News Rangers Team Notes

Rangers must pay pending RFA K’Andre Miller based on track record, not potential

NHL: New York Islanders at New York Rangers

Danny Wild-Imagn ImagesDanny Wild-Imagn Images

The New York Rangers are facing a decision on whether to re-sign young defenseman K’Andre Miller for the long term. Ultimately, the choice for the Blueshirts should be an easy one – as long as they enter into such an agreement with clear eyes on what it is they’re paying for.

Miller has flashed his amazing physical gifts and tantalizing skill set off and on since former general manager Jeff Gorton traded up four spots in the 2018 NHL Draft to select the University of Wisconsin product No. 22 overall. Miller never played in the minors, making his debut in the pandemic-altered 2020-21 season and playing 53 games. He’s now 343 games — and counting — deep into his NHL career.

In that time, fans, media and perhaps the front office have often viewed him as a top pair defenseman-in-waiting. Miller’s size (6-foot-5, 210 pounds), strength, mobility and supposedly untapped offensive potential surely are tantalizing, as his play. Sometimes.

Related: Rangers coach provides positive Igor Shesterkin update for games after 4 Nations break

K’Andre Miller hasn’t reached elite status – and might never do so​

NHL: New York Rangers at Columbus Blue Jackets

Samantha Madar/USA TODAY Network via Imagn Images

Miller, of course, has yet to cooperate with that narrative. He took a step back after a 43-point 2022-23 season, compiling 30 points last season and struggling with his play and life off the ice, stepping away from the team briefly for what was termed “personal reasons.” He later courageously opened up about his battles with mental health.

It was more of the same early in 2024-25, Miller being unable to maintain consistency and sometimes making costly gaffes, even as he also turned in games that again evoked the potential promise of a star blueliner waiting to get out. He has a disappointing 13 points (four goals, nine assists) in 49 games this season.

Unfortunately for the Rangers, time has all but run out on their evaluation period of this polarizing player. Miller’s two-year, $7.7 million bridge contract expires this summer, making him a restricted free agent with arbitration rights. The Rangers can either tie the 25-year-old up for the long haul at fair value or trade him.

The choice, though, shouldn’t be difficult. Parting with Miller would leave a massive void on the left side of the top four, one that perhaps could start to resemble the sinkhole at top-six right wing that has forced the team to spend resources at the trade deadline to fill it for three years now. With their entire left side facing uncertainty – Ryan Lindgren seems likely to be traded or leave as a UFA this summer, and Zac Jones and Urho Vaakanainen project as third-pair players at best – the loss of Miller’s durable, consistent presence seems all but unthinkable.

The caveat here is that the Rangers should at least attempt to pay Miller for what he is now, as opposed to what they think he could become. There’s a good chance that Miller’s ceiling is that of a solid, minutes-eating, second-pair defenseman – not a Victor Hedman clone-to-be. The Blueshirts would have to be fully aware of what they’re buying, which could be a player that never fully puts all of his considerable talents together.

Miller’s camp is sure to disagree with such an assessment of his value. Agent Ian Pulver – who also represents jilted ex-Rangers forward Barclay Goodrow – can point to Miller’s analytics this season as evidence of his indispensability. Through the season’s first 28 games, Miller posted an expected goal share of 50.0 – respectably breaking even, with the Rangers also getting outscored 27-21 with him on the ice at 5-on-5, per Natural Stat Trick.

Since Dec. 20, though, Miller has posted an individual 69.2 expected goal share over 21 games covering 72 minutes, with the Blueshirts out-chancing opponents 43-24 and 19-5 in the high-danger category. That date represents the first game for Miller’s new defense partner, Will Borgen, in a Rangers sweater. Much has made of how Miller has settled down since the arrival of the former Seattle Kraken, who signed a five-year extension not long after being acquired in the Kaapo Kakko trade.

Borgen has posted a 46.8 expected goal share in 84 minutes without Miller since arriving, strongly illustrating that it’s Miller who has carried the partnership. The duo has a combined 48.2 expected goal share in 332:36.

Related: Rangers assign disgruntled, seldom-used defenseman to AHL Hartford on conditioning stint

Polarizing play of K’Andre Miller will make this a complex contract negotiation​

NHL: Philadelphia Flyers at New York Rangers

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Ultimately, this negotiation jumps out as a textbook instance of the need for healthy compromise. The Rangers will be in a serious spot without Miller’s contributions next season and going forward. At the same time, Miller’s representatives lack any sort of irrefutable evidence that the player is an emerging star. He’s yet to fashion a dominant season, and there is simply too much up-and-down in his game to label him as a top-pair force who should be paid accordingly.

Will an honest and well-intentioned back-and-forth happen? Pulver and his team recognize there’s a danger in agreeing to, say, six years at $6.5 million per, given Miller’s package of obviously elite abilities. Should the defenseman actually fulfill his considerable potential, the agent knows he will have sold off a No. 1 or No. 2 D-man at a discount – especially with the confirmation that the salary cap will rise at a significant rate over the next three seasons, and likely into the future.

Pulver is also aware that asking for Victor Hedman or Quinn Hughes money – about $8 million per for both players – isn’t supported by his client’s body of work. And the Rangers will still hold leverage and control for two more seasons, given that Miller will be an RFA, albeit one with arbitration rights that neither side wants to exercise.

The Rangers need Miller, even if his occasional dips in performance prove to be a career-long characteristic and not something he’ll definitely outgrow. It’s also in Miller’s interest to work out a deal with the team that drafted him, given his comfort level with a defense partner that might be paving the way for him to reach another level. Then there’s the possibility that Miller is Adam Fox’s partner in waiting on the top pair.

Can the sides come to an agreement, either during the season or this summer? It might come down to whether team and player are able to partially accept each other’s viewpoint on who Miller is, and what he might become. The Rangers might not get him for purely second-pair cash, and Miller also won’t get paid as a top player at his position.

The Rangers’ remaining 27 regular-season games should go a long way toward determining which version of Miller the club will be dealing with as it looks for a long-term commitment to keep him on Broadway.

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Source: https://www.foreverblueshirts.com/new-york-rangers-news/kandre-miller-contract-pending-rfa/
 
Rangers blown out by Sabres 8-2 in 1st game after 4 Nations Face-Off break

NHL: New York Rangers at Buffalo Sabres

Timothy T. Ludwig-Imagn ImagesTimothy T. Ludwig-Imagn Images

The New York Rangers returned from the two-week break for the 4 Nations Face-Off and were doomed by a litany of mistakes in a humiliating 8-2 loss to the Buffalo Sabres on Saturday at KeyBank Center.

The Rangers fell behind 1:46 into the contest and gave up four more goals in the final 8:02 of the opening period to fall behind the last-place Sabres 5-0.

“It wasn’t good,” coach Peter Laviolette said postgame. “There was nothing that was good about the game. Terrible start, terrible first period. It didn’t get much better from there. It was not the game we were looking for coming out of the break. That’s it in a nutshell.”

Jack Quinn scored the opening goal, Rasmus Dahlin scored twice and added an assist for the Sabres, who also rolled to a 6-1 rout against the Rangers at Madison Square Garden on Nov. 7. Dahlin had a three-point opening period and was unstoppable against the Rangers, who spent large stretches in their defensive zone and scrambling around.

“I don’t see it as a lack of urgency,” said Vincent Trocheck, one of six Rangers who appeared in the 4 Nations Face-Off. “I think we were not in the right spots.”

NHL: New York Rangers at Buffalo Sabres

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Tage Thompson scored Buffalo’s third goal and tallied again early in the third. Ryan McLeod scored less than two minutes after Thompson’s first goal to turn the game into a rout, added another goal in the third and Dahlin capped the five-goal barrage by scoring on a power play.

Henri Jokiharju scored in the final minute, and the Rangers allowed eight goals for the first time since a 9-3 loss to the Tampa Bay Lightning on Nov. 14, 2019.

“I think the effort and execution needs to be a whole lot better,” center J.T. Miller said. “It’s tough seeing that many go up. We kind of left the goalies hanging out to dry tonight.”

SEVEN GOALS FOR YOUR BUFFALO SABRES

THIS IS MAYHEM

WHAT A MOVE FROM MCLEOD

HIS SECOND OF THE GAME

7-2 SABRES pic.twitter.com/NodXz6EGOg

— Crossing Swords ⚔️ (@CrossSwordsPod) February 23, 2025

Dahlin’s second goal at 18: 21 of the first period ended Igor Shesterkin’s night. Shesterkin returned from his second upper-body injury this season and allowed five goals on 16 shots.

It was the ninth time this season Shesterkin allowed at least five goals, his most in any season since making his NHL debut in January 2020. The 29-year-old is 1-5-0 in his past six games with an .817 save percentage. It was the fourth time this season Shesterkin was pulled. Jonathan Quick allowed the final three goals, all in the third period.

The Rangers (27-25-5, 58 points) fell to 3-5-0 in their past eight games since a 10-game point streak (7-0-3) moved them back into the Eastern Conference playoff race. The Rangers play six more games before the NHL Trade Deadline on March 7. New York is four points out of the second wild-card spot with 26 games remaining.

The Rangers were somewhat improved in the second period after allowing their first five-goal opening period since Dec. 26, 1991 in an 8-6 road win over the Washington Capitals. Chris Kreider scored a power-play goal and Mika Zibanejad also scored, but Buffalo finished it off in the opening 5:40 of the third.

Kreids deflects it in to tie the franchise record for power play goals. pic.twitter.com/0uJUoUJWic

— New York Rangers (@NYRangers) February 22, 2025

Kreider’s goal was the 116th power-play goal of his career, tying Camille Henry for the most in Rangers history. But it was the only bright spot on a rough night for the Rangers, who face a quick turnaround with a visit to the Pittsburgh Penguins on Sunday afternoon.

“It has to be frustrating today,” Zibanejad said. “We move on and play a big one tomorrow.”

Related: Rangers must pay pending RFA K’Andre Miller based on track record, not potential

Sabres 8 – Rangers 2

NHL: New York Rangers at Buffalo Sabres

Timothy T. Ludwig-Imagn Images

The mistakes started early and persisted throughout a disastrous opening 20 minutes.

Buffalo went ahead after K’Andre Miller’s clearing pass banked off Zibanejad’s left skate. Quinn gained possession, easily moved through the slot and flipped a soft shot from the left circle past Shesterkin.

With 8:14 remaining, Shesterkin made a juggling save on Jordan Greenway but could not control the rebound and the puck went to the corner. Braden Schneider lost his stick in the corner and lost possession, allowing Greenway to move to the left point and take a shot that was tipped in by Dahlin, who easily breezed past Reilly Smith to the front of the net.

Dahlin was denied on a breakaway with 5:55 left but things got even worse for the Rangers when Thompson made a dominating play to put Buffalo up 3-0 with 4:28 left. Thompson pried the puck from Ryan Lindgren with an effective forecheck near the left corner, easily skated past Adam Fox and flipped a backhander past Shesterkin from in front of the net.

After McLeod won an offensive zone face-off from Trocheck, he went to the net as the Sabres moved the puck around without difficulty. Following five passes, McLeod jostled for position in front with Schneider and tipped in Dahlin’s blast from the point with 2:27 remaining.

Shesterkin’s night ended during a cross-checking penalty to Sam Carrick when Dahlin eased by Trocheck, got to the left circle and sent a wrist shot into the net.

After Kreider and Zibanejad scored to make it 5-2 after two periods, Thompson surprised Quick with a shot from the right circle at 3:47 of the third and McLeod finished off a breakaway less than two minutes later. Jokiharju completed the scoring with 36 seconds left.

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Source: https://www.foreverblueshirts.com/n...-8-2-1st-game-after-4-nations-face-off-break/
 
New York Rangers Daily: Blueshirts must atone for abysmal loss; Islanders getting healthy on defense

NHL: New York Rangers at Buffalo Sabres

Timothy T. Ludwig-Imagn ImagesTimothy T. Ludwig-Imagn Images

So much for the New York Rangers favorable schedule coming out of the 4 Nations Face-Off break.

The Rangers were wiped out by the Buffalo Sabres, who reside in the basement of the Eastern Conference, 8-2 on Saturday. They fell behind 5-0 in the first period, and a shell-shocked Igor Shesterkin was watching from the bench before 19 minutes elapsed on the game clock.

It was a non-competitive performance filled with horrendous mistakes defensively. It was a complete embarrassment for a team that’s had it’s fair share of those this season.

But it could’ve been worse in the Eastern Conference standings. The Ottawa Senators lost in regulation and the Detroit Red Wings lost in overtime, so the Rangers dropped a point further back in the race for the second wild card, now four points behind. The Columbus Blue Jackets won, so they’re also four up on the Rangers, who have a game in hand.

But how many of this abysmal performances can the Rangers put forth and still remain in contention? And really, do you have any faith in this group making a deep run even if the Rangers do find their way into the Stanley Cup Playoffs?

Yeah, didn’t think so.

Those who participated in the 4 Nations Face-Off produced for the Rangers after they fell behind 5-0. Chris Kreider and Mika Zibanejad scored. J.T. Miller had two assists, Adam Fox had one and Vincent Trocheck had five hits. Urho Vaakanainen — not great at the 4 Nations for Finland — was minus-4 and had an egregious turnover on the game’s first goal.

There’s a lot to say and really nothing to say about this one. The Rangers should be embarrassed. Let’s see if they can rebound against the second-worst team in the East on Sunday, when the visit the Pittsburgh Penguins.

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New York Rangers news

NHL: St. Louis Blues at New York Rangers

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Peter Laviolette’s postgame media session lasted 90 seconds, long enough to let it ne known how disgusted he was with the Rangers performance Saturday.

Here are three things to watch for when the Rangers visit the Penguins on Sunday, including an obvious need to start games better.

K’Andre Miller is a restricted free agent with arbitration rights this offseason. Tom Castro details how the Rangers should handle negotiations with the polarizing defenseman.

Urho Vaakkanainen had a miserable turnover that led to the first goal by the Sabres on Saturday and finished minus-4. But the Rangers defenseman said the day before that participating in the 4 Nations Face-Off should prepare him for the stretch run and possible Stanley Cup Playoffs this spring.

NHL news

NHL: New York Islanders at Utah

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P.K. Subban said on ABC on Saturday that the Penguins are “poorly constructed” and “set up to fail” no matter how great a player Sidney Crosby is or coach Mike Sullivan is.

The Penguins were smoked 8-3 by the Washington Capitals, though Crosby scored his 610th goal, tying him with Bobby Hull for 18th all-time in NHL history.

The Islanders banged up defense got several does of good news. Ryan Pulock and Scott Mayfield were activated from IR, and Noah Dobson practiced fully Saturday. Pulock and Mayfield could play Sunday against the Dallas Stars; Dobson must miss one more game on LTIR and should be back then against the Rangers on Tuiesday.

Elliotte Friedman reported on Sportsnet that teams have looked into acquiring both Schenn brothers and reuniting them in separate deals with the St. Louis Blues (Brayden) and Nashville Predators (Luke).

The rumor mill has the BOston Bruins looking to trade forward Morgan Geekie, who, in turn, stated that he wants to stay with the Bruins.

The Bruins picked up a point but lost to the Anaheim Ducks 3-2 in overtime.

The Winnipeg Jets signed former Rangers forward Vladislav Namestnikov to a two-year, $6 million contract.

The Jets then went out and won their ninth straight game, setting a franchise record with a 4-3 victory over the Blues in a shootout.

Brady Tkachuk missed the Ottawa Senators’ fourth straight loss, 5-2 to the Montreal Canadiens, with a lower-body injury. Coach Travis Green said he hoped Tkachuk can play Wednesday against the Jets.

Speaking of Tkachuk brothers missing games with a lower-body injury, Matthew Tkachuk was out for the Florida Panthers, when they lost 2-1 to the Seattle Kraken.

The New Jersey Devils lost to the Stars 4-2 and coach Sheldon Keefe broke up his young defense tandem of Luke Hughes and Simon Nemec because of poor play.

Kent Johnson scored twice to lead the Columbus Blue Jackets to a 5-1 win against the Chicago Blackhawks. Columbus is tied with the Ottawa Senators for the final wild-card spot in the East.

The Detroit Red Wings blew a late lead and lost 4-3 in overtime to the Minnesota Wild, though they picked up a point and are now in the first wild card in the East.

Watch Barrett Hayton score his first NHL hat trick in Utah Hockey Club’s 5-3 loss to the Los Angeles Kings.

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Source: https://www.foreverblueshirts.com/n...atone-abysmal-loss-islanders-healthy-defense/
 
3 Rangers takeaways after fortunate 5-3 win over Penguins

NHL: New York Rangers at Pittsburgh Penguins

Charles LeClaire-Imagn ImagesCharles LeClaire-Imagn Images

The New York Rangers bounced back with a 5-3 win over the Pittsburgh Penguins on Sunday afternoon at PPG Paints Arena, a game involving teams that each surrendered eight goals in a loss just a day prior.

Despite being outshot 39-16 and outplayed for the majority of the game, the Rangers found a way to escape Pittsburgh with a big win.

Igor Shesterkin and J.T. Miller practically willed the Rangers to victory in this one. Shesterkin was huge making 36 saves, while Miller, named the game’s First Star, scored twice in his hometown to give the Rangers the edge over their Metropolitan Division rival and earn a huge two points as the playoff race heats up.

JT Miller scores in his hometown to give the Rangers the lead 🔥 pic.twitter.com/Nm2F0Xbwhz

— B/R Open Ice (@BR_OpenIce) February 23, 2025

The Rangers fell behind in the first period before scoring a goal of their own by Will Cuylle. Miller scored his first of the game late in the second, but that’s all the Rangers could muster in what was an abysmal period — however, Shesterkin stood tall to carry New York into the third with a 2-1 lead.

After two quick goals by the Penguins, Jimmy Vesey tied the game 3-3, and Adam Fox gave the Rangers the lead for good. Miller scored his second of the game into an empty net to seal it for the Rangers in a game that they likely did not deserve to win.

Aside from the goal-scorers, K’ Andre Miller, Reilly Smith (2), Fox, Artemi Panarin, Vincent Trocheck, Ryan Lindgren, Mika Zibanejad, and Vesey all had assists.

Related: Rangers must pay pending RFA K’Andre Miller on track record, not potential

Three takeaways from Rangers 5-3 win over Penguins​

NHL: New York Rangers at Pittsburgh Penguins

Charles LeClaire-Imagn Images

Here are three takeaways from the game on Sunday:

1. Igor Shesterkin bounces back​


Shesterkin desperately needed a bounce-back game after his poor performance Saturday in Buffalo. He gave up five goals on 16 shots and was pulled after 18:21 in an onslaught by the Sabres, who routed the Rangers 8-2. Playing less than a full period in that game, the Rangers turned to Shesterkin again Sunday, a wise decision which paid off in a big way.

The 29-year-old goalie was sensational in a game where the Rangers were anything but. He especially came up big in the second period where the Rangers were outshot 19-4. He also made some key stops in the final moments of the third period when the Penguins pulled their goalie for an extra attacker. This performance from Shesterkin came at a time when he desperately needed it, and so did the Rangers.

“You know he’s going to bounce back,” Ryan Lindgren said about Shesterkin. “He’s one of the best goalies in the League. He works so hard, he cares so much. You look at [Saturday], too, we’re leaving him out to dry. Did that tonight, too, in that second period. He made some huge saves.”

It’s been a rough stretch Shesterkin, who had failed to record a save percentage over .900 in his previous six starts, maxing out at .885 on Feb. 7, a 3-2 loss to the Penguins. He and the Rangers were 1-5-0 in those games, with each carrying more and more significance every passing day in the playoff race.

2. Rangers are outshot badly but steal two huge points​


Despite being more than doubled up in shots by the Penguins, the Rangers were able to secure two massive points in the wild-card race. The win gives them 60 points (28-25-4), and they’re two points out of the second wild-card spot, held by the Ottawa Senators with 62 points.

The playoff race is as tight as ever, as the Columbus Blue Jackets also have 62 points, and the Boston Bruins have 61. Three teams are right behind the Rangers, each with 57 points and the Islanders hosting the Dallas Stars on Sunday. So, while it may not have been a pretty win by any means, earning the two points gets New York back on track and within striking distance of a playoff berth after getting blown out by the Eastern Conference cellar-dwelling Sabres.

3. J.T. Miller picks up where he left off, scores two massive goals in win​

NHL: New York Rangers at Pittsburgh Penguins

Charles LeClaire-Imagn Images

It’s been a whirlwind three weeks for J.T. Miller. After being traded by the Vancouver Canucks, the 31-year-old forward made the transition and played for the Rangers less than 24 hours after the trade. After five games with the Rangers, he suited up for the United States in the 4 Nations Face-Off and was an integral piece of the lineup. Now, he’s back with the Rangers trying to help them earn a playoff spot, and he certainly did his part against the Penguins.

Miller’s two goals against the Penguins give him four goals and eight points in seven games with the Rangers, and he continues to make an impact in every imaginable way. Not only has he contributed on the score sheet, but his speed and physicality continue to open up the game and generate offense for the Rangers. Miller helped save the Rangers from another embarrassing loss, and boosted their playoff hopes.

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Source: https://www.foreverblueshirts.com/new-york-rangers-news/takeaways-fortunate-5-3-win-penguins/
 
3 storylines for Rangers archrival ahead of 2 crucial head-to-head meetings, NHL trade deadline

NHL: New York Islanders at New York Rangers

Danny Wild-Imagn ImagesDanny Wild-Imagn Images

The New York Rangers and New York Islanders faced off just once in the first four months of the 2024-25 season. They’re getting ready to play twice within the next week in a pair of high-stakes games for both teams.

Each will enter the game Tuesday at UBS Arena on the outside looking in when it comes to a playoff berth in the Eastern Conference. The Rangers will be playing their third game in four nights after splitting a pair of road contests over the weekend – they were demolished 8-2 by the Sabres in Buffalo before being badly outplayed most of Sunday in Pittsburgh before somehow defeating the Penguins 5-3.

The Islanders playoff hopes looked all but dead in mid-January. But they got back in the hunt with seven straight wins, including victories at Vegas and Tampa Bay, before losing four of their next five – including a 4-3 home loss to the Dallas Stars on Sunday that saw them on the wrong end of a couple of controversial officiating calls.

After Tuesday, each team will play two games before they face off again at Madison Square Garden on March 3.

NHL: New York Islanders at New York Rangers

Danny Wild-Imagn Images

The Rangers (28-25-4) come to UBS 11th in the Eastern Conference, two points behind the Ottawa Senators for the second wild card in the East. They are three points ahead of the 12th-place Islanders (25-24-7). The difference between them is the Rangers’ 5-2 win at Madison Square Garden on Nov. 3 – reverse the outcome and the Rangers would be looking up at the Isles, instead of the current scenario.

As big as the two games are for the Rangers, they might be even bigger for the Islanders. General manager Lou Lamoriello has one of the League’s oldest rosters, and one that’s been plagued by injuries. All six regular defensemen have missed chunks of time this season. Their most dynamic forward, Mathew Barzal – who has more points against the Rangers (35) than any other team – has been out since Feb. 1 with a left kneecap injury after missing 23 games earlier in the season with an upper-body injury. His absence has been a big blow to an already-ailing offense, and he may not play again this season.

Ex-Rangers forward Anthony Duclair missed two months earlier in the season with a lower-body injury and has yet to find his scoring touch since returning.

Related: Rangers recall Brennan Othmann from AHL Hartford amid Chris Kreider injury concern

Islanders storylines heading into crucial games against Rangers

NHL: New York Rangers at New York Islanders

Dennis Schneidler-Imagn Images

Here are three storylines as the Islanders prepare for their two meetings with the Rangers:

To buy or to sell


Unlike the Rangers, who’ve made three major trades already this season, the Islanders are heading for the NHL Trade Deadline on March 7 not having made a big deal. Waiver claims for defenseman Tony DeAngelo and Adam Boqvist don’t count, nor does getting D-man Scott Perunovich from the St. Louis Blues for a fifth-round pick.

The Islanders have a number of older players that could bring them younger assets in return as the deadline nears — or they could hang onto their older guys, try to add around the edges and scrape their way into a playoff berth, as they’ve done in each of the past two seasons. The latter is more in keeping with Lamoriello’s past practices.

But two losses to the Rangers could induce Lamoriello to part with players such as center Brock Nelson, a 33-year-old pending unrestricted free agent who’s scored at least 34 goals in each of the past three seasons but has 17 this season. Nelson is No. 1 on many trade boards as the deadline nears.

NHL: San Jose Sharks at New York Islanders

Thomas Salus-Imagn Images

Nelson’s linemate, 34-year-old pending UFA forward Kyle Palmieri, could also attract interest if the wheels fall off the Islanders’ drive for the playoffs. He has 17 goals and 38 points in 56 games, a 25-goal, 56-point pace over a whole season. Jean-Gabriel Pageau, a fine two-way center who’s 32 and has a year left on his contract, would also draw interest if the Isles make him available.

If the Rangers win twice, the lineup they’ll face when they visit UBS Arena on April 10 could look a lot different.

Getting healthier on blue line


Few teams have been battered more heavily by injuries than the Islanders, especially on defense. The good news for them is that some of their battered bodies on the blue line are starting to get healthy.

The Islanders got top-four D-man Ryan Pulock (upper body) and third-pair regular Scott Mayfield (lower body) back on Sunday. The better news is that their best offensive defenseman, Noah Dobson, who’s missed the past 10 games with a lower-body injury, became eligible to come off long-term injured reserve after their game Sunday. Dobson has just six goals and 24 goals in 46 games after a breakout season in 2023-24 that saw him finish with 10 goals and 70 points.

Dobson has been skating at practice wearing a regular jersey and quarterbacking the second power-play unit, with ex-Rangers defenseman DeAngelo running the No. 1 unit.

NHL: New York Islanders at Montreal Canadiens

David Kirouac-Imagn Images

One player whose injury absence has surprisingly hurt the Islanders is backup goaltender Marcus Hogberg, who hasn’t played since Jan. 22 because of an upper-body injury. Hogberg had been terrific as Ilya Sorokin’s backup, and his injury, combined with the continued absence of injured veteran Semyon Varlamov, means the organization’s No. 4 goalie, Jakob Skarek, has been elevated to an NHL role, one that he showed he’s not ready for in a 6-3 loss to the Florida Panthers on Feb. 2.

Now or never


There are different kinds of pressure on each team as they prepare to face each other twice in a seven-day span.

For the Islanders, losing twice to the Rangers could all but end their playoff hopes and perhaps send the franchise in a different direction. Lamoriello has done his best to keep the cast that made the NHL final four in 2020 and 2021 together — he traded off his first-round pick in four consecutive seasons to bring in veteran help. That strategy got them within one win of the Stanley Cup Final in 2021, but consecutive first-round blowouts in the 2023 and 2024 playoffs and the imminent possibility of missing the playoffs this season have to have ownership wondering whether it’s time to rebuild – something the 82-year-old Lamoriello has resisted.

The Rangers are one of the biggest disappointments in the NHL this season. They followed up last season’s Presidents’ Trophy with a 12-4-1 start, then were 4-15-0 in their final 19 games of 2024 and have been chasing a playoff berth ever since.

GM Chris Drury unloaded captain Jacob Trouba (to the Anaheim Ducks) and forward Kaapo Kakko, the second player taken in the 2019 NHL Draft (to the Seattle Kraken) in December, both for lower-pair defensemen and draft picks. He then switched gears to bring in J.T. Miller from the Vancouver Canucks at the end of January. They are 4-3-0 since that trade and still outside the top eight in the East.

A couple of losses to the Islanders could trigger another shakeup, either by trade or by recalling young players like Brennan Orthmann (which they did Monday as a precaution should injured veteran Chris Kreider is unable to play) and Brett Berard from AHL Hartford – an approach that is not an option the Islanders, who have perhaps the League’s weakest prospect pool.

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Al Trautwig dies at 68, longtime host of Rangers broadcasts on MSG Networks including 1994 Stanley Cup

al-trautwig-1.webp


Al Trautwig, a longtime host of New York Rangers pregame and postgame shows during three decades with MSG Networks, has died at age 68.

His former MSG Networks teammate, Alan Hahn, was the first to reveal the news.

“[Trautwig] was not only a friend, but a mentor and a teacher,” Hahn wrote. “He was, personally, one of my biggest resources of support when I moved into this career.”

Al Trautwig had an amazing voice and knew how to use it the way a tenor could bring depth and intensity to a song. He loved sports and had incredible versatility from baseball to basketball and hockey. And that’s not even counting his incredible work at the Olympics.

— Alan Hahn (@alanhahn) February 24, 2025

No cause of death was disclosed. Trautwig said in an interview with Newsday last year that he had undergone cancer treatment, though he did not say what type of cancer it had been. He did say he had been “cleared, and now it is just a matter of getting better.”

Trautwig last appeared on MSG back in 2019 when he took a leave of absence after he was diagnosed with cancer. MSG opted not to renew his contract in 2021. Following his departure from the network, Trautwig spent time teaching at Adelphi University in Garden City, New York.

Over the course of his career, Trautwig won four national Emmy Awards, 28 New York Emmys and a New York State Sportscaster of the Year Award. But Rangers fans know him best for his time hosting pregame and postgame shows on MSG, where he started in 1989.

MSG Networks mourns the passing of Al Trautwig pic.twitter.com/ESJqQNMOTY

— MSG Networks (@MSGNetworks) February 24, 2025

His time at MSG included covering the Rangers run to the Stanley Cup in 1994, and for years he was the first voice their fans would hear when they tuned in for a game telecast and the last face they saw before the telecast concluded.

Trautwig, a Long Island native who covered 16 Olympic games for NBC, ABC and CBS, was a stick boy for the New York Islanders in their early years and a ball boy for the New York (now Brooklyn) Nets during their time in the American Basketball Association. He began his broadcasting career calling New York Apollo soccer games in 1978 for Adelphi’s student-run radio station WBAU before broadcasting their matches on WMCA radio after graduating.

He handled NHL play-by-play on USA Network broadcasts in the 1980s. Although rooted in New York, Trautwig spent enough time on the national stage to be cast in the 1993 Disney movie “Cool Runnings” as a sportscaster narrating the feats of the Jamaican bobsled team at the 1988 Calgary Olympics.

Related: Rangers recall Brennan Othmann from AHL Hartford amid Chris Kreider injury concern

Former Rangers studio host Al Trautwig ‘lived and breathed’ New York sports


Trautwig was remembered by former co-workers and members of the media after word sperad about his passing.

Al Trautwig, longtime MSG Networks broadcaster, dies at age 68
Yes, he covered the Olympics and Ironman, but the Long Islander made his mark with the Knicks, Rangers and Yankees. https://t.co/Ah2lUMTASU

— Colin Stephenson (@ColinSNewsday) February 24, 2025
Heartbroken over the passing of Al Trautwig. I had the privilege of working alongside him for my first five years at MSG Networks, covering @NYRangers Pre/Post, and intermissions together.

Al didn’t just cover New York sports—he lived and breathed them. His passion, knowledge,…

— Stephen Valiquette (@VallysView) February 24, 2025
ICON: “A person widely admired for having great influence or significance in a particular sphere.”

The words personify Al Trautwig in our sphere. From day one together at MSG in 2002, as a co-host, a colleague, a teammate & a mentor, Al set the bar for brilliance on air. (1/2) pic.twitter.com/h0AcICdMKS

— John Giannone (@jaygeemsg) February 24, 2025
I’m just learning that we lost a broadcasting, MSG and NYC media legend in Al Trautwig. When Al’s voice was the first you heard to start a pregame, no one made a local broadcast feel bigger. He was also as nice as they come. Sending every good thought and prayer to his family RIP

— Bob Wischusen (@espnbob) February 24, 2025
So terribly sad to hear of the passing of Al Trautwig. During my years broadcasting Islander games, whenever we brought in a new host/sideline reporter, if I was asked for advice I would simply say, “Just watch Al Trautwig”. The best to ever do it. RIP.

— Howie Rose (@HowieRose) February 24, 2025
I have been blessed to work with some amazing broadcasters but there was no one better than Al Trautwig. He was meant to be on the air. Smooth. Unflappable. Al patiently walked a young writer through growing pains on TV. His lessons were invaluable. He was part of the soundtrack… https://t.co/qlgHnp2KO6

— Michael Kay (@RealMichaelKay) February 24, 2025

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New York Rangers NCAA prospects report: Gabe Perreault reaches 100-point milestone

NHL: NHL Draft

Christopher Hanewinckel-Imagn ImagesChristopher Hanewinckel-Imagn Images

Top New York Rangers prospect Gabe Perreault reached a major milestone in his NCAA career last weekend, the biggest news among Blueshirts prospects playing collegiately.

The 2023 first-round pick reached — and surpassed — 100 points with a pair of assists in Boston College’s 4-1 win over Vermont on Saturday. Playing in his 67th NCAA game, the high-flying sophomore has 31 goals and 70 assists for 101 points.

After a massive freshman year when he recorded 60 points (19 goals, 41 assists), Perreault has 41 points (12 goals, 29 assists) in 31 games this season.

The night before reaching the 100-point milestone, Perreault had his six-game point scoring streak come to an end Friday night against Vermont. Perreault was assessed a major penalty and game misconduct for cross-checking at 19:57 of the first period.

Teammate Drew Fortescue finished that game with a plus-1 rating as Boston College went on to win 6-3. On Saturday, Fortescue, the 2023 third-round pick, had one shot on goal, when BC finished the weekend sweep.

Tipping the hat to NTDP alums Ryan Leonard and Gabe Perreault (2021-23) as they both hit 💯 career points with @BC_MHockey in their weekend sweep of UVM for your @OrinJewelersMi Gem of the Week! 💎 pic.twitter.com/URhujTcLqB

— USA Hockey’s NTDP (@USAHockeyNTDP) February 24, 2025

Boston College improved to 24-6-1 overall with the two wins. They remain at the top of the USCHO.com Men’s Division I Poll and PairWise Rankings. A weekend series against New Hampshire is next on the schedule before the Hockey East regular season concludes against Merrimack College on March 8.

Related: Rangers recall top prospect from AHL Hartford amid Chris Kreider injury concern

Rangers prospect Brody Lamb breaks out with 3 goals in 2 games for Minnesota


On Friday night, junior forward Brody Lamb scored his first goal in 11 games, when the Minnesota Golden Gophers defeated Ohio State 4-1 a Big Ten contest. Lamb opened the scoring at 12:14 of the first period when he scored off a pass right in front of the net.

Lamb from the slot 👊

Brody Lamb opened up the scoring for @GopherHockey in the 1st. #B1GHockey pic.twitter.com/xWZqpsPIVi

— Big Ten Hockey (@B1GHockey) February 22, 2025

Lamb added his second goal of the game on a wraparound at 17:34 of the third period. His teammates tried to set up Lamb for a hat trick, but he had to settle for a secondary assist on Minnesota’s final goal, an empty-netter coming at 18:39. The three point night helped earn Lamb the game’s first star.

What a move for No. ✌️ on the night! 🌪️

🍎: L.Mittelstadt, Souliere pic.twitter.com/ywhKCpwTEB

— Minnesota Men’s Hockey (@GopherHockey) February 22, 2025

Minnesota defeated Ohio State 6-3 on Saturday with Lamb adding an empty-net goal for his 16th tally of the season. Minnesota’s win moved them into first place in the Big Ten with an upcoming series at Penn State to finish off the regular season. A win would secure a first round bye in the Big Ten tournament. The Gophers moved up to second in the USCHO Poll with an overall record of 23-7-4 and remained in third place in PairWise Ranking.

Freshman left wing Ty Henricks was held without a point with two shots on goal and a plus-1 rating Friday night when Western Michigan lost 5-3 to Arizona State in NCHC play. He was not in the lineup for the Broncos on Saturday due to the flu. Western Michigan remained on top of the NCHC standings following a 4-3 overtime win. Their record is 23-6-1 overall, good for fourth in the USCHO Poll and fifth in PairWise Ranking. NCHC play continues next weekend against North Dakota.

2024 first-round pick EJ Emery sat out North Dakota’s game on Friday, a 4-2 win over Minnesota Duluth, due to suspension. The freshman defenseman returned to the lineup Saturday, a 6-1 victory. Emery was called for three separate minor penalties (tripping, roughing, and hooking).

North Dakota is one point behind third place Omaha in the NCHC standings. The Fighting Hawks are currently outside the NCAA tournament bubble tied for 18th in PairWise ranking and 18th in the USCHO poll with a 17-12-2 overall record.

In the ECAC, defenseman Hank Kempf and the Cornell Big Red limited Clarkson to just 11 shots on goal, but lost 3-1 Friday night. Kempf had one shot on goal and one blocked shot. Cornell shut out St. Lawrence 6-0 in their final regular-season home game. Kempf scored the fifth goal in the third period, his second of the season, to increase his scoring total to seven points. With the win, Cornell will host a first round ECAC playoff game. The Big Red are 21st in PairWise ranking with a 12-9-6 overall record, and will need to win the conference tournament for the second consecutive year in order to qualify for the NCAA Frozen Four. Union College and Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute will be their final regular-season opponents next weekend.

In other ECAC action, Zakary Karpa and the Harvard Crimson dropped a 2-1 decision to Union on Friday. The senior center had a game-high four shots on goal, and won three of eight face-offs. Karpa won seven of 15 draws on Saturday in a 3-2 win over RPI with one blocked shot. Harvard is 44th in PairWise ranking with a record of 10-15-2. They conclude the ECAC regular season Friday at Yale and Saturday at Brown.

Northeastern upset rival Boston University 5-1 on Friday. Defenseman Jackson Dorrington earned a secondary assist on the Huskies’ third goal of the game on the power play. The junior defenseman set a new career high for points, as the assist improved his season totals to two goals and 11 assists for 13 points in 30 games this season. Dorrington also had one blocked shot during the game and was called for tripping in the second period.

The Huskies lost the rematch on Saturday 3-1. Dorrington had three shots on goal and four blocked shots. The loss kept Northeastern at ninth place in the Hockey East standings and 24th in PairWise Rankings with an overall record of 11-16-3. It will be a battle of the Huskies this weekend when they play the University of Connecticut in a home and home series.

Colorado College split a weekend series against St. Cloud State, winning 4-3 Friday, and dropping a 4-2 decision Saturday. Center Noah Laba missed both games with a lower-body injury. The Tigers are 20th in the USCHO Poll, and sit at 32nd in PairWise Ranking with an overall record of 17-14-1. A matchup against defending national champion Denver concludes the NCHC regular season.

Swedish defenseman Rasmus Larsson missed both games for Northern Michigan against St. Thomas. The Wildcats continued to struggle, losing each game,3-0 and 4-3, dropping their overall record to 5-26-1 which puts them at 62nd out of 64 teams in PairWise Rankings. Ferris State will be the final regular-season opponent.

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Source: https://www.foreverblueshirts.com/n...ts-report-gabe-perreault-100-point-milestone/
 
Rangers get big win, but may have paid steep price with Adam Fox, K’Andre Miller injuries

NHL: New York Rangers at Buffalo Sabres

Timothy T. Ludwig-Imagn ImagesTimothy T. Ludwig-Imagn Images

There was plenty for the New York Rangers to feel good about following their 5-1 road win against the New York Islanders on Tuesday at UBS Arena. However, the positive vibes were tempered due to injuries sustained by, arguably, their two most important defensemen.

K’Andre Miller, who holds down the left side on the second defense pair and is an important penalty killer, exited the game in the second period with a lower-body injury. Even worse, top-pair defenseman Adam Fox, a former Norris Trophy winner, left early in the third period with an upper-body injury and also didn’t return.

“They’re being evaluated right now,” is all Rangers coach Peter Laviolette said postgame.

Though hard to tell when or how exactly Miller was injured, it was clear that Fox was hurt at 3:16 of the third. Tangled up defending in front of his own goal, Fox fell hard to the ice, landing on his left side. He immediately got up, skated off the ice and headed straight to the dressing room in obvious pain.

Looks like Fox landed hard on his left shoulder and left the ice in considerable pain #NYR pic.twitter.com/wLCzdONcQc

— Vince Z. Mercogliano (@vzmercogliano) February 26, 2025

Though it’s speculative, it appeared Fox injured his shoulder or perhaps collarbone. To add insult to injury, the 27-year-old was penalized for hooking on the play. Rookie forward Brennen Othmann served the penalty since Fox was unable to remain in the game.

If Fox is out for any length of time, that would be a crushing blow to the Rangers. He entered Tuesday leading the Rangers with 23:20 average TOI, playing on the top pair with Ryan Lindgren and serving as their power-play quarterback.

Earlier in the game, Fox assisted on Jonny Brodzinski’s second goal of the first period, extending his point streak to seven games. He has 48 points, including 43 assists, in 58 games this season, among the League leaders for defensemen in each category.

Related: Rangers NCAA prospects report — Gabe Perreault reaches 100-point milestone

Rangers ‘really stepped up in their place’ after Adam Fox, K’Andre Miller injuries

NHL: New York Rangers at Pittsburgh Penguins

Charles LeClaire-Imagn Images

Miller played only two shifts in the second period, none after the 6:19 mark. He played just 10:13 on Tuesday and began play second behind Fox on the Rangers averaging 21:57 TOI. Though his point total is way down this season — 14 points (four goals, 10 assists) in 51 games — Miller is extremely valuable to the Rangers.

The Rangers survived losing Fox and Miller in the same game. Doing so for an extended stretch in the midst of a tight playoff race is something else altogether. The Rangers are in a three-way tie for ninth in the Eastern Conference, two points out of the second wild card.

“It’s tough when you lose a couple of key players like that, but I thought the guys really stepped up in their place,” Laviolette said.

The Rangers have Zac Jones as their seventh defenseman. He just returned from a conditioning stint with Hartford of the American Hockey League and has eight points (one goal, seven assists) in 28 games with the Rangers.

Jones is a left-hand shot, so it’s possible he could take Miller’s spot or play on the third pair if Urho Vaakanainen — who had an NHL career-high three points against the Islanders — moves up.

Defensemen currently playing in Hartford with NHL experience are Chad Ruhwedel, Erik Brannstrom, Connor Mackey and Casey Fitzgerald. Brandon Scanlin played one NHL game last season and Matthew Robertson is looking to make his NHL debut after the Rangers selected him in the second round of the 2019 NHL Draft.

Braden Schneider is key here because he’s a right shot who can play on either side. If Fox misses any time, Schneider likely would move up to either the top pair or second pair (if Will Borgen took Fox’s place) on the right side.

Schneider was also hurt in the game Tuesday. He blocked a shot with his knee on the third-period penalty kill during Fox’s minor and appeared to be in terrible pain remaining on the ice to defend until he finally could exit the ice. Fortunately, Schneider returned and the Rangers finished the game with four defensemen.

“Big, gutsy effort by all four of those guys back there,” said forward Jonny Brodzinski, who scored two goals and finished with three points.

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Rangers placing Adam Fox on injured reserve, no update on K’Andre Miller: report

NHL: New York Rangers at Montreal Canadiens

David Kirouac-Imagn ImagesDavid Kirouac-Imagn Images

The New York Rangers reportedly are placing Adam Fox on injured reserve after their star defenseman was hurt in a 5-1 win against the New York Islanders on Tuesday. In a corresponding move, the Rangers recalled defenseman Matthew Robertson from Hartford of the American Hockey League on Wednesday.

That the Rangers only recalled one defenseman could be a good sign that K’Andre Miller will not miss any — or any significant — time after he, too, was injured in that game against the Islanders. Miller sustained a lower-body injury in the second period and didn’t return.

Fox sustained an upper-body injury at 3:16 of the third period when he fell on his left shoulder after getting tangled with Islanders forward Kyle MacLean in front of the Rangers net. The 27-year-old appeared in significant pain as he immediately got up and exited the ice and headed directly to the dressing room.

Looks like Fox landed hard on his left shoulder and left the ice in considerable pain #NYR pic.twitter.com/wLCzdONcQc

— Vince Z. Mercogliano (@vzmercogliano) February 26, 2025

Despite landing on IR, word is that Fox should be able to return for the final weeks of the season. That’s crucial because the Rangers are in a tight battle for a wild-card spot in the Eastern Conference standings. They are tied for ninth place with the Ottawa Senators and Boston Bruins, and are two points behind the Columbus Blue Jackets for the second wild card.

Fox is one of two or three indispensable players on the Rangers roster, along with goalie Igor Shesterkin and forward Artemi Panarin. The 2020-21 Norris Trophy winner as top NHL defenseman is third among NHL defensemen with 43 assists this season and tied for third with 48 points. Fox had an assist on Jonny Brodzinski’s second goal Tuesday, extending his point streak to seven games.

No Rangers player logs more time on ice than Fox, who averages 23:14 per game. He’s been a mainstay on the right side of their top defense pair for years and quarterbacks the top power-play unit.

The timing of his injury is brutal, in part because of their ongoing quest to secure a playoff berth and also since the NHL trade deadline is next Friday, March 7. The Rangers could be less inclined to trade pending unrestricted free agent defenseman Ryan Lindgren — Fox’s longtime partner — if Fox is out, so as to not further deplete the defense corps with the playoffs in sight.

Related: Rangers trade deadline strategy should be about near future, not Stanley Cup dream

Zac Jones expected to get increased Rangers responsibility due to injuries on blue line

NHL: New York Rangers at Nashville Predators

Steve Roberts-Imagn Images

Further complicating matters is Miller’s health status. If the 25-year-old is forced to miss any games, it’d be hard to fathom the Rangers dealing Lindgren, who it appears they have no plans to re-sign at the end of the season. Like Lindgren, Miller also plays on the left side. He’s second on the Rangers behind Fox, averaging 21:44 TOI.

It’s been a wildly inconsistent season for Miller, whose point total is down to 14 (four goals, 10 assists) just two seasons removed from a 43-point (nine goals, 34 assists) campaign. But he and Will Borgen formed a solid second defense pair after the latter was acquired from the Seattle Kraken in the Kaapo Kakko trade in December.

Zac Jones is expected to take on a much bigger responsibility with one — or both — out of the lineup. The 24-year-old is a left-shot defenseman with plenty of offensive skills, though he has eight points (one goal, seven assists) in 28 games this season.

Jones began the season as a third-pair regular but has been the extra defenseman for two months since Urho Vaakanainen replaced him after being acquired from the Anaheim Ducks in the Jacob Trouba trade. The lack of playing time infuriated Jones to the point that he lashed out about it to reporters in early January.

“It’s tough. It’s really [expletive] tough,” Jones told reporters. “I mean, I’m just generally a pretty easygoing, happy person. And no matter what is going on in my life, I’m gonna try and come to the rink with a smile on my face . . . But it [expletive] sucks. Like, there’s nothing else I can say about it.”

Robertson was New York’s second-round pick (No. 49 overall) in the 2019 NHL Draft. This is his fourth season in professional hockey and he’s yet to play in an NHL game. He leads Hartford defensemen with 18 points (one goal, 17 assists) in 47 AHL games this season.

The 23-year-old is also a left-shot defenseman. It’s a bit surprising that veteran Chad Ruhwedel, a right-shot d-man with 369 games of NHL experience, wasn’t called up by the Rangers, especially with the right-handed-shooting Fox headed to IR.

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Rangers trade deadline strategy should be about near future, not making run at Stanley Cup

NHL: New York Rangers at Buffalo Sabres

Timothy T. Ludwig-Imagn ImagesTimothy T. Ludwig-Imagn Images

For all the agita-inducing moments this 2024-25 New York Rangers season has caused for their fans, it remains entirely possible that the Blueshirts could find their way into the Stanley Cup Playoffs.

For these Rangers, though, such an outcome would actually be besides the point. Hardly anyone believes this group can win four postseason rounds, that they have a 2023 Florida Panthers-type run to the Stanley Cup Final in them – or anything even close.

The best situation for the franchise is if the front office also holds that opinion, that making expensive, splashy adds ahead of the March 7 trade deadline in a long-shot attempt to not only get into the playoffs but win a championship is counterproductive.

Chances are that general manager Chris Drury doesn’t harbor any such delusions, and the moves he makes will be driven by a concession to that reality. Their acquisition of center J.T. Miller, whose contract has five seasons to run beyond this one, reflects a strategy of positioning the team for a restructuring in personnel and playing style that should gain steam this summer.

Drury wants to make his team bigger, faster and meaner. Miller’s acquisition represents all of that in what is likely the first salvo in reshaping the veteran core to make it competitive for a Stanley Cup in near-future seasons – and probably not this one as a result.

So Drury should be active before the deadline, looking to pull off some obvious moves – and perhaps some unexpectedly big ones – that will better position the Rangers for 2025-26 and beyond.

There are three points of focus Drury should follow with the deadline bearing down:

Related: Rangers new-look 4th line leads way in 5-1 win against Islanders

Rangers game plan ahead of 2024 NHL Trade Deadline

NHL: Philadelphia Flyers at New York Rangers

Dennis Schneidler-Imagn Images

1. Trade pending UFAs Ryan Lindgren, Reilly Smith and Jimmy Vesey to replenish draft capital


Lindgren’s time in the Big Apple is almost certainly over, given the Rangers’ apparent lack of interest in extending the gritty defenseman beyond this season. The 27-year-old, however, is an ideal rental property for contenders, his physical, all-out style capable of toughening up a team’s blue line and injecting a roster with emotion for a long playoff run.

The Blueshirts dealt away a lot of draft picks to fortify for just that in each of the past three springs. They moved their first-rounder to the Vancouver Canucks in the Miller trade, and they don’t have a second-rounder in any of the next three drafts. Lindgren probably won’t fetch a first-round pick, but a hot market for him could bring back one of those much-needed second-round selections.

Of course, the Rangers might have to abandon this part of the plan if defensemen K’Andre Miller and/or Adam Fox, both of whom were injured in a 5-1 victory over the New York Islanders on Tuesday, are out long-term. Drury doesn’t want to let short-term issues derail his longer-term goals, but he also can’t leave his current team with hardly any viable options on defense.

There’s also no reason not to trade versatile veteran wingers Smith – who cost the Rangers a 2027 second-rounder and a 2025 fifth-rounder last summer – and Vesey, with both players likely to draw interest from deadline buyers in exchange for mid-round picks. Maybe Smith is worth a third, and the Blueshirts don’t have a pick in the fourth round in 2026 or 2027.

Whether they’re used to bolster the farm system or as future trade ammunition, the Rangers simply need to get back some draft choices. Those three players, as well as pending restricted free agents, such as defenseman Urho Vaakanainen and forward Arthur Kaliyev, represent an opportunity to do just that – one that shouldn’t be overlooked or sacrificed in pursuit of a playoff spot.

In the same vein …

2. Use their 3 salary retention slots to broker trades for other teams​

NHL: New York Rangers at Vegas Golden Knights

Stephen R. Sylvanie-Imagn Images

While Lindgren, Smith and Vesey don’t exactly reside at the top of the trade market, the Rangers ample deadline cap space of $15 million or more provides a chance to increase their haul of futures, be it picks or prospects. With all three retention spots available, the Blueshirts should have no trouble retaining the maximum 50 percent of player salaries to make trades work for capped-out contenders – for the usual price of doing that business, of course.

It would probably be foolish for Drury to agree to take on retained money beyond this season, the kind of move that would fetch a higher return in trade. Brokering deals as a third party for pending UFAs, however, should in theory bring back some decent additional mid-round picks to go with whatever they can extract for their veteran rental players.

As with the need to not hold onto tradeable veterans because of an unrealistic belief in this team’s chances to make the playoffs and win it all, the Rangers shouldn’t squander the chance to play trade matchmaker – something they might not be able to do for a while if the club returns to Stanley Cup contention next season.

Related: 3 Rangers takeaways from 5-1 thrashing of archrival on Long Island

3. Explore larger trades Rangers will try to make this summer​

NHL: Vegas Golden Knights at New York Rangers

Danny Wild-Imagn Images

It’s true that it is more difficult to pull off major deals during the season, when teams tend to have less salary cap space and sometimes take a while to decide whether to make a run at the playoffs or look to next season. That said, doing so is certainly possible, as evidenced by Drury’s ability to acquire Miller, a point-per-game player in five-plus seasons with the Canucks, on Jan. 31.

There’s no harm in Drury being open to anything – though he should probably learn his lesson and do that verbally and not over text message this time – to start transforming the core, because he’s going to attempt to do that this summer anyway. So thinking big isn’t bad. If there’s enough concern over Fox’s current health or long-term dip in effectiveness this season, painfully highlighted by his alarming Four Nations Face-Off performance, does Drury want to get a head start on at least laying the groundwork for a possible trade ahead of Fox’s no-move clause kicking in July 1?

Likewise, is Alexis Lafreniere, who has provided mostly regressive play and effort since inking a seven-year extension with the club early this season, a trade candidate when he still has value and perceived upside at age 23?

Is Drury unsold on the highly-talented but maddeningly inconsistent K’Andre Miller as a staple of the team’s future? There seems little downside to at least testing the waters with possible trade partners who, like the Rangers, might want to get a jump on the offseason by potentially pulling off rarer in-season blockbuster trades.

Even if Drury ends up being very busy on the trade front, his team, locked in a crowded battle for a wild-card berth, could make it into the tournament even with significant personnel changes before the deadline. A fourth consecutive postseason appearance, however, should be ancillary.

With his trade for J.T. Miller, moving out of overpriced veterans Barclay Goodrow and Jacob Trouba and signaling (albeit clumsily) that he’s open for business on other players, the Rangers GM has made clear what’s coming soon. The Rangers are in perfect position to begin executing those changes almost immediately. They shouldn’t hesitate to do so.

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Zac Jones getting wish to play at most critical moment of Rangers season

NHL: St. Louis Blues at New York Rangers

Danny Wild-Imagn ImagesDanny Wild-Imagn Images

New York Rangers defenseman Zac Jones wanted to play so badly that his frustration over not doing so boiled over in a furious rant to the media last month.

Perhaps the lesson learned for the 24-year-old, aside from not dealing with your ice-time issues through reporters, is to stay ready – because you never know when you’re going to get the opportunity you desire.

That appears to have arrived this week, with Jones likely facing the best chance of his young career to show off the full range of his skills. Star defenseman Adam Fox is on injured reserve after sustaining an upper-body injury against the Islanders on Tuesday and is expected to be out for a while. That mean the speedy, offensive-minded Jones is in line to suddenly receive key responsibility at a critical juncture of the Rangers season.

Jones’ 97 games of NHL experience over five seasons have come during shorter, fill-in stints, with time spent on the Hartford shuttle when he bounced between the AHL and NHL. No longer waivers-exempt last season, Jones remained on the Blueshirts roster as a depth player throughout 2023-24 and mostly impressed in an NHL career-high 31 games, averaging 14:38 TOI and recording nine points (one goal, eight assists) and a plus-1 rating. He filled in when Fox, Ryan Lindgren and Erik Gustafsson were injured at different points during the season.

Essentially all of that work came at even strength and on the third pair, and that’s expected to continue, since Jones teamed with Braden Schneider at practice Thursday as part of the blue-line shuffle that took place. Jones also doesn’t appear to be slated to take over Fox’s role as the point man on the top power-play unit, with coach Peter Laviolette employing a five-forward arrangement on PP1 at practice. It’s clear that the level of trust Laviolette has with other regulars just isn’t fully there regarding Jones yet.

Urho Vaakanainen moved up from the third pair to skate alongside Lindgren in Fox’s usual spot.

Related: 5 infamous Rangers injuries after Adam Fox lands on IR

Zac Jones can replace some of Adam Fox’s skill set​

NHL: New York Islanders at New York Rangers

Danny Wild-Imagn Images

However, with Fox going down, Jones’ skill set is going to be in demand for the Rangers. He manned one point along with K’Andre Miller on the second power-play unit, and it’s possible that group might get more man-advantage time with Fox injured.

After struggling to crack the regular lineup this season, Jones will take it. His speedy, elusive ability to create zone entry, lateral movement at the top of the zone and sneaky shot from the point allowed him to build a reputation as a dangerous PP quarterback at the University of Massachusetts and with Hartford, where he was an AHL All-Star.

The opportunity for Jones to work his way onto the top unit over the Rangers’ remaining 24 games might exist as well, especially if their power play, hardly the juggernaut of last season with a 21.1 percent conversion rate (19th overall) in 2024-25, continues to be ordinary. Will Laviolette believe enough in this relative unknown to consider such a move, if seemingly warranted?

He certainly hasn’t for much of this season, with the coach making Jones a healthy scratch for 18 straight games and 20 of 21 from Dec. 24-Feb. 4. After a two-game conditioning stint at Hartford last weekend, Jones will get his first game action with the Rangers since Feb. 7.

“Great timing – ‘Jonesy’ had gone down (to the AHL) and played I think 25, 28, 30 minutes in games, and got some game conditioning under his belt, so I though that was really good,” Laviolette said after practice Thursday. “Comes back here, he looks good in practice, and so opportunities for others to step up.”

Laviolette, who earlier this season lauded Jones’ improved battle level in his own zone, encouragingly carried more than a hint of optimism about Jones getting another shot in his voice. It’s a long way from where the player was at the depths of his long run of time in the press box..

“It’s frustrating when you think you’re doing some things well and it’s just, you just keep getting taken out, taken out, taken out,” Jones said in early January. “I just feel like I’m rotting away a little bit.

” … I’m a guy who wants to earn my paycheck. I need to play. I have things I need to improve in order to be a full-time player and that’s what I want to be, I want to be a guy who plays 82 games and be in the lineup every night. I get that there are decisions to be made but, you know, it just sucks when it’s always you.”

Laviolette understood Jones’ angst at the time.

“That’s OK and I would expect anyone out of the lineup to be frustrated and want to be in there and play,” the coach said.

Related: New York Rangers Daily: No sympathy for Blueshirts; Canucks contract talks ‘frustrating’ Brock Boeser

Rangers need little-used Zac Jones to hit ground running for crucial week​

Zac-Jones2-788x525.jpg

Credit: Hartford Wolf Pack

Jones is about to be in there playing, and the Rangers need him now. The next week will go a long way toward determing whether the Blueshirts sell off attractive trade targets to contenders or decide to stay focused on making a run at a wild-card playoff berth – one still so tantalizingly close in a crowded Eastern Conference race marked by mediocrity.

The Rangers’ third-round selection in the 2019 NHL Draft isn’t Fox, or really anywhere close. He can, however, provide at least some of what was lost when Fox got hurt after being tangled up with the Islanders forward Kyle MacLean and falling to the ice in the third period Tuesday.

Looks like Fox landed hard on his left shoulder and left the ice in considerable pain #NYR pic.twitter.com/wLCzdONcQc

— Vince Z. Mercogliano (@vzmercogliano) February 26, 2025

Fox – who Laviolette said doesn’t have a timetable for a return, though the Rangers do not believe this is a season-ending injury – left clutching his shoulder. If it does turn out to be a shoulder problem, how realistic is it that Fox will be anywhere near his usual level of effectiveness – which had dropped this season before he got hurt – if he can return at all this season?

Laviolette may be set on trying to shelter Jones as he always has, since the belief factor isn’t high enough for the coach to give him too much responsibility right away. The fact of the matter is, though, that Laviolette is going to have to take at least a small leap of faith with Jones – who has eight points (one goal, seven assists) in 28 games this season with a plus-2 rating in a career-high 16:31 of ice time – after the devastating injury to Fox.

The Rangers don’t just need Jones to play now after being used so sporadically this season. They need him to make a difference immediately, with four games remaining – all at home – before the March 7 deadline.

If Jones and his teammates aren’t able to compensate for the loss of Fox during that stretch, the young blue-liner might find himself getting extensive ice time – likely for a team that’s playing out the string and looking to next season.

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New York Rangers Daily: Important Blueshirts homestand; Mikko Rantanen likely not being traded again

NHL: Toronto Maple Leafs at New York Rangers

Brad Penner-Imagn ImagesBrad Penner-Imagn Images

The New York Rangers largely did what they needed to coming out of the break with a soft schedule, taking four of six points, despite a bad loss to the Buffalo Sabres and plenty of uneven play.

Things get a bit harder Friday at Madison Square Garden. They take a step up in class with the Toronto Maple Leafs coming to town. And the Rangers will do so without their best defenseman, Adam Fox, in the lineup. He’ll be watching from the press box nursing an upper-body injury that landed him on IR for a while.

It’s fair to say that the Rangers need to be far better Friday than they were against the Sabres, Pittsburgh Penguins or even the New York Islanders, whom they thumped 5-1 on Tuesday. The Rangers won that game handedly, despite not getting much from their top players. It’ll be all hands on deck against the Maple Leafs, who are not only good, but motivated since they’re fairly desperate to finish first in the Atlantic Division. Right now, Toronto is one point behind the Florida Panthers but have two games in hand.

Desperate is a word that hasn’t been used often enough when discussing the Rangers on-ice play this season. They could use more urgency and compete in their game, certainly on Friday, but throughout the rest of the regular season.

The Rangers are tied for ninth in the Eastern Conference, four points behind both the Detroit Red Wings and Columbus Blue Jackets, who are tied for the two wild-card spots. After the game Friday, the Rangers play a pair of weaker teams — the Nashville Predators and Islanders again — before facing the top team in the East, the Washington Capitals.

That will conclude an important four-game homestand ahead of the March 7 NHL Trade Deadline. It’s another crucial stretch woven into a string of important games the rest of the way with the Rangers trying to claw their way into the Stanley Cup Playoffs.

Make no mistake, a win Friday would go a long way to strengthening the feeling that these Rangers are indeed a worthy playoff team.

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New York Rangers news

NHL: New York Islanders at New York Rangers

Danny Wild-Imagn Images

The Rangers plan to replace injured defenseman Adam Fox “collectively,” including going with five forwards on the top power-play unit.

After spending the past two months primarily as a healthy scratch, Zac Jones gets his opportunity in the Rangers lineup with Fox injured.

Fox’s upper-body issue spurred our John Kreiser to recall five infamous injuries in Rangers history.

You know who’s playing the best hockey of his young Rangers career? Matt Rempe, that’s who.

Check out Rangers legend Mike Richter and current Blueshirts forward in their new video to promote an NHL-themed clothing line.

NHL news

NHL: Buffalo Sabres at Carolina Hurricanes

James Guillory-Imagn Images

Reports are that the Carolina Hurricanes will hold onto star forward Mikko Rantanen for the rest of the season even is he doesn’t agree to a new contract ahead of the March 7 trade deadline. Rantanen, who was acquired last month from the Colorado Avalanche, is a pending UFA at season’s end.

Rantanen had a goal and assist to lead the Hurricanes past the Buffalo Sabres 5-2.

Trent Frederic is week to week with a lower-body injury but there are reports stating the Boston Bruins pending UFA could still be traded ahead of the March 7 deadline.

The Washington Capitals are the top team in the Eastern Conference and second overall in the NHL behind the Winnipeg Jets, but general manager Chris Patrick said “anything is on the table” when it comes to their plans ahead of the NHL Trade Deadline.

St. Louis Blues captain Brayden Schenn is doing his best to not pay attention to rumors about him being traded ahead of the deadline.

Schenn played his 1,000th NHL game Thursday, a 5-2 win over the Capitals. He and brother Luke are the 10th set of siblings to each play 1,000 games in the League.

Out of respect for a veteran player, the Philadelphia Flyers are reportedly allowing Scott Laughton some input to where he might be traded before the deadline.

Wayne Gretzky’s wife Janet says the criticism he’s received in Canada over his relationship with the U.S. President Donald Trump has “broken his heart.”

Vancouver Canucks defenseman Noah Juulsen is likely out for the season after hernia surgery.

The Canucks let a 2-0 lead slip away and lost 5-2 to the Anaheim Ducks.

The Columbus Blue Jackets pulled even with the Detroit Red Wings for the first wild card in the Eastern Conference after defeating them 5-2.

The Bruins placed forward Oliver Wahlstrom on waivers. Then they went out and dominated the Islanders, only to lose 2-1 when Ilya Sorokin finished with 37 saves for New York.

The Pittsburgh Penguins will have to do without one of their better players this season, forward Michael Bunting, for “a little while” after he had his appendix removed Thursday.

The struggling Penguins rallied from a 3-0 deficit to defeat the Philadelphia Flyers 5-4 in overtime, behind Evgeni Malkin’s four-point night (two goals, two assists).

Watch Malkin score the OT winner against the Flyers.

Speaking of overtime winners, check out this brilliant one by Cole Caufield in the Montreal Canadiens’ 4-3 win against the San Jose Sharks.

The Winnipeg Jets had their franchise-record 11-game winning streak end with a 2-1 loss to the Nashville Predators.

The Florida Panthers won a Stanley Cup Final rematch with the Edmonton Oilers, 4-3, handing the Oilers their fifth consecutive defeat.

Clayton Keller had an NHL career-high five points to lead the Utah Hockey Club to its third straight win, 6-1 over the Minnesota Wild.

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Rangers chase Maple Leafs all night but can’t catch them in disappointing 3-2 loss

NHL: Toronto Maple Leafs at New York Rangers

Wendell Cruz-Imagn ImagesWendell Cruz-Imagn Images

The New York Rangers stepped up in class on Friday night when the Toronto Maple Leafs came to Madison Square Garden. They weren’t quite up to the challenge.

After going 2-1-0 despite playing poorly against the three weakest teams in the Eastern Conference, the Buffalo Sabres, Pittsburgh Penguins and New York Islanders, the Rangers outshot Toronto 35-17 and outplayed the Leafs for long stretches. But they never led, and Matthew Knies’ goal at 6:21 of the third period put the Leafs ahead to stay in a 3-2 victory that moved them into first place in the Atlantic Division.

It was a damaging loss for the Rangers, who remained in a three-way tie for ninth place in the Eastern Conference after failing for the fifth straight time to win three in a row, something they haven’t done since Nov. 14-19. They’re still four points behind the Detroit Red Wings and Columbus Blue Jackets, who own the two wild-card berths entering their NHL Stadium Series game at Ohio Stadium on Saturday. All three teams have played 59 games.

NHL: Toronto Maple Leafs at New York Rangers

Wendell Cruz-Imagn Images

New York was playing catch-up all night after allowing a power-play goal by Oliver Ekman-Larsson 1:47 into the game. Mika Zibanejad tied it with less than six minutes remaining in the period, but Toronto went ahead again 51 seconds into the second period on William Nylander’s unassisted goal.

Zibanejad set up Will Cuylle’s game-tying shorthanded goal 3:47 into the third period. But Toronto went ahead to stay just 2:34 later on Knies’ 22nd goal, then survived a barrage of shots down the stretch by the Rangers.

“When they got a look in the third period, they buried it,” coach Peter Laviolette. “We couldn’t find the third one.”

Igor Shesterkin, coming off back-to-back brilliant efforts in the wins at Pittsburgh and the Islanders, was just OK against the Leafs. He allowed three goals on just 17 shots, matching the fewest the Rangers have allowed this season. He was outplayed by Toronto’s Anthony Stolarz, who finished with 33 saves.

“I felt we deserved a better fate,” Cuylle said.

The Rangers dominated play for most of the night without their best defenseman, Adam Fox, who’s on injured reserve after sustaining an upper-body injury Tuesday in a 5-1 win against the Islanders. However, defenseman K’Andre Miller (lower-body injury sustained vs. Isles) and center J.T. Miller (illness) each dressed and took a regular shift.

Related: Zach Jones getting wish to play at most critical moment of Rangers season

Toronto Maple Leafs 3 – New York Rangers 2​


The Rangers got off to the kind of start that gives coaches nightmares.

Auston Matthews misfired on a wide-open shot from the slot six seconds after the opening face-off, but drew a tripping penalty on Zibanejad 12 seconds later.

Toronto’s five-forward first power-play unit did nothing, but the second unit wasted no time putting the Maple Leafs in front. Max Domi controlled the puck in the left circle and floated a pass that landed right on the stick of Ekman-Larsson near the top of the right circle. The veteran defenseman rocketed a shot off the near post and into the net at 1:47 to give Toronto a 1-0 lead.

The Rangers tightened up after that, controlling play and holding Toronto without a shot on goal for more than eight minutes before Shesterkin had to make a big stop on Mitch Marner in the crease. New York nearly tied it at 10:41 by using the same strategy that was so effective in the 5-1 road win against the New York Islanders on Tuesday – going to the net and looking for tips and rebounds. Vincent Trocheck got a piece of Urho Vaakanainen’s shot from the left point, but the tip went just wide.

Zibanejad atoned for his penalty when he did tie the game at 13:08, again using the go-to-the-net strategy. J.T. Miller had a shot blocked, but the puck came to Will Borgen, who fired from the top of the right circle. Zibanejad got a stick on the puck and deflected it past Stolarz for his 13th goal of the season, extending his point streak to five games.

Borgs with the shot + Mika redirects it. pic.twitter.com/2tc9tkUsGy

— New York Rangers (@NYRangers) March 1, 2025

“It was a great heads-up play by Borgs,” Zibanejad told MSG Networks during the first intermission.

The Rangers dominated play for the rest of the period but couldn’t get another puck past Stolarz before time ran out, leaving the score tied 1-1 despite New York’s 14-5 lead in shots on goal, 29-11 advantage in attempts and, according to Natural Stat trick, a 9-3 edge in high-danger scoring chances.

Related: Mike Richter remains bullish on Rangers despite struggles

Toronto struck for another early goal to begin the second period after a bad line change enabled Nylander to go in alone on Shesterkin. Though Vaakanainen disrupted the shot and the puck trickled wide, Nylander got to it first and slid the puck back into the crease, where Shesterkin inadvertently knocked it into his own net at the 51-second mark. The original call of no goal was quickly overturned by video review, leaving Toronto ahead 2-1.

New York killed off Ryan Lindgren’s interference penalty at 1:34 and nearly tied it at 6:20 when Trocheck made a terrific move to sneak through the defense and get off a quick shot. Stolarz was surprised but made the save and covered.

NHL: Toronto Maple Leafs at New York Rangers

Wendell Cruz-Imagn Images

The Rangers got their first power play at 13:10 when Bobby McMann was called for holding Braden Schneider just seconds after Schneider helped break up his dash to the net. The Rangers did little offensively until they were called for too many men at 14:54.

Jonny Brodzinski, coming off the first two-goal game of his career against the Islanders, nearly tied it with 50 seconds left. His rip from the right of the slot beat Stolarz cleanly but hit the crossbar.

John Tavares’ interference penalty with 3.1 seconds left gave the Rangers their second power play, and J.T. Miller forced Stolarz to make a big save just before the buzzer went off, keeping the score 2-1 through 40 minutes.

The Rangers didn’t generate much during the power play, then gave the Leafs their fourth man advantage when Sam Carrick was called for cross-checking. But instead of falling behind by two goals, the Rangers tied it on Cuylle’s shorthanded goal.

COOLS WITH A BEAUTY. pic.twitter.com/9Nb5rmiq3P

— New York Rangers (@NYRangers) March 1, 2025

Cuylle started the play by picking off a pass by Nicholas Robertson in the Rangers’ zone and broke out 2-on-1 with Zibanejad. They played give-and-go, with Cuylle taking Zibanejad’s feed and beating Stolarz with a terrific backhand deke to make it 2-2.

Trocheck nearly put the Rangers ahead less than 20 seconds later when he beat Stolarz but rang the post.

Knies then put Toronto ahead for the third time by converting a pass from Matthews after a terrific play by Marner, who jumped up to knock down a rim-around by Shesterkin behind the net. This time, the Rangers couldn’t find the equalizer.

The Rangers have a rare Saturday off before playing back-to-back home games against the Nashville Predators on Sunday and the Islanders on Monday.

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New York Rangers Daily: Blueshirts deserved better; Predators consider Ryan O’Reilly trade

NHL: Toronto Maple Leafs at New York Rangers

Wendell Cruz-Imagn ImagesWendell Cruz-Imagn Images

Go figure.

The New York Rangers played their best all-around game since returning from the 4 Nations Face-Off break Friday, and did so against a legit Stanley Cup contender. Yet they lost 3-2 to the Toronto Maple Leafs at Madison Square Garden.

This after absolutely stealing a 5-3 win in Pittsburgh against the Penguins last Sunday, a game they were run out of the building over the first 40 minutes.

Go figure.

A frustrating loss Friday when the Rangers were the better team and deserved a better result.

There are no moral victories this time of year, with the Rangers remaining tied for ninth in the Eastern Conference and still four points back of the two wild card teams as the calendar flips to March. But if the Rangers play like that the majority of their remaining 23 games, they should secure a postseason playoff berth.

Rangers coach Peter Laviolette shortened his bench and leaned heavily on his top-nine forwards, and even more so on his stars. Vincent Trocheck logged 25:52 TOI. Mike Zibanejad, who had a goal and assist, played 24:44. Artemi Panarin was out there 24:01.

The Rangers best — minus defenseman Adam Fox, who missed his first game with an upper-body injury — were on the puck all night, leading to 78-39 attempts advantage and 35-17 lead in shots on goal.

But they lost.

To cover for Fox’s absence, Laviolette deployed five forwards on the top power-play unit. He might want to re-think that strategy. But giving fairly equal ice time to each of the six defensemen instead of leaning heavily one one pair with their top d-man out worked well. K’Andre Miller — five giveaways! — led the defense corps with 23:30 TOI. But the other defensemen were between 16 and 19 minutes roughly. That worked.

Not too much to tweak Sunday, when they host the Nashville Predators. Just the result.

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New York Rangers news

NHL: Toronto Maple Leafs at New York Rangers

Wendell Cruz-Imagn Images

Here are three Rangers takeaways from the loss Friday, including needing to “start on time.”

Rangers legend Mike Richter told Forever Blueshirts that the current team can definitely grow from the adversity they faced this season, saying “these challenges galvanize you.”

They may be without the injured Fox, but the Rangers remain “hungry” to battle for a playoff spot in the East.

Louis Domingue made 25 saves and topped six of seven shots in the shootout to lead the Hartford Wolf Pack to their second straight win, 4-3 against Springfield.

NHL news

NHL: New Jersey Devils at Nashville Predators

Steve Roberts-Imagn Images

As we reported Friday, the Islanders may not get star forward Mathew Barzal back from an “unfortunate injury” before the season ends. They most certainly won’t have him in the lineup Monday at Madison Square Garden against the Rangers.

Kirby Dach had knee surgery and the Montreal Canadiens center is out for the season.

Cole Sillinger is out indefinitely with a lower-body injury for the Columbus Blue Jackets.

The Blue Jackets will host the 2025 Stadium Series at Ohio Stadium against the Detroit Red Wings on Saturday. Those teams are tied with 66 points and own the two wild-card spots in the Eastern Conference.

Pierre LeBrun reports that the Nashville Predators will consider trading captain Ryan O’Reilly, but only if their price is met. He adds that the Predators are looking to move forward Gustav Nyquist.

There are reports that Buffalo Sabres forward J.J. Peterka has become a hot trade deadline target for some teams.

Ottawa Senators captain Brady Tkachuk is expected to return to the lineup Saturday against the San Jose Sharks.

Defenseman Tyler Tucker signed a two-year, $1.85 million contract to remain with the St. Louis Blues.

The Colorado Avalanche got two goals from Ross Colton and handed the Minnesota Wild their third straight loss, 5-2.

Logan Stankoven scored twice and the Dallas Stars remained hot (9-2-1) with a 6-2 win against the Los Angeles Kings.

Watch Sam Steel score a breakaway short-handed goal for the Stars against the Kings.

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What’s next for Rangers ahead of NHL Trade Deadline after making Ryan Lindgren deal with Avalanche

NHL: New York Rangers at Buffalo Sabres

Timothy T. Ludwig-Imagn ImagesTimothy T. Ludwig-Imagn Images

The other shoe finally dropped Saturday, when the New York Rangers cut ties with respected veterans Ryan Lindgren and Jimmy Vesey in a trade with the Colorado Avalanche.

It’s been long expected that neither would make it past the March 7 NHL Trade Deadline with the Rangers. In fact, it appeared Lindgren’s fate was sealed last summer, when he signed a one-year, $4.5 million contract that walked him straight into unrestricted free agency this summer.

The Rangers did not wish to invest in Lindgren long term, considering his style of play, smaller physical stature and penchant for injury. With the Rangers on the fringe of the playoffs and not exactly a Presidents’ Trophy juggernaut like last season, Lindgren was even more expendable — so it was time to recoup assets for a player the Rangers were not going to re-sign.

Ditto for Vesey, who was a less-valuable piece this season than Lindgren and easy to replace.

#NYR Trade: pic.twitter.com/Wggci81n2L

— New York Rangers (@NYRangers) March 1, 2025

The Rangers retained half of Lindgren’s salary cap hit and were able to get a second- and fourth-round pick from the Avalanche in the 2025 NHL Draft, restocking their diminished pool of picks. They also acquired veteran defenseman Calvin de Haan, who’s on an expiring contract, and 24-year-old forward Juuso Parssinen.

So, with the NHL Trade Deadline six days away and the playoff race in full swing, what’s next for the Rangers?

Related: ‘That was a disaster’: The one trade Neil Smith regrets most from Rangers tenure

What’s next for Rangers after making Ryan Lindgren trade with Avalanche


So, here’s the lay of the land for the Rangers ahead of the March 7 trade deadline and further down the road.

Rangers plan for Calvin de Haan, Juuso Parssinen

NHL: Edmonton Oilers at Colorado Avalanche

Isaiah J. Downing-Imagn Images

De Haan is a left-shot defenseman who will take Lindgren’s spot in the lineup, perhaps as soon as Sunday when the Rangers host the Nashville Predators. We will have to see how de Haan’s role changes when Lindgren’s long-time defense partner Adam Fox returns from an upper-body injury. However, that’s down the road since Fox just landed on IR this week and is expected to be out a while.

Lindgren skated on a pairing with Urho Vaakanainen in a 3-2 loss to the Toronto Maple Leafs on Friday, so figure de Haan starts there. When Fox, a righty, returns, Vaakanainen is clear to slot back to his natural left side. At that point, coach Peter Laviolette must decide who among de Haan, Vaakanainen or Zac Jones comes out of the lineup and who he pairs with Fox.

The 33-year-old is a placeholder to help the Rangers get through the rest of this season. De Haan is a UFA at season’s end and nearing the end of his career — this is his fifth team in the past four seasons. He’s not returning to Broadway next season.

Parssinen is a 2019 seventh-round draft pick (by Nashville) who’s played 126 games with the Predators and Avalanche. The 24-year-old is a big (6-foot-3, 212 pounds) center who could get a look on the third line if Mika Zibanejad remains on the wing with J.T. Miller.

He’s never scored more than eight goals in a season and has 11 points (four goals, seven assists) in 37 games this season. Parssinen is a restricted free agent with arbitration rights at the end of the season, but should be back since he provides much-needed organizational depth at the center position.

Reilly Smith’s future with Rangers

NHL: Toronto Maple Leafs at New York Rangers

Wendell Cruz-Imagn Images

The Rangers showed their hand Saturday. They’re not punting on this season, but the priority is to maximize what they can get for players who are not part of the future moving forward. Now that Lindgren and Vesey are gone, that leaves Reilly Smith as a pending UFA on the roster, who won’t be re-signed this summer.

Smith’s been a good soldier this season, playing up and down the lineup and on both special teams. The 33-year-old has 10 goals and 29 points in 58 games this season, helped the Vegas Golden Knights win the Stanley Cup in 2023 and could be a nice fit on some contender’s third line.

The Rangers, who are better off giving minutes to rookie Brennan Othmann down the stretch, would love to land another second-round pick by trading Smith. But a third-rounder seems more likely. You have to figure the Rangers will take whatever they can get for Smith before the deadline.

Big summer awaits Rangers


Unless the Rangers can land a younger coveted player, someone like Buffalo Sabres defenseman Bowen Byram let’s say, they’re unlikely to make another major trade before the deadline. Their big pre-deadline deal was acquiring J.T. Miller on Jan. 31. If they can somehow move injured veteran forward Chris Kreider, the Rangers would probably do it in a heartbeat. But that feels unlikely.

Keep in mind, the Rangers made four significant trades this season, not waiting until the deadline to do all of their business. Gone are Lindgren, Vesey, Jacob Trouba, Kaapo Kakko, Filip Chytil and Victor Mancini. In are Miller, de Haan, Parssinen, Vaakanainen and Will Borgen.

So, the deadline might be low-key for the Rangers after this trade with the Avalanche. But this summer? That’s a different story.

Well positioned financially and with the salary cap set to rise significantly, the Rangers should be major players in free agency. While forwards Mitch Marner and Mikko Rantanen are juicy options, the Rangers could set their sights — in free agency or via trade — on a top-four defenseman, perhaps someone to pair with Fox for years to come.

Perhaps a Zibanejad trade would help bring back able bodies to further bolster what’s sure to be a new-look Rangers lineup next season.

Hands off

NHL: Preseason-New York Islanders at New York Rangers

Danny Wild-Imagn Images

There’s zero chance the Rangers are trading either Othmann or Gabe Perreault. In fact, there’s a better chance each top prospect is in the Rangers lineup near the end of the season than traded before the deadline.

Othmann, New York’s first-round pick in 2021, was recently recalled from AHL Hartford and impressed in a 5-1 win against the Islanders. Perreault, the 2023 first-round selection, is starring for Boston College but could turn pro after his sophomore season ends this spring.

Playoff chase


They won’t invest heavily in trying to earn a berth in the Stanley Cup Playoffs for the fourth straight season, but the it’s not like the Rangers are going to quit now with 23 games to go and just four points out of a wild-card spot entering Saturday’s games.

Fox’s injury and an iffy defense corps won’t make it easy, but the Rangers are good enough and talented enough to make the playoffs. Don’t count on them making a deep run if they do make it, of course, but the playoff chase remains on.

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Rangers vs. Predators: 3 things to watch for as final week before trade deadline starts

NHL: Nashville Predators at New York Rangers

Wendell Cruz-Imagn ImagesWendell Cruz-Imagn Images

The New York Rangers are still within striking distance of a wild-card spot in the Eastern Conference, but it hardly seems to be a compelling argument for general manager Chris Drury to add major pieces by the March 7 NHL Trade Deadline.

The Rangers seem to be intent on dealing away players on expiring contracts. A home game against the Nashville Predators on Sunday will be their first since trading Ryan Lindgren and Jimmy Vesey to the Colorado Avalanche on Saturday for veteran defenseman Calvin de Hann, center Juuso Parssinen and second- and fourth-round picks in the 2025 draft.

First look at new #NYR Calvin de Haan pic.twitter.com/TNCMyVDB3s

— Mollie Walker (@MollieeWalkerr) March 2, 2025

The Rangers traded Lindgren and Vesey a day after a 3-2 loss to the Toronto Maple Leafs that dropped them to a pedestrian 5-6-0 in their past 11 games following a 10-game point streak from Jan. 5-23. The point streak put the Rangers (29-26-4, 62 points) within one point of the second wild-card spot and ahead of every other team below the cutoff. But now they are four points out and tied for 12th place in the Eastern Conference.

The Rangers have 23 games left to make up the deficit and will do so while trying to cope with the loss of Adam Fox, who will miss his second game Sunday in what likely will be a lengthy absence after he fell on his left shoulder in the third period of a 5-1 win over the New York Islanders on Tuesday.

The Rangers are coming off a game where they had little to show for 35 shots on goal. Though Mika Zibanejad and Will Cuylle scored tying goals, little mistakes doomed the Rangers, notably a misplay behind the net by Igor Shesterkin leading to the Maple Leafs getting the game winner in the third period.

The Rangers are a major disappointment and face a strong possibility of missing the postseason for the first time in four seasons; but the Predators (21-31-7, 49 points) are well out of the playoff race in the Western Conference after handing out three massive free-agent contracts this past offseason. They are easily the League’s biggest disappointment in 2024-25.

Nashville has the third-fewest points in NHL and is 16 points out of the final playoff spot in the West despite adding Steven Stamkos, Jonathan Marchessault and former Rangers defenseman Brady Skjei on the first day of free agency. They were 10 points out following a five-game winning streak last month but are 3-9-0 in their past 12 games and after a string of poor defensive performances.

The Predators allowed three goals in the first period when they were outshot 19-3 during a 7-4 loss to the Islanders on Saturday. Nashville ended its latest loss by allowing an empty-net goal to Islanders goaltender Ilya Sorokin, who beat Shesterkin in a quest to join ‘goalie goal’ list, albeit when Stamkos sent the puck into his own net.

One of Nashville’s better defensive showings was a 2-0 home win over the Rangers on Dec. 17 when Juuse Saros notched a 25-save shutout. Saros allowed six goals on 36 shots Saturday and the Predators will likely start backup Justus Annunen, who has allowed 18 goals in his past four appearances.

Related: Rangers trade grades after acquiring Calvin de Haan, Juuso Parssinen from Avalanche

3 things to watch for when Rangers host Predators

NHL: New York Rangers at Nashville Predators

Steve Roberts-Imagn Images

1. No more 5-forward power-play unit


With Fox out, the Rangers experimented with a five-forward group on PP1 against the Maple Leafs on Friday. The Rangers were 0-for-3 with four shots on goal, using Alexis Lafreniere, J.T. Miller, Artemi Panarin, Vincent Trocheck and Zibanejad in the top group.

That’ll change Sunday. At the morning skate, defenseman Zac Jones slotted onto the top unit to play with Zibanejad, Miller, Panarin and Trocheck. It makes sense to let Jones man the point and quarterback the power play. He’s a skilled offensive player with good vision and instincts. Why not let him play to his strength?

On Sunday the Rangers face a team which has allowed a power-play goal in 14 of its past 19 games. Could be a chance for the Rangers — two power-play goals in their past seven games and 20th overall in the NHL (20.7 percent) this season — to get untracked when a man up.

2. What’s happened to Steven Stamkos?


Stamkos is experiencing a down season in the first of a four-year, $32 million contract, entering Sunday with 17 goals and 33 points in 59 games. Barring a massive hot streak, Stamkos is likely to finish with under 30 goals in any 82-game season not disrupted by injury since finishing with 27 goals in 2017-18.

Stamkos has not scored a goal nor recorded a point in 12 straight games since Jan. 23 and was pointless in the month of February. It is the longest scoreless drought ever for the League’s third-leading goal scorer among active players.

On Saturday, Stamkos was on the ice for three even-strength goals in 17:31. He has been on the ice for 15 even-strength goals in his scoreless drought.

Stamkos is two shy of 600 career assists and has 19 goals and 43 points in 43 regular-season games against the Rangers.

3. The new guys


Parssinen and de Haan will each be in the lineup Sunday to make their Rangers debuts after taking part in the morning skate. Parssinen practiced on the third line with Brennan Othmann and Jonny Bordzinski on the wings. De Haan paired with Jones on defense, skating on his off (right) side.

Reportedly coveted by the Rangers for a while, Parssinen scored two goals and had four assists this season with the Avalanche, who acquired the 24-year-old in December from the Predators. He impressed in Colorado’s two games against the Rangers and scored on a quick shot from the slot in the second period at MSG on Jan. 26.

Another fun note about the newest Rangers forward is that he scored in his NHL debut for the Predators against the Blueshirts on Nov. 12, 2022.

Here’s a closer look at Pärssinen. Cuylle gets the edge in these battles. #NYR pic.twitter.com/xjq5t9xYc3

— Vince Z. Mercogliano (@vzmercogliano) March 2, 2025

Like Lindgren, de Haan is an unrestricted free agent after the season. He also is a familiar face to the Rangers since he played his first six seasons with the Islanders, including 2016-17 when he posted career highs with five goals and 20 assists.

The 33-year-old is a placeholder until the Rangers make bigger moves to bolster their defense corps during the offseason.

Veteran forward Reilly Smith won’t dress for the Rangers on Sunday due to roster management issues — meaning he will be traded soon. Chris Kreider landed on IR Saturday with an upper-body issue.

New York Rangers projected lineup


Panarin – Trocheck – Lafreniere

Cuylle – J.T. Miller- Zibanejad

Othmann – Parssinen – Brodzinski

Berard – Carrick – Rempe

K. Miller – Borgen

Vaakanainen – Schneider

Jones – de Haan

Quick

Shesterkin

Rangers vs. Predators: When, where, what time, how to watch


Who: New York Rangers vs. Nashville Predators

When: Sunday, March 2 at 7:00 p.m. ET

Where: Madison Square Garden

How to watch: MSG2

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Jonathan Quick shutout leads Rangers to convincing 4-0 win against Predators

NHL: Nashville Predators at New York Rangers

Brad Penner-Imagn ImagesBrad Penner-Imagn Images

In a game the New York Rangers had to win Sunday night at Madison Square Garden, they did in convincing fashion, shutting out the woeful Nashville Predators 4-0.

Playing his 800th NHL game, Jonathan Quick earned his 63rd career shutout and third this season. The 39-year-old goalie finished with 35 saves, including a whopping 20 in the third period.

Artemi Panarin and J.T. Miller each had a goal and assist for the Rangers (30-26-4), who’ve won three of their past four games and six of nine. Mika Zibanejad extended his point streak to six games with two assists and defenseman Calvin de Haan picked up an assist in his Rangers debut after he and Juuso Parssinen were acquired from the Colorado Avalanche on Saturday.

J.T. Miller doubles the Rangers' lead! pic.twitter.com/yFwmyJ4BcM

— Rangers Videos (@SNYRangers) March 3, 2025

K’Andre Miller and Brett Berard scored New York’s other goals.

With the win, the Rangers are now tied for ninth in the Eastern Conference, two points behind the Detroit Red Wings for the second eild card, with a game in hand.

The Predators (21-32-7) have lost four of five and are 3-10-0 in their past 13 games.

Justus Annunen didn’t get much help from his teammates but was solid in goal, finishing with 30 saves.

Related: Rangers trade grades after acquiring Calvin de Haan, Juuso Parssinen from Avalanche

New York Rangers 4 – Nashville Predators 0

NHL: Nashville Predators at New York Rangers

Brad Penner-Imagn Images

At one point this season, the Rangers and Predators were in a neck-and-neck race to be the most disappointing team in the NHL. But the Rangers righted themselves after the New Year and are in thick of the playoff chase in the Eastern Conference. However, the Predators continue to be stunningly bad, incredibly with the third-worst record in the NHL.

The difference between the teams now was clear Sunday night. The Rangers were better in every facet of the game, right from the opening puck drop. If not for Annunen, this one could’ve been an early blowout for the Rangers.

What stood out in a big way was how the Rangers’ stars so completely outplayed the Predators best players, especially the first two periods. It began in the first period, when Panarin scored the game-opening goal and had numerous other prime chances included with his four shots on goal. It continued in the second when Miller and Zibanejad each had two points and Panarin added two more shots on goal and a primary assist.

Steven Stamkos, Jonathan Marchessault and Ryan O’Reilly were ghosts, except for one two-shot sequence by Marchesseault late in the second when he charged the Rangers net and was denied twice by Quick.

Panarin’s goal in the first period was a beauty, aided and abetted by a brutal defensive sequence by the Predators, who had four players on one side of the ice and another stuck in the offensive zone, when Panarin raced up right wing and uncontested hammered a booming slap shot over Annunen’s glove at 8:32. It was his 24th goal of the season and first in seven games. He also reached 60 points for the fourth consecutive season.

Artemi Panarin's not going to miss many of those when he's left wide open 🍞

📺: @Sportsnet or stream on Sportsnet+ ➡️ https://t.co/4KjbdjVctF pic.twitter.com/16kAByN9z9

— NHL (@NHL) March 3, 2025

Alexis Lafreniere made a gorgeous cross-ice pass that sprung Panarin. And de Haan picked up an assist in his Rangers debut, starting the play with a takeaway in his own end followed by a quick outlet to Lafreniere.

The Rangers outshot the Predators 15-6 in a first period likely best remembered for a rousing fight between Matt Rempe and Andreas Englund at 4:07. Rempe got in on the forecheck and flattened Nick Blankenburg with a high elbow. Englund jumped in for his shaken teammate and the 6-foot-4 defenseman went toe to toe with the 6-foot-9 Rempe in a spirited fight. Each landed some heavy blows and Rempe ended up with a bloody mouth and nose. Englund was cut on his nose.

Matt Rempe catches Nick Blankenburg up high and Andreas Englund takes exception 😳👊 pic.twitter.com/upn5OQNz7W

— Gino Hard (@GinoHard_) March 3, 2025

Rempe received two minutes for elbowing and five for fighting. Englund accumulated 17 minutes in penalties for being the instigator.

J.T. Miller made it 2-0 with a power-play goal 1:02 into the second period. Panarin stared down Annunen, faked a shot and made a pretty pass to Miller for an easy tap-in.

The other Miller, K’Andre, finished a rush with J.T. at 3:25 to make it 3-0. It was a smooth sequence, starting with a Zibanejad pass out of his own end to spring J.T. Miller. It continued with a soft touch feed to K’Andre Miller. And ended with a brilliant finish when Miller roofed an in-tight backhand shot at full speed for his fifth goal of the season.

K'Andre Miller takes J.T. Miller's pass and roofs the backhander to put the Rangers up by 3!#NYR pic.twitter.com/YesiCNEek7

— Hockey Daily 365 l NHL Highlights & News (@HockeyDaily365) March 3, 2025

Late in the second period, the Rangers nearly made it 4-0, but Jonny Brodzinski was robbed by Annunen on a 2-on-1 break.

Quick had to make a pair of sensational acrobatic saves to preserve the shutout early in the third, first against Blankenburg in the opening minutes and later with a scorpion save against Marchessault.

With 4:09 to play, Quick robbed Marchessault again, flashing his right pad to deny a point-blank putback.

Berard, recalled from Hartford of the American Hockey League on Saturday, made it 4-0 at 16:56 with his fourth goal in 20 games with the Rangers this season. Sam Carrick won a puck battle in the left-wing corner, then sent a pass to Berard between the circles, and the rookie wired his shot past Annunen.

Quick brought it home from there, moving within one shutout of tying Rangers legend Henrik Lundqvist (64) for 17th place in NHL history.

Igor Shesterkin will be back in goal, though, when the Rangers have a quick turnaround and host the Islanders at MSG on Monday.

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New York Rangers week ahead includes 2 games before trade deadline, crucial weekend back to back

NHL: Ottawa Senators at New York Rangers

Dennis Schneidler-Imagn ImagesDennis Schneidler-Imagn Images

The New York Rangers have two games left before the NHL Trade Deadline arrives Friday, then a crucial weekend back-to-back set against two of the teams they’re battling for one of the two Eastern Conference wild-card playoff berths.

Newcomers Calvin de Haan and Juuso Parssinen were in the lineup Sunday when the Rangers blanked the Nashville Predators, the 30th-place team in the overall standings, 4-0. Jonathan Quick made 35 saves, 20 in the third period, to earn his 63rd career shutout in his 800th NHL game.

The win moved the Rangers (30-26-4) into a three-way tie for ninth in the East with the Ottawa Senators and Boston Bruins. Each enters the week with 64 points, two behind the Detroit Red Wings, who hold the second wild card, and four in back of the Columbus Blue Jackets, the first wild card.

De Haan, who was acquired with Parssinen and two 2025 draft picks on Saturday for defenseman Ryan Lindgren and forward Jimmy Vesey, had an assist, six hits and was plus-1 against Nashville in his Rangers debut. Parssinen didn’t have a point but was credited with six hits against the team that selected him in the seventh round of the 2019 draft.

The veteran defenseman de Haan will get his turn to face the team that drafted him when the New York Islanders come to Madison Square Garden on Monday. The Isles took de Haan with the No. 12 pick in the 2009 draft; the Rangers are the sixth team he’s played for since leaving Long Island after the 2017-18 season.

NHL: Nashville Predators at New York Rangers

Brad Penner-Imagn Images

The Rangers play their last game before the deadline when they host the Washington Capitals on Wednesday. After two days off, they visit Ottawa on Saturday afternoon and come home to host the Blue Jackets on Sunday.

Who’s hot​


J.T. Miller had a goal and an assist Sunday, and is filling the score sheet since returning from the 4 Nations Face-Off. Miller has four goals and four assists during a five-game point streak and 12 points (six goals, six assists) since coming to New York in a trade with the Vancouver Canucks on Jan. 31. He’s been everything the Rangers could have asked for.

Mika Zibanejad has thrived playing alongside Miller. He had two assists against Nashville, giving him three goals and six assists during a six-game point streak and 15 points in 10 games since Miller’s arrival, most in the NHL since Feb. 1.

Who’s not​


Alexis Lafreniere ended a five-game streak without a point by picking up an assist on Artemi Panarin’s goal against Nashville. But his goal-less streak reached eight games.

Related: Rangers trade grades after acquiring Calvin de Haan, Juuso Parssinen from Avalanche

Rangers lookahead this week includes …


Another dose of home games, with three of four contests at MSG. From March 2-9, the Rangers will play five games in eight days – four of them at the Garden.

New York Islanders at Rangers (March 3, 7 p.m. ET; MSG/NHL Network)


The Rangers go for two wins in a week against their archrival after an easy 5-1 victory at UBS Arena last Tuesday.

Igor Shesterkin is in line to start after a sensational 36-save performance against the Islanders last week, followed by an ordinary 14-save night in the 3-2 loss to the Toronto Maple Leafs three nights later. His Russian buddy, Ilya Sorokin rebounded from an awful showing (five goals on 11 shots) against the Rangers with a 38-save, 2-1 road win against the Boston Bruins on Thursday before one-upping Shesterkin by being credited with a goal in the Islanders’ 7-4 win against Nashville on Saturday. Sorokin was the last Islander to touch the puck before Nashville’s Steven Stamkos missed his point man with a pass and the puck slid into the empty net.

NHL: New York Rangers at New York Islanders

Dennis Schneidler-Imagn Images

This is a big game for the Rangers, who could pull even in points with the Red Wings for the second wild card. But it’s even bigger for the Islanders, who are 14th in the East, five points out of the second wild card and three points behind their big-city rivals. They host the League-leading Winnipeg Jets on Tuesday, so a loss at the Garden could persuade GM Lou Lamoriello to be a seller ahead of the trade deadline.

Washington Capitals at Rangers (March 5, 7:30 p.m.; MSG/TNT/truTV)


The Gr8 chase makes its only stop at the Garden this season, with the Rangers trying to avoid being swept by the Eastern Conference leaders.

Alex Ovechkin moved within 11 goals of passing Wayne Gretzky’s career record of 894 when he scored Washington’s lone goal in a 3-1 home loss to the Tampa Bay Lightning on Saturday. Ovi has five goals in his past four games and 45 in 75 games against the Rangers since he entered the NHL in 2005.

NHL: New York Rangers at Washington Capitals

Geoff Burke-Imagn Images

Three of those goals came in Washington’s two victories against New York this season. They Capitals outscored the Rangers 12-7, including a 7-4 win in their last meeting on Jan. 4. But the Capitals have hit some bumps in the road for the first time this season; they enter the week on a three-game losing streak.

Shesterkin is 8-5-0 in his career against Washington with a 2.70 goals-against average and .916 save percentage despite allowing four goals in a 5-3 loss at Capital One Arena on Oct. 29.

Rangers at Ottawa Senators (March 8, 12:30 p.m. MSG)


The Rangers go for a sweep of the three-game season series after defeating the Senators twice at the Garden, allowing just one goal in the process.

The Senators got hot after losing 5-0 at the Garden on Jan. 21 and held a playoff position through the 4 Nations break. But they lost five in a row until defeating the San Jose Sharks 5-3 on Saturday and enter the week tied for ninth place in the East with the Rangers and Bruins; each has 64 points, two behind Detroit.

NHL: Ottawa Senators at New York Rangers

Dennis Schneidler-Imagn Images

Artemi Panarin has excelled against the Senators during his career with 30 points (11 goals, 19 assists) in 24 games. Ottawa’s Brady Tkachuk, who returned Saturday after being injured when playing for Team USA in the 4 Nations event, has 17 points (eight goals, nine assists) in 17 games against the Rangers.

Columbus Blue Jackets at Rangers (March 9, 6 p.m. ET; MSG)


This is the first of two games in a seven-day span against the Blue Jackets, a team the Rangers have defeated in their first two meetings this season. Columbus begins the week holding the first wild card in the East after winning its first four games after the 4 Nations break, including a 5-3 victory against Detroit in their NHL Stadium Series game at Ohio Stadium on Saturday.

Their previous meeting at the Garden on Jan. 18 was scoreless through 65 minutes before Vincent Trocheck scored the only goal in the shootout for a 1-0 Rangers victory. The shutout was Shesterkin’s third in eight career games against Columbus; he’s 6-2-0 lifetime with a 1.65 GAA and .942 save percentage.

NHL: Columbus Blue Jackets at New York Rangers

Brad Penner-Imagn Images

Quick has also been superb against Columbus, with a 20-9-1 record, a 2.46 GAA, a .905 save percentage and two shutouts. The 38-year-old played most of his career in the Western Conference with the Los Angeles Kings; his 20 wins against the Blue Jackets are the most he’s had against any Eastern Conference team.

The Rangers also won 4-3 at Columbus on Feb. 8. They’ll be back at Nationwide Arena on March 15 to complete the season series.

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Rangers blank Islanders 4-0 for second straight shutout victory

NHL: New York Islanders at New York Rangers

Brad Penner-Imagn ImagesBrad Penner-Imagn Images

Monday at Madison Square Garden, it was different goalie, same result for the New York Rangers. They shut out the New York Islanders 4-0 behind the work of Igor Shesterkin one night after blanking the Nashville Predators 4-0 with Jonathan Quick in net.

Shesterkin only had to make 20 saves — eight in the first period, six in each of the final two — for his fourth shutout of the season and 19th of his career as the Rangers turned in one of their most complete defensive performances of the season. They blocked 22 shots and allowed only 14 scoring chances all game, per Natural Stat Trick.

SHESTY’S TURN. pic.twitter.com/6o8NeqnGQp

— New York Rangers (@NYRangers) March 4, 2025

The consecutive shutout victories lifted the Rangers (31-26-4) into a tie points-wise (66) with the Detroit Red Wings for the second wild card in the Eastern Conference. The Red Wings have played one fewer game than the Rangers, who’ve won four of their past five games and seven of 10.

Will Cuylle, J.T. Miller and Artemi Panarin each had a goal an assist in the win. Will Borgen scored their other goal and Zac Jones pick up an assist in his 100th NHL game.

The Islanders (27-26-7) lost for the third time in three games against the Rangers this season. They had won two in a row after losing 5-1 to the Rangers at UBS Arena last Tuesday. With 22 games remaining on their schedule, the Islanders are five points out of the second wild card but have seven teams to pass in the standings.

Ilya Sorokin allowed three goals on 26 shots, and Panarin’s goal was scored into an empty net.

Related: Rangers ‘trending in right direction’ after slow start coming out of 4 Nations break

New York Rangers 4 – New York Islanders 0

NHL: New York Islanders at New York Rangers

Brad Penner-Imagn Images

Good fortune hasn’t been a hallmark for the Rangers this season. But it certainly was Monday in the first period against the Islanders. The different examples of things going their way directly led to them taking a 2-0 lead into the first intermission.

The first came at 11:46, after it appeared Anders Lee scored the game-opening goal for the Islanders. Lee beat Shesterkin with a sneaky shot from near the right corner, the puck hitting Shesterkin’s pads and caroming into the back of the net for what looked like the Islanders captain’s 24th goal.

But not so fast. The Rangers challenged that the play was offsides and video review upheld the challenge. Islanders center Casey Cizikas was a hair over the blue line ahead of the puck on the zone entry, so the goal came off the scoreboard.

The Rangers responded with the actual game-opening goal at 15:03, one that came off a fluky and fortuitous bounce for them. Jones sent a shot toward the net that deflected off an Islanders stick and then hit Cuylle in the helmet to redirect past a surprised Sorokin to make it 1-0.

Cuylle actually turned his head trying not to get hit by the puck, failed and was rewarded with his 17th goal of the season, second most on the Rangers.

Will Cuylle taking "use your head" literally 😳 pic.twitter.com/yyywHMmMkV

— B/R Open Ice (@BR_OpenIce) March 4, 2025

Then with under a minute left in the period, Borgen’s short-handed shot deflected off Adam Boqvist’s stick and shot straight up over Sorokin’s shoulder and bar down to make it 2-0.

It was the 11th shorty this season scored by the Rangers, second most in the NHL, and was a neat looking play that started with Cuylle pushing the puck out to center while absorbing a big check by Islanders defenseman Noah Dobson. Sam Carrick carried the puck into the offensive zone, dropped it to the trailing Borgen and his shot fortunately was deflected up and over Sorokin for his fourth goal of the season.

Will Borgen MISSILE pic.twitter.com/cYfeOWOKUX

— Jonny Lazarus (@JLazzy23) March 4, 2025

Just three minutes prior, Borgen limped off the ice after blocking Brock Nelson’s snap shot off the rush. But he never missed a shift and scored the big goal with 44.9 seconds remaining in the period.

The scoreless second period was a low-event affair, not dissimilar from the first period, just without any big breaks. The Islanders hit the crossbar at 10:30 of the second and Rangers defenseman Braden Schneider also caught iron after he wired a long wrist shot past Sorokin with 90 seconds remaining in the period.

Shesterkin, who faced only 14 shots over the first 40 minutes, made a terrific read and save on a cross-crease pass to J.G. Pageau that was deflected into his midsection for his best stop in the second.

The Islanders had a rare rush opportunity 3:20 in the third period when Kyle Palmieri beat Urho Vaakanainen with a power move, but his shot hit the outside of the net with Shesterkin scrambling across the blue paint.

That was a big miss because Miller scored for the Rangers on the next shift. So, instead of 2-1, it was 3-0 Rangers.

The Islanders turned the puck over at center ice and Panarin chipped the puck over the blue line on right wing to Miller, who broke in 2-on-1. Miller looked off the defenseman and goalie and then snapped a shot that beat Sorokin stick side at 3:43.

J.T. ON THE FLY. pic.twitter.com/xlMdatRnSS

— New York Rangers (@NYRangers) March 4, 2025

Since arriving in a trade from the Vancouver Canucks on Jan. 31, Miller has seven goals and seven assists in 11 games, and has produced six multi-point games. He extended his point streak to six games on Monday.

The Islanders aggressively pulled Sorokin for an extra attacker with 7:40 to play in regulation. That backfired when Panarin stuffed in the rebound of an Alexis Lafreniere shot that hit the side of the net with 5:09 to play. The goal was his second in as many games and 25th of the season.

Shesterkin finished off the shutout and now the Rangers seek their first three-game winning streak since Nov. 14-19, when they host the first-place Washington Capitals on Thursday at MSG.

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New York Rangers Daily: Wild Blueshirts; Canadiens working to keep Jake Evans

NHL: New York Islanders at New York Rangers

Brad Penner-Imagn ImagesBrad Penner-Imagn Images

With 21 games remaining in the regular season, the New York Rangers are wild. Well, sort of.

A 4-0 win over the beleaguered New York Islanders on Monday at The Garden pulled the Rangers even in points (66) with the idle Detroit Red Wings for the second wild card in the Eastern Conference. However, the Rangers technically remain in ninth place since they’ve played one more game than the Red Wings, who host the Carolina Hurricanes on Tuesday.

The Rangers are one point up on the Ottawa Senators, who’ve played one fewer game than New York and have a slight edge in points percentage as a result.

Listen, these things are going to fluctuate over the next several weeks, just as they have the past couple months. But one thing’s clear, the Rangers are right in the thick of this race. And truth be told, you must consider them to be favorites to land a playoff berth — whether one of the two wild cards or even third place in the Metropolitan Division.

That’s right. The Rangers are not out of the top three in the division. They’re six points behind the wobbly Devils, who just lost Jack Hughes to injury. Plus the Rangers have a game in hand. Hmmm.

Let’s not get ahead of ourselves. The Rangers have won two in a row, defeating two of the League’s weaker teams, the Nashville Predators and Islanders. But they did prove to be far superior, not allowing a goal over their past six periods of play. Plus, they’ve won four of five and seven of 10.

Big tests await, though. The first-place Washington Capitals come to MSG on Wednesday. Then there’s two crucial weekend games against the Senators and Columbus Blue Jackets, the first wild card in the East. Next week begins with a road contest against the League-leading Winnipeg Jets and includes a visit to the Blue Jackets to close out a three-game road swing.

Plenty of peaks and valleys ahead in this wild playoff race.

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New York Rangers news

NHL: New York Islanders at New York Rangers

Brad Penner-Imagn Images

Here are three key Rangers takeaways from their latest shutout victory, including Artemi Panarin’s significantly improved play.

We’ve also got the winners and losers breakdown form the Rangers 4-0 win Monday, including two more bench minor penalties that land in the loser’s column for Blueshirts.

In case you missed it, here are the winners and losers from New York’s 4-0 win Sunday against the woeful Nashville Predators, including a special 800th NHL game for Jonathan Quick.

The Rangers believe they’re “trending in the right direction” after a slow start following 4 Nations break.

“Fiery” Brett Berard made quite the impression in his return to the Rangers lineup Sunday against the Predators.

Here’s a look at the Rangers week ahead, that includes two crucial weekend games against the Ottawa Senators and Columbus Blue Jackets.

NHL news

NHL: Montreal Canadiens at Ottawa Senators

Marc DesRosiers-Imagn Images

Hold on a second, Jake Evans may not be traded ahead of the deadline Friday. Reports are that the pending UFA forward is making progress on a new contract with the Montreal Canadiens. This one may go down to the wire Friday.

The Athletic is reporting that John Gibson may consider lowering his 10-team no-trade list in order to facilitate a trade by the Anaheim Ducks ahead of the deadline.

With much uncertainty about their salary cap situation and the health of forward Evander Kane, the Edmonton Oilers are in a somewhat of a limbo before the deadline. Captain Connor McDavid said Monday he’s hopeful that the Oilers will be able to add “reinforcements” for depth purposes.

Daily Faceoff reports that the Dallas Stars are working on an eight-year extension with forward Wyatt Johnston.

Olli Maatta signed a three-year contract to remain with the Utah Hockey Club.

The Athletic reported that the Blue Jackets are close to finalizing a contract extension with rugged forward Mathieu Olivier.

The Pittsburgh Penguins recalled veteran goalie Tristan Jarry from Wilkes-Barre/Scranton of the American Hockey League and demoted the overmatched Joel Blomqvist.

The Penguins also placed defenseman P.O. Joseph on IR with an undisclosed injury.

The Washington Capitals ended a three-game losing streak with an exciting 5-4 shootout win against the Ottawa Senators, who dropped one point behind the Rangers in the East standings.

That Capitals-Senators game featured a star-studded fight between Brady Tkachuk and Tom Wilson.

TOM WILSON AND BRADY TKACHUK DROPPED THE GLOVES 🚨 pic.twitter.com/4Y05DsMlSA

— TSN (@TSN_Sports) March 4, 2025

The Canadiens won their fifth straight game, defeating the Buffalo Sabres 4-3 in overtime.

Watch Mike Matheson score the OT winner for the Canadiens.

Days after being traded by the Florida Panthers in the Seth Jones deal, Spencer Knight made 41 saves in his Chicago Blackhawks debut, a 5-1 win against the Los Angeles Kings.

Jones had a strong debut for the Panthers in their 2-1 win against the Tampa Bay Lightning.

The San Jose Sharks ended a 0-5-3 slide with a 3-2 shootout win against the Toronto Maple Leafs.

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