News Rangers Team Notes

How Rangers owner got ‘invaluable’ advice from legendary reporter Larry Brooks

With his hard-nosed, often brutally honest approach to covering the New York Rangers as the preeminent hockey journalist on the beat, Larry Brooks ruffled more than a few feathers in the organization over the years. Apparently, however, Rangers owner James Dolan, who’s often called out for being thin-skinned, appreciated the veteran scribe’s honest take, right up until Brooks died Thursday at the age of 75.

“Besides the stellar job that Larry did covering the New York Rangers, what few people know is that he and I would meet on occasion and he would give me his unabashed opinion on how the franchise was doing and what we needed to do to win,” Dolan told The New York Post, for whom Brooks covered the NHL for nearly four decades.

“This never appeared in any of his columns, but I found his advice to be invaluable and will miss it dearly.”

That’s the level of respect Brooks had within the hockey world. As many said since news broke of his passing, you may not have liked him; you may not have agreed with him; but you always read what Brooks wrote.

Statement from the New York Rangers on the passing of Hall of Fame writer Larry Brooks. pic.twitter.com/RfQiG3gUJA

— New York Rangers (@NYRangers) November 13, 2025

But Dolan seemed to take it a step further, seeking out Brooks for his opinions and thoughts, ones not shared in his printed Rangers articles or weekly Slap Shots column in the Post.

Former Rangers general manager Neil Smith believes these meetings were mutually beneficial.

“What it speaks to me is the amount of respect that Jim Dolan had for Larry Brooks and the fact that he wanted him on his side,” Smith told Forever Blueshirts on the Rink Rap podcast. “Now, does that mean Larry was going to write all positive things about Jim and his club? No. But it was strategically smart to make sure that you were friendly with the guy that’s got the most say in the city about your franchise.

“I do believe there was a respect there; but I do believe that the respect really came from [Dolan thinking] this guy is a big-time influencer — meaning Larry Brooks — so I had better get to know him and see how he thinks and see if he’s got anything I can glean to do better with my club.”

Former Rangers GM Neil Smith among those who got past ‘horrible battles’ with Larry Brooks


Tributes poured in for the Hockey Hall of Famer, who was enshrined with the Class of 2018 when he won the Elmer Ferguson Award “in recognition of distinguished members of the hockey-writing profession whose words have brought honor to journalism and to hockey.”

Throughout my career he was always there, asking questions. I had many conversations with Larry Brooks, almost daily about my game, the Rangers and the game as a whole. I respected his knowledge a ton. Thank you Larry for your commitment to the game, you will be missed. RIP🙏🏼 pic.twitter.com/2u9nA5orEu

— Henrik Lundqvist (@HLundqvist) November 13, 2025

Though unsurprising that someone like Henrik Lundqvist, who had a solid professional relationship with Brooks, publicly stated that he “respected his knowledge a ton” and commended Brooks for his “commitment to the game,” it said much about the man that former Rangers Sean Avery and Tony DeAngelo had such positive things to say.

“Very sad to hear about the passing of Larry Brooks,” DeAngelo posted on X. “Nobody did the job like him. His opinions were strong but he was always willing to say them to your face & let you have your say back. Him & I became closer over the years talking frequently about hockey. Will miss those talks , always appreciated his perspective on things.”

As for Smith, he and Brooks crossed paths for several years, though Brooks didn’t join the Rangers beat at the Post until after the Blueshirts won the Stanley Cup in 1994. Brooks didn’t give Smith much leeway over the ensuing years just because he was the Cup-winning GM.

“I had horrible battles with Larry,” said Smith, who was fired as Rangers general manager after the 1999-2000 season. “I called him some names I’m not very proud of today. But it was all in the course of doing my job and him in the course of doing his job. When that job was over, you didn’t hate the guy, you didn’t dislike the person … but if you were man enough, you could separate the two things, the person from the role he had to play.”

Clearly, former Rangers coach John Tortorella felt the same way. He and Brooks had many arguments during Tortorella’s tenure behind the Blueshirts bench from 2009-13 — including a very well-known public scrap that almost got physical. But, as reported in the New York Post, Tortorella reached out to Brooks in his final days upon hearing how ill the longtime reporter was.

Relationships are complicated. And that was the case with Brooks and those he reported on and covered over the years. In the end, there was respect..

Source: https://www.foreverblueshirts.com/n...mes-dolan-invaluable-advice-late-larry-brooks
 
Why missing key defenseman would be big loss for Rangers vs. Blue Jackets

Will Borgen was not on the ice for the New York Rangers at practice Friday in Columbus, one day before they begin a busy weekend by facing the Blue Jackets at Nationwide Arena. Coach Mike Sullivan said Borgen is day to day with an upper-body injury but wouldn’t rule him out when the Metropolitan Division rivals meet for the first time this season.

It’s unclear when or how Borgen was injured — he played the entirety of Wednesday’s 7-3 win against the Tampa Bay Lightning. With Borgen not on the ice Friday, Carson Soucy, his regular partner, was paired with Braden Schneider while Matthew Robertson played alongside Urho Vaakanainen.

Borgen is one of those players who is easy to overlook despite averaging a career-high 18:43 of ice time. His goal in the win at Tampa Bay was his first of the season and his third point. He hadn’t hit the score sheet since assisting on the Rangers’ only goal in a 3-1 loss to the Minnesota Wild on Oct. 20.

PUT IN THE WORK + PUT IT AWAY. pic.twitter.com/K8N1Jtdehe

— New York Rangers (@NYRangers) November 13, 2025

“We’re not asking him to score a lot of goals,” Sullivan said earlier this week.

But not having Borgen on the blue line against a Columbus team that is 9-7-1 after a 5-4 win against the Edmonton Oilers on Thursday would be a sizeable loss.

The Rangers have had a major turnaround defensively, and Borgen is a big reason why. They were 28th in the NHL last season in 5-on-5 expected goals against per 60 minutes, according to Natural Stat Trick. Entering the game in Columbus, they are second (2.13).

Will Borgen has been key to solidifying Rangers’ defense​


New York acquired Borgen from the Seattle Kraken last December in the trade that sent forward Kaapo Kakko, the No. 2 pick in the 2019 NHL Draft, to the League’s newest franchise. Less than two months later, general manager Chris Drury made a major commitment to his new defenseman, signing him to a five-year extension with an average annual value of $4.1 million.

Drury didn’t do it because of Borgen’s ability to score – the 28-year-old’s five goals last season was a career high – but rather because of his ability to help Igor Shesterkin and Jonathan Quick keep the puck out of the Rangers’ net. He’s blocked 24 shots, fourth on the team, and he and Soucy have been on the ice for five 5-on-5 goals for and only two against during the 14 games and 138:02 they’ve played together.

“What we’re asking of Will is to be hard to play against and defend hard, help us on the penalty kill, defend the rushes aggressively, kill plays in the D-zone, be hard at the net front,” Sullivan said. “That’s the game that we think he excels at. That’s what he’s brought to us.”

NHL: New York Rangers at Pittsburgh Penguins

Charles LeClaire-Imagn Images

Sullivan, who coached the Pittsburgh Penguins for 10 seasons before parting ways with them and signing with the Rangers in May, didn’t know much about Borgen before coming to Broadway. But in watching him on film during the offseason, the coach said he liked Borgen’s willingness to defend and how he uses his size (6-foot-3, 200 pounds) to his advantage.

“Number one, he’s competitive, and he has a level of abrasiveness to his game that I think makes us a whole lot more difficult to play against,” Sullivan said.

Borgen looks like a legit shutdown defenseman who can handle top-four minutes and kill penalties, especially under Sullivan’s zone approach to defending. One thing that’s helped him, even with a coaching change, is that he’s more familiar with his new team as he nears the one-year mark since coming to New York. Borgen said this week that he’s feeling “more comfortable everywhere on and off the ice.”

NHL: Minnesota Wild at New York Rangers

Brad Penner-Imagn Images

Sullivan, who helped a number of defensemen, including Kris Letang, raise their game in Pittsburgh, has liked what he’s seen so far and hopes Borgen won’t have to miss time – especially with the Rangers playing the second half of a back-to-back when the Detroit Red Wings come to town on Sunday, followed by a three-game trip to Vegas, Colorado and Utah.

“He’s a reliable, trustworthy defenseman, and he’s predictable for his partner,” Sullivan said. “I think those are great attributes to have for a defenseman.”

Source: https://www.foreverblueshirts.com/new-york-rangers-news/borgen-might-miss-game-at-columbus
 
Why Neil Smith believes Rangers won’t let free agent star ‘walk’

The way Artemi Panarin is playing right now, it’d be understandable if the New York Rangers wanted to lock up the pending unrestricted free agent with a contract extension as soon as possible.

But it’s not exactly that easy.

First off, Panarin’s current heater, nine points (three goals, six assists) in his past four games, was preceded by an exceptionally slow – -and concerning — start this season. He had seven points in 14 games before shaving his head for good luck.

“My confidence [is] OK now. “Better than before,” Panarin told the New York Post this week.

Artemi Panarin – New York Rangers (4) pic.twitter.com/hdGXInbwSU

— NHL Goal Videos (@NHLGoalVideos) November 11, 2025

Then there are reports that extension talks already fizzled this fall, with term and dollar value value unsurprisingly at the heart of the issues. Panarin reportedly is not planning on giving the Rangers a discount to stay on Broadway — and that stance was firm even when his production wasn’t there last month.

Another key issue is Panarin’s age. He’s 34, hitting that age when potential suitors might pause from making a heavy investment in him next summer.

All that said, former Rangers general manager Neil Smith is pretty sure that Panarin ultimately remains in New York after his current massive deal — seven years, $81.5 million — expires July 1. His reasoning is simple and based on history.

“I don’t think the Rangers will let him walk. They just don’t let star players walk,” Smith told Forever Blueshirts on the Rink Rap podcast.

Of course, much has changed in the 25 years since Smith was the Blueshirts’ top executive, mainly the implementation of the NHL salary cap. But the Rangers do love their stars, no doubt about that. And Panarin, their leading scorer each of the past six seasons and again with 16 points (five goals, 11 assists) so far in 2025-26, is a big-time star.

So, there’s value to Smith’s insight. But he raises serious questions, as well.

“Should they let him walk is another question. Are they ever going to win with him? That’s another question,” Smith offered. “But will they re-sign him and he does not walk away? I think they do. That would be my bet, that they do re-sign him.”

Rangers, Artemi Panarin willing to move slowly with free agency looming

NHL: Nashville Predators at New York Rangers

Brad Penner-Imagn Images

One of the major rubs against Panarin is that he doesn’t produce at nearly the same rate in the Stanley Cup Playoffs. Though he does have a pair of iconic overtime goals from New York’s runs to the 2022 and 2024 Eastern Conference Finals, Panarin has 21 goals and 61 points in 71 career postseason games with the Rangers, Columbus Blue Jackets, and Chicago Blackhawks.

Panarin averages better than a point per game (1.15), with 886 points in 770 regular-season games.

Matt Larkin from Daily Faceoff weighed in on the Panarin topic and is most concerned about declining play moving forward for the top-line wing, who’s coming off a four-point game in the Rangers’ 7-3 win over the Tampa Bay Lightning on Wednesday.

“And from Rangers GM Chris Drury’s perspective, would it be risky to re-sign a declining Panarin?,” Larking wrote. “It might make more sense to cash him out for a major haul approaching the 2026 Trade Deadline.”

For those counting, that’s four months until the trade deadline. Four months to determine a next step with Panarin.

The free-agent market is thinning next offseason. Connor McDavid, Jack Eichel, Kiril Kaprizov, Martin Necas, and Kyle Connor are among the stars who re-signed with their current teams already. That leaves Adrian Kempe of the Los Angeles Kings and Panarin as the clear top two players available next summer. Even approaching his age-35 season, the dollars could be there for Panarin.

By all accounts, both Panarin and Rangers GM Chris Drury are willing to let this play out. Neither is panicking nor in a rush to make a decision one way or the other.

For now, each side is thrilled that the Breadman regained his scoring touch and that the Rangers (9-7-2) collectively are finding their footing after tough first month of the season, that included five shutout defeats on home ice.

Source: https://www.foreverblueshirts.com/n...ers-wont-let-artemi-panarin-leave-free-agency
 
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