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Why 2 young Rangers forwards are heading in opposite directions

Noah Laba and Brennan Othmann couldn’t be much further apart in their current standing with the New York Rangers. Where one young forward is a pleasant surprise and NHL regular, the other is seeking to earn trust and rebuild his game in the minor leagues.

The difference between the 22-year-olds right now is striking. Laba, a 2022 fourth-round draft pick, scored his first two NHL goals this past week and earned a promotion into the top six on the just-completed road trip to western Canada and Seattle. Othmann spent the past week in the NHL and played one game after Matt Rempe landed on IR with an upper-body injury. He was sent back to Hartford of the American Hockey League on Sunday.

Noah Laba cleans it up 🧹 pic.twitter.com/kHA6kJEQPQ

— Spittin' Chiclets (@spittinchiclets) November 2, 2025

After practice Monday, Rangers coach Mike Sullivan wasn’t asked by reporters to compare the two youngsters, whose careers right now are traveling in separate lanes. But how he answered unrelated questions about each spoke volumes about how the coach currently views Laba and Othmann.

When asked about whether Laba’s surprisingly mature play at center allowed the Rangers to load up their top line with Mika Zibanejad, J.T. Miller, and Artemi Panarin in the final two games of the trip, a pair of overtime wins against the Seattle Kraken and Edmonton Oilers, Sullivan didn’t hesitate to heap praise on the rookie.

“100 percent. One of the things that allowed us to do it is the traction we’re seen with ‘Labs’ in his overall game on both sides of the puck. He’s improving and growing and developing right in front of our eyes with every game that he plays,” Sullivan gushed. “His learning curve has been steep. He’s got real good aptitude for the game, and so I think that’s been a big part of it. And if we didn’t have a comfort level there, we probably wouldn’t do it.”

Laba had an outstanding training camp and forced his way on to the Rangers’ opening-night roster. He did so despite just 11 games of pro experience in the AHL late last season after finishing up at Colorado College.

Though Laba’s had some expected ups and downs to start his NHL career, he clearly has the trust of the coaching staff and his teammates. He plays a committed 200-foot game, is smart, fast, and hard to play against. In another words, he’s Sullivan’s kind of player.

Laba’s played all 13 games, averaging just under 12 minutes TOI, has four points (two goals, two assists), and won 54.7 percent of his face-offs. The past two games he moved up from the third line to center one in the top six, where he’s flanked by Alexis Lafreniere and Will Cuylle. And it’s Laba bringing out the best in his more experienced and well-known linemates.

“He’s just playing with so much confidence, and he’s hungry, you know?” Sullivan said over the weekend. “The most impressive thing for me is his composure.”

Brennan Othmann’s defensive shortcomings among ‘subtleties’ that concern Rangers

NHL: Vancouver Canucks at New York Rangers

Danny Wild-Imagn Images

Confidence — or lack thereof — is a big issue for Othmann, As is his lack of attention to detail defensively, per Sullivan.

In other words, the coach trusts Laba and doesn’t have the some level of faith in Othmann. Play away from the puck is something coach and player discussed repeatedly since training camp, and was the main reason given when Othmann was cut and sent to Hartford in late September.

It didn’t help Othmann that he made a glaring missed assignment defensively that led to a goal for the Calgary Flames in a 5-1 road loss last week. Not surprisingly, Othmann was replaced by veteran Jonny Brodzinski in the Rangers lineup the final three games of the trip. The Rangers won each of those games and Othmann was sent back to Hartford.

“‘Otter’ has NHL skill, without a doubt. I think it’s a lot of the subtleties, and that was the discussion I had with him,” Sullivan said Monday.

That’s not even taking into account that Othmann’s yet to score in 26 NHL games, spread over three seasons.

Predictability and reliability are words Sullivan uses often when discussing Othmann’s shortcomings, and did so again Monday.

But don’t think that the coach is burying the 2021 first-round pick, who scored 21 goals as a rookie pro with Hartford two season ago. Even if there’ve been recent trade rumors involving Othmann, Sullivan presented a big picture reason for sending the forward back to the minors.

“The other part of it is we don’t want a player, especially a young player, sitting on the sidelines,” Sullivan explained. “He was on the West Coast trip with us, he played one of the games. We would rather see him get into game action, so he has an opportunity to learn through those experiences. And that’s part of it also. He’s a young player, he’s got a lot of his career in front of him.”

Source: https://www.foreverblueshirts.com/n...ennan-othmann-opposite-directions-development
 
Rangers Daily: Arthur Kaliyev faces gambling, fraud accusations

Former New York Rangers forward Arthur Kaliyev has bigger problems than whether or not the Ottawa Senators will recall him to the NHL any time soon.

The New York Post published an explosive article Monday detailing Kaliyev’s alleged gambling problem, and how he defrauded his then-girlfriend out of $50,000 to pay off his debts.

Kudos to Mollie Walker for doing a helluva’ job researching and tracking down important background information for this story. Not to mention landing an exclusive interview with Lauren Mochen, the alleged victim of Kaliyev’s fraud.

Ex-#NYR Arthur Kaliyev stole thousands from me, owes money around NHL over gambling problem: model ex-girlfriend tells The Post⬇️https://t.co/ene8v0iPVU via @nypostsports pic.twitter.com/JezWmSTAlr

— Mollie Walker (@MollieeWalkerr) November 4, 2025

I won’t steal Walker’s thunder and recap all that she reported. We linked to her story within this article, and I encourage you all to read it.

If his issues are as big as it seems, it’s worth questioning when the Rangers — and Los Angeles Kings, Kaliyev’s first team — became aware of them. The Rangers claimed Kaliyev on waivers last season and he played 14 games with them before sustaining a season-ending injury.

The Rangers didn’t re-sign the pending free agent in the offseason and quietly moved on from him. The 24-year-old signed a one-year, $775,000 contract with the Senators on July 2. He has one assist in two games with them, and six points (two goals, four assists) in seven games with their AHL affiliate in Belleville.

Listen, this is a tragic story. For Mochen. For Kaliyev. For their respective families.

And it does raise questions about who knew what and when, about Kaliyev’s gambling problem.

Let’s see how this plays out.

New York Rangers news and analysis

NHL: San Jose Sharks at New York Rangers

Wendell Cruz-Imagn Images

Here’s a breakdown of how and why a pair of 22-year-old forwards — Noah Laba and Brennan Othmann — are headed in opposite directions right now for the Rangers.

Vincent Trocheck is practicing with his teammates again, but remains on LTIR with an upper-body injury. Urho Vaakanainen is day to day with a lower-body issue. Here’s the latest news and quotes in our Rangers injury report.

What’s to make of Alexis Lafreniere? Our Tom Castro takes a deep dive into all the good things Laf is doing this season, and how he can be a game changer for the Rangers if he fixes one major flaw.

Speaking of former first-round draft picks, Gabe Perreault is the AHL Player of the Week, after recording six points in three games for the Hartford Wolf Pack..

John Kreiser takes a closer look at the Rangers week ahead, which includes a pair of home games against Metropolitan Division rivals.

NHL news and rumors

NHL: New Jersey Devils at Carolina Hurricanes

James Guillory-Imagn Images

New Jersey Hockey Now: It’s always early, until it isn’t. So, James Nichols analyzes why the New Jersey Devils may want to address their depth on defense before it submarines their season.

TSN: The NHL is going big, like Texas-sized big, next season. The League announced that the Dallas Stars will host the 2027 Stadium Series at AT&T Stadium, home of the Dallas Cowboys in february of that year.

The Athletic ($$): A terrific article by Daniel Nugent-Bowman, detailing how goalie Connor Ingram headed back to the minor leagues to rebuild his foundation after stepping away from the game because of depression that followed his mother’s death last season.

Pittsburgh Hockey Now: The Penguins absolutely collapsed in the third period against the Toronto Maple Leafs on Monday night, and Dan Kingerski provides a detailed breakdown of what happened and why it did.

Sportsnet: Despite the 4-3 comeback victory, coach Craig Berube was still steaming after the game about how poorly the Maple Leafs played in the first two periods against the Penguins.

NHL.com: Connor McDavid had two assists for the Edmonton Oilers in their 3-2 loss to the St. Louis Blues, and became the 69th player to reach 1,100 points in the NHL, the fourth-fastest to do so — behind Wayne Gretzky, Mario Lemieux, and Mike Bossy.

Sportsnet: Calgary Flames general manager Craig Conroy remains adamant that rookie defenseman Zayne Parekh belongs in the NHL and not back in juniors despite a rocky start for the highly-touted 19-year-old.

NHL.com: Quinn Hughes played 28+ minutes in his return to the lineup after missing four games due to injury, when the Vancouver Canucks edged the Nashville Predators 5-4 on Brock Boeser’s overtime goal.

Source: https://www.foreverblueshirts.com/new-york-rangers-news/arthur-kaliyev-gambling-fraud-accusations
 
Ex-Rangers defenseman reflects on New York tenure, embraces ‘second start’

For the first time in his six-year NHL career, former New York Rangers defenseman K’Andre Miller stepped on the Madison Square Garden ice as a visiting player Tuesday.

The 25-year-old didn’t suit up when the Carolina Hurricanes face-off with the Rangers in a Metropolitan Division clash, though. Miller is still nursing a lower-body injury sustained Oct. 20, but he joined Carolina’s morning skate in a regular practice jersey.

This is his first return to The Garden since the Rangers traded Miller to the Hurricanes on July 1. He has four points (two goals, two assists) in six games, but missed Carolina’s past five contests and remains on IR.

Rod Brind’Amour doesn’t think K’Andre Miller will play tonight, but he raved about his early-season play for Carolina.

“His skating ability fits perfectly.” https://t.co/M2nHexKSCO

— Peter Baugh (@Peter_Baugh) November 4, 2025

Miller’s five-season tenure with the Rangers isn’t the feel-good story it could have been. After a promising rookie campaign in 2020-21 that earned him a spot on the NHL All-Rookie Team, and a career-best nine-goal, 43-point 2022-23 season, the former first-round pick (No. 22 overall in 2018) trended toward becoming a mainstay in New York’s defense corps for years to come.

It wasn’t to be. Highlight-reel plays and incredible athleticism stood in contrast to inconsistent production and sloppy turnovers, culminating in a frustrating conclusion to his time on Broadway.

With Miller a restricted free agent holding arbitration rights after a subpar 2024-25 season, the Rangers didn’t want to commit long term for big bucks — so they moved him to the Hurricanes in a summer sign-and-trade.

Carolina came to terms with the left-shot defenseman on an eight-year, $60 million contract. That average annual value of $7.5 million is more than the Rangers gave the more experienced and reliable defenseman Vladislav Gavrikov ($7 million AAV over seven seasons) in free agency.

Speaking to reporters after practice Tuesday, Miller candidly reflected on a five-year Blueshirts tenure that spanned 368 regular-season games and 43 more in the Stanley Cup Playoffs.

“Confidence-wise and just what I wanted from myself, I wasn’t getting all the results I wanted here,” Miller conceded. “I blame myself for that.”

According to Evolving Hockey, Miller was 42nd percentile defensively during his final season with the Rangers, marking his first time below League average since his 53-game rookie campaign. Meanwhile, his offensive production dipped under 30 points for the first time in three seasons; Miller finished with seven goals and 27 points in 74 games.

“I had some struggles throughout my years here. The ups and downs just kind of took a toll and it was in my head for a lot of the time I was here,” he acknowledged. “It’s been good getting out to Raleigh. That slower style of pace, that slower style of living has benefited me a ton and really given me a second start.”

K’Andre Miller appreciates time with Rangers​

NHL: Vancouver Canucks at New York Rangers

Danny Wild-Imagn Images

Miller made a strong first impression in his Hurricanes debut, scoring twice and helping them open the season with a 6-3 home win over the New Jersey Devils on Oct. 9. Afterward, the former Blueshirt joked with the Lenovo Center crowd during an on-ice interview postgame.

“I honestly hated playing here when I was on the other side, so I’m happy you guys are in my corner now.”

Former #NYR K’’Andre Miller immediately after his 2G debut for the @Canes ⤵️
pic.twitter.com/lMjffCHBtR

— Matthew P. Mugno (@mugnoma) October 10, 2025

The sixth-year pro clearly embraces his fresh start, but he expressed gratitude for his five seasons with the Rangers.

“I’ve had a number of talks with guys that have been on New York, that have got dealt out of New York, and I think their biggest thing is, you really don’t realize how great you have it here until it’s gone,” Miller said. “From the amenities to the travel to the food — it’s just the little things that you take to appreciate after the fact.”

Of course, there was plenty to appreciate about Miller in a Rangers uniform, too. He logged significant minutes in a top-four shutdown role with a variety of partners during his Rangers tenure. He also played an important part helping the Rangers reach the Eastern Conference Final in 2022 and 2024, and win the Presidents’ Trophy in 2023-24.

Miller has three more chances to play against his former team this regular season. Carolina hosts New York on Nov. 26 and Dec. 29, before returning to MSG on Feb. 5.

Don’t discount a possible head-to-head clash in the postseason, either. If not this go-round, at some point during Miller’s extended run with the Hurricanes that carries though the 2032-33 season.

Source: https://www.foreverblueshirts.com/new-york-rangers-news/kandre-miller-reflects-new-york-tenure
 
Rangers must ‘keep on fighting’ despite historic struggles on home ice

Maybe it’s a good thing for the New York Rangers that their next game is more than 600 miles away from Madison Square Garden.

The Rangers take a 6-1-1 road record and a three-game winning streak away from the Garden into their game against the Detroit Red Wings at Little Caesars Arena on Friday — three nights after making some dubious home history with a 3-0 loss to the Carolina Hurricanes.

The Rangers have lost their first six home games (0-5-1) for the first time in the franchise’s 100 NHL seasons. The six-game winless streak to start the season matches the World War II-ravaged 1943-44 team (lost its first five games before a 2-2 tie against the Montreal Canadiens) and the 1950-51 team (three losses, three ties). These Rangers have lost five times in regulation and once in overtime – a sloppy 6-5 loss to the previously winless San Jose Sharks on Oct. 23.

They’ve scored six goals at home — and given up six empty-netters.

“It’s frustrating,” forward Mika Zibanejad said of the struggles at the Garden. “No one wants to win at home more than we do right now.”

The Rangers are now in a five-way tie for the third-longest home losing streak from the start of a season in NHL history; only the 1971-72 Los Angeles Kings (8) and 1983-84 Pittsburgh Penguins (7) had longer season-opening stretches of home futility.

Perhaps the heartiest cheers from MSG Faithful on Tuesday were for Jaromir Jagr, who owns the team records for goals (54) and points (123) in a season, set 20 years ago.

Big cheer for Jaromír Jágr pic.twitter.com/8T7gYBm0dL

— Peter Baugh (@Peter_Baugh) November 5, 2025

In contrast, boos rained down on the current Blueshirts as the game went on and it became apparent that the Rangers weren’t going to score even if the game went all night. They had 13 shots on goal in the first 8:40 of the game but later went without a shot for a stretch of 21:18 — the final 8:08 of the second period through the first 13:10 of the third, when a long-range bouncer hopped off goaltender Pyotr Kochetkov for his 25th and final save. It was their only shot of the period.

“Maybe frustration and other emotions kind of got to us in the third,” Zibanejad said of a lackluster performance in the final 20 minutes.

Rangers seek answers after another shutout loss at home​

NHL: Tampa Bay Lightning at New York Rangers

Wendell Cruz-Imagn Images

Coach Mike Sullivan said he couldn’t have asked for much more from his players through the first 40 minutes Tuesday.

“I thought when you look at how the game was played in the first two periods there was a lot to like about our game,” he explained. “Some of the quality looks, I’m not sure we could get better looks. ‘Bread’ (Artemi Panarin) was in alone. J.T. (Miller) had a rebound chance right in the slot. Jonny Brodzinski had a Grade-A chance right in the slot.

“There’s three off the top of my head that you don’t get many better looks than those. That’s just the way it’s going for us right now.”

One reason for the scoring drought is that the power play continues to struggle. An 0-for-3 performance despite getting several prime chances among their nine shots with the extra man dropped the Rangers to 4-for-36 (a League-worst 11.1 percent) this season, including 1-for-15 (6.7 percent) at The Garden. It’s not that the Blueshirts didn’t get good looks, but they aren’t converting them into goals.

“I don’t think I’ve ever been a part of something like this before in terms of getting looks and not scoring,” a frustrated Zibanejad said. “I feel like we’re at three or four or maybe five Grade As and we don’t score. The puck just has got to go in. Other than that we have to keep going.”

In contrast, Carolina was 1-for-3 after going 3-for-32 in its first 11 games. Nikolaj Ehlers’ first-period PPG put the ’Canes up 1-0 and let a lot of the air out of The Garden.

FLY'S FIRST AS A HURRICANE 🚨 pic.twitter.com/hTmRPW7LnX

— Carolina Hurricanes (@Canes) November 5, 2025

“Power plays are difference-makers,” said defenseman Adam Fox, who quarterbacks the top power-play unit. “They get one, we don’t. That’s the difference right there, especially early in the game, when you can get the lead. That team gets a lead, they’re hard to play against.

“But for us, I think even if you’re not scoring, you want to get momentum. We’ve done that on a few power plays, but then similar to five-on-five, we get a little frustrated and we start doing things differently.”

The Rangers will try to end their home frustration when the archrival New York Islanders come to The Garden on Saturday night. Sullivan said his team has to put the slow start at the Garden in the rear-view mirror.

“We want to be a team that prides itself on being good at home, being stingy at home, making this a tough place for people to play,” Sullivan explained. “We’ve just got to keep on fighting.”

Source: https://www.foreverblueshirts.com/new-york-rangers-news/struggles-home-keep-fighting
 
Rangers NCAA prospects report: Ty Henricks hit injures younger brother

Conference play began this past weekend in NCAA Division I Men’s Ice Hockey, with five New York Rangers prospects hitting the ice for their respective collegiate teams.

It was all smiles for Ty Henricks and younger brother Tanner before Western Michigan opened defense of their Penrose Cup with an NCHC game Friday against St. Cloud State. But no so much afterward.

Henricks, a Rangers forward prospect with Western Michigan, was assessed a major penalty for direct contact to the head of his brother, and a game misconduct. Worse, Tanner Henricks, a defenseman and Columbus Blue Jackets draft pick, sustained a lower-body injury on the play that will require surgery, and is out three months.

“All I’ll say is that it’s a really freak injury. It wasn’t part of the hit. It was an after thing,” St. Cloud State coach Brett Larson said.

𝗕𝗥𝗢𝗧𝗛𝗘𝗥𝗦 🤝 pic.twitter.com/dNi5V4bh3D

— St. Cloud State Men's Hockey (@SCSUHuskies_MH) November 1, 2025

Western Michigan defeated St. Cloud State 6-5 on Friday, but lost the rematch, with the elder Henricks back in the lineup, 5-1 on Saturday. Henricks recorded five shots on goal in the two games, but was held without a point. Worse, he probably has some explaining to do at the family Thanksgiving dinner.

The Broncos dropped one spot to fourth in the USCHO.com poll, as well as the USA Hockey poll. Western Michigan is 5-3-0 and hosts Denver University for two games at Lawson Arena this upcoming weekend.

Rangers 2025 top pick Malcolm Spence hits dry spell with Michigan

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Malcolm Spence, New York’s top pick in the 2025 draft, had two shots on goal for Michigan on Friday night, when the Wolverines defeated Notre Dame 5-3. The freshman forward had one shot on goal Saturday in a 2-1 victory. Through 10 games, Spence has three goals and four assists for seven points. However, he’s without a point in four straight games, and hasn’t scored a goal in six consecutive games.

The Wolverines stayed at No. 2 in the USCHO.com and USA Hockey polls with a 9-1-0 overall record. Michigan hosts Wisconsin for two games this weekend.

Defenseman EJ Emery had three shots on goal and two blocked shots for North Dakota in a 4-3 loss to Minnesota Duluth in NCHC action on Friday. The sophomore was minus-1 and recorded one shot on goal during a 5-1 win in the rematch Saturday. The Fighting Hawks remained eighth in both polls with a 5-3-0 overall record. North Dakota is on the road for a pair of games this week against Omaha.

NCAA Hockey: New Hampshire at Boston College

Drew Fortescue — Eric Canha-Imagn Images

Boston College was upset twice by cross-town rival Northeastern, losing by scores of 4-1 on Thursday night, and 3-0 on Friday. Junior Drew Fortescue recorded one shot on goal and had a minus-2 rating in the first game. The defenseman was called for roughing in the second period of the rematch, before he was assessed a major penalty and game misconduct for direct contact to the head later on.

The Eagles are 2-4-1 and fell to 18th in the USCHO.com poll and 17th in the USA Hockey poll. Boston College is on the road against the Vermont Catamounts this weekend.

Minnesota dropped out of the top 20 rankings following losses of 5-2 and 4-0 last week to Wisconsin in Big Ten conference action. The Golden Gophers have lost four in a row, and dropped to 2-7-1 overall. Minnesota captain Brody Lamb had three shots on goal and one blocked shot in the first game of the series. He was held without a shot on goal in the second game, and took a minor penalty for slashing in the second period with two blocked shots. Lamb is tied for the team lead in goals (4) , and points (7) in 10 games. Minnesota hosts Notre Dame at 3M Arena at Mariucci for a pair of games this weekend.

Rasmus Larsson was not in the lineup for Robert Morris University, when the Colonials swept Niagara in a weekend set by scores of 4-2 and 4-3 to begin AHA conference play. The Swedish defenseman has only appeared in two games since transferring from Northern Michigan. Robert Morris hosts LIU at Clearview Arena this weekend.

Michigan State remained at the top of the polls following a week off. Freshman defenseman Sean Barnhill has one assist in six games, and has been solid defensively, tied for second on the team with seven blocked shots. Barnhill’s plus-4 rating is tied for fourth best on Michigan State. The Spartans are 5-1-0 and begin Big Ten Conference play this weekend at home with two games against top NHL Draft prospect Gavin McKenna and Penn State.

Source: https://www.foreverblueshirts.com/n...ers-ncaa-prospect-ty-henricks-unjures-brother
 
Vincent and Hillary Trocheck: A Power Couple in Rangers Blue

Long before the bright lights of Madison Square Garden, before marriage and children and the push and pull of NHL life with the New York Rangers, Vincent and Hillary Trocheck were just two kids in a 10th-grade economics class at Heritage High School in Saginaw, Michigan.

“The second I met him, it was over for me,” Hillary told Forever Blueshirts with a laugh.

Even then, she recalled, there was something magnetic about him — a mix of confidence and curiosity that drew people in.

“He was always striving to be the best he could be,” she added. “And he made you want to be better too.”

That drive — the one that first caught her attention — became the thread that’s run through everything since: competition, family, and the way each approaches life itself.

Today, Vincent is an alternate captain for the Rangers, forging a reputation as one of their most beloved and relentless players. Since signing with New York as a free agent in July 2022, he’s delivered three consecutive 20-goal seasons and, a career-best 77 points in 2023–24.

That season, Trocheck helped the Rangers capture the Presidents’ Trophy and reach the Eastern Conference Final. The popular two-way center played in the NHL All-Star Game, won the prestigious Steven McDonald Extra Effort Award, and scored one of the most iconic goals in Madison Square Garden history, a double-overtime playoff winner against the Carolina Hurricanes.

If Vincent’s world runs on grit and determination, Hillary’s moves with grace and purpose. Both an accomplished equestrian and a self-made business owner, she’s found her balance in two worlds — one built on instinct, the other on imagination.

Hillary’s been riding horses since she was five — mostly Arabians, the kind that demand trust as much as skill — and the lessons from the arena still anchor her life. That bond between rider and horse, Hillary reflected, is unlike anything else.

“People don’t understand how deep a rider’s connection with a horse gets,” she explained. “It’s not just about you when you’re up there, you have to have confidence or they will feel it.”

Last October, she achieved what once felt impossible — her first U.S. National Championship in the Hunter Pleasure division, a dream she’d carried since childhood.

“When you put the work in, absorb every ounce of training, and execute it all — and win — it’s an incredible feeling,” she said. “And I love that my kids (Leo, 8 and Lennon, 6) get to watch me do it.”

Hillary-Trocheck-Equestrian.jpg


Photo courtesy Hillary Trocheck

That same sense of purpose followed her into Statement Threads, the custom apparel brand she launched from home. What began as playoff outfits for her kids evolved into a creative business recognized across professional sports — from bespoke designs for players’ families to jackets for Team USA’s Four Nations Face-Off.

“I never thought of myself as artsy,” she admitted, “but I love creating. It’s something that’s mine.”

Together, the Trochecks represent a modern kind of power couple — one defined not just by celebrity, but by substance. They’ve built a life grounded in parallel ambition: his measured in faceoffs and goals, hers in stitches and strides. Two worlds, one shared heartbeat.

Love and Legacy​

Trocheck-Family-life.jpg


Photo courtesy Hillary Trocheck

Even in the glare of the NHL spotlight, the Trochecks built a life that feels beautifully ordinary.

“The kids are in school all day,” Hillary explained. “We wake up, make breakfast, pack lunches, and start the day like everyone else. Once they’re dropped off, I usually work out and then get right into my office. I try to get as much done as I can before pick-up, and most afternoons I’m taking Leo to hockey. He’s on the ice about five times a week right now, so we’re fully hockey busy.”

If there’s a Rangers home game that night, she often brings the kids along — Leo watching every shift, Lennon dancing in her seat with a box of candy.

“They’re only small once,” Hillary said with a smile. “I love them to be at the games with me.”

LeoandLennon_MSG.jpg


Photo courtesy Hillary Trocheck

She hopes these moments show her children what’s possible when passion meets purpose.

“I hope they know they can do it all,” she said. “They can do the things that make them happy and find joy in trying new things.”

Much of that belief comes from what she and Vincent model every day.

“If I didn’t have Vince, who’s been so supportive since I started working, I wouldn’t be able to do it,” she said. “We rely on our family and each other. We build each other up.”

That foundation has been steady since their early years in the League with the Florida Panthers, when veteran families welcomed them in and showed that the game’s real strength isn’t competition, but connection.

“It made us understand early that hockey is family,” Hillary recalled. “We try to bring people together as much as we can. We want everyone to feel comfortable.”

Now their home is that place — teammates and friends drifting in for dinner, kids running through the kitchen, laughter spilling from every room.

“People are from all over the world,” she added. “It’s nice to provide a sense of home whenever we can.”

NHL: Stanley Cup Playoffs-Florida Panthers at New York Rangers

Vincent Carchietta-Imagn Images

That same spirit carried into the 2023–24 season, when rookie forward Will Cuylle, then 21, lived with the Trocheck family.

“He stayed for the whole season,” she recalled with a laugh. “The kids loved it — a lot of family dinners. He even took us out to eat and cooked a couple of times! We liked having him around.”

Within the Rangers organization, the Trochecks earned genuine reverence — not only for Vincent’s leadership, but for the warmth and generosity they share as a couple. They’re the kind of people who make a city feel smaller and a team feel like home — gracious and grounded in all the ways that matter.

Statement Threads and Identity​

Hillary_and_TeamUSAwives.jpeg


Photo courtesy Hillary Trocheck

For Hillary, creativity didn’t arrive all at once — it unfolded quietly, born from curiosity and playoff adrenaline. During the 2023 postseason, she began making pieces for her kids to wear to Rangers games.

“Then some of the girls started to ask me to make things, and I thought, why not?” she recalled. “It just kind of took off from there.”

What started as a small project at her kitchen table soon grew into Statement Threads, a company shaped through long nights, trial and error, and the simple joy of bringing ideas to life. What began as embroidery for her own family evolved into a way to connect — with teammates’ wives, fans, and entire communities around the League.

“I was first really surprised people even liked my ideas,” she said. “Then I just ran with it. It’s become something I’m so proud of, and something I never thought it would be.”

Her custom designs — bold, personal, and playfully fearless — reflect the same confidence she found in the show ring. The brand’s signature Bear design, one of her earliest creations, has since taken on a life of its own, morphing into new animals and meanings, including a lion motif she made for the wives and girlfriends of the Detroit Lions.

“That one was special,” she said softly. “My grandpa was a huge Lions fan — he would have loved it.”

When Vincent played for Team USA at the Four Nations Face-Off this past February, Statement Threads joined him on that stage. Hillary designed jackets for the players’ wives and girlfriends — her creativity woven into a moment that meant the world to their family.

“It was the coolest thing ever seeing him wear the USA jersey,” she remembered. “I know how much that meant to him. And getting to contribute in my own way made it even more special. Our kids were there watching, and I know it’s something they’ll never forget.”

For Hillary, Statement Threads isn’t just a business — it’s an extension of everything she values: family, imagination, and the courage to try.

“I started by making things for the people I love,” she reflected. “And that’s still why I do it.”

Beyond the Spotlight​

Trocheck-Wedding-day-788x969.jpg


Photo courtesy Hillary Trocheck

From the outside, life in the NHL can look like a highlight reel — private flights, luxury hotels, flashing lights. But Hillary Trocheck knows the truth is far simpler — and far more grounded.

“It’s not all this lavish lifestyle where we brunch, shop, and party all the time,” she said, laughing. “Maybe before kids it’s a little different, but when you have kids, it’s all about finding a sense of normal for them in a world that’s really not that normal.”

Normal, for the Trochecks, means missed birthdays and long road trips, holidays spent in hotel rooms, and a steady current of change — trades, new teammates, and miles between family moments.

In a world that celebrates goals and headlines, Hillary sees the personal side — the one that unfolds between games, beyond the roar of the crowd. She has seen how demanding the game can be — not just for players, but for the families who live it alongside them. Most fans, she recounts, are deeply supportive, though the scrutiny can sometimes be intense.

“People don’t realize they’re human too,” she said. “Fathers, friends, sons. They see the game, but not everything that goes into it.”

She’s watched players carry both triumphs and challenges with steady resilience — the parts of the job few ever see.

“If they’re smart and strong, they can block a lot of the hate,” she added, “but somehow, they still end up seeing some of it.”

It’s a perspective shaped by years of watching the game up close — through victories and setbacks, and everything in between. Hillary witnessed it all: the pressure, the high points, the exhaustion. What stands out most isn’t the attention, but the effort.

“Vincent’s the hardest-working person I know,” she said. “His mental toughness is beyond what I can comprehend.”

When Vincent scored that double-overtime winner for the Rangers in Game 2 of the 2024 Eastern Conference Second Round against the Hurricanes — his former team — Hillary didn’t mince words.

“Holy shit!!! It was one of those moments where everything he’s worked for showed up all at once. We’re just lucky to be along for the ride.”

That mix of awe and gratitude defines the way they move through life. If Hillary could pass one of Vincent’s qualities on to their children, it would be his determination.

“He doesn’t take no for an answer,” she said. “If he wants something, he gets it. He’s so intelligent, too. He’s the best.”

Nearly two decades after that high-school economics class, their story has come full circle — built on comebacks, trust, and an unshakable belief in one another. Through every season, every challenge, and every dream realized, Vincent and Hillary Trocheck created more than a life; they’ve built a legacy. Theirs is a love that endures, a partnership defined by resilience and heart, proof that some stories only grow stronger with time.

And for the Trochecks, the best is yet to come.

Source: https://www.foreverblueshirts.com/n...vincent-hillary-trocheck-power-couple-rangers
 
Rangers considering lineup, power play changes ahead of game vs. Red Wings

Fourteen games into the 2025-26 NHL season, the New York Rangers are still searching for answers to kickstart a scuffling offense.

It’s not for lack of trying. The Blueshirts consistently generate high-quality chances and boast the fourth-best 5-on-5 expected-goals-for percentage in the NHL. It just hasn’t translated to the score sheet for the Rangers, as they sit dead last in the League, averaging 2.21 goals per game.

The struggles are particularly glaring at home, where New York has yet to record a win in six games (0-5-1). After a 3-0 loss to the Carolina Hurricanes on Tuesday, the Rangers have been shut out four times at Madison Square Garden and tallied multiple goals there just once — a 6-5 overtime loss to the San Jose Sharks.

Chief among the concerns is a languishing power play that’s converted on just four of 36 opportunities — good for a League-worst 11.1 percent success rate.

New York’s lineup has seen plenty of changes through the first month of the season, and coach Mike Sullivan unveiled a few more at practice Thursday. Here’s what to watch for when the Rangers visit the Detroit Red Wings on Friday.

Will Cuylle replaces Alexis Lafreniere on top power-play unit​

NHL: New York Rangers at Vancouver Canucks

Bob Frid-Imagn Images

Much like 5-on-5, New York’s underlying metrics on the man advantage are strong, ranking fourth in expected-goals-for percentage. But that’s little consolation for a unit that ranks last in the NHL and is 0-for-its-last-13.

Something needed to change, if for no other reason than to experiment with a different look. That’s what Sullivan did on Thursday, replacing Alexis Lafreniere with Will Cuylle on the top group.

Despite ample chances, Lafreniere has yet to score a power-play goal, and scored just once at even strength in 14 games, shooting a career-worst 3.1 percent. For now, he’ll return to the second unit, where he spent most of his six-year Blueshirts tenure.

It was a slow start to the 2025-26 season for Cuylle, who scored 20 goals last season, but the 23-year-old forward has looked much sharper of late, notching a goal and five points in his past five games.

Cuylle positioned himself net front at practice — a spot manned by longtime Rangers forward Chris Kreider in seasons past, most memorably to the tune of 26 power-play goals in 2021-22.

New look for PP1. Cuylle at net front, replacing Laf. pic.twitter.com/v7nEJiJ6pc

— Colin Stephenson (@ColinSNewsday) November 6, 2025

The Blueshirts could use a stable presence in front of the goaltender, since Kreider was traded to the Anaheim Ducks this offseason. Mika Zibanejad and J.T. Miller each received a shot in that spot but the results aren’t there. Cuylle, meanwhile, thrives close to the net, and it allows Zibanejad to set up for one-timers in the left circle.

Vincent Trocheck made the trip to Detroit and could, but won’t play against the Red Wings. But the 32-year-old could return from an upper-body injury as early as Saturday, so Cuylle’s stint on the top power-play unit could be short-lived. Still, it’s worth seeing if the swap yields more favorable results.

Jaroslav Chmelar expected to make NHL debut​

NHL: Preseason-Boston Bruins at New York Rangers

Vincent Carchietta-Imagn Images

The Rangers recalled Jaroslav Chmelar from Hartford of the American Hockey League on Sunday, when they sent Brennan Othmann back down. The 22-year-old forward was a healthy scratch Tuesday against the Hurricanes, but joined Sam Carrick and Juuso Parssinen on the fourth line at practice Thursday, bumping Adam Edstrom to likely his first scratch of the season Friday.

First look at #NYR lines indicates that Adam Edström may be a scratch in Detroit:

Panarin – Zibanejad – Raddysh
Cuylle – Miller – Lafrenière
Sheary – Laba – Brodzinski
Pärssinen – Carrick – Chmelař

— Vince Z. Mercogliano (@vzmercogliano) November 6, 2025

After tallying 12 goals and 29 points in 71 games at Hartford last season, Chmelar has two goals and five points in nine games to open his 2025-26 campaign — including a goal and four points in his past three games.

If he gets the nod, it will mark his NHL debut after 87 games across parts of three seasons in the AHL. Chmelar is a big-body winger, standing at 6-foot-5, capable of playing a physical bottom-six game.

Trocheck’s looming return could make for a short stay, although it looks like Chmelar will get an opportunity to impress Friday.

Connor Mackey could slot into lineup on Friday​

NHL: New York Rangers at Ottawa Senators

Marc DesRosiers-Imagn Images

Urho Vaakanainen was absent from practice Thursday after missing the game Tuesday with a lower-body injury. Sullivan revealed that Vaakanainen will make the trip to Detroit, but it’s unclear if the 26-year-old defenseman will be able to play.

Matthew Robertson joined Braden Schneider on the third defensive pairing against the Hurricanes, returning to the lineup after three straight games as a healthy scratch. Robertson was minus-one in 14:02 TOI, trailing all other Rangers defensemen in time-on-ice.

Should Vaakanainen be unavailable Friday, Sullivan may pivot to 29-year-old veteran Connor Mackey. Though the defensive pairings rotated at practice, Mackey spent considerable time alongside Schneider and could replace Robertson against the Red Wings.

Mackey has 42 games under his belt at the NHL level, including three with the Blueshirts. He memorably sparked life into a scuffling 2023-24 Rangers squad, dropping the gloves with Brady Tkachuk during a January game against the Ottawa Senators.

New York has found success with Sullivan’s defensive structure, but the third-pair left-side D-man has been a revolving door to open the season.

Source: https://www.foreverblueshirts.com/new-york-rangers-news/rangers-lineup-changes-ahead-of-red-wings
 
Ex-Rangers forward having ‘ton of fun’ filling the net for Ducks

Chris Kreider’s old team, the New York Rangers, could use him about now.

The Rangers traded Kreider to the Anaheim Ducks on June 12 for prospect Carey Terrance and a swap of draft picks. The deal was made after the No. 3 goal-scorer in team history (326) dropped from 39 goals and 75 points in 2023-24 to 22 goals and 30 points last season, when he missed time with a broken hand, a back problem and vertigo. In addition, Kreider’s name was leaked in a trade memo Rangers general manager Chris Drury sent to the other 31 GMs in the League, helping upend his final season on Broadway.

Kreider ultimately waved his no-trade clause to leave the only NHL organization he’d ever played for and join a team that hasn’t made the Stanley Cup Playoffs since 2017-18. But one month into the new season, the Rangers might like to have him back.

While the Blueshirts struggle to put the puck in the net (NHL-low 2.21 goals through 14 games, six goals in six home games), Kreider rediscovered his scoring touch in Anaheim, where he joined former teammates Ryan Strome, Jacob Trouba and Frank Vatrano on “Rangers West.” His old team is mired at 6-6-2, last in the Metropolitan Division, entering a road game against the Detroit Red Wings on Friday. Meanwhile, his new club leads the Pacific Division with a 9-3-1 record, has won five in a row, and leads the NHL with 4.15 goals per game.

One big reason for the early success is Kreider, who has nine goals in his first nine games with his new team, including a pair on Thursday when the Ducks rallied from an early two-goal deficit for a 7-5 win against the Stars in Dallas. His first goal at 1:16 of the second period started the comeback; his second, 16 seconds into the third, put Anaheim ahead 5-3.

🚨 Kreider 🚨

A snipe on the power play starts our scoring! #FlyTogether pic.twitter.com/kHe6tWxTbY

— Anaheim Ducks (@AnaheimDucks) November 7, 2025

“I think it’s a resilient group. We started getting in behind their D and were able to play in the (offensive) zone,” he said of the turnaround against the Stars. “We stuck with it, didn’t get frustrated. It was a fun game – not a game that coaches enjoy.”

Former Rangers star Chris Kreider healthy, ‘having ton of fun’ with Ducks


So what’s the difference between last season and this one, aside from changing teams?

“Healthy, knock on wood,” Kreider said. “I’m having a ton of fun. Good group. I think missing some time and dealing with some stuff last year makes you appreciate feeling healthy again. There’s a lot of gratitude there, so (I) just show up every day and enjoy it.”

NHL: Vancouver Canucks at New York Rangers

Danny Wild-Imagn Images

His renewed scoring touch is a big reason the Ducks scored seven times in back-to-back wins against the defending Stanley Cup champion Florida Panthers and the Stars. Anaheim became the sixth team in the past 40 years to score seven or more goals in a game at least four times through their first 13 games of a season, joining the Pittsburgh Penguins (six times in 1995-96; four in 2019-20 and 1992-93), Edmonton Oilers (four times in 1987-88) and Toronto Maple Leafs (four times in 1987-88).

Kreider is two shy of the NHL goal-scoring lead shared by teammate Cutter Gauthier and Pittsburgh’s Sidney Crosby. Five of his goals are on the power play, one more than the entire total scored by his old team, which at 4 for 36 (11.1 percent) has the League’s 31st-ranked extra-man unit.

The Ducks got Kreider to provide scoring and leadership on one of the youngest teams in the NHL, and he’s done everything GM Pat Verbeek and coach Joel Quenneville could ask. The only thing that’s slowed him down was a bout of Hand, Foot and Mouth Disease, a viral infection accompanied by a rash and multiple other symptoms that cost him four games in late October.

🚨 Kreider X 2 🚨

His deflection gives us a two-goal lead! #FlyTogether pic.twitter.com/HbCvgUGaKB

— Anaheim Ducks (@AnaheimDucks) November 7, 2025

“It was weird being out that long and really not able to do anything. It’s just a lot of twiddling in my thumbs,” Kreider said before returning to the lineup against the Detroit Red Wings on Oct. 31. “It just had to run its course. Nothing you can do but sit there and feel awful.”

The 12-day break between games didn’t cool off Kreider’s hot stick. He scored once each against the Red Wings, New Jersey Devils and Panthers before connecting twice in Dallas. Next up is a visit to the division-rival Vegas Golden Knights on Saturday.

“We need to continue to build our game,” he said. “I think we’ve done a good job learning from the previous game, leaving it behind and attacking the next game. We’ll enjoy this one for a few minutes and get ready for Vegas.”

Source: https://www.foreverblueshirts.com/new-york-rangers-news/kreider-thrives-with-ducks
 
Rangers continue superb play on road by downing Red Wings 4-1

Noah Laba put on a show for his family and friends at Little Caesars Arena on Friday night while helping the New York Rangers continue their domination of the Detroit Red Wings with a 4-1 victory.

The rookie center, who grew up about 30 miles away in Northville, Michigan, had the kind of night a rookie dreams of. He scored the go-ahead goal early in the second period after being denied on a first-period shorthanded breakaway. Laba and his linemates, Jonny Brodzinski and Conor Sheary, were the Rangers’ best unit all night. Brodzinski had a couple of excellent chances; Sheary had an assist and drew three power plays.

But that wasn’t all the good news for the Rangers, who improved to 7-6-2 overall and 7-1-1 on the road.

Artemi Panarin, minus his hair after getting his head shaved before the trip, ended a six-game pointless streak with a bang – assisting on the first two goals and scoring the third. Alexis Lafreniere scored his first goal since Oct. 9, and Jonathan Quick made 32 saves for his fourth straight win in Detroit since joining the Rangers for the 2023-24 season. The win was Quick’s 407th, tying him with Hockey Hall of Famer Glenn Hall for 12th place on the all-time list.

In all, the Rangers have won seven in a row against their Original Six rival, who came into the game second in the Atlantic Division at 9-5-0 and owners of a five-game winning streak at home.

New York got the game’s first power play when Andrew Copp was called for holding Sheary at 6:28. They needed just 18 seconds for their remodeled top unit to capitalize. Mika Zibanejad’s cross-ice pass found Will Cuylle racing into the left circle, and he zipped a quick shot into the top far corner for a 1-0 lead. It was the Rangers’ fifth power-play goal in 37 tries this season and their first in six games.

Mika with the feed + Cools buries the PPG. pic.twitter.com/dFyHfQ0nW9

— New York Rangers (@NYRangers) November 8, 2025

Though Adam Fox’s holding penalty at 7:21 gave the Wings their first power play, Laba had the best scoring chance. He stole the puck at the red line and went in alone, but ex-Ranger Cam Talbot stopped him with his pad.

That save appeared to invigorate Detroit, which began to dominate play and tied the game on a goal by J.T. Compher at 11:06. Compher was left alone in the lower left circle to take a passout from Mason Appleton and beat a defenseless quick to make it 1-1.

Sheary earned another power play when Marcus Johansson tripped him at 2:39 of the second period. The Rangers didn’t score with the extra man, but they went ahead 2-1 at 4:52 when Laba outfought the defense to get position in front and lifted a spinning backhander into the net.

Laba in front. 👏 pic.twitter.com/BvSCP1wPus

— New York Rangers (@NYRangers) November 8, 2025

“It was special to score where you grew up watching games,” Laba told MSG between periods. “It’s something I dreamed about my whole life – a pretty special moment.”

Detroit had a golden opportunity to tie the game just after the nine-minute mark when Quick misplayed the puck while trying to swat it away from Patrick Kane. The former Ranger got the bouncing puck into the crease, but the combination of Quick and defenseman Braden Schneider and Carson Soucy managed to keep it out of the net.

“I knew I got his stick pretty good and that I had help coming back,” Quick said postgame. “It was a little bit of chaos, but we kept it out.”

The Rangers thought they had scored at 18:16 when Cuylle beat Talbot, but Miller made contact with the goaltender in the crease and the officials disallowed the goal. However, New York blew the game open in the third period by scoring twice in 58 seconds. Panarin got his third of the season at 7:29, and Lafreniere followed with his second at 8:27.

Key takeaways after Rangers roll to 4-1 win over Red Wings

1. A night to remember for Noah Laba

NHL: New York Rangers at Detroit Red Wings

Tim Fuller-Imagn Images

The score sheet doesn’t list Laba as one of the game’s Three Stars. That seems absurd, since no player on the ice was more visible than the rookie center during his first visit to an arena where he spent much of his youth watching his heroes.

“It was awesome,” he said. “I was excited to get a win in my home town.”

Laba scored his third goal in six games and his first NHL game-winner but could have had a couple more. He, Brodzinski and Sheary made life miserable for the Wings every time they were on the ice.

“I was thrilled for him,” coach Mike Sullivan said. “He had a lot of energy.”

The coach also noted that Laba had plenty of support in the crowd.

“I don’t know how many tickets he had to buy,” Sullivan said with a smile, “but it sure was exciting for them.”

2. Artemi Panarin ends scoring slump with a bang​

The Breadman right on target. 🎯 pic.twitter.com/OZ7FaHJSRF

— New York Rangers (@NYRangers) November 8, 2025

MSG analyst Steve Valiquette nailed it after the game when he noted that “The Breadman” had a smile on his face after scoring his first goal since Oct. 20. It was the kind of smile Panarin has worn a lot since joining the Rangers in 2019 — but not very often this season.

Panarin looked like the player who’s led the Rangers in scoring in each of his six seasons with the team — and who’s being counted on for big offensive numbers again.

“Our best players were our best players,” Sullivan said. “I think that’s an important element of the game tonight.”

Facing the Red Wings might have been just the tonic for what was ailing Panarin’s scoring touch. The three points give him 44 (17 goals, 27 assists) in 26 games against Detroit.

Panarin got off to a blazing start in 2023-24 after shaving his head. Will a repeat have the same result?

“I hope so,” he said with a laugh. “Just one game. It’s not, like, make me a better hockey player, but more ugly for sure.”

3. Will road success finally lead to first home win?​


The Rangers didn’t get much time to enjoy the win. They hopped a plane back to New York and will host the Islanders on Saturday in search of their first win at Madison Square Garden this season. At 0-5-1, the Rangers are the only team in the NHL that has yet to win in its own building — and the first team in NHL history to win seven games on the road before its first home win.

NHL: New York Rangers at Detroit Red Wings

Tim Fuller-Imagn Images

“We look forward to taking the momentum from this game back home with us,” Quick said.

The Blueshirts have scored just six goals in their six home games and have been shut out four times. But a visit from the Islanders might be just what they need to get off the schneid at the Garden. The Isles will also be playing their second game in two nights – they were awful on Friday in a 5-2 loss to the Minnesota Wild at UBS Arena — and have been giving up boatloads of high-danger scoring chances. The Rangers swept the four-game season series from their suburban rivals in 2024-25 and have beaten them five straight times at MSG.

Igor Shesterkin is 7-0-0 in his last seven games against the Islanders, most of them against fellow Russian Ilya Sorokin, who is 0-4-2 in his last six games against the Rangers and has struggled for most of this season. Sorokin is 3-4-2 but has a 3.33 goals-against average and .879 save percentage, far below his career numbers (2.60 GAA/.915 save percentage).

Source: https://www.foreverblueshirts.com/n...uperb-road-play-continues-with-win-in-detroit
 
Rangers vs. Islanders: Lineups, storylines for 1st clash between archrivals

So, it’s come to this for the New York Rangers. If they’re going to end a historically bad six-game winless skid (0-5-1) on home ice to begin the season, they’ll need to defeat the their archrival New York Islanders on Saturday night at Madison Square Garden.

As if, the teams and fans wouldn’t already be at a fever pitch for this rare Saturday night tilt at the World’s Most Famous Arena, the stakes feel even greater for this one. The Rangers are desperate to put these home-ice issues to rest for good. But the Islanders would love nothing more than to extend the Blueshirts misery at MSG.

That’s not even mentioning that it’s an important early-season game for each team. The Rangers (7-6-2) and Islanders (6-6-2) are separated by two points in the Metropolitan Division and Eastern Conference standings, are meeting for the first time, and likely will battle for a spot in the Stanley Cup Playoffs all season.

The Rangers come off one of their most complete 60-minute performances through 15 games. They defeated the Red Wings 4-1 in Detroit on Friday, improving their road record to a League-best 7-1-1.

Will Cuylle scored a power-play goal; Artemi Panarin had a goal and two assists, days after shaving his head for good luck; Alexis Lafreniere scored his first goal in 13 games; Noah Laba played with boundless energy and scored a big goal; Jonathan Quick was terrific, making 32 saves.

Artemi Panarin is cooking tonight 👨‍🍳

That's his third point of the game! pic.twitter.com/AvgBPjnIoI

— NHL (@NHL) November 8, 2025

At 5v5, the Rangers held a considerable 28-11 advantage in scoring chances, including a dominant 17-4 edge in high-danger chances, per Natural Stat Trick.

Now, can they bottle that kind of effort and play a similar thorough game against the Islanders? Remember, the Rangers had a three-game winning streak — all on the road — before they returned to MSG, and despite a good start, were shut out by the Carolina Hurricanes 3-0 on Tuesday.

The Islanders are 2-3-2 after a four-game winning streak ended Oct. 25. After blowing a lead and losing to the Boston Bruins 4-3 in a shootout Tuesday, the Islanders trailed the entire way in a 5-2 loss Friday to the Minnesota Wild.

The Rangers swept the regular-season series against the Islanders last season, and finished ahead of them in the standings. However, that cost them in the end because the Islanders won the NHL Draft lottery, and selected stud defenseman Matthew Schaefer with the No. 1 overall pick, a selection that is paying off quite nicely already.

Their winning streak over the Islanders sits at five games, and the Rangers are 8-1-0 in the past nine versus their suburban rivals.

3 storylines when Rangers host Islanders

NHL: New York Islanders at New York Rangers

Brad Penner-Imagn Images

1. Rookie watch


Laba and Schaefer are making big impacts on their respective teams, despite vastly contrasting expectations for each rookie. Laba, a fourth-round selection in the 2022 draft, has won the hearts of Rangers fans, not to mention the trust and respect of his teammates and coach Mike Sullivan, with his infectious, hard-charging style. Hie effort and compete level are legit, and consistent. And there’s plenty of skill there with New York’s third-line center.

The 22-year-old helped ignite the Rangers on Friday with his third goal of the season, and second in three games. His five points in 15 games are tied for 14th among NHL rookies, and his three goals are tied for third on the Rangers. In short, he’s been a huge addition to the lineup and a big surprise with how far he’s come in his first pro season.

Noah Laba gets on the board in his home state of Michigan! 🏠 pic.twitter.com/CnHcfJW9qA

— NHL (@NHL) November 8, 2025

Much more was expected from Schaefer, even though he didn’t turn 18 until training camp. The wonderkid hasn’t failed to impress and continues to deliver on the massive hype. Schaefer is second in rookie scoring with 11 points in 14 games, tied for first with five goals, and first with three power-play goals. He leads all rookies and all Islanders players by averaging 22:07 TOI.

And you’ve got to love how Schaefer is doing his best to reignite this Rangers-Islanders rivalry.

2. Fast start


You know what wouldn’t hurt the Rangers on Saturday? A fast start, that’s what. And not just dominating puck possession and shots on goal for an extended stretch to start the game, like against the Hurricanes. But how about a goal or two or … ?

Listen, the MSG Faithful want to erupt and dance to the Rangers Goal Song, but they’re also nervous, waiting for the next bad thing to happen to the home team, considering its woeful start at The Garden. A goal or two early should ease much of the unrest and help get them into being a difference maker, a real home-ice advantage.

The numbers tell a story, too. The Rangers are 6-1-0 when scoring first this season, 4-0-0 when leading after the first period and 4-0-0 when holding a lead after two.

3. Igor vs. Ilya

NHL: All-Star Game

Sam Navarro-Imagn Images

Because they’re of similar age, good friends from back home in Russia, command big-time salaries, and considered to be two of the best in the world at their position, the spotlight is always on goalies Igor Shesterkin and Ilya Sorokin when the Rangers face off against the Islanders. That’ll be the case again Saturday, since each didn’t play Friday and will start Saturday.

Due in large part to the fact that the Rangers don’t score on home ice, Shesterkin is 4-5-2 in 11 starts this season. But his 2.26 goals-against average and .915 save percentage paint a better picture of his play. He started great, tailed off a bit for a couple games, and now appears to back in form. Lifetime against the Islanders, the 2022 Vezina Trophy winner is 9-8-1 with a 2.68 GAA, .910 save percentage and one shutout.

Sorokin was a finalist for the Vezina in 2022-23, but has struggled since — especially considering his lofty standards. The 30-year-old is 3-4-2 this season with a 3.33 GAA and .879 save percentage, continuing a downward three-year trend. Lifetime he is 3-6-2 against the Rangers with a 3.46 GAA, .897 save percentage, and one shutout.

New York Rangers projected lineup


Artemi Panarin — Mika Zibanejad — Taylor Raddysh

Will Cuylle — J.T. Miller — Alexis Lafreniere

Conor Sheary — Noah Laba — Jonny Brodzinski

Juuso Parssinen — Sam Carrick — Jaroslav Chmelar

Vladislav Gavrikov — Adam Fox

Carson Soucy — Will Borgen

Matthew Robertson — Braden Schneider

Igor Shesterkin

Jonathan Quick

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


Who: New York Rangers vs. New York Islanders

When: Saturday Nov. 8 at 7 p.m. ET

Where: Madison Square Garden

How to watch: MSG

Source: https://www.foreverblueshirts.com/n...anders-game-preview-lineups-storylines-rivals
 
Key takeaways after Rangers’ home woes continue with 5-0 loss to Islanders

The New York Rangers celebrated some of their most famous moments and saves on “Miles and Milestones Night” – then went out and made the wrong kind of history against the New York Islanders.

The Rangers fell to 0-6-1 at Madison Square Garden when they were shut out for the fifth time at home, losing 5-0 to their archrivals. The Isles got two goals from Bo Horvat and a 33-save performance by Ilya Sorokin, who outplayed his friend and rival, Igor Shesterkin, with his best game of the season.

The Blueshirts (7-7-2) started fast but couldn’t beat Sorokin early, paid dearly for a couple of defensive lapses that turned into goals in the first period, lost the special-teams battle and played most of the last two periods in front of a sellout crowd whose silence was interrupted only by spurts of booing and some “Let’s Go Islanders” chants.

Even worse was having a night like this against their biggest rival, a team they swept last season and outscored 23-5 in the four wins. Shesterkin had beaten the Islanders seven straight times, and the visitors had dropped their last five visits to MSG.

After the cheers for players like Pete Stemkowski, Adam Graves and Mike Richter had died down, the Rangers started the game by picking up where they left off in their 4-1 win at Detroit on Friday night. The Blueshirts had two Grade A chances less than 15 seconds into the game, but Sorokin stopped Mika Zibanejad’s shot and foiled Artemi Panarin at the left post on the rebound.

Zibanejad beat Sorokin at 7:30 but rang the crossbar, and the Isles goaltender denied Will Cuylle through traffic in front soon after.

“I thought we had a great start,” coach Mike Sullivan said. “The first 10-12 minutes we were playing the kind of game we wanted to play.”

But the save on Cuylle wound up leading to the game’s first goal. The Islanders broke the puck out quickly and ended up with a 2-on-1 rush. Emil Heineman put a pass right on Horvat’s stick, and Horvat beat Shesterkin at 10:29 for his 10th of the season and a 1-0 lead.

What a pass, what a goal! #Isles | @Ford pic.twitter.com/o6X8K0Ihzw

— New York Islanders (@NYIslanders) November 9, 2025

That goal energized the Islanders, who began to dominate play. They held the Rangers shotless for the last nine minutes of the period – and made it 2-0 with 33 seconds left when Jonathan Drouin capitalized on another 2-on-1. Ex-Ranger Anthony Duclair’s saucer pass put Drouin in alone, and he went forehand-to-backhand before beating Shesterkin between the legs for his first goal since opening night.

“We beat ourselves in a lot of ways,” Sullivan said of the defensive breakdowns. “You can’t give up the type of 2-on-1s we did and expect success.”

The home side generated literally nothing at even strength in the second period – 5-on-5 scoring chances were 6-0 for the Isles; high-danger chances were 3-0, according to Natural Stat Trick. The Blueshirts’ only flurry came after ex-Rangers defenseman Tony DeAngelo was called for holding at 13:16. Zibanejad had two point-blank shots one-timers the slot, but Sorokin took both of them in the chest.

NHL: New York Islanders at New York Rangers

Wendell Cruz-Imagn Images

The Isles got their first power play with 3:06 left in the period when Conor Sheary was called for hooking rookie defenseman Mathew Schaefer, the No. 1 overall pick in the 2025 NHL Draft. The visitors were in a 2-for-26 slump with the extra man before Horvat got his second of the night at 18:42, beating Shesterkin after a terrific pass from Drouin.

The Rangers had only occasional chances in the third period until Sullivan pulled Shesterkin with five minutes remaining. They bombarded Sorokin with six shots on goal in less than three minutes but couldn’t score. Jean-Gabriel Pageau put the game away by hitting the empty net with 2:01 left, then set up Anders Lee for a rub-it-in goal with 30 seconds left.

The struggling Nashville Predators come to the Garden on Monday night. It will be interesting to see what Sullivan can come up with to turn around a team that can’t find the net in its own building.

Key takeaways after Rangers lose again at home, 5-0 to Islanders

1. Home horrors continue​


The 0-6-1 start at the Garden is now officially the worst in franchise history. The 1943-44 team, which had been decimated by World War II and went on to go 6-39 with five ties, won its seventh home game after losing the first five and tying the sixth.

The seven-game losing streak at MSG matches the team record set from Oct. 20-Nov. 14, 1976, and matched when they lost the last seven games (one in overtime) at the Garden in 1992-93.

“Our group is a proud group,” Sullivan said. “Yeah, it wears on you. We haven’t won a game at home. If it doesn’t wear on you, there’s something wrong.”

NHL: New York Islanders at New York Rangers

Wendell Cruz-Imagn Images

This looked like the perfect setup for ending the victory drought at home. The Islanders have struggled to keep the puck out of their net all season, haven’t done well on either of their special teams and aren’t getting the kind of goaltending from Sorokin that they’ll need to get back into the Stanley Cup Playoffs.

Instead, the night was eerily similar to Tuesday’s 3-0 loss to the Carolina Hurricanes – a good start that doesn’t produce any goals, a couple of defensive mistakes that end up in their net — and another defeat.

“It’s frustrating,” captain JT Miller said. “Disappointing we can’t put together… we’ve had some good nights at home and some that weren’t. We kind of shot ourselves in the foot today.”

2. Tough night for the big guns​


The turning point of the game might well have come when Zibanejad beat Sorokin but rang the crossbar while the game was still scoreless. He also had two great chances during the Blueshirts’ second power play, only to hit Sorokin in the breadbasket each time.

NHL: New York Islanders at New York Rangers

Wendell Cruz-Imagn Images

Or maybe it came on the game’s first shift, when Sorokin got to the left post and foiled Panarin, who was wide-open after the Isles’ goaltender stopped Zibanejad’s shot. Or it could have been when Sorokin stopped Cuylle on the play that led to the game’s first goal.

The three combined for 15 shots on goal (six for Zibanejad, five for Panarin, four for Cuylle) – nearly half of the team total. But the result was the same as it’s been in five of the Rangers’ seven home games – a big zero on the scoreboard.

3. A non-contact night​


Islanders-Rangers games are usually full of physicality, with hits galore, a few scrums and the occasional fight. That was not the case Saturday.

NHL: New York Islanders at New York Rangers

Wendell Cruz-Imagn Images

Garden fans expected the Rangers to do some banging in an effort to slow down Schaefer, and Miller did welcome the rookie defenseman to MSG with a first-period belt into the boards, one of the four first-period hits he was credited with and half of the team total.

But the home side had just six hits over the final 40 minutes, one by Miller. They ended up being outhit 18-14 by the Isles, who aren’t close to being the kind of physical team they were in the early 2020s. Miller’s hit on Schaefer was the only one against the first player taken in the 2025 NHL Draft, who had three shots on goal, a takeaway, a blocked shot – and few if any bruises from contact with a Ranger.

Source: https://www.foreverblueshirts.com/new-york-rangers-news/takeaways-home-loss-to-islanders
 
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