement the next.

First Islanders Goal picks go here.

Islanders News​

  • In addition to that podcast interview the other day, Mathieu Darche held a media availability, sharing updates on Bo Horvat (not traveling with the team overall) and saying all parties are still in a wait-and-see mode regarding UFAs Anders Lee and J-G Pageau. [Isles | Post]
  • Also, Darche went into the rotating cast (and Isaiah George’s multiple injuries) to fill the gap from Alex Romanov’s injury, including leaning on and evaluating what’s in Bridgeport. [Post]
  • Previewing tonight: The Isles haven’t won in Minnesota since 2019-20.[Isles]
  • Slapshots are becoming less common, but Ryan Pulock will still deliver the occasional bomb. [Newsday]

Elsewhere​

  • A deeper dive into Quinn Hughes’ first 12 games with the Wild. [Athletic]
  • Bourne: Eight thoughts on the midpoint of the season. [Sportsnet]
  • Today’s goalies talk about the importance of being mentored by the old guard. [NHL]
  • Ridly Greig is one bright spot in a tough Senators season. [Sportsnet]
  • THE OLYMPIC ICE WILL BE FINE, JUST FINE. [TSN]
  • The Devils have ol’ friend Dennis Cholowski on waivers. [TSN]

Source: https://www.lighthousehockey.com/islanders-news-headlines/43735/islanders-gameday-wild-about-quinn
 
Islanders 4, Wild 3 (OT): Simon and Ilya save the day

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Simon Holmstrom had his biggest game as an Islander and Ilya Sorokin kept the Wild barrage at bay as the Isles won in overtime, 4-3 in Minnesota.

This was an occasion where the Islanders were not the better side, but they refused to wilt nor slow their tempo against one of the top teams in the league. That makes nights like this possible and fun — though also dependent on the top-level goaltending they’ve received from both netminders this season.

Holmstrom’s game winner 94 seconds into overtime capped a sterling night, which also included his impressive shorthanded assist on Casey Cizikas’ equalizer with 26 seconds left in the second period and a shot from distance earlier in that period that tied it at 2-2.

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

The Islanders hung in there all night, tying the game three times and mounting counterattacks after each scary phase of sustained Wild pressure. There were many times where the Wild dazzled with their cycling and puck movement — often requiring big stops from Sorokin — but the Isles didn’t respond to those by simply trying to catch their breath; instead, they took their turns attacking.

That included the dying minutes of regulation, when the Quinn Hughes Show — three assists on the night and could’ve been more — was in full effect. But the Isles followed a long stretch in their own zone with a dangerous counterattack that concluded with a classic Anders Lee screen and tip, stopped by Filip Gustavsson.

To meet the Wild’s speed, Patrick Roy made a couple lineup changes, with Adam Boqvist — playing on his natural side — coming in for Cole McWard, and Max Tsyplakov providing a little life in place of Kyle MacLean.

Sorokin was acrobatic as usual, but the night belonged to Holmstrom’s attributes. On the Cizikas shorthander, Holmstrom intercepted a dangerous slot pass, made a move with his long reach to trap a Wild pinch and then lead a semi-odd-man rush. Holmstrom stared down Hughes long enough to create a lane for him to set up Cizikas, who needed to make a smart five-hole move to finish the sequence.

Another wonderful “low IQ” play from Simon Holmstrom and excellent finish from Casey Cizikas shorthanded pic.twitter.com/UzsWQdJs6s

— Rob Taub (@RTaub_) January 11, 2026

On the OT winner, Holmstrom circled the zone and accelerated away from a Hughes-Boldy coverage exchange to get himself a lane to Gustavsson. He faked the shot and then used his reach to backhand around the Wild goalie, giving the Isles two points on a night when they could’ve easily netted zero.

SIMON HOLMSTROM IS THE HERO! 🦸‍♂️

His second of the game wins it for the @NYIslanders in @Energizer overtime! pic.twitter.com/eZAzJFAD9L

— NHL (@NHL) January 11, 2026
Simon Holmstrom on his OT winner (second of the night plus one assist as #Isles top Wild 4-3: "I thought when I got it they were kind of doubling up and I saw (Drouin) coming for the dump pass and I was trying to fake it to get some space and I put it in."

— Andrew Gross (@AGrossNewsday) January 11, 2026

Up Next​


Chapter 3 of the seven-game road trip comes Tuesday when the Islanders visit the Winnipeg Jets and hang out in Canada for a bit.

Source: https://www.lighthousehockey.com/game-recaps/43738/islander-wild-simon-holmstrom-sorokin
 
Islanders News: Lee’s pond, mid-season status

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Fresh off stealing one from one of the league’s few top teams (thanks, Ilya and Simon!), the Islanders now head to the President’s Trophy winner that has fallen on hard, near-bottom times — though the Jets have now won consecutive games for the first time since November.

Before the Isles got to Winnipeg, they enjoyed what looks like a pretty sweet off day playing pond hockey at the Lee compound. This team appears to sustain that fun vibe and spirit that keeps them from throwing in the towel while being toyed with by a team like the Wild. With the goaltending they’ve been getting most nights, anything is possible on most nights.

So that’s made this season pretty fun through the first half or so. (It’s a weird, weird year in the East. Perennial playoff miss Detroit is currently battling for first in the conference with a +3 goal differential.)

But if we had complaints — and we always do, even when expectations are low — we might focus on the power play, which continues to be pretty, pretty bad: its 15.3% conversion rate is second from the bottom of the league. Granted, right now it’s missing Bo Horvat’s slot shot — and was missing Kyle Palmieri before that — but a unit with Matthew Schaefer and Mat Barzal should be able to create enough openings for more than that.

In recent weeks, Barzal’s cross-slot passes have occasionally found gold at even strength and on the power play. The Barzal-Schaefer combo continues to be a zone entry god and can help keep plays alive in tight along the boards. But this team needs to identify confident, willing shooters (plus Anders Lee back in front?) and set them up to succeed. It’s sounds so easy!

Amid other mid-season concerns, there is of course Horvat’s injury, the constant reliance on top goaltending, the rotating cast of Alex Romanov replacements on the third pair, and the question of whether Schaefer will hit a rookie-year wall. But it’s a luxury to be able to talk about these things now, with the Isles still well in the hunt and second in the Metro.

Islanders News​

  • Playing on the Lee pond, wearing jerseys of yore. This looks so fun, and the photos are great. [Isles]
  • Post-game: Patrick Roy knows that was a lopsided show but he liked that the Isles did what they could to stick around and steal it. (As my grandpa used to say about living through the Depression: “We did what we could, with what we had.”) [Isles video]
  • Takeaways: It was Simon Holmstrom’s night, but he credited “the best goalie in the league.” [Isles]
  • Mathieu Darche and his NFL brother have pro championship trophies and unconventional paths to playing and post-playing careers. [Athletic]
  • Gross: Schaefer has already entered the realm of the league’s elite. [Newsday]
  • Sears: Seeing Quinn Hughes was a tease of Schaefer’s future. [Po$t+]
  • Another big factor in the Isles having a better year is their vast improvement in overtime, where they’re undefeated. That’s probably a bit of luck, a bit of new approach, and a bit of Matthew freaking Schaefer. [THN]
  • During his media availability last week, Mathieu Darche also expressed belief in Max Tsyplakov. [THN]

Elsewhere​


Last night’s scores included the Devils — with a shocking minues-23 goal differential — losing in regulation again, this time to the Jets. The Caps also lost in regulation, while the Pens were blanked by the Bruins.

  • Speaking of the Devils, they’re scratching Dougie Hamilton, whose camp calls it “business” rather than related to play. They apparently had a trade to San Jose in place over the summer but Hamilton vetoed it with his NTC. [Fourth Period]
  • Alex Ovechkin now trails only Gordie Howe for most 20-goal seasons. [NHL]
  • The Canucks are calling it a “hybrid rebuild” now. [Sportsnet]
  • Speaking of which Thatcher “don’t call me DiPietro” Demko is back on IR. [TSN]
  • The Olympic ice hockey arena in Italy is totally almost ready. Totally. [ESPN]

Source: https://www.lighthousehockey.com/is...s-news-anders-lee-bo-horvat-sorokin-holmstrom
 
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