RSS Kraken Team Notes

Monday Musings: Still on a ride

It was another roller‑coaster week for the Seattle Kraken, who traded off losses and wins to finish 2–2–0. Things opened with a 6–3 loss to the Pittsburgh Penguins in which the Kraken started late, battled back, but ultimately came up short. Two days later, they skated to a convincing, though not dominant, 4–1 win over the New York Islanders, and it briefly felt like things were back on track heading into a very important Friday night matchup with the Anaheim Ducks.

I don’t have much desire to relive the Ducks game, but as poorly as the Kraken played for the first two periods, they were within one goal for most of the third. They had their chances, too. Look at the Kraken’s shot attempts by period, excluding blocked shots.

image-27.png


I’m not trying to spin that loss, but even in one of their worst games of the season, they were somehow still in it. Then they rebounded Sunday at got a needed 4-2 win over the New Jersey Devils.

As of Monday morning, they sit four points back of Anaheim for third in the Pacific Division and are tied with the Sharks and Kings for the final wild‑card spot. San Jose and Los Angeles hold the advantage because they’ve each played one fewer game than Seattle.

Even with all that swirling around, it’s worth zooming out for a second and taking stock of where this team actually sits in the bigger picture.

Sticking around​


I wasn’t feeling great about this team after either the Penguins game or the Ducks game, but despite the poor results, the Kraken remain firmly in the playoff mix. Even I need to remind myself that this is all I asked for at the start of the season, and I probably shouldn’t get too emotional after a loss. They’ve had their share of stinkers, but they can beat anyone, which makes tuning in easy. The team is healthy and, believe it or not, starting to score some goals. If they can lock down the defensive structure that defined their early‑season success, they have a decent chance of making the playoffs.

Sabotage returns​


For those who haven’t been to a game lately, Kraken game ops brought back “Sabotage” by the Beastie Boys as the player‑intro song. The switch happened for the Islanders game, and based on what I saw online, fans had been clamoring for its return. The Kraken were 10–8–5 with “Cochise” by Audioslave as the intro and are 2–1–0 with “Sabotage” this season. I genuinely wonder what went into the decision to insert “Cochise” in the first place and how “Sabotage” made its way back. My guess is fan feedback drove the return, which is nice to think about.

🎶 Sabotage IS back! 🎶 #SeaKraken pic.twitter.com/hpZOOaqfie

— Sound Of Hockey (@sound_hockey) January 24, 2026

Quick thoughts on Shane Wright​


I’ve had no fewer than 20 people ask me what’s going on with the Shane Wright narrative, so I feel obligated to share my perspective. We spent a good chunk of time on it in the latest Sound Of Hockey Podcast, and Curtis Isacke brought the heat with some data on Wright’s season to date, so I highly recommend checking that out (the Wright discussion starts around the 31:40 mark).

Are the Kraken “shopping” Shane Wright? No. Are they listening to offers? Yes, just as they should for every player.

You don’t need to be an insider to see that roughly 20 NHL teams are looking for a center, while the Kraken have five or six centers playing in their lineup every night. Center is where Seattle’s depth lies, and to acquire a top‑six, high‑end, goal‑scoring winger, you have to give up something of value.

Theoretically, any center could be available, but only a few would fetch the return Seattle needs, which is where Wright enters the conversation. It really is that simple. I’m not disputing that discussions are happening, but I am not sure Wright will be traded this season.

Other musings​

  • Sunday’s win was their first against the Devils since January 2023. They have still never won in New Jersey. The only other team they haven’t beaten on the road is Utah.
  • For the ninth time in the last 10 games, the Kraken gave up the first goal. It’s a trend that has been all too common after they opened the season so strong in scoring first. They’re 16–6–3 when scoring first and 7–13–6 when allowing the first goal.
  • Naturally, after I just posted about how good the Kraken’s special teams have been lately, they went 0‑for‑4 on the power play and allowed two goals on the penalty kill.
  • After going 27 games without a goal, Berkly Catton now has five in his last 11. He’s tied with Matty Beniers and Jared McCann for the most goals in that span despite playing significantly fewer minutes.
  • One small thing I picked up on Sunday was the “face-off and change” pattern in the third period. Several times, Chandler Stephenson took a defensive‑zone draw with Freddy Gaudreau on the wing. They aren’t on the same line, but more than a couple of times I noticed head coach Lane Lambert sending them out together for the face-off, and once the puck was cleared, one of them would change.
  • It’s been 16 years since I started the NHLtoSeattle grassroots movement, and 13 years since the Seahawks won the Super Bowl. I mention them together because I remember feeling emboldened by that run to back‑to‑back Super Bowls and the civic pride that washed over the city. It validated what I was doing and reminded me of the value sports bring to a community. Sports bring people together, and I think we need more of that in the world right now. Go Hawks.

Goal of the week​


This was an easy one…

Player performances​


Carson Rehkopf (CVF) – Rehkopf is no stranger to this section of Monday Musings, but it has been a while since we mentioned him. He recorded his first professional hat trick on Wednesday night.

🧢 CARSON REHKOPF WITH HIS FIRST PRO HAT TRICK!!!!! 🧢 4-2 FIIIIREEEEBIRDDSSSSS! pic.twitter.com/pIktElzQdC

— Coachella Valley Firebirds (@Firebirds) January 22, 2026

Jake O’Brien (BRA/SEA) – The Kraken’s 2025 first‑round pick returned to the Brantford Bulldogs lineup last Sunday and has 10 points in four games.

Logan Morrison (CVF) – Morrison has points in eight of his last 10 games and has quietly put up strong numbers for the Firebirds. He has 20 goals in 39 games this season and is on pace for 37.

The week ahead​


I’m sure I’m starting to sound like a broken record, but with six points on the table this week, the Kraken should aim for three. They host the Washington Capitals and Toronto Maple Leafs on Tuesday and Thursday, respectively, before hitting the road for a Saturday matchup with the Vegas Golden Knights.

The home games will be a challenge, but they’re catching both the Capitals and Leafs at a good time because neither team is playing its best hockey right now. Vegas has lost three of its last four but still has seven wins in its last 10. If nothing else, this season keeps giving us reasons to stay plugged in and see where the next twist in the ride takes us.

The post Monday Musings: Still on a ride appeared first on Sound Of Hockey.

Source: https://soundofhockey.com/2026/01/26/monday-musings-still-on-a-ride/
 
Three Takeaways – Jared McCann has four-point night, Kraken beat Capitals 5-1

What a night for the Seattle Kraken’s first line, which produced nearly all the offense in a 5-1 drubbing of a reeling Washington Capitals team.

Seattle got off on a better foot than it has in recent games, going through the first period tied 0-0, then rode Jared McCann’s impressive night to a convincing victory.

“They had an outstanding game,” coach Lane Lambert said of Seattle’s first line. “And it’s very important to have those guys do that. And we look forward to more of that.”

McCann finished with two goals and two assists, Matty Beniers and Jordan Eberle each had a goal and an assist, and Philipp Grubauer was solid again (when he had to be), stopping 19 shots.

Here are Three Takeaways from a 5-1 Kraken win over the Capitals.

Takeaway 1: Better start​


After going 10 straight games giving up a goal in the first 10 minutes, it was refreshing to see Seattle get through the opening frame with a 0-0 tie. There were a couple of hairy moments in that first period, including a Jacob Chychrun shot that slid behind Grubauer but missed wide of the far post, and another chance in which Vince Dunn stepped in front of an open net to save a sure goal.

Phew! 😅

Jakob Chychrun sends it behind Grubauer and out the other side. pic.twitter.com/w5UYPu4ICA

— Sound Of Hockey (@sound_hockey) January 28, 2026

Aside from those two scares, Seattle controlled almost the entire period and came away with a 13-4 shots-on-goal advantage and a clean slate heading to the second.

“We’ve addressed [our starts]. We’ve talked about it many times,” Eberle said. “I mean, obviously we know the stats on giving up the first goal. I mean, just a collective mindset of being ready, and that just means, maybe getting it in deep and trying to establish a forecheck. You’re not going to score the first goal every game, that’s the reality of this league. It’s a good league, other teams are good, but you can try and— especially at home, put your will and establish your game early. So good start tonight and [we’ve got to] keep it going.”

Seattle then got on the board with a power-play goal early in the second period, and things got on the rails quickly.

Takeaway 2: Jared McCann gets robbed of the hat trick​


It was McCann who opened the scoring, converting on the power play to make it 1-0 at 1:15 of the second period by one-timing Eberle’s pass from the top of the right circle against the grain and past Logan Thompson.

MCCANN CAN! 🚨

Really nifty shot here by Jared McCann, back against the grain on Thompson. Power-play goal.

1-0 #SeaKraken https://t.co/UWsAui9mPI pic.twitter.com/owOFPWWxUR

— Sound Of Hockey (@sound_hockey) January 28, 2026

He followed that up with his second of the game at 10:09, cleaning up a Beniers rebound that landed right on his stick with a yawning cage in front of him.

“On the first one, Ebs found me through the slot there,” McCann said. “I just tried to get it on net as quick as possible, and kind of— I didn’t get all of it, but it was a good-placed shot, I guess. And the second one there, I just tried to battle my way to the net, and it kind of kicked off the pad there, right to me, backdoor.”

From there—once McCann officially landed on hat-trick watch—things started to get weird. First, with a chance at a natural hat trick, he rang a shot hard off the left post, which Eberle swept into the net to make it 3-0 at 17:54 of the second. There went the natty hatty.

O CAPTAIN! 🫡 🚨

How rude of Jordan Eberle to steal the natural hat trick opportunity from Jared McCann.

3-0 #SeaKraken pic.twitter.com/1NJSlpWXwa

— Sound Of Hockey (@sound_hockey) January 28, 2026

Things got really weird early in the final period, when McCann appeared to score his third goal, making it 4-0 at 1:27. As he celebrated, hats rained down onto the ice. Only after every fan who wanted to throw a hat had done so did the officials make it clear that they were considering wiping the goal off the board.

“The linesman called the high-sticking penalty, and when a linesman sees a high stick, he can’t blow it down right away,” coach Lane Lambert said. “So the play went on for quite a while, obviously, and then they reviewed it, and that was the rule, and that’s the way it goes. So, we couldn’t change it. We just had to buckle down and get through it.”

Replay showed that Matty Beniers had clipped Justin Sourdif nearly a full minute before McCann summoned the barrage of hats from the crowd. The linesman properly reported the penalty at the next stoppage, which just so happened be McCann’s goal.

“I’ve never seen— I didn’t even know that was an option,” Eberle said, dumbfounded. “I’ve never seen that. I mean, obviously, massive momentum swing when you get the fourth and put them away, and they take it away, give you a four-minute penalty.”

Added McCann: “I just feel bad for people who threw their hats on the ice, to be honest.”

The officials ultimately got it right, but it was a bizarre circumstance. Alex Ovechkin capitalized on the four-minute power play with career goal No. 919, briefly giving the Capitals a pulse.

Credit to the Kraken for sticking with it, though, killing off the remainder of that penalty and then adding goals from Beniers and Ryker Evans down the stretch to put the game away.

Takeaway 3: Melanson’s first NHL fight​


The legend of Jacob Melanson continued to grow Tuesday. He delivered seven more hits and is now averaging just under five hits per game in his brief NHL career. He also drove hard to the net and was the target of a Ryker Evans pass that caromed in off Tom Wilson.

RYKER STRIKER! 🚨

Two straight games with a goal for Ryker Evans, who gets a good bounce of Tom Wilson's skate.

4-1 #SeaKraken pic.twitter.com/xhGEFutPHn

— Sound Of Hockey (@sound_hockey) January 28, 2026

But he brought the crowd to its feet one last time late in the game after Brandon Duhaime wrestled him to the ice in the corner and then laid on him. When the two finally got up, Melanson gave Duhaime a shot, and they jostled all the way up the ice. Once Duhaime cross-checked Melanson up high, the gloves finally came off.

FISTICUFFS! 🥊

Saw that one coming. Jacob Melanson gets his first NHL fight with Brandon Duhaime.

The two were going at it all shift after Duhaime laid on Melanson in the corner. #SeaKraken pic.twitter.com/HYmoEiLbNJ

— Sound Of Hockey (@sound_hockey) January 28, 2026

It was one of those fights you could see coming from a mile away. What I loved about it is that Melanson is clearly trying to play a physical game at all times without putting his team at a disadvantage. He got some licks in on Duhaime but tried several times to skate away. When he finally accepted the fight, Duhaime ended up with the extra penalty.

How can you not love this kid?

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Darren Brown


Darren Brown is the Chief Content Officer at soundofhockey.com and the host of the Sound Of Hockey Podcast. He is a member of the PHWA and is also usually SOH’s Twitter intern (but please pretend you don’t know that). Follow him @DarrenFunBrown and @sound_hockey or email [email protected].

Read more from Darren

The post Three Takeaways – Jared McCann has four-point night, Kraken beat Capitals 5-1 appeared first on Sound Of Hockey.

Source: https://soundofhockey.com/2026/01/28/kraken-defeat-capitals-mccann-four-points/
 
Kraken Notebook – Melanson under Duhaime’s skin, Lindgren on facing his brother’s team

After a big 5-1 win over the Washington Capitals on Tuesday, the Seattle Kraken had a light day Wednesday, with only Cale Fleury, Josh Mahura, Tye Kartye, Joey Daccord, and Matt Murray taking part in a very optional practice.

Sound Of Hockey took the opportunity to catch up with a couple of players who were not on the ice: defenseman Ryan Lindgren and forward Jacob Melanson.

What happened between Brandon Duhaime and Jacob Melanson?​


Apparently, Capitals forward Brandon Duhaime is not a fan of Jacob Melanson’s physical style of play. We all saw Tuesday night that Duhaime did everything he could to get Melanson to drop the gloves, a request to which Melanson finally acquiesced in the closing minutes of the contest, when the score was well out of reach for Washington.

“I don’t know [what I did to him], but I mean, if I got that guy that mad at me, then I must be doing my job the right way,” Melanson said. “So, I mean, obviously, he wanted it the whole night, and he finally got it.”

What we didn’t catch live during the game was that Duhaime—apparently intentionally—stuck the butt end of his stick over the boards from inside Washington’s bench and poked Melanson in the face as Melanson rushed up the ice during the second period.

Wait… this replay is better. What was Duhaime thinking?!

[Shooter McGavin voice]: "Doug, kick him off the tour!" https://t.co/am17AzMOPv pic.twitter.com/jJIqiCu9HM

— Sound Of Hockey (@sound_hockey) January 28, 2026

Melanson said he didn’t realize during the game that it was Duhaime’s stick that caught him in the face, nor that the poke was apparently intentional.

“I didn’t [know it was him], and I feel like that would have made things a little different, but I mean, it’s just part of the game. He’s trying to get under my skin, and I respect it.”

Melanson got the last laugh several times over, with his team winning the game convincingly and Duhaime taking an extra penalty during the end-of-game melee. Duhaime was also handed a $2,500 fine from the NHL’s Department of Player Safety on Wednesday morning for unsportsmanlike conduct (the poke from the bench).

“Obviously, it’s a 5-1 hockey game, one minute left, it’s not really the time to have a fight. But I mean, he wouldn’t back down,” Melanson said. “I tried to skate away from it a few times, but I’m also not going to show that I’m just going to skate away every time and that I will answer the bell.”

Checking in with Jacob Melanson to try to understand why Brandon Duhaime was so mad at him last night. #SeaKraken #allcaps pic.twitter.com/9tkijPN3FG

— Sound Of Hockey (@sound_hockey) January 28, 2026

Battle of the Lindgrens​


One storyline that flew under the radar in Tuesday’s game against Washington was that Ryan Lindgren was facing his brother Charlie in the 2026 Lindgren Bowl. Unfortunately, Charlie—a goaltender for the Capitals—did not play, backing up Logan Thompson in this particular contest.

Still, it was a chance for Ryan Lindgren to reflect on how unique it is to face his brother in NHL competition.

“Yeah, it really is the coolest thing,” Ryan said. “It’s something we both dreamed of growing up was playing the NHL, and any time we get to play against each other is… I mean, it’s incredible. Obviously, it’s a little more fun when he’s in net, but, yeah, it’s really special.”

The two teams meeting is always a unique moment for the Lindgren family, which has been known to convene whenever the brothers’ respective teams square off.

“It’s always fun to see [Charlie], and my parents come into town, my grandpa, my other brother,” Ryan said. “And I think more so for them, too, they really, really love it and really enjoy seeing us out there together. So, yeah, it’s incredible.

“We’re both very fortunate that our parents and family supported us through everything, and for them to come out and watch and enjoy it as well is really cool.”

So what did the Lindgren family do when they all gathered in Seattle? Pretty much what any family would do when visiting from out of town.

“We were able to watch the Seahawks game with them and spent a lot of time together. And then Monday, we had breakfast in the morning and then kind of spent the day in Seattle, went to Pike Place, and then got dinner again after. So, we just tried to spend as much time together as we can.”

Of course, this was not the first time the brothers’ teams had faced each other, and in previous matchups, Charlie has even tended goal for the Capitals instead of riding the pine.

In fact, they first faced each other in the AHL, when Ryan was in the Rangers’ farm system playing for the Hartford Wolf Pack and Charlie was in the Canadiens’ system with the Laval Rocket. Most notably, they also squared off in the 2024 playoffs, when Ryan’s Rangers faced Charlie’s Capitals, with Charlie playing the entire series for Washington.

“We were lucky enough to sweep them, too,” Ryan said with a smirk. “So, I kind of got that over him, which is nice. But yeah, like I said, it’s really special just getting to play against him.”

Odds and ends​

  • Despite the win Tuesday, the Kraken did not gain any ground in the standings and instead just held serve with the Los Angeles Kings and San Jose Sharks. All three teams remain deadlocked at 57 points, but San Jose currently occupies the final wild-card spot. The target for Seattle has to be the third-place position ahead of the Kings, Sharks, and Anaheim Ducks; the top three spots are the only ones where you’re not also battling desperate teams from the Central Division.
  • On Thursday, coach Lane Lambert will face the team for whom he served as an associate head coach last season, the Toronto Maple Leafs. Seattle is 1-0-0 against the Leafs this season, thanks to Josh Mahura’s dazzling overtime goal in Toronto on Oct. 18.
  • With nine goals in January, Matty Beniers is now tied with Jordan Eberle (November 2021) for the most goals in a month by a Kraken player. One more either Thursday or Saturday, and he will set a new record.
  • Thanks to the impending Olympic break being bookended by road games, Thursday marks Seattle’s last home game until Feb. 28.
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Darren Brown


Darren Brown is the Chief Content Officer at soundofhockey.com and the host of the Sound Of Hockey Podcast. He is a member of the PHWA and is also usually SOH’s Twitter intern (but please pretend you don’t know that). Follow him @DarrenFunBrown and @sound_hockey or email [email protected].

Read more from Darren

The post Kraken Notebook – Melanson under Duhaime’s skin, Lindgren on facing his brother’s team appeared first on Sound Of Hockey.

Source: https://soundofhockey.com/2026/01/2...es-skin-lindgren-on-facing-his-brothers-team/
 
Down on the Farm – Kraken prospect trade value tiers

Welcome to “Down on the Farm,” your weekly Seattle Kraken prospects update. This week, we’re ranking which Seattle Kraken prospects may have the most value in a deadline (or offseason) trade for an NHL upgrade. After that, we’ll pass along Kraken prospect news, including a couple of injury returns, all-shifts video, data updates, the Sound Of Hockey Prospect of the Week, and a preview of the week ahead, as always.

If you have a Seattle Kraken prospect–related question you’d like to see featured in a future column, drop us a note below or on X or BlueSky at @deepseahockey or @sound_hockey.

Kraken trade value tiers​


The Seattle Kraken are seeking a top-line scorer to elevate the NHL team for the medium-to-long term. This has been reported and speculated about with increasing frequency of late.

The mindset is not a “new” development, though. Anyone who has followed the team closely knows the Kraken have lacked a high-end difference maker. Solving that deficiency has been a focus of new Kraken general manager Jason Botterill since day one. Indeed, during Botterill’s introductory conference with Seattle Kraken season ticket holders on May 22, 2025, he noted the strong foundation of veterans and other assets already in place. He said his job was to “drop in elite talent.”

Since that job remains incomplete, it makes sense that the Kraken would be exploring the market with added urgency as teams approach the Olympic break and the ensuing trade deadline. Due diligence is necessary, but it should be emphasized that the type of player Seattle is targeting rarely moves at the trade deadline. If the right player is not available now, efforts will continue into the offseason.

Assuming the right player is available, though, what assets do the Kraken have to trade? Inspired by a recent post in The Athletic, which tier-ranked the young players and draft assets several prominent deadline “buyers” could offer, I figured it would be useful to map out the potential “market value” of Seattle’s development pieces. (This focus on “market value” in a trade is a fundamentally different exercise from my own subjective prospect rankings, which focus on projected on-ice value for the Kraken.)

The Athletic used the following tiers: “Tier 1: Premium young assets,” “Tier 2: Strong B-level assets,” “Tier 3: B-grade assets,” and “Tier 4: Quality Trade Chips.” I’ll use a similar approach (with only one minor change) in considering Seattle’s under-23 players and draft picks. Let’s dive in.

Tier 1: Premium young players​


Berkly Catton, 20, F, Seattle Kraken. Catton has the most value of any young player or draft asset in the system. He has high-end offensive instincts and play-creation ability. While he doesn’t have elite speed, size, or strength, he wins more than his fair share of puck battles and is a threat on the forecheck with precision stick work and smarts. He has point-per-game, all-three-zone upside from any forward position (though the goal totals may never be gaudy). Every team would want this player.

Jake O’Brien, 18, F, Brantford Bulldogs. It was rumored that Seattle did not want to part with the draft pick that became Jake O’Brien in an offseason deal for Jordan Kyrou, and O’Brien has only reinforced his stock with a solid OHL season. He is a play creator on the rush and from the half wall on the power play. He’s not overly engaged off the puck, but his fundamentals are trending in the right direction. I don’t envision him as a defensive or forechecking liability. He has a willingness to get net front that should only improve if he can fill out his 6-foot-2 frame a bit more. He may not be every team’s cup of tea, but I suspect he would have premium, “headliner” value in most trades.

Shane Wright, 22, F, Seattle Kraken. Elliotte Friedman’s musing about a potential Shane Wright-for-Alexis Lafrenière swap has me concerned that public perception of Wright’s value may be lower than his fair, “true” value. This suggests to me that the Kraken would be wise to “hold” Wright, whom I still believe in as a core, offense-first, top-six center. That said, if the Kraken were “motivated” to move Wright, it would likely be due to internal concern that his market stock is trending out of the “premium” category and closer to the “Tier 2” category below. Wright likely has more value than O’Brien to a “retooling” team, whereas O’Brien may have more value to a true “rebuilding” club.

BL57092-1024x683.jpg

Shane Wright skates at Climate Pledge Arena (Photo/Brian Liesse)

Tier 1A: Premium draft assets​


Seattle 2026 first-round pick. The Seattle Kraken own their own first-round pick in 2026, which should fall in the early-to-mid portion of the round. This draft class has solid depth through the mid-first round, so the pick should likely have more market value than any other player in the system. This pick would also have more value than the players and picks The Athletic has in its “Tier 2,” hence the addition of “Tier 1A.”

Tier 2: B+-grade assets​


Jani Nyman, 21, F, Coachella Valley Firebirds (AHL). Nyman did not earn the role to leverage his goal-scoring skill at the NHL level this season, but he quickly demonstrated that the net-driving mentality and lethal shot are still there when he was reassigned to the AHL, scoring seven goals in 12 games. Combined with a 6-foot-4 frame and the ability to protect pucks, draw penalties, and throw the occasional hit, there is likely a team out there that views him as an offense-forward, middle-six winger. He should have value to at least some teams in a package with another similar asset or as a secondary piece in a bigger deal.

Tampa Bay 2026 first-round pick.

Seattle 2027 first-round pick.


Tier 3: B-grade assets​


Tampa Bay 2027 first-round pick.

Jagger Firkus, 21, F, Coachella Valley Firebirds (AHL).
Firkus’s offensive smarts, playmaking, and crafty shot have found their way to the AHL level this season. He has averaged almost a point per game and earned an All-Star nod despite his size disadvantage. If he were bigger, his market value would almost certainly be higher. As it stands, he likely straddles the boundary between Tier 3 and Tier 4. It’s possible his trade value is at its peak amidst this AHL breakout, but I’m increasingly confident in Firkus’ pro future. I wouldn’t want to include him as a mere “throw in” in a deal.

Tier 4: Other quality trade chips​


Oscar Fisker Molgaard, 20, F, Coachella Valley Firebirds (AHL). Molgaard almost certainly has some trade value after a solid run in both the SHL and AHL, but I find it unlikely the market would value him commensurate with his fair, projected on-ice contributions as a bottom-six forward.

Nathan Villeneuve, 19, F, Windsor Spitfires (OHL). Villeneuve not only brings physicality and leadership to the ice, he is sixth in the OHL in points per game. With multiple possible avenues to the NHL (well-rounded middle-six forward or bottom-line grinder), he’s a relatively high-certainty junior player. This gives him more value than your average junior scoring forward.

Julius Miettinen, 20, F, Everett Silvertips (WHL). Similar to Villeneuve, Miettinen’s size and defensive game complement a solid scoring profile, which gives him a few different ways to help an NHL team.

Blake Fiddler, 18, D, Edmonton Oil Kings (WHL). Fiddler has size and skating ability from the right side. Even if the flashes of offensive upside do not coalesce, it’s easy to imagine a Will Borgen-type career for the player. These types of players are coveted. His stock is lower than it might be simply because he still has a fair amount of development ahead.

Seattle’s four 2026 and 2027 second-round picks.

Missed the cut​


I considered including Nikke Kokko (21, G, Coachella Valley Firebirds) in Tier 4, but he has never gained the reputation of a high-end goalie prospect despite his solid play at every level.

Young fourth-liners like Jacob Melanson (22, F, Seattle Kraken) and Ryan Winterton (22, F, Seattle Kraken) wouldn’t figure to return much in a trade and, therefore, almost certainly have more value on this team than anywhere else.

Tyson Jugnauth (21, D, Coachella Valley Firebirds) could intrigue other clubs amidst a strong offensive rookie year in the AHL, but I suspect defensive concerns keep him a notch below the “quality” tier.

Carson Rehkopf (21, F, Coachella Valley Firebirds) and Eduard Sale (20, F, Coachella Valley Firebirds) are two players one would hope to see in the tiers above, but their AHL play hasn’t justified it as of yet.

Notes on four Kraken prospects​

Jake O’Brien | F | Brantford Bulldogs (OHL)​


Jake O’Brien is back in the regular lineup with the Bulldogs, taking heavy minutes and producing at a high clip. He piled up two goals and four assists in two games this past week, which earns him Sound Of Hockey Prospect of the Week. He exited the lineup last Friday with eight minutes left in regulation, but returned and played a full load on Sunday, so hopefully there is no reason for concern there. Check out his shifts from Friday’s game below.

Logan Morrison | F | Coachella Valley Firebirds (AHL)​


Morrison flies under the radar as an older, undrafted free agent. Indeed, he’s probably in the “veteran leader” category for this year’s young AHL club. That said, he brings playable offensive instincts and finishing to the center position. His challenge is that he likely falls short of a traditional top-nine projection but also isn’t a classical fourth liner either. He has points in 14 of the Firebirds’ last 18 games and scored the team’s only goal in a 2–1 loss to the Colorado Eagles on Wednesday.

Oscar Fisker Mølgaard | F | Coachella Valley Firebirds (AHL)​


Mølgaard has been absent from the Coachella Valley Firebirds lineup for the last two games with an upper-body injury. He remains out of the lineup for the Firebirds game today, Friday, Jan. 30. The team characterized it as a day-to-day injury, so hopefully it will not pose a threat to Mølgaard’s opportunity to represent Denmark in the upcoming Olympic Games. Either way, the Firebirds will have to navigate the coming weeks without this critical player.

Kaden Hammell | D | Coachella Valley Firebirds (AHL)​


For his part, Kaden Hammell is out week-to-week with a lower-body injury. This is a tough break for the young defenseman, who has exceeded expectations in seizing AHL playing time. Lukas Dragicevic should be in the lineup regularly in Hammell’s absence.

Kraken prospects data update​


Alexis Bernier was scoreless in his first two games of the season this past week, but seemingly came through the contests without a setback, which is great news for the defenseman. Look for him to build up and take on more significant minutes as Chicoutimi moves toward the QMJHL playoffs.

Barrett Hall had two assists in two games last week. With 10 goals and 15 assists in 26 games, he has already surpassed his point total in 34 games from last season. He is third on the Huskies in scoring.

Semyon Vyazovoy has been the clear starter for his KHL team for the last couple months and has rewarded that coaching decision with a sterling run of play. He is 10-2-1 in his last 13 games.

We mentioned Jack Lafontaine’s strong play for the Mavericks and Firebirds last week. There was a good interview with LaFontaine on this past week’s Fire & Ice Podcast. Check it out. And don’t be afraid to add the podcast to your regular rotation. Judd Spicer does a great job updating the past week for the Firebirds.

Sound Of Hockey Prospect of the Week tracker​


3: Jagger Firkus, Kim Saarinen

2: Jake O’Brien, Julius Miettinen, Nathan Villeneuve

1: Barrett Hall, Ollie Josephson, Tyson Jugnauth, Nikke Kokko, Victor Ostman, Semyon Vyazovoi, Zaccharya Wisdom

Previewing the week ahead​


The Beanpot semifinals are this coming Monday, Feb. 2, 2026. Ben MacDonald’s Harvard Crimson will take on the Boston College Eagles in your Deep Sea Hockey Game of the Week. The matchup is available to stream outside the New England area on ESPN+.

Tracking 2026 NHL Draft prospects: Xavier Villeneuve​


Xavier Villeneuve is a five-foot-11, offense-first blueliner who checked in at No. 9 on the midseason Sound Of Hockey Big Board. The skill is there to break the puck out, feed the transition game, and create offense. That said, he could be off the board for some teams as a sub-6-foot defenseman. I think it’s fair to say he’s more talented than any of the “smaller” blueliners in last year’s draft, but it’s also fair to note that zero sub-6-foot defensemen were drafted last year. Zero. Where Villeneuve and fellow undersized blueliner Ryan Lin go in the 2026 NHL Draft will be a storyline to watch. They’re still likely first-round picks, but do they fall a bit farther than expected?

Recent prospect updates​


January 23, 2026: Alexis Bernier set to return, early 2026 NHL Draft thoughts

January 16, 2026: Jacob Melanson is speeding toward an NHL future despite the demotion

January 9, 2026: World Juniors reports, CHL trades

January 2, 2026: Mid-season Kraken prospect ranking

December 26, 2025: Watching Kraken prospects at the 2026 World Junior Championship

December 20, 2025: Resetting Seattle Kraken draft capital after the Mason Marchment trade

December 13, 2025: Ryan Jankowski talks Kraken prospects

December 5, 2025: World Juniors Announcements, Kokko saving the day for the Firebirds

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Curtis Isacke

Curtis is a Sound Of Hockey contributor and member of the Kraken press corps. Curtis is an attorney by day, and he has read the NHL collective bargaining agreement and bylaws so you don’t have to. He can be found analyzing the Kraken, NHL Draft, and other hockey topics on Twitter and Bluesky @deepseahockey.

Read more from Curtis

The post Down on the Farm – Kraken prospect trade value tiers appeared first on Sound Of Hockey.

Source: https://soundofhockey.com/2026/01/30/down-on-the-farm-kraken-prospect-trade-value-tiers/
 
Three Takeaways – Shane Wright scores two, Kraken roll to 5-2 win over Maple Leafs

…And just like that, the Seattle Kraken have vaulted into third place in the Pacific Division. It’s wild to think that coming into Thursday’s game, the Kraken (24-19-9) and the Toronto Maple Leafs (24-20-9) had nearly identical records and the same number of standings points. Yet Seattle entered the night right on the cusp of re-entering the playoff picture—which they did, thanks to their win and some coinciding losses around the division—while the Maple Leafs have all but packed it in and appear ready to go into seller mode.

That’s how big the gap is right now between the Eastern and Western Conferences. Now sitting at 59 points, Seattle jumped over Los Angeles, San Jose, and Anaheim to move into the all-important third spot in the Pacific Division. Meanwhile, the Maple Leafs—at 57 points—slid to last place in the Atlantic, a whopping 10 points out of the final Wild Card position.

The jump up the standings came thanks to a solid 5-2 Kraken win over Toronto, a game in which Shane Wright scored twice, Brandon Montour and Jared McCann each had a goal and an assist, and Matty Beniers set a franchise record with his 10th goal in a single month. It also helps that Seattle has now won four of its last five games.

“We’re dialed into playing the right way,” coach Lane Lambert said. “It’s not always perfect, but when you try and play the right way, I’ve said it all year long, often times you end up on the right side of it, and you give yourself a good chance to win. And that’s what we’ve been doing lately, so credit to our guys.”

Here are Three Takeaways.

Takeaway 1: Shane Wright night​


We saw last season that when Shane Wright starts putting the puck in the net, his game looks different. His confidence seems to balloon with production, perhaps because he starts believing in his shot and no longer hesitates to show off his quick release.

Wright’s two-goal night against Toronto snapped a 12-game goalless drought and gave him his eighth and ninth tallies of the season.

The first came off a simple play by Jaden Schwartz, who sent the puck toward the net from distance and created a juicy rebound off Anthony Stolarz’s pad. Wright jumped on it and chipped it home at 6:23 of the second period to restore a 2-1 lead after Nicholas Robertson had tied the game late in the first.

WRIGHT AS RAIN! ☔🚨

Schwartz returns to the game and creates a rebound for Shane Wright, who goes BarrDown Studios™️.

2-1 #SeaKraken pic.twitter.com/d9BIyVBjZF

— Sound Of Hockey (@sound_hockey) January 30, 2026

His second goal was even more critical—and it was a beauty. Wright was whistled for a questionable holding penalty at 4:57 of the third, and Morgan Rielly scored on the ensuing power play to cut Seattle’s lead from 3-1 to 3-2. (Thankfully, Montour had added an insurance goal earlier in the period off a fantastic rush by Freddy Gaudreau.)

If Wright felt any guilt over the soft call, he wasted no time making up for it. The Kraken were pressuring on the forecheck when Montour read Matias Maccelli’s breakout pass, disrupting the outlet and nudging the puck into open ice for Wright. Wright skated into it, rotated his body into shooting position at the top of the right circle, and snapped a perfect shot into the top-right corner.

WRIGHT AS RAIN x ✌️! ☔🚨 🚨

It's going to take a LOT to get Shane Wright out of Seattle. His second of the night is a snipe. 🎯

4-2 #SeaKraken pic.twitter.com/drsgbWMr11

— Sound Of Hockey (@sound_hockey) January 30, 2026

“He can shoot, and it was very evident [tonight],” Lambert said. “I liked his first goal when he went to the net. And that was a huge goal for us when he came off the wall there [in the third]. He’s had opportunities, he’s hit posts, he’s hit cross bars. He finally got rewarded tonight for that one.”

Added Wright: “The coaches always tell me to shoot a little more. I think I can always put a few more pucks on net. And, yeah, nice to [get a couple tonight].”

Now we’ll see if the two-goal night sparks something bigger. It took Wright a long time to really get rolling last season, but once he did, he became one of Seattle’s best players down the stretch.

Takeaway 2: First line still clicking​


The top line delivered again Thursday, with Matty Beniers opening the scoring on Seattle’s first shot of the game and Jared McCann sealing it with an empty-netter late in the third.

On the opening goal, McCann found Beniers slicing through a leaky Toronto defense just a minute into the contest. Beniers glided down the slot unmolested and snapped a shot that hit Stolarz’s left pad before popping into the net.

MATTY MAGIC! 🚨

Beniers gives the #SeaKraken an early 1-0 lead and sets a new franchise record for goals in a month.

The top line keeps clicking. pic.twitter.com/yd115atKii

— Sound Of Hockey (@sound_hockey) January 30, 2026

The goal gave Beniers his 10th of January, setting a new franchise record for most goals in a single month. The previous mark of nine, held by Jordan Eberle, dates back to November of the inaugural season. It’s worth noting that the Kraken have played 16 games this month, while Eberle’s nine-goal stretch came in just 13.

BUT…

Beniers is absolutely rolling right now. Lambert has been praising the work Beniers has put in to improve his offensive game, and he echoed those sentiments again Thursday.

“I just continue to talk about the fact of his evolvement since the beginning of the year, offensively,” Lambert said. “Again, Chris Taylor and Justin Rai have done a great job of working with him on offensive concepts, putting himself in position to— whether it be spacing or whatever. The goal he scored tonight, he found that late spacing, so to speak.

“He did a real good job of driving to the net, and McCann made a great play. So I think he’s being rewarded for his efforts, but also, there’s a lot of good philosophies that have come out of our coaching department, from that standpoint, and not from me.”

Meanwhile, McCann is right on Beniers’ heels with nine goals in the month. He followed his four-point night Tuesday with another two-point effort against Toronto and now has nine points in his last five games.

This top trio looks dangerous right now.

Takeaway 3: Schwartz recovers, but Catton leaves​


There were two separate injuries to Kraken forwards in the first period. First, Jaden Schwartz went knee-on-knee with Nicolas Roy, appearing to hurt the same knee that kept him out for more than a month.

I fully expected the Kraken to announce Schwartz was done for the night—and perhaps longer—but instead, he returned to the Seattle bench a few minutes later and immediately resumed playing. He did limp back to the dressing room again late in the period, but he was back for the second and helped create Wright’s first goal.

Oh, boy. Jaden Schwartz goes knee-on-knee with Nic Roy and needs help down the tunnel.

That looked bad. #SeaKraken pic.twitter.com/zXvn3dr4Qm

— Sound Of Hockey (@sound_hockey) January 30, 2026

“I can’t say enough about [Schwartz’s performance], actually,” Lambert said. “There was a point in time when we were down to 10 forwards. I think that Jaden showed us what veteran leadership and a guy who’s been around the game a long time can do. He knew what position and what situation we were in, and he came back.”

The reason Seattle was briefly down to 10 forwards was that while Schwartz was trying to shake off the injury, Berkly Catton was leveled at the Toronto blue line by Oliver Ekman-Larsson at 12:04 of the first. The 20-year-old forward stayed down for a moment before eventually gathering his belongings and exiting the game.

To be clear, I don’t think Ekman-Larsson intended to deliver a head shot. Catton leaned in and made contact face-first with Ekman-Larsson’s shoulder. That said, I still believe there needs to be an immediate response from the Kraken. Accidental or not, teams shouldn’t be able to lay a finger on No. 27.

There wasn’t much of a response beyond Jacob Melanson hitting Ekman-Larsson in the second period and exchanging a few words with him.

The players didn’t seem particularly heated about the hit after the game.

“I wanted to obviously make sure ‘Cats’ was good,” Montour said. “It wasn’t necessarily one that I’m probably going to jump in necessarily. I’ve got a few issues going on myself right now, so I can’t really do much there, but ‘Cats’ was all right. [Somebody] said it was somewhat clean, just a hard hit. You don’t like to see that. Obviously, I spoke to [Ekman-Larsson] a little bit, he thought it was clean.”

Montour added that he also checked in on Ekman-Larsson’s young family. So, keeping things nice and friendly, I guess.

When I asked Lambert if he would have liked to see a stronger physical response, he said: “It was pretty incidental. There was a couple of guys reaching for the puck, and Ekman-Larsson’s a little bit bigger than Berkly. I thought he got sort of stretched and exposed. But it was a—in my mind—it was a little bit of a hockey play. So, I liked our game overall.”

Now, is it a coincidence that after the Kraken didn’t retaliate, Brandon Carlo went head-hunting on Eeli Tolvanen in the third period?



Seattle has now closed out its long pre-Olympic homestand and will head on the road for three absolutely massive divisional games against Vegas, Anaheim, and Los Angeles. We won’t see the Kraken back at Climate Pledge Arena until Feb. 28.

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Darren Brown


Darren Brown is the Chief Content Officer at soundofhockey.com and the host of the Sound Of Hockey Podcast. He is a member of the PHWA and is also usually SOH’s Twitter intern (but please pretend you don’t know that). Follow him @DarrenFunBrown and @sound_hockey or email [email protected].

Read more from Darren

The post Three Takeaways – Shane Wright scores two, Kraken roll to 5-2 win over Maple Leafs appeared first on Sound Of Hockey.

Source: https://soundofhockey.com/2026/01/3...berkly-catton-injured-shane-wright-two-goals/
 
Three Takeaways – Kraken hold on for huge 3-2 win over Golden Knights

Never a doubt! Not to sound hyperbolic, but of the 26 wins the Seattle Kraken have now racked up this season, defeating the Vegas Golden Knights 3-2 in their building on Saturday may have been the biggest one yet.

Seattle jumped out to a 2-0 lead in the first period, let it slip away in the second, but recovered in the third and then held on for dear life to secure a victory that pulled them within three points of the first-place Golden Knights and opened a small two-point cushion on Anaheim and Los Angeles, their next two opponents.

Eeli Tolvanen, Jared McCann, and Kaapo Kakko had the goals, and Chandler Stephenson recorded two assists against his former team.

Here are Three Takeaways from a huge 3-2 Kraken win over the Golden Knights.

Takeaway 1: Joey Daccord was the difference


This team has gone as its goaltending has gone. When the goalies have been outstanding, the Kraken have won. When they’ve been just OK, they haven’t. Lately, both Joey Daccord and Philipp Grubauer have been outstanding, and the Kraken have—unsurprisingly—won five of their last six.

After a stretch of alternating goalies from game to game, coach Lane Lambert recently gave Grubauer two straight starts against the Islanders and Ducks. It had been a while since Daccord played consecutive games, but Lambert gave Joey the nod again Saturday after a solid outing Thursday against Toronto, and Daccord rewarded him.

Daccord stopped 27 of 29 shots, plainly outplaying his counterpart at the other end, Akira Schmid, who allowed three goals on 23 shots and continued a mediocre season.

Joey was especially big in the third period. A few minutes after Kakko restored Seattle’s 3-2 lead, Adam Larsson joined the rush as the trailer, took a feed from McCann, and rifled a shot wide of Schmid. Larsson missed badly enough that the puck rimmed around to Jack Eichel on the half wall, springing Vegas the other way. Having taken himself out of the play, Larsson couldn’t recover in time, and Eichel easily sent Ivan Barbashev in alone on a breakaway.

Barbashev—who had already scored once in the game—cruised down Las Vegas Boulevard and ripped a shot that Daccord snared to keep Seattle in front.

🗣JOEYYYYYYYYYY!

Ivan Barbashev gets a breakaway after Adam Larsson slid down for a shot and missed wide.

Daccord snares Barbashev's shot. What a save! pic.twitter.com/SvyJjVgI8y

— Sound Of Hockey (@sound_hockey) February 1, 2026

Then, with time winding down, Daccord was exceptional in the final two minutes, battling through traffic and tracking shots off weird, broken plays and bouncing pucks.

When the horn sounded, Daccord celebrated accordingly.

NEVER A DOUBT! 🎉

What a celebration by Joey Daccord, as the #SeaKraken hold on to defeat the 1st-place Vegas Golden Knights, 3-2.

Enormous win. pic.twitter.com/diIe1HRrf4

— Sound Of Hockey (@sound_hockey) February 1, 2026

Takeaway 2: Bend, don’t break​


Any time a team coughs up a two-goal lead—especially in the fashion Seattle did in the second period—it’s not a great feeling heading into the third.

The Kraken had opened the scoring after Stephenson set up Ryan Winterton, who created a rebound for Tolvanen at 6:50 of the first. McCann followed that up with a one-time missile off a Vince Dunn feed on the power play to make it 2-0 at 13:04.

MCCANN CAN! 🚨

Power-play goal on a beautiful setup, Stephenson->Dunn->McCann->🥅

Three straight games with goals for McCann, 10th in January, 200th of his career.

2-0 #SeaKraken pic.twitter.com/xZ6LuPHF33

— Sound Of Hockey (@sound_hockey) February 1, 2026

That was McCann’s 10th goal of the month (tying Matty Beniers, who set a franchise record for goals in a month last game), 200th of his career, and fourth in three games.

It was an excellent first period, punctuated by Jacob Melanson nearly putting Jonas Rondbjerg through the curved glass by the Kraken bench with one of his franchise-record 12 hits on the night.

Melly Smash! 💥

2-0 #SeaKraken through 20. Heckuva period. pic.twitter.com/ANyAS9EwVH

— Sound Of Hockey (@sound_hockey) February 1, 2026

“We’ve talked about our starts, and it’s the third game in a row, I think, we scored first. The stats don’t lie,” Lambert said. “The guys have done a good job of making sure that they’re ready to go. It’s not that they weren’t [doing that] before, but I think there’s just a little extra focus that we had to have.”

The Kraken Hockey Network noted that Seattle is now 19-6-3 when scoring first this season and 20-0-0 when building a two-goal lead, underscoring just how critical those starts have been.

After the strong opening frame, the second period felt different. Vegas came out visibly intent on shifting momentum. Eichel found Barbashev with an elite pass to cut the deficit to 2-1 at 8:52, and Mitch Marner tied it with 11 seconds left after Seattle gave the Golden Knights’ lethal power play two straight opportunities.

Historically, giving up a tying goal that late in the second can be a backbreaker. But to Seattle’s credit, the group reset during the intermission, got Kakko’s goal off a fortunate bounce three minutes into the third, and then committed to protecting the lead the rest of the way.

KAAAAAAAAPO KAKKO! 🚨

Kaedan Korczak knocks down Adam Larsson's shot nicely for Kakko, and he lofts it past Schmid.

3-2 #SeaKraken pic.twitter.com/jK263soC7g

— Sound Of Hockey (@sound_hockey) February 1, 2026

“The message was, ‘It doesn’t matter how we got here. If we win a period, we win a game on the road in this building,’” Lambert said. “Whether you’re up 2-0, down 2-0, it doesn’t matter. The score is 2-2 right now, go win a period, and they did.”

Takeaway 3: Another huge win​


The streakiness of this Kraken team has been wild this season. They lost 10 of 11 between November and December, then won eight of nine and went on a 10-game point streak from late December into early January. After another skid—losing six of seven—they’ve once again rebounded, winning five of six.

After the win over the Islanders, it felt like if Seattle could string together a run before the Olympic break, it could climb right back toward the top of the Pacific Division.

Lo and behold, aside from two brutal periods against Anaheim on Jan. 23, the Kraken have been playing some of their best hockey of the season and are now just three points from first place. Contributions are coming from throughout the lineup, and the goaltending has been excellent.

Now, Seattle gets a rare two-day break before facing those same Ducks in Anaheim on Tuesday and then closing out pre-Olympic play the following night in Los Angeles.

Talk about big games.

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Darren Brown


Darren Brown is the Chief Content Officer at soundofhockey.com and the host of the Sound Of Hockey Podcast. He is a member of the PHWA and is also usually SOH’s Twitter intern (but please pretend you don’t know that). Follow him @DarrenFunBrown and @sound_hockey or email [email protected].

Read more from Darren

The post Three Takeaways – Kraken hold on for huge 3-2 win over Golden Knights appeared first on Sound Of Hockey.

Source: https://soundofhockey.com/2026/01/31/kraken-defeat-golden-knights/
 
Where to get your live hockey fix in Seattle this February

We’re about a week away from lighting the torch in Milan for the Winter Olympics, to which NHL and PWHL players will be making the voyage over the Atlantic Ocean to play in the tournament, which means there will be few games locally for most of February.

For the players not going to the Olympics, the break will be a nice time to relax, recover and get ready for the race to the playoffs. But for fans, especially those of the Seattle Kraken and Torrent, the shortest calendar month of the year is about to feel like the longest.

The Kraken only play one home game in February, which is the very last day of the month against the Vancouver Canucks. That’s the same with the Torrent, who will play just a day earlier against the Toronto Sceptres.

No live hockey for a month? Really?

Have no fear, there are plenty of alternative ways for fans to get some games in. Here’s what’s happening around the region this month to get your live hockey fix until the pro teams return to Seattle.

WHL season in full swing​


Fans will need to head north to Everett or south to Kent to catch live WHL action.

The Silvertips are flying high once again this season. At now 38-6-2-1, they sit 12 points ahead for first place in the Western Conference. Get up there to see Landon DuPont while there’s time! He’s really something special to watch in person. Check in on Seattle Kraken forward prospect Julius Miettinen too, who has 19 goals and 25 assists in 31 games this season.

Another day in the office for Julius Miettinen👔@WHLsilvertips | @SeattleKraken | #SeaKraken pic.twitter.com/GPVu0jZzSD

— Western Hockey League (@TheWHL) January 25, 2026

Everett is looking tough to beat once again. Having made the playoffs every year in team history, the Tips are still searching for their elusive first WHL championship. It’s bound to come one of these years, right?

Meanwhile, down at accesso ShoWare Center in Kent, things have not been as smooth.

What was shaping up to be a promising year for the Thunderbirds coming in quickly went south, as the team struggled out of the gate, traded star Canucks prospect Braeden Cootes to Prince Albert, and retooled on the fly. Additions such as top-five WHL point-getter Cameron Schmidt and Noah Kosick have helped stabilize the lineup, though the T-Birds still sit just 10th in the conference at 18-22-3-2.

While things haven’t been perfect, the T-Birds are still hanging around the Western Conference playoff picture, only five points behind Victoria for the final spot. A rematch of last year’s playoff series with Everett could be in store if they find a way to get there.

Other hockey in the region worth noting includes the Seattle Totems and Bremerton Sockeyes of the USPHL, whose seasons are ramping up. And if you’re really starved for hockey, head to Cheney for the ACHA PAC-8 tournament from Feb. 6-8, featuring UW, WSU, WWU and EWU.

February hockey calendar (notable promotions included):


Sunday, Feb. 1: Everett vs. Tri-City, 4 p.m., Angel of the Winds Arena
-Mascot Mania Night

Sunday, Feb. 1: Seattle vs. Penticton, 5 p.m., accesso ShoWare Center

Friday, Feb. 6: Everett vs. Kamloops, 7 p.m., Angel of the Winds Arena

Friday, Feb. 6: Seattle vs. Portland, 7 p.m., accesso ShoWare Center

Saturday, Feb. 7: Everett vs. Victoria, 6 p.m., Angel of the Winds Arena
-Great Small Dog Race Night

Friday, Feb. 13: Seattle vs. Tri-City, 7 p.m., accesso ShoWare Center

Friday, Feb. 20: Seattle vs. Portland, 7 p.m., accesso ShoWare Center
-Girls Night Out

Saturday, Feb. 21: Everett vs. Seattle, 6 p.m., Angel of the Winds Arena

Friday, Feb. 27: Torrent vs. Sceptres, 7 p.m., Climate Pledge Arena

Friday, Feb. 27: Everett vs. Kamloops, 7 p.m., Angel of the Winds Arena

Saturday, Feb. 28: Seattle vs. Everett, 6 p.m., accesso ShoWare Center
-South Sound Police and Fire Charity Cup

Saturday, Feb. 28: Kraken vs. Canucks, 7 p.m., Climate Pledge Arena

Header courtesy of Brian Liesse and the Seattle Thunderbirds

The post Where to get your live hockey fix in Seattle this February appeared first on Sound Of Hockey.

Source: https://soundofhockey.com/2026/02/01/where-to-get-your-live-hockey-fix-in-seattle-this-february/
 
Monday Musings: McCann-do

The Kraken just played their best four games of the season. They’re sitting third in the Pacific Division and only three points back of the division‑leading Vegas Golden Knights.

I mentioned last week that they should target three out of a possible six points to stay in the mix. Well, they got all six, and the last game served as a bit of an exclamation point with a 3–2 regulation win over Vegas. Head coach Lane Lambert often talks about “playing the right way,” and they did it in spades this week. It was the most consistent stretch of full 60‑minute efforts we’ve seen in any three‑game span this season. They started strong and had complete buy‑in up and down the lineup.

The games against the Washington Capitals and Toronto Maple Leafs on Tuesday and Thursday were stress‑free wins. They held two‑goal leads for long stretches, and neither opponent could muster much offense. The Kraken caught both teams at particularly vulnerable times, as they’ve been sliding down the standings, but it was still nice to see Seattle take care of business, something that hasn’t always been guaranteed in the past.

The 2025–26 Kraken have put together a longer winning streak this season, but these last four games are the best they’ve looked. They’re scoring at a respectable rate while also playing their suffocating defensive structure, paired with the steady goaltending they’ve had all year. You can chalk the Capitals and Maple Leafs games up to weakened opponents (both teams looked bad), but you can’t deny how good the Kraken looked against Vegas.

The Kraken are scoring. What?!?​


After the first two months of the season, I expected the only way this team would win was by grinding out low‑event hockey games. We knew Lambert was defensive‑minded, and if that was the path to winning, I could live with it. On top of that, the Kraken dealt with several injuries in the first half, including multiple IR stints for Jared McCann, their leading scorer in three of the last four seasons.

McCann’s return was the shot in the arm they needed. He has 11 goals in 19 games since coming off IR in late December, tied for sixth in the league over that span. Matty Beniers is also on a heater with 10 goals in January, a number McCann matched one game later. Beyond those two, Berkly Catton chipped in five goals, and Jordan Eberle added five of his own during the month.

image.png

The ageless wonder of Jordan Eberle​


Speaking of scoring, you could make a case that Jordan Eberle has been the team’s most valuable player this season. He’s been a steady contributor while others have missed time, and he’s on pace for one of his best goal‑producing seasons since 2015–16. That’s not bad for a 35‑year‑old winger coming off a brutal injury last season.

image-1.png


It will be interesting to see if the Kraken try to sign him to an extension before the trade deadline or take their chances on him re-signing before free agency. From everything I gather, he and his family enjoy Seattle, but you have to imagine he wants a real shot at a Stanley Cup before he retires.

Strength of schedule remaining​


Several people sent me The Athletic’s “strength of schedule remaining,” which shows the Kraken with the hardest schedule in the league. I understand how the calculation works, but it feels a little flawed and not very translatable in layman’s terms. The metric hinges on a “Projected Net Rating” based on a bottom‑up model of individual player contributions.

I’m not saying the model is bad or that the Kraken don’t have a tough road ahead, but I will point out that Dom’s current model projects the Kraken to finish with 80.8 points — which would require a .354 points percentage the rest of the way. Models are inherently wrong; the question is simply how wrong they end up being.

As an alternative, I offer my own “Strength of Remaining Opponents,” which simply averages each opponent’s points percentage. Averages can be weak when outliers skew the numbers, so I added categories to illustrate the distribution of the strength of the opponents:

  • Top: > .600
  • High‑mid: .600–.550
  • Mid‑low: .550–.500
  • Low: < .500
image-2-718x1024.png


By this measure, the Kraken have a relatively manageable schedule remaining, but compared to their Pacific Division counterparts, theirs is still tougher. It’s not a perfect method, and I’m not sure one exists, but we’ll revisit it as the season progresses.

Other musings​

  • Regardless of what happens in the final two games before the break, Kraken fans should be thrilled with where the team sits. Last season, on Feb. 2, 2025, they were 10 points back of the last wild‑card spot.
  • Among Pacific Division teams, the Kraken have the second‑best record within the division and have wins against every divisional opponent.
  • Jared McCann scored his 200th career NHL goal on Saturday against Vegas. Given how good he’s been since joining Seattle, 200 feels low, but that’s because he’s essentially doubled his career goal total in roughly the same number of games he played elsewhere.
image-3.png

  • If there’s one area of concern right now, it’s the penalty kill. The Kraken have allowed at least one power‑play goal in seven straight games. Their PK sits at 73.1 percent over that stretch, which is near the bottom of the league.
  • Tuesday’s win over Toronto was the Kraken’s first ever against the Leafs at Climate Pledge Arena.
  • Across the entire 2025–26 season, the Kraken have led by two or more goals for 310 minutes. 76 of those minutes came in the last three games; the other 234 came in the previous 51.
  • The Kraken are second in points percentage in games against Pacific Division opponents and have two more divisional games before the break.
image-4.png

  • The Seattle Torrent’s Hilary Knight and Alex Carpenter have been named captain and alternate captain, respectively, for the USA Olympic team.

Goal of the week​


I love this goal so much…

Player performance​


Joey Daccord (SEA) – Posted a .933 save percentage in two of the Kraken wins this week.
Jared McCann (SEA) – Four goals and three assists in three games and named the NHL’s First Star of the Week.
Semyon Vyazovoi (YUL/SEA) – The Kraken’s sixth-round selection from the 2021 NHL Draft had three wins and a .943 save percentage for Salavat Yulaev Ufa in the KHL.

The week ahead​


Only two games remain before the Olympic break, and both are massive. On Tuesday, the Kraken face the Anaheim Ducks, who are tied with them in points. On Wednesday, they play the Los Angeles Kings, who sit one point back. These aren’t must‑win games, but getting at least two points would be ideal — three (or four) would be huge and would lock Seattle solidly into a playoff spot heading into the break.

It wasn’t long ago that the Kraken were embarrassed by the Ducks for two periods in Seattle. I’m eager to see what kind of response we get, especially considering how well they’ve started games lately and how much more control they’ve shown. The Ducks have won eight of their last 10 and have figured out how to defend.

Meanwhile, the Kings return home after a 4‑1‑1 road trip. Hopefully they’re already mentally on break, but that might be wishful thinking.

And finally…​


I’ve said it before, and I’m sure I’ll say it again: fans should be happy with where the Kraken are right now. The early‑season winning might have been a bit of smoke and mirrors while they dealt with injuries, but the play in January might be who this team really is — and that should be enough to get them into the playoffs. Regardless of what happens before the break, I’m feeling pretty good about this group. Of course, two wins would make the next three weeks a whole lot more enjoyable.

The post Monday Musings: McCann-do appeared first on Sound Of Hockey.

Source: https://soundofhockey.com/2026/02/02/monday-musings-mccann-do/
 
Seattle Kraken: Does being streaky actually matter for playoff success?

“We’re going streaking! Through the quad, and into the gymnasium!” – Frank Ricard, Old School, 2003

The Seattle Kraken have had an up-and-down season, bouncing between winning and losing streaks. Recently, the crew at Sound Of Hockey held a Mailbag segment on Episode 369 of the Sound Of Hockey Podcast. They did not get through every question, but one submission stood out to me and inspired this article.

FMammal asked on the Patreon, “Does it matter if a team is streaky the way the Kraken seem to be, or is the only important thing the point total after all 82 games?”

We are going to take this one level deeper and also explore how streaky teams perform in the playoffs.

Definitions​


Let’s start by defining the types of streaks used in this analysis.

  • Point streak: Three or more consecutive games in which a team earns at least one point in each game. This includes wins of any kind and overtime or shootout losses.
  • Losing streak: Three or more consecutive games in which a team loses. This includes regulation losses, overtime losses and shootout losses.
  • Win streak: Three or more consecutive games in which a team wins and earns two points in each game, including regulation, overtime and shootout victories.

To evaluate streakiness and playoff success, I created the following metrics:

  • Streakiness tier: Low (under 49 games spent in point streaks or losing streaks), Medium (50 to 60 games), High (61 games or more).
  • Balance ratio: The number of games teams are on point streaks divided by the total number of games on any streak. Any value above 0.50 means a team earned points in more games than it lost while streaking.
  • Playoff depth score (PDS): Teams earn one point for making the playoffs and one point for each round won. A Stanley Cup champion earns five points. Teams that miss the playoffs earn zero. For example, when Seattle made the playoffs in 2022-23 and lost in the second round, the Kraken earned a PDS of two.

Kraken streaks this season​


For this piece, streak data is based on point streaks and losing streaks, unless otherwise noted.

The Kraken rank 13th in the NHL with nine total streaks this season.

query7_current_total_streaks_histogram.png


The streaks break down as follows:

  1. Five-game point streak (Oct. 9–18): eight of 10 points
  2. Five-game point streak (Oct. 23–Nov. 3): eight of 10 points
  3. Three-game point streak (Nov. 11–15): five of six points
  4. Three-game point streak (Nov. 20–23): five of six points
  5. Six-game losing streak (Nov. 23–Dec. 8): one of 12 points
  6. Four-game losing streak (Dec. 12–18): zero of eight points
  7. 10-game point streak (Dec. 20–Jan. 8): 18 of 20 points
  8. Four-game losing streak (Jan. 14–19): one of eight points
  9. Four-game win streak (Jan. 25–31): eight of eight points

It may not feel like it at times, but Seattle has had six point streaks and only three losing streaks. That amounts to 30 games on point streaks and 14 games on losing streaks.

The 10-game point streak ranks sixth in the NHL this season.

query9_current_point_streak_max_histogram.png

Streakiness and playoff results​


Data was collected only from seasons in which the Kraken have existed, covering 2021-22 through the current season.

During that span, teams with a balance ratio below 0.50 never made the playoffs. A balance ratio under 0.50 means a team spent more games on losing streaks than point streaks. Losing more games than you win is not a recipe for success.

The heatmap focuses on teams with a balance ratio of 0.51 or higher. The Kraken currently sit at 0.68, based on 30 point-streak games and 14 losing-streak games (30 of 44 games).

query18_balance_ratio_heatmap_90plus.png

Playoff depth score (Number of teams in bucket)

The results seem to align with intuition. Teams with higher balance ratios perform better in the playoffs. There is also a trend showing that playoff depth score improves as streakiness increases for teams above a 0.68 balance ratio.

  • Balance ratio 0.68–0.84: PDS rises from 1.57 to 1.77, a 12.7 percent increase
  • Balance ratio 0.85–1.00: PDS rises from 2.25 to 2.60, a 15.6 percent increase

The Kraken currently sit at a 0.68 balance ratio and are trending toward 67 total streak games. That would place them in the High streakiness tier.

Among the 13 teams in that bucket, 12 made the playoffs in the last four seasons, and eight reached at least the second round. The 2023-24 Edmonton Oilers advanced the furthest, losing in the Stanley Cup Final.

Seattle sits on the cutoff line. When teams drop below a 0.68 balance ratio, only eight of 16 made the playoffs. Of those eight, six entered as wild cards and two finished third in their division. In every case, those teams opened the playoffs as underdogs, drawing higher-seeded opponents and facing a steeper path to advancing.

A necessary caveat​


This heatmap has a flaw.

As streakiness increases, teams with strong balance ratios are also winning more games overall. That inflates playoff success. Looking at average standings points for teams in the 0.68–0.84 bucket shows the issue clearly.

  • Low streakiness: 98 points
  • Medium streakiness: 102 points
  • High streakiness: 106 points

It would be expected that a 106-point team would perform better in the playoffs than a 98-point team, and that is exactly what is being shown here.

Standings points matter more​


Breaking standings points into buckets and slicing them by streakiness tier produces inconsistent results. If streakiness alone drove playoff success, each standings-point bucket would show the same trend. The buckets do not show this.

query17_points_bucket_avg_playoff_depth.png


The consistent signal is simpler as shown in the next chart. As standings points increase, playoff depth scores increase. Better teams tend to go further in the playoffs.

query19_points_bucket_avg_playoff_depth_overall_2nd-1024x341.png

Final takeaway​


So, does it matter if a team is streaky, or is the final point total all that matters?

The standings point total matters most.

How a team gets there matters less than the final point total. Streaks can help build momentum, but they ultimately show up in the standings. Make the playoffs, and the slate is mostly clean.

Streakiness only becomes an issue when losing streaks pile up. As long as the Kraken keep their balance ratio at or above 0.68, they are positioning themselves to qualify and avoid the most difficult first-round matchups.

Some bonus charts​


As part of this research, I pulled additional streak data to provide more context. The charts below show how the Kraken have compared to league averages over the past four seasons in terms of their longest winning, point and losing streaks.

query1_kraken_vs_league_by_season_point_streak_max.png

query1_kraken_vs_league_by_season_win_streak_max.png

query1_kraken_vs_league_by_season_losing_streak_max.png


As the season continues, the focus should remain on the standings rather than the emotional swings that come with streaky play. If Seattle keeps earning points at its current rate, the path to the playoffs remains clear, regardless of how bumpy the ride feels along the way.

Blaiz_Buoy.png

Blaiz Grubic


Blaiz Grubic is a contributor at Sound Of Hockey. A passionate hockey fan and player for over 30 years, Blaiz grew up in the Pacific Northwest and is an alumni of Washington State University (Go Cougs!). When he’s not playing, watching, or writing about hockey, he enjoys quality time with his wife and daughter or getting out on a golf course for a quick round. Follow @blaizg on BlueSky or X.

Read more from Blaiz

The post Seattle Kraken: Does being streaky actually matter for playoff success? appeared first on Sound Of Hockey.

Source: https://soundofhockey.com/2026/02/0...-streaky-actually-matter-for-playoff-success/
 
Three Takeaways – Kraken lose 4-2 to Ducks in game with massive playoff implications

That was not the outcome Seattle Kraken fans were looking for in what was ostensibly a critical pre-Olympic game against the division rival Anaheim Ducks. Seattle ultimately lost 4-2, but it was worse than the score indicated, with the Kraken mounting a too-little-too-late push in the closing minutes after falling behind 4-0 in the third period.

The second period turned the tide of the game, and things went from bad to worse early in the third. By the time Seattle started to push, the mountain was simply too high to climb, giving Anaheim a leg up for third place in the Pacific Division.

Jordan Eberle and Shane Wright scored late in the third, and Philipp Grubauer made several dazzling saves—finishing with 27 stops—but also had a couple of blunders that proved costly.

Here are Three Takeaways from a painful 4-2 Kraken loss to the Ducks.

Takeaway 1: Second-period struggles​


When the Kraken have gotten through the first period tied 0-0, they’ve generally fared well this season. That wasn’t the case here.

Matty Beniers took a holding penalty just 1:56 into the second period. Seattle’s penalty kill did its job, but as Beniers stepped back onto the ice, Cutter Gauthier slapped at a bouncing puck from the top of the right circle, and the shot eluded Grubauer to make it 1-0 at 4:01.

Cutter Gauthier breaks the ice, as he did the last time these teams played each other.

Not officially a power-play goal, but it came seconds after Matty Beniers left the box.

1-0 Ducks. pic.twitter.com/RtfFOLpMQq

— Sound Of Hockey (@sound_hockey) February 4, 2026

From there, Anaheim seized control of the momentum for much of the middle frame.

The real turning point came late in the period, though, after Seattle tilted the ice the other way and had the Ducks on the ropes. Anaheim was hemmed in for nearly a minute and a half and clearly exhausted, with forward Jeffrey Viel limping on one leg after blocking a shot. The Ryan Winterton–Chandler Stephenson–Eeli Tolvanen line was relentless, firing pucks on net and recovering rebounds. Even when the Ducks briefly gained possession, Seattle stole it right back.

The Kraken were in the middle of a change when Shane Wright jumped on the ice and continued the attack, but his attempted low-to-high pass misfired, exited the zone, and ended the sequence.

Just over a minute later, Jacob Trouba scored with a seeing-eye shot through traffic to make it 2-0 with only 32 seconds left in the period. That goal was a killer, and the Kraken failing to capitalize on that extended pressure likely cost them the game.

Takeaway 2: An odd night for Grubauer​


For large stretches of the game, Grubauer was sharp and was a big reason Seattle got through the first period unscathed. But it was also one of those familiar nights of yesteryear where strong play was undermined by a couple confusing goals that make you stop and ask whether they should have gone in.

Gauthier’s goal looked stoppable, though it came on a broken play that appeared to catch Grubauer off guard. Alex Killorn’s goal 24 seconds into the third, which effectively put the game out of reach at 3-0, was tougher to grasp. Grubauer appeared to be reading a pass across the slot and lifted his left leg to push laterally, opening his five-hole. Killorn found it.

Alex Killorn makes it 3-0 just 24 seconds into the 3rd.

That's a tough one for Grubi… #SeaKraken pic.twitter.com/7gY9CevkVe

— Sound Of Hockey (@sound_hockey) February 4, 2026

The worst moment came at 13:54 of the third, when Grubauer took his eye off a rimmed puck behind the net, which hopped over his stick and eventually left Ross Johnston with an open cage.

Salt in the wound for the #SeaKraken. Grubauer takes his eye off the puck and mishandles it, and Ross Johnston ends up with an open net.

4-0 pic.twitter.com/UAQHgetqLS

— Sound Of Hockey (@sound_hockey) February 4, 2026

There was certainly some bad luck mixed in—Grubauer tracked pucks well for much of the night and made several stops he probably shouldn’t have made—but the mishaps in this one were damaging.

Takeaway 3: Melanson catches Terry​


One reason Jacob Melanson has quickly endeared himself to Kraken fans is that his physical play has generally come in the “right way.” He plays hard, makes opponents uncomfortable, and hasn’t taken many penalties.

Late in the second period, though—perhaps in an effort to spark something—Melanson flattened Troy Terry, who was playing his first game back from injury. Replay showed Melanson’s elbow coming up, delivering his first regular-season hit that crossed into questionable territory. (It’s worth remembering Melanson was suspended for a head shot in a preseason game back in 2022.)

Oh, boy. Melanson catches Troy Terry up high right at the 2nd horn, and all hell breaks loose. 😬

Could be an interesting 3rd… #SeaKraken #FlyTogether pic.twitter.com/DFHE7Wc0Ay

— Sound Of Hockey (@sound_hockey) February 4, 2026

Melanson was assessed a 10-minute misconduct and, notably, did not take another shift after exiting the box in the third period. It remains unclear why he didn’t return to the ice.



This was a brutal loss given the opportunity Seattle had to create separation in the standings against Anaheim. Now sitting in the final wild-card spot, the Kraken head to Los Angeles on Wednesday with a chance to claw back into third place before the Olympic break—or risk falling out of the playoff picture altogether.

That game is enormous.

Headshot-New-2.jpg

Darren Brown


Darren Brown is the Chief Content Officer at soundofhockey.com and the host of the Sound Of Hockey Podcast. He is a member of the PHWA and is also usually SOH’s Twitter intern (but please pretend you don’t know that). Follow him @DarrenFunBrown and @sound_hockey or email [email protected].

Read more from Darren

The post Three Takeaways – Kraken lose 4-2 to Ducks in game with massive playoff implications appeared first on Sound Of Hockey.

Source: https://soundofhockey.com/2026/02/04/kraken-lose-to-ducks-in-big-game/
 
Three Takeaways – Kraken beat Kings, go to Olympic break in third place

In what felt like a must-win game, the Seattle Kraken delivered in the second leg of a back-to-back, defeating the Los Angeles Kings 4-2 Wednesday night at Crypto.com Arena.

The Kings struck first on a power-play goal from Andre Kuzmenko, and after Tuesday night’s loss to the Anaheim Ducks, everyone held their breath wondering if the Kraken were in for another rough night.

Seattle put the doubters to bed quickly, though. The team scored three goals in the next 7:39 to take the lead for good.

The Kraken head into the Olympic break going 11-6-2 in 2026 and have reclaimed third place in the Pacific Division. The win also created separation in the Western Conference playoff race. A three-point buffer now exists between the last wild-card team (Anaheim, 63 points) and the first team out (LA Kings, 60 points). The Kings and Predators play Thursday, so the gap could shrink. But one thing is certain: the Kraken will maintain third place for the duration of the Olympic break.

The Kraken improved to 3-0 against the Kings this season.

Here are the Three Takeaways.

Takeaway 1: Shane Wright heating up​


Shane Wright scored two goals for the second time in four games. After netting only seven goals in the first 52 games, he has increased his total to 11. Wright’s first goal came on a nifty steal and pass from Ryan Winterton. Wright pulled the puck to his backhand and beat Darcy Kuemper to tie the game at 1-1.

Great read and setup by Winterton and an excellent finish by Shane Wirght. 1-1 #SeaKraken. pic.twitter.com/cSz3udqo2z

— Sound Of Hockey (@sound_hockey) February 5, 2026

Wright answered a question from Piper Shaw about his increased scoring:

“Guys are finding me. That’s a big thing. Putting myself in areas to score, trying to get open and shoot the puck as well. Guys are making good plays on the goals, so I’m not having to do too much on them. But it’s always nice to chip in there.”

The key is Wright is getting to the right spots and making himself available. His second goal came on the power play from a Freddy Gaudreau feed. It extended the lead to two goals and provided breathing room.

Shane Wright with his second of the night. Great set up by Freddy Gaudreau who is on the second power play unit because Schwartz is out tonight. 4-2 #SeaKraken pic.twitter.com/mvBEBy1rj8

— Sound Of Hockey (@sound_hockey) February 5, 2026

Takeaway 2: Penalty kill on the struggle bus​


The Kings converted twice on the power play, both by Andre Kuzmenko. The Kraken have allowed power-play goals in eight of the last nine games. The one game they technically didn’t surrender a power-play goal was last game. But they gave up a goal five seconds after a penalty expired, as Matty Beniers was still trying to rejoin the play. This will be an area of focus when the Kraken return from the break.

Kuzmenko allowed to mosey on in and goes 5-hole. 1-0 Kings. pic.twitter.com/BiNDsTZZY6

— Sound Of Hockey (@sound_hockey) February 5, 2026

The good news: the Kraken didn’t allow any other goals and emerged with the 4-2 victory. The Kings pushed hard, though. They had two goals waived off immediately as the whistle had blown before the puck crossed the line both times.

Trevor Moore gave the Kraken a scare and nearly tied the game in the opening seconds of the third period. The post did its job, though, and after a couple of odd-man rushes for each team, the Kraken settled down and eventually converted on Wright’s power-play goal.

Interesting start to the 3rd. pic.twitter.com/LHgVHNtHDZ

— Sound Of Hockey (@sound_hockey) February 5, 2026

Takeaway 3: Scoring is up​


After getting shut out for 55 minutes Tuesday against the Ducks, the Kraken found their scoring touch. They scored four goals and have averaged 3.47 goals per game in 2026. That would rank them third in the NHL for the season.

Chandler Stephenson, Gaudreau, and Wright all enjoyed two-point nights. The offense was clicking.

Boom! Larsson finds a soft spot in the slot and it is 2-1 #SeaKraken. pic.twitter.com/x3Xy4Daz5V

— Sound Of Hockey (@sound_hockey) February 5, 2026

Jaden Schwartz was out with a lower-body injury. Oscar Fisker-Molgaard was called up to fill in. As a side note, the Kraken are now 3-0 in games Molgaard has played. He wasn’t a big factor in this game, though, as the fourth line played only about six minutes and 30 seconds of ice time. Molgaard and Tye Kartye started the third period, but that was their only shift. Jacob Melanson’s last shift came around the 18-minute mark of the second period.

Although the fourth line didn’t play much in the third, Molgaard’s presence allowed Gaudreau to fill in for Schwartz alongside Stephenson and Eeli Tolvanen. Gaudreau looked great in this game and earned the primary assist on Wright’s second goal on his way to two point night.

Wrapping up​


With 19 games played in 2026 and momentum rolling, I’m a little nervous the break is here. The team basically played a playoff hockey schedule, playing almost every other night for the past month-plus and thrived. But the break is well deserved. They definitely have areas to improve—cough, penalty kill—so hopefully they come back Feb. 25 ready to play. After the break, they don’t ease back into it. They head right into a back-to-back, first against the Dallas Stars, then the St. Louis Blues on Feb. 26.

The Kraken have three players—well, now four with Molgaard on the roster—heading to the Olympics. We wish them the best of luck. Dallas has seven players and St. Louis has five in the Olympics, so hopefully the Kraken will be the more rested team and start on time.

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Blaiz Grubic


Blaiz Grubic is a contributor at Sound Of Hockey. A passionate hockey fan and player for over 30 years, Blaiz grew up in the Pacific Northwest and is an alumni of Washington State University (Go Cougs!). When he’s not playing, watching, or writing about hockey, he enjoys quality time with his wife and daughter or getting out on a golf course for a quick round. Follow @blaizg on BlueSky or X.

Read more from Blaiz

The post Three Takeaways – Kraken beat Kings, go to Olympic break in third place appeared first on Sound Of Hockey.

Source: https://soundofhockey.com/2026/02/0...eat-kings-go-to-olympic-break-in-third-place/
 
OH MAN what a rollercoaster couple of days for the Kraken! That Ducks loss was BRUTAL to watch - you're up against a division rival in a massive game and Grubauer decides to have one of THOSE nights. The five-hole goal on Killorn and then taking his eye off the puck behind the net? Come on man, we've seen this movie before with Grubi and I thought we were past it!

BUT THEN they bounce back against the Kings in a back-to-back and suddenly everything's sunshine and rainbows again heading into the break. That's the most Kraken thing ever - lose the game you absolutely need to win, then win the game where you're supposed to be tired and demoralized. Make it make sense!

Shane Wright heating up is HUGE though. Kid's been snake-bitten all year with only 7 goals in 52 games and now he's potting them left and right. That steal and backhand finish was slick as hell. If he can keep this up after the break, this team gets a lot more dangerous.

The penalty kill situation is concerning though - giving up PP goals in 8 of 9 games is NOT playoff hockey. That's gotta get fixed or they're gonna get bounced in the first round. You can't give teams free goals in April.

Going into the Olympic break in third place in the Pacific is exactly where you want to be. McCann's been on an absolute TEAR since coming back from injury - 11 goals in 19 games is elite production. And Eberle proving that 35 is just a number with one of his best goal-scoring seasons since 2015-16? Love to see it.

Now we just gotta survive three weeks without hockey... 😤
 
Down on the Farm – Seattle Kraken prospects midseason mailbag

Welcome to “Down on the Farm,” your weekly Seattle Kraken prospects update. This week, we’re going to try something a little different and tackle your Kraken prospects questions in a more-direct format. I solicited questions on the Sound Of Hockey Discord (join the conversation, won’t you?) and received so many interesting prompts that I expect I will return with a second mailbag post in the weeks ahead.

After tackling some questions, we’ll pass along Kraken prospect news, all-shifts video, data updates, the Sound Of Hockey Prospect of the Week, and a preview of the week ahead, as always.

If you have a Seattle Kraken prospect–related question you’d like to see featured in a future column (or answered in our next mailbag), drop us a note below or on X or BlueSky at @deepseahockey or @sound_hockey.

The midseason Kraken prospects mailbag (part one)​

Q. Before this season, it seems folks were hoping Kokko would be ready for next year after a Grubauer buyout. Now that it seems fairly obvious Grubauer will be back, how do you think that could impact Kokko’s development?​


Even more so than Lane Lambert’s leadership and strategic reset, Philipp Grubauer’s resurgence is the storyline of the 2025-26 Seattle Kraken. He has transformed himself from a liability into perhaps the team’s most valuable player leading up to the Olympic break. Though goalie performance can be difficult to project (more on that in a moment), few would have predicted such an intense resurgence entering the year.

That said, Grubauer’s retrenchment as a fixture in net should not negatively impact Nikke Kokko’s development. It bears emphasizing just how young Kokko is (by goalie standards). At 21 years old, he is one of only six goalies under 22 to have at least eight AHL games this year. (And no one in this age range has more appearances than Kokko’s 23 games.) Kokko may seem older, but that is only because he was “ahead of schedule” coming to North America after such a strong run in Liiga.

Coming into the year, I viewed the 2026-27 season as the earliest scenario in which the team could give Kokko a legitimate shot at an NHL role—almost certainly in a training camp competition with a Matt Murray–style veteran. Kokko’s play this season—while not bad behind a young defense corps—has not forced the issue on that timeline. On top of that, Kokko has also dealt with some injuries, causing him to miss time.

Patience is a virtue here. Say what you will about the expression “the NHL is not a developmental league,” I feel it rings true when it comes to goalies. If the team retains Grubauer next season and Kokko ends up as the lead goaltender in Coachella Valley for another year, it would not be detrimental.

Consider this: Entering the 2027-28 season, Kokko would still be only 23.5 years old. Only four goalies under 24 have earned even one NHL game this season, and none are regulars: Jacob Fowler (10 appearances), Carl Lindbom (8), Sergei Murashov (5), Thomas Milic (3).

Q. I can’t judge goalie performance beyond obvious things like letting in lots of obviously easy goals. So my question is, what makes LaFontaine and Ostman, both of whom recently got AHL shutouts, ranked low down on the goalie prospect totem pole? Do their ages play a role? Maybe I’m asking the wrong question- what makes Kokko and Saarinen better?​


Honestly, I have grappled with this issue too. I try to spend stretches of games isolating in on goalies, but it’s really hard to do if you have any interest in the actual outcome of the game (or the other players involved). I also try to be humble about what I don’t know and ask questions of people who have played or scouted the position. On the podcast, I try to defer goalie technique and performance questions to Darren because I want to learn.

From watching games and practices, I believe I have improved my ability to detect the athletic and movement traits that should theoretically translate to the NHL. How crisp are the side-to-side movements? Is the player able to regain position and square up to the shooter with athleticism and anticipation? These athletic traits are where, in my view, Nikke Kokko separates himself from Victor Ostman. It’s not so much the fundamentals of puck tracking, but his movement skills and athleticism that raise his floor as a prospect.

Beyond that, I do put a good deal of weight on the statistics. The goalie’s job is not without nuance, but it is simpler than most on the ice: stop pucks. At the NHL level, we have a better sense of the shot quality the goalie is facing, so the data has more value. That said, save percentages, particularly within league context, tell us something.

Q. With the shortage of top-line defense prospects, would a top forward for top defense prospect swap be something you’d like GM Jason Botterill to pursue, or are you fine plugging holes with vets for the next few years?​


Generally speaking, when it comes to the draft, I’m a strong believer in “best player available,” given the uncertainty involved. So, I have not had a problem with the Kraken following that mindset to a forward-heavy prospect pool so far.

That said, the question foregrounds an issue the team has not really faced throughout its brief history: the future of the blue line. The Kraken signed Vince Dunn, Adam Larsson, Jamie Oleksiak, and Brandon Montour (at various times) to long-term deals, which has left only bottom-pair minutes for young players and other veteran additions. That core group is entering the downslope of its life cycle, however. Jamie Oleksiak is a pending unrestricted free agent this offseason, with fellow left shots Vince Dunn (unrestricted) and Ryker Evans (restricted) following after the 2026-27 season.

Assuming Oleksiak departs, there will be an opening next year, ideally for a right-shot defenseman. The Kraken have internal options under contract who could vie for a third-pair role, such as Cale Fleury, Ville Ottavainen, or the lefty Josh Mahura.

The more relevant prospect question arises if one of Dunn or Evans is not on the team after the 2026-27 season (or before then). This draft presents an opportunity to grab a projected top-four defenseman early, but it’s quite unlikely the player would be ready by 2027. (It’s at least possible the lefty Alberts Smits or righty Keaton Verheoff could be ready by then, if they were the choice.)

Looking to the free-agent or trade market for an impact, left-shot defenseman is less than encouraging. Simon Nemec and David Reinbacher are a couple of recent draft picks who may need a “change of scenery,” but both are righties. Could Owen Power become available? I have my doubts, with Buffalo seemingly on the incline of late. I suspect that if David Jiricek finds his game, Minnesota will keep him. There are a few interesting names somewhat buried in the Pacific Division, but an intra-division trade like this feels unlikely.

All of this makes me think retaining both Dunn and Evans is an underrated organizational priority. If the team picks up a top lefty defenseman in the draft like Carson Carels, perhaps a short-term extension for Evans would be the best play.

Q. How is Jake O’Brien’s post-draft season going? His name pops up on some top prospect lists using NHL equivalencies.​


Jake O’Brien remains fundamentally the same player the Kraken drafted at No. 8 overall last year. He does not have dominant size, speed, or strength, but his offensive instincts and stick skill are high-end. He can create off the rush or from the half wall on the power play. He has patched some of the holes in his defensive game as well. I haven’t noticed him dropping his coverage much recently. He will backcheck when the situation dictates, even if he’s not elite at it.

It’s not surprising that data-driven models favor him. My own “Data Score” metric rates his season to date as the best in the system. He leads the entire CHL in points per game at 18 years old. And he’s 6-foot-2. While he’s relatively slight at the moment (think more like Matty Beniers), the frame gives more room for his NHL projection compared with players like Jagger Firkus or David Goyette.

What O’Brien really needs is the professional challenge, which brings me to the last question of part one of the mailbag.

Q. Will the kraken exercise their option to bring an underaged CHL player in to Coachella Valley Firebirds (AHL) and if so whom? Would it be someone they draft this season?​


The most recent Collective Bargaining Agreement between the NHL players and league contains an agreement that, beginning in the 2026-27 season, each NHL team will be able to assign directly to the AHL one 19-year-old player drafted out of the CHL. (The controlling rule through this season was that 19-year-olds must be offered back to their junior teams if they did not make the NHL roster.)

That said, for this rule change to take effect, the NHL will need to obtain agreement from the CHL in the form of an amendment to the CHL Transfer Agreement. I suspect an agreement of some kind will be reached, but it’s at least notable that this hurdle remains.

Assuming the rule change happens, I expect the Kraken to utilize it. As for the second question, it’s doubtful they would (or could) use it on a player they draft this year. Hypothetically, the team could draft a 19-year-old draft re-entry (as Ryker Evans was) and assign him directly to the AHL, but I don’t see a great candidate for that path in the first or second round of this year’s draft.

The two best candidates for assignment to the AHL next year are forward Jake O’Brien and defenseman Blake Fiddler. I suspect the team will utilize the exemption for O’Brien. Fiddler is a half-step behind O’Brien in his development and has not yet signed his professional entry-level contract. This means college hockey is still an option for him. Could Fiddler spend a year at college before joining the Firebirds for the 2027-28 season? I could see him following that path.

Notes on five Kraken prospects​

Jacob Melanson | F | Seattle Kraken (NHL)​


There was some question whether the Kraken would return Melanson to the Coachella Valley Firebirds during the Olympic break. Under the rules governing roster transactions during the Olympic break, NHL teams could immediately reassign waivers-exempt players like Melanson to the AHL level if the player had played in fewer than 16 of the team’s previous 20 regular-season games. Melanson played in only 15 of Seattle’s last 20 games, so he was technically eligible for an assignment. So far, the team has not done so, however. This likely reflects the team’s view that Melanson will be an important part of the stretch run at the NHL level.

Semyon Vyazovoi | G | Salavat Yulaev Ufa (KHL)​


Semyon Vyazovoi had another dominant week, turning aside 59 of 61 shots in two wins. His .931 save percentage is tied for third in the KHL. He is your Sound Of Hockey Prospect of the Week. Reading between the lines of previous answers, it seems like the Kraken hope and expect Vyazovoi to join the team in North America next year. There are few players I’m more intrigued to watch in the Valley.

Justin Janicke | F | Kansas City Mavericks (ECHL)​


We have not featured Janicke in this space or in our data updates because he is not currently signed to an NHL contract with the Kraken. Janicke signed an AHL contract with the Coachella Valley Firebirds over the summer after his run with the Notre Dame Fighting Irish ended. He has played the majority of this year in the ECHL with the Kansas City Mavericks. Janicke has taken fairly regular middle-six minutes for a top ECHL team, compiling a solid 10 goals and 12 assists in 38 games. His 10 goals are tied for fifth on the team, and his +16 plus-minus is best on the team among forwards. Kansas City has won 16 of its last 17 games.

Jani Nyman | F | Coachella Valley Firebirds (AHL)​


Jani Nyman continues to pile up goals at the AHL level, adding two more in three games this week. His 0.6 goals-per-game pace is sixth best in the AHL, and tops on the Firebirds. With the Kraken in contention, it’s possible another NHL opportunity does not come his way this season, but I suspect it will be an organizational priority to get him regular third-line NHL minutes next season to evaluate the player’s future. It is perhaps the reason I find it unlikely all three of Jordan Eberle, Jaden Schwartz, and Eeli Tolvanen will return, even in the absence of a big-ticket acquisition.

Caden Price | D | Coachella Valley Firebirds (AHL)​


The Firebirds announced Caden Price is day-to-day with an upper-body injury on Friday afternoon. The Firebirds recalled Zach Uens from the ECHL in a countermove.

Kraken prospects data update​


Speaking of which, amidst rumors that the Kraken are looking to upgrade the NHL roster, it feels like a particularly important time for a few of Seattle’s young players to prove to management that they are part of the team’s future rather than potential trade chips. With the NHL game at a break for the Olympics, more attention can turn to the Firebirds.

Lleyton Roed continues to be one of my favorite under-the-radar organization players. He has the size, skating ability, and forechecking mentality to be useful on a hockey team at any level. The question is whether there is depth-role room for him in the Pacific Northwest. I would like to see an NHL opportunity happen for him, whether with the Kraken or elsewhere.

Amid another month-long stretch in which he was not earning any Liiga starts, Kärpät sent Visa Vedenpää down to its U20 team for a spot start last Friday. It was Vedenpää’s first start at that level since the 2023-2024 season.

Victor Ostman and Jack LaFontaine have continued to share the load at the AHL level and do their jobs in Nikke Kokko’s absence, but I get the sense the team could use Kokko’s stabilizing presence back in the lineup sooner rather than later.

Sound Of Hockey Prospect of the Week tracker​


3: Jagger Firkus, Kim Saarinen

2: Jake O’Brien, Julius Miettinen, Nathan Villeneuve, Semyon Vyazovoi

1: Barrett Hall, Ollie Josephson, Tyson Jugnauth, Nikke Kokko, Victor Ostman, Zaccharya Wisdom

Previewing the week ahead​


This week’s Deep Sea Hockey Games of the Week make a tidy Wednesday doubleheader. Alexis Bernier takes on his former QMJHL team for the first time at 4:00 pm PT. Then Julius Miettinen and the Everett Silvertips square off against Blake Fiddler and the Edmonton Oil Kings in a WHL nightcap at 6:00 pm PT.

Tracking 2026 NHL Draft prospects: Chase Reid​


Chase Reid is a swift-skating, offense-first defenseman with more than enough size and defensive ability to withstand difficult top-four minutes. Did I mention he’s a right shot? All of these factors combine to make the Soo Greyhounds blueliner a highly desired candidate to go in the top five of the 2026 NHL Draft. He ranked No. 4 overall on the midseason Big Board.

Recent prospect updates​


January 30, 2026: Kraken prospect trade value tiers

January 23, 2026: Alexis Bernier set to return, early 2026 NHL Draft thoughts

January 16, 2026: Jacob Melanson is speeding toward an NHL future despite the demotion

January 9, 2026: World Juniors reports, CHL trades

January 2, 2026: Mid-season Kraken prospect ranking

December 26, 2025: Watching Kraken prospects at the 2026 World Junior Championship

December 20, 2025: Resetting Seattle Kraken draft capital after the Mason Marchment trade

December 13, 2025: Ryan Jankowski talks Kraken prospects

December 5, 2025: World Juniors Announcements, Kokko saving the day for the Firebirds

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Curtis Isacke

Curtis is a Sound Of Hockey contributor and member of the Kraken press corps. Curtis is an attorney by day, and he has read the NHL collective bargaining agreement and bylaws so you don’t have to. He can be found analyzing the Kraken, NHL Draft, and other hockey topics on Twitter and Bluesky @deepseahockey.

Read more from Curtis

The post Down on the Farm – Seattle Kraken prospects midseason mailbag appeared first on Sound Of Hockey.

Source: https://soundofhockey.com/2026/02/06/down-on-the-farm-seattle-kraken-prospects-midseason-mailbag/
 
Down on the Farm – Projecting NHL futures for Logan Morrison and Jagger Firkus

Welcome to “Down on the Farm,” your weekly Seattle Kraken prospects update. This week, we’re going to take a look at scoring comparables for a couple Kraken prospects in the AHL, Logan Morrison and Jagger Firkus. What expectations should we be putting on these players now?

After that, we’ll have updates on Kraken prospects at the Olympics and the AHL All-Star Classic, plus other news, video, data updates, the Sound Of Hockey Prospect of the Week, and a preview of the week ahead, as always.

If you have a Seattle Kraken prospect–related question you’d like to see featured in a future column (or answered in our next mailbag), drop us a note below or on X or BlueSky at @deepseahockey or @sound_hockey.

Setting fair expectations for Logan Morrison and Jagger Firkus​


In the last week, I have seen a couple of questions regarding Logan Morrison’s season in the AHL and his NHL future. Morrison is not your typical, heralded NHL prospect. He is not the biggest, fastest, or flashiest player on the ice. The six-foot center signed with the Kraken as an undrafted free agent in 2023 and spent his first couple of seasons working his way up the AHL lineup with solid, but not head-turning, statistics.

This season, at age 23, he has broken through as a scoring engine for the Firebirds, piling up 23 goals and 23 assists in 45 games. Morrison’s 46 points lead the Firebirds and are third in the AHL at the All-Star break.

Is this scoring binge a harbinger of an NHL future? Should the Kraken be thinking Morrison may earn a spot on the 2026-27 team? Or is it more consistent with a good player likely to top out as an AHL or European league scorer?

At the same time, we’re seeing a professional-career-best scoring performance from Morrison’s teammate Jagger Firkus. As the No. 35 overall pick in the 2022 draft, Firkus has garnered a higher prospect profile. Even so, the 21-year-old winger still has questions about his own future due to his slight stature. Firkus has 17 goals and 27 assists in 45 games this season. His 44 points are second on the Firebirds and seventh in the AHL.

Is this production a step forward for Firkus’s stock? Or is it just an average (expected) outcome for a player who led the CHL in scoring two seasons ago? Perhaps it’s even a slight step back since he has not yet established himself in the NHL?

Though we can and should dig in on the player evaluation specifics for Morrison and Firkus to address these questions, I thought some numbers could help us establish an informed baseline for them moving forward—and for others who might be in a similar situation in the years ahead.

Methodology and data​


I gathered every AHL player season from the 2010-11 season to present in which the player was 23 years old or younger and scored at least 0.95 points per game in 40+ AHL games. (The point-per-game threshold is admittedly arbitrary and an effort to expand the sample to include Firkus, who is one point shy of a point-per-game pace.)

This approach returned a sample of 67 players and 74 total qualifying seasons. Seven players had two such seasons. For these players, I utilized the younger of the two qualifying seasons as the standard for the analysis below.

Six of the 67 players are currently playing their qualifying seasons (including Morrison and Firkus). Setting those examples aside, we have a sample of 61 players to evaluate.

For each of the 61 players, I tabulated their career statistics through the present—i.e., the Olympic break of the 2025-26 NHL season.

I then set three (again, arbitrary) thresholds when analyzing the results:

  1. NHL Contributor: 100+ NHL games played (or 35+ games per season since the AHL season)
  2. NHL Regular: 500+ NHL games played (or 55+ games per season since the AHL season)
  3. Star: NHL Regular and 0.8+ points per game

Findings and limitations​


As you might expect, players who achieved the production threshold at a younger age were more likely to achieve NHL careers and production. For example, of the four players to achieve the .95 points per game at 19 years old, all four passed the 100 NHL game threshold. Two are currently “NHL Contributors” (though both are still active, with the potential for more), one is an NHL Regular, and one is a Star. This is a one hundred percent “success” rate.

At the other end of the spectrum, players like Morrison who first achieved .95 points per AHL game at age 23 were markedly less certain to find future NHL success. Of the 15 qualifying AHL player seasons, two come from this season—Quinn Hutson and Morrison. Of the 13 remaining seasons, only six have surpassed the 100-game threshold to be an NHL Contributor (46 percent). Four of those (31 percent of the total sample) became NHL Regulars—Carter Verhaeghe, Jonatan Berggren, Pat Maroon, and Victor Olofsson. None have reached “Star” status—though Verhaeghe is fairly close with .74 points per game in his NHL career.

Toward the middle of the spectrum is Firkus’s age-21 group. Of the 16 qualifying seasons, again, two are from this year—Connor Geekie and Firkus. Of the 14 remaining in the sample, 10 became NHL Contributors (71 percent), and six of those are NHL Regulars (43 percent). The NHL Regular group is comprised of Matias Maccelli, Mavrik Bourque, Matt Coronato, Troy Terry, Marco Rossi, and Jean-Gabriel Pageau. None qualify as a Star, though Terry is the closest at .70 points per game.

Drawing back, there are some clear takeaways: Achieve this level of production as a 19- or 20-year-old, and the player is a near sure-fire NHL player, a better-than-even-money shot to have a lengthy career, and has even an outside chance of stardom. Achieve this production for the first time at 22 or 23, and the player has only a slim chance of achieving a lengthy NHL career and is no more than an even-money bet to get 100+ games at the next level. The 21-year-olds are a bit of a tipping point where you find a likelihood of playing NHL games but a 50-50 chance of achieving more.

If these likelihoods seem low or disappointing, it’s worth emphasizing that the very best players are unlikely to be captured in our sample. Many projected NHL Regulars move past the AHL level without accruing 40 games in a season—or skip that level entirely. This speaks to a built-in scouting assessment of the players in our sample (which includes Firkus and Morrison).

I did explore whether there were any other takeaways to distinguish the players who “made it” in this sample versus those who did not (e.g., height, higher-scoring players within the sample), but no other notable trends emerged.

Finally, I should note an obvious limitation: All of this assumes Firkus and Morrison can sustain their strong (.95 points per game) scoring pace for the balance of this season.

Conclusions​


Firkus and Morrison are scoring at a league-leading rate in the AHL, but this does not mean they are a certainty to stick at the NHL level.

In 2023, I utilized a similar method to evaluate Firkus’ peer group when the winger was a high-scoring junior player. Comparing those results with our study here, we see that Firkus’ probability of becoming an NHL Contributor has edged forward from an even-money proposition to a likelihood. This is the type of progress you like to see from a prospect. Similarly, in that 2023 study, only 25 percent of Firkus’ peers achieved 33 points per 82 NHL games, which I used as a stand-in for a third liner. In this sample, the probability is 50 percent (7 of 14). Again, this is a significant step forward.

As for Morrison, his profile has always been a long shot. Personally, I have had him well outside Seattle’s top-10 prospects in my most recent rankings. Though an upside outcome remains unlikely, it is worth noting that solid middle-six players like Olofsson and Verhaeghe did follow a similar trajectory. After digging in on these numbers, I suspect I’ll move Morrison up a bit in my end-of-season ranking. That said, whether he accrues any notable NHL time remains a coin-flip bet at this point.

Notes on three Kraken prospects​

Oscar Fisker Mølgaard | F | Denmark (Olympics)​


Oscar Fisker Mølgaard is representing his native Denmark in the 2026 Winter Olympics and has scored Denmark’s only goal of the tournament to date—a tap-in off a net drive. The goalie Mølgaard bested on that play? None other than Philipp Grubauer. Mølgaard is fourth among forwards on the team in time on ice, centering the team’s second line. The players to earn more time than him? Nikolaj Ehlers and a couple of players with notable ties to Seattle—Alexander True and Oliver Bjorkstrand.

Oscar Fisker Molgaard scores his first Olympic goal for Team Denmark against Germany in Milan! @DKIshockey

Way to go, Oscar!

🎥: @nbcolympics/International Olympic Committee (IOC)#MilanoCortina2026 #WinterOlympics! pic.twitter.com/MZkCzRmNFn

— Coachella Valley Firebirds (@Firebirds) February 12, 2026

Logan Morrison | F | Coachella Valley Firebirds (AHL)​


Morrison had two goals and four assists and was a plus-four across two one-goal wins over Henderson this week. He is your Sound Of Hockey Prospect of the Week.

Jagger Firkus | F | Coachella Valley Firebirds (AHL)​


Firkus potted a goal and added three helpers in those two Henderson games this week before packing up with teammate Tyson Jugnauth to head to the AHL All-Star Classic. Firkus’s strong week carried through to the All-Star festivities; he scored a goal in the game and won the shooting accuracy event with a perfect 4-for-4 mark.

IT'S CALLED THE FIRKUS CIRCUS FOR A REASON🎪@firebirds | #AHLAlLStar pic.twitter.com/79BhWfBaf7

— American Hockey League (@TheAHL) February 11, 2026

Kraken prospects data update​


Jani Nyman continues to pile up goals at the AHL level, with two more in two games this week.

Julius Miettinen’s plus-43 plus-minus leads all CHL forwards.

Visa Vedenpää received his first Liiga start in four weeks, and he played well, stopping 28 of 30 shots against. Unfortunately, it was not enough as Karpat fell to Nyman’s old team, Ilves, 2-1.

Kim Saarinen continued his recent stretch of strong play, posting a .924 save percentage across two starts last week. Saarinen’s .916 save percentage is second in Liiga, behind only Eetu Randelin, who is five years older than Saarinen.

Sound Of Hockey Prospect of the Week tracker​


3: Jagger Firkus, Kim Saarinen

2: Jake O’Brien, Julius Miettinen, Nathan Villeneuve, Semyon Vyazovoi

1: Barrett Hall, Ollie Josephson, Tyson Jugnauth, Nikke Kokko, Logan Morrison, Victor Ostman, Zaccharya Wisdom

Previewing the week ahead​


This week’s Deep Sea Hockey Games of the Week (which are not included on the prospect schedule below) are Mølgaard’s Denmark games at the Olympics. Denmark takes on the United States at 12:10 p.m. PT on Saturday and then squares off against Latvia at 10:10 a.m. PT on Sunday. Depending on the results of those games, Denmark will return to play in the elimination round on Tuesday or Wednesday. All Olympics games are available to stream on Peacock.

Tracking 2026 NHL Draft prospects: Alberts Smits​


Alberts Smits is perhaps the most pro-ready physical specimen among this year’s blueliners. He’s 6-foot-3 and mixes a sturdy, muscular game with creativity to break pucks out and quarterback a power play from the blue line. He brings a lot of high-level experience at 18 years old. He has logged 51 Liiga games over the last two seasons and participated in the World Juniors for Latvia over the holidays. Most impressively, he is playing against the best in the world for Latvia at the Olympics right now. He’s not a passenger, either; he has logged the third-most minutes among Latvia’s defenders. While the offense may never be high-end, he presents as a very strong bet to slot into the middle of a defensive lineup with shutdown upside.

Smits ranked No. 6 on the mid-season Big Board. Good Friend of the Pod Chris Peters has mentioned that scouts told him not to be surprised when Smits is the first defenseman drafted this year.

Recent prospect updates​


February 6, 2026: Seattle Kraken prospects midseason mailbag

January 30, 2026: Kraken prospect trade value tiers

January 23, 2026: Alexis Bernier set to return, early 2026 NHL Draft thoughts

January 16, 2026: Jacob Melanson is speeding toward an NHL future despite the demotion

January 9, 2026: World Juniors reports, CHL trades

January 2, 2026: Mid-season Kraken prospect ranking

December 26, 2025: Watching Kraken prospects at the 2026 World Junior Championship

December 20, 2025: Resetting Seattle Kraken draft capital after the Mason Marchment trade

December 13, 2025: Ryan Jankowski talks Kraken prospects

December 5, 2025: World Juniors Announcements, Kokko saving the day for the Firebirds

curtis-author-profile-1.png


Curtis Isacke

Curtis is a Sound Of Hockey contributor and member of the Kraken press corps. Curtis is an attorney by day, and he has read the NHL collective bargaining agreement and bylaws so you don’t have to. He can be found analyzing the Kraken, NHL Draft, and other hockey topics on Twitter and Bluesky @deepseahockey.

Read more from Curtis

The post Down on the Farm – Projecting NHL futures for Logan Morrison and Jagger Firkus appeared first on Sound Of Hockey.

Source: https://soundofhockey.com/2026/02/1...futures-for-logan-morrison-and-jagger-firkus/
 
Do tight NHL standings strengthen the case for a three-point model?

With the NHL on Olympic break, I have been looking at how tight the league’s standings have been this season. Although they have spread out a bit over the past month-plus, and there is now a buffer after the final wild card team in each conference, things are still compressed. In the Western Conference, that buffer is three points. In the Eastern Conference, it is four points. On Jan. 1, there was a one-point buffer in the East and no buffer in the West, where three teams were tied for the final spot.

With Olympic hockey underway in Milano, Italy, the tournament has again put a spotlight on the three-point standings model. This is the standard model used in international play, as well as in the PWHL.

Standings models explained​


Here is how the three-point model works:

  • Three points for a regulation win.
  • Two points for an overtime or shootout win.
  • One point for an overtime or shootout loss.
  • Zero points for a regulation loss.

The NHL currently uses a two-point model:

  • Two points for any win, whether in regulation, overtime, or a shootout.
  • One point for a loss in overtime or a shootout.
  • Zero points for a regulation loss.

Standings congestion​


Although there is now a small buffer between the final wild card spot and the next team, the standings remain tightly bunched.

season_points_distribution_end_2_point-1024x721.png


There is a lot to digest in this chart, but it shows that 14 teams are within four points, plus or minus, of the final wild card spot in each conference during the 2025-26 season. Those 14 teams can reasonably be considered in the playoff mix.

Looking back at the previous four completed seasons, I increased the spread of points until at least 14 teams were in the mix. Over that span, the race for the final playoff spots has become tighter each year, with the current season showing the most congestion.

Overtime on the rise​


One major driver of the tight standings is the number of games going beyond regulation. Of the 908 games played so far this season, 233 have ended in overtime or a shootout. That is 25.7 percent of games, the highest rate in NHL history.

chart_otso_pct_by_season_1983_2004_2-1024x439.png

chart_otso_pct_by_season_2005_2026_2-1024x439.png


Overtime formats have changed several times since being introduced in the 1983-84 season, when 5-on-5 overtime was added. In 1999-00, overtime shifted to 4-on-4, and the “loser” point was introduced. At that time, games could still end in a tie. That changed in 2005-06 with the introduction of the shootout, while 4-on-4 overtime remained.

The current format arrived in 2015-16, when the league moved to 3-on-3 overtime followed by a shootout if needed.

Should the NHL move to the three-point model?​


I explored this question in January 2025. At the time, the three-point model showed only minor improvements over the NHL’s two-point system.

With overtime and shootout games continuing to rise, and standings congestion remaining high, it is worth revisiting whether the three-point model would now provide more clarity.

chart_current_points_2_vs_3_west-922x1024.png

chart_current_points_2_vs_3_east-922x1024.png


Teams with a red or green line in the chart would either move up or down in the standings with the introduction of the three-point system. There is some movement under the three-point model, but every team currently in a playoff position remains there. Buffalo benefits the most, while Montreal is penalized the most. That outcome aligns with how the three-point model rewards regulation wins.

At the time of writing, Montreal has 21 regulation wins, while Buffalo has 26. Montreal has also played the most overtime games in the Eastern Conference at 19. That boosts Montreal’s position under the two-point model but works against the Habs under the three-point system.

Does the three-point model reduce congestion?​


Another way to evaluate the model is by looking at overall standings congestion. Moving from a two-point to a three-point system increases the total points available, so a 1.5x multiplier is used here to normalize the comparison.

season_points_distribution_end_3_point-1024x721.png


Somewhat surprisingly, the three-point model shows very similar congestion in the current season. Completed seasons do show slightly larger spreads, but the difference is modest.

2024-25 data​


Since the original analysis, the 2024-25 season has concluded. Below is the movement chart from that season under a three-point model.

chart_points_2_vs_3_2024_2025_west-922x1024.png

chart_points_2_vs_3_2024_2025_east-922x1024.png


There would have been no changes to the playoff teams, but there were shifts that could have affected draft positioning. Seattle would have finished 24th instead of 26th. If the draft lottery had played out the same way, the Kraken would have selected 10th instead of eighth.

That swing could have meant missing out on Jake O’Brien, who leads the Ontario Hockey League in points per game at 1.68.

Would a three-point model be a good choice for the NHL?​


The three-point model has minimal impact on which teams make the playoffs, but it does place greater value on regulation wins. That can influence which teams earn home-ice advantage and how teams at the bottom of the standings are ordered for the draft.

Those effects are relatively small and do not resolve the current standings congestion. Over time, however, team behavior could shift simply because regulation wins would be worth three points instead of two.

One clear benefit of the three-point model is consistency. Every game awards three points, regardless of how it ends. Under the two-point system, regulation games award only two total points, while overtime and shootout games award three. That imbalance slightly inflates points percentages.

For example, under the two-point model, the Seattle Kraken hold a .562 points percentage with a 27-20-9 record.

Under the three-point model, overtime and shootout wins are tracked separately, creating a four-part record of W-OTW-OTL-L. The Kraken sit at 21-6-9-20, good for 84 points. With 56 games played and a maximum of 168 points available, Seattle would hold a .500 points percentage.

If you have questions or want to dig deeper into any of the data, drop them in the comments below.

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Blaiz Grubic


Blaiz Grubic is a contributor at Sound Of Hockey. A passionate hockey fan and player for over 30 years, Blaiz grew up in the Pacific Northwest and is an alumni of Washington State University (Go Cougs!). When he’s not playing, watching, or writing about hockey, he enjoys quality time with his wife and daughter or getting out on a golf course for a quick round. Follow @blaizg on BlueSky or X.

Read more from Blaiz

The post Do tight NHL standings strengthen the case for a three-point model? appeared first on Sound Of Hockey.

Source: https://soundofhockey.com/2026/02/1...-strengthen-the-case-for-a-three-point-model/
 
Down on the Farm – David Goyette suspended for 20 games

Welcome to “Down on the Farm,” your weekly Seattle Kraken prospects update. This week, we’ll have an update on the happenings around the system, including a player facing league discipline and one more Olympics update. After that, we’ll have additional Kraken prospect news, video, and data updates, the Sound Of Hockey Prospect of the Week, and a preview of the week ahead, as always.

If you have a Seattle Kraken prospect–related question you’d like to see featured in a future column or answered in our next next mailbag (next week?), drop us a note below or on X or BlueSky at @deepseahockey or @sound_hockey.

Goyette suspended for violation of PED policy​


The Seattle Kraken announced this week that Kraken forward prospect David Goyette had been suspended 20 games for a violation of the American Hockey League–Pro Hockey Players Association Performance Enhancing Substance Program. Goyette, 21, has three goals and seven assists in 47 AHL games this season. In his final game before the suspension was announced, he had perhaps his most impressive offensive play of the season.

LETS GO GOYSYYYY!!

3-2 pic.twitter.com/xZNva7j5rE

— Coachella Valley Firebirds (@Firebirds) February 16, 2026

“We fully support the Performance Enhancing Substance Program and hope this was a learning experience for David,” Kraken GM Jason Botterill said in a statement.

David Goyette addressed the suspension in a statement too, saying, “I did not knowingly or intentionally use any prohibited substance, and I have never tried to gain an unfair advantage. However, I understand I am responsible for what enters my body, and I accept the league’s decision. I’m sorry to my teammates, the organization, and the fans.

“I’ll work with the program to determine how this happened and will be fully prepared to return when my suspension ends.”

Goyette missed his first game due to the suspension on Wednesday, Feb. 18. He will be eligible to return to the Firebirds lineup on April 10, when the Firebirds host the Ontario Reign. The team will have only five regular-season games remaining at that point, so it remains to be seen what role, if any, Goyette will be able to carve out at that time. The 2022 second-round pick has one season remaining on his entry-level contract.

Notes on three Kraken prospects​

Oscar Fisker Mølgaard | F | Denmark (Olympics)​


Team Denmark fell short of the medal rounds but notched a win over Latvia in its four games. Oscar Fisker Mølgaard had a goal and two assists in those four contests. His three points were tied for second on the team. It was yet another strong international showing for Mølgaard.

Alexis Bernier | D | Chicoutimi Saguenéens (QMJHL)​


Bernier got a late start to his season due to offseason ACL reconstruction surgery, but he has navigated his return successfully, playing in eight straight games for the Chicoutimi Saguenéens. His season hit another gear this past week when he recorded not just his first goal of the season but his first three goals. With an assist, too, in three games, Bernier is your Sound Of Hockey Prospect of the Week.

Alexis Bernier, goal scoring machine! 🏒

He goes with the wraparound, for his 2nd goal in as many games! @SagueneensLHJMQ @SeattleKraken | #SeaKrakenpic.twitter.com/p5wGR51gK6

— QMJHL (@QMJHL) February 15, 2026

Jani Nyman | F | Coachella Valley Firebirds (AHL)​


Nyman keeps piling up goals at the AHL level, with two more in three Firebirds games this week. His .65 goals per game are second in the AHL behind only Isak Rosen, who is about a year older than Nyman. If the objective was for Nyman to recapture his scoring mentality with an eye toward grabbing the next available top-nine NHL role, he is doing everything he can.

Kraken prospects data update​


Zaccharya Wisdom had two goals and two assists in two games last week. His four points pushed his season total to 24, which is a new NCAA career high for Wisdom.

Jake O’Brien’s seven points last week brought his season total to 69 in 41 games. He is third in the entire CHL in points per game (among those with at least 10 games played), behind only Cole Beaudoin and Tij Iginla, both of whom are a year older than O’Brien.

Semyon Vyazovoi continues to earn the lion’s share of the starts for his team and maintain his top-five save-percentage position in the KHL. There’s no doubt in my mind he’s ready for the North American challenge.

Kim Saarinen, 19, has a .917 save percentage on the season, which is the second-best mark in Liiga. Perhaps more impressively, he is 15 points clear of the next-best save percentage by any goalie age 22 or younger (Matthieu Herpin, .902).

Sound Of Hockey Prospect of the Week tracker​


3: Jagger Firkus, Kim Saarinen

2: Jake O’Brien, Julius Miettinen, Nathan Villeneuve, Semyon Vyazovoi

1: Alexis Bernier, Barrett Hall, Ollie Josephson, Tyson Jugnauth, Nikke Kokko, Logan Morrison, Victor Ostman, Zaccharya Wisdom

Previewing the week ahead​


This week’s Deep Sea Hockey Games of the Week are a couple of NCHC matchups pitting Ollie Josephson and North Dakota against Barrett Hall and St. Cloud State.

Tracking 2026 NHL Draft prospects: Malte Gustafsson​


Malte Gustafsson is a smooth-skating, 6-foot-4, left-shot defenseman with a lot of high-level experience in the SHL and for the Swedish National Team. He has the potential to be a plus puck-moving defenseman, rush defender, and in-zone net-front presence, though many aspects of his game are carried by his strong athletic traits at this point. There is an easy middle-pair projection here. Gustafsson ranked No. 21 on the mid-season Big Board.

Recent prospect updates​


February 13, 2026: Projecting NHL futures for Logan Morrison and Jagger Firkus

February 6, 2026: Seattle Kraken prospects midseason mailbag

January 30, 2026: Kraken prospect trade value tiers

January 23, 2026: Alexis Bernier set to return, early 2026 NHL Draft thoughts

January 16, 2026: Jacob Melanson is speeding toward an NHL future despite the demotion

January 9, 2026: World Juniors reports, CHL trades

January 2, 2026: Mid-season Kraken prospect ranking

December 26, 2025: Watching Kraken prospects at the 2026 World Junior Championship

December 20, 2025: Resetting Seattle Kraken draft capital after the Mason Marchment trade

December 13, 2025: Ryan Jankowski talks Kraken prospects

December 5, 2025: World Juniors Announcements, Kokko saving the day for the Firebirds

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Curtis Isacke

Curtis is a Sound Of Hockey contributor and member of the Kraken press corps. Curtis is an attorney by day, and he has read the NHL collective bargaining agreement and bylaws so you don’t have to. He can be found analyzing the Kraken, NHL Draft, and other hockey topics on Twitter and Bluesky @deepseahockey.

Read more from Curtis

The post Down on the Farm – David Goyette suspended for 20 games appeared first on Sound Of Hockey.

Source: https://soundofhockey.com/2026/02/20/down-on-the-farm-david-goyette-suspended-for-20-games/
 
Decoding trade deadline strategy and where the Kraken fit

The Olympic break roster freeze is officially over, and the NHL has snapped back into trade deadline mode. Between now and March 6, every front office will be asking the same question: Who are we, really? And for the Kraken, a team that has spent most of the season hovering around the playoff bubble, the answer isn’t as straightforward as it is for others.

That’s what makes this deadline so compelling. Seattle isn’t locked into any one lane. Depending on the plan, they can justify almost any approach, with some paths more realistic than others. And because the conversation usually collapses into the oversimplified “buy or sell,” it’s worth laying out the full menu of strategies NHL teams actually use this time of year.
Here’s what’s on the table, with real examples and a little Kraken-specific seasoning.

The big swing​


This is for teams that want to push their chips in and win a Stanley Cup now. This category includes both the classic “full buyer” approach and the rare, seismic deadline blockbuster that shakes the league.

Examples:

  • Dallas Stars (2025): Acquired Mikko Rantanen from the Hurricanes for Logan Stankoven, two first-round picks, and two third-round picks. Result: Lost in the Conference Finals to the Oilers.
  • Vegas Golden Knights (2024): Added Tomas Hertl and Noah Hanifin for two firsts, a third, and depth prospects. Lost in the first round, but both players remain long-term pieces.
  • Tampa Bay Lightning (2023): Acquired Tanner Jeannot from Nashville for Cal Foote and five draft picks. Result: Lost in the first round to Toronto.
  • Toronto Maple Leafs (2023): Added Erik Gustafsson, Jake McCabe, Sam Lafferty, Ryan O’Reilly, and Noel Acciari across three trades for Rasmus Sandin and multiple picks. Won a round, then fell to Florida.

Kraken angle: Very unlikely. Seattle hasn’t reached the “push the chips in” phase of the franchise. A blockbuster only makes sense if it involves a player with several years of term beyond 2025–26, and that might be a deal they try to swing over the summer.

Targeted buyer​


This is the “we’re good, but let’s not tweak too much” approach. You’re improving the roster without lighting your future on fire. Usually there’s a specific role or depth need, but these moves don’t get the headlines of a big swing.

Examples:

  • Winnipeg Jets (2025): Added Brandon Tanev and Luke Schenn for second-round picks. Won a round, then lost to Dallas.
  • Florida Panthers (2024): Acquired Vladimir Tarasenko for a third and a fourth. Won the Stanley Cup.
  • Dallas Stars (2023): Added Max Domi and Evgenii Dadonov for a second and Denis Gurianov. Reached the Conference Finals.

Kraken angle: Unlikely. With the team finally healthy, the Kraken have an abundance of depth, which makes this scenario less likely. Their needs lean more toward high-end talent, and that usually requires significant assets.

Stay the course​


Sometimes the best move is no move. Sometimes the best move is getting a key player back from injury. Sometimes the best move is solving your depth issues with internal resources. Plenty of teams have taken this path and lived to tell the tale.

Examples:

  • Montreal Canadiens (2025): Did nothing at the deadline, made the playoffs, then lost to Washington in Round 1.
  • Boston Bruins (2024): Made two small depth trades, finished second in the Atlantic, beat Toronto, then lost to Florida.
  • Seattle Kraken (2023): Stood pat, then beat Colorado in seven games before falling to Dallas in seven.

Kraken angle: Likely. It’s not exciting, but it’s probably the most likely scenario. The Kraken are in a playoff spot and playing their best hockey of the season, but it’s hard to argue they’re a true Cup contender. Keeping their expiring contracts may simply be the strategy.

Soft seller​


You’re not rebuilding, but you recognize the long odds of contending for the Cup. You have players on expiring contracts who could fetch a nice return, and you’re willing to listen.

Examples:

  • Washington Capitals (2024): Shed Evgeny Kuznetsov, Joel Edmundson, and Anthony Mantha while seven points out of a playoff spot. Still made the playoffs, then were swept by the Rangers. Playing it conservative enabled them for a busy summer of retooling by acquiring Pierre-Luc Dubois, Andrew Mangiapane, Logan Thompson, and Jakob Chychrun in four different trades.
  • Pittsburgh Penguins (2024): Moved Jake Guentzel and little else. Despite calls to tear it down, the core stayed intact. Now, the Penguins are surprisingly back in a playoff spot with that same core.

Kraken angle: Possible. The Kraken have four players on expiring contracts: Jaden Schwartz, Jordan Eberle, Eeli Tolvanen, and Jamie Oleksiak. All have contributed, but the Kraken also have enough depth to backfill if another team makes an offer they can’t refuse. With Ben Meyers and Berkly Catton set to return from injured reserve, a trade could solve a roster crunch while bringing back a meaningful asset. It also seems like current Coachella Valley Firebirds Logan Morrison and Jani Nyman could help backfill any forward departures, while Seattle is carrying two extra defensemen in Cale Fleury and Josh Mahura.

Tear it down​


A tear it down approach isn’t really a trade deadline strategy — it’s a multi-year plan for a team with little to no path to competitiveness. Full rebuilds are less common now, since there’s no guarantee they work. But a major deadline offload can signal the start (or continuation) of one.

Example:

  • Boston Bruins (2025): On the outside of the playoff picture, they moved Brad Marchand, Brandon Carlo, Charlie Coyle, Justin Brazeau, and Trent Frederic. One year later, they’re holding down the last wild card spot with a very different roster.

Kraken angle: Very unlikely. Seattle has a healthy amount of young talent in the NHL and in the pipeline, plus plenty of early-round picks in the coming drafts. A major teardown at the deadline makes little sense.

What should the Kraken do?​


With the Kraken in the playoff hunt and several players on expiring contracts, they have multiple paths available. It’s unlikely they’ll be a major player at the deadline, but if an opportunity arises to add an impact player with term, they’ll be in the mix. They also have pieces that could help any playoff team, along with prospects and picks that rebuilding clubs covet.

They have options, but staying relatively quiet might be the most realistic outcome.

So what’s your take? If you were Seattle Kraken general manager Jason Botterill, which lane would you choose, and how bold would you be as the deadline approaches?

The post Decoding trade deadline strategy and where the Kraken fit appeared first on Sound Of Hockey.

Source: https://soundofhockey.com/2026/02/23/seattle-kraken-trade-deadline-strategies/
 
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