Date: March 9, 2026
Author: IHM News
IHM POWER INDEX - NHL 1-32 Trade Deadline Rankings
The Holiday Edition on December 21 captured the league before the winter grind and before the trade deadline chaos. Now the board has shifted again. Colorado still sits on top, but this version of the IHM POWER INDEX is shaped by deadline aggression, roster identity, Olympic aftershocks, and which teams look most sustainable for the final push into spring.
For continuity, every club keeps a direct reference to the previous IHM ranking from December 21. This is the official Trade Deadline Edition of the IHM POWER INDEX, built on form, IHM Metrics, injury context, deadline impact, star value, and how stable each team’s structure looks heading into the playoff race.
And because this is the deadline edition, every team also gets one simple March Need - the one thing that matters most for the stretch run.
1. Colorado Avalanche
Previous IHM Rank (Dec 21): 1 · Movement: -
Colorado stays on top of the IHM board. If anything, the deadline only strengthened their grip on the number one spot. Nathan MacKinnon is still driving the league’s most dangerous tempo, Cale Makar remains a game breaker from the back end, and the center depth now looks absurdly strong after the latest moves. The Avs do not just have top-end talent anymore. They have layers.
This is a team that can win through skill, speed, forecheck detail, or line matching. That combination is what keeps them above the rest of the field.
March Need: Health and rhythm, because the roster is now strong enough that the biggest threat is disruption, not weakness.
2. Dallas Stars
Previous IHM Rank (Dec 21): 2 · Movement: -
Dallas stays exactly where it was in the Holiday Edition, and that is not an insult. They remain one of the cleanest all-around teams in the league. The Stars do not always dominate the way Colorado does, but they manage game states like veterans who understand what spring hockey feels like.
Their structure is reliable, their top nine can hurt teams in waves, and the special teams remain dangerous. If Colorado did not exist, Dallas would have a real case for the top spot.
March Need: A hard edge in the Central race, because the path to the Cup may still run through Colorado.
3. Carolina Hurricanes
Previous IHM Rank (Dec 21): 3 · Movement: -
Carolina holds steady inside the top three. The formula has not changed. Five-man structure, suffocating blue-line pressure, disciplined layers, and enough goaltending to support it. The Hurricanes remain one of the most system-stable teams in the NHL.
They are not flashy every night, but they are always difficult. That reliability is exactly why they stay near the top of the IHM board.
March Need: A healthy, sharp crease, because the structure is already championship caliber.
4. Minnesota Wild
Previous IHM Rank (Dec 21): 4 · Movement: -
Minnesota remains in the elite tier. The Quinn Hughes effect is still real, Matt Boldy is playing some of the best hockey of his career, and the Wild look like a team that can beat opponents in different ways. They are more dynamic now than they were earlier in the season, but the core identity is still based on structure.
This is one of the few teams that can survive playoff-style games without needing chaos.
March Need: Defensive health, because losing too many minute-eaters could cut into their ceiling fast.
5. Tampa Bay Lightning
Previous IHM Rank (Dec 21): 7 · Movement: ▲2
Tampa climbs back into the top five. The Lightning still know how to build a season arc better than almost anyone. Even when the roster looks worn down, they find rhythm, keep scoring threats alive, and carry enough playoff intelligence to remain dangerous.
The latest stretch has reminded everyone that their window is not closed just because the rest of the Atlantic got louder.
March Need: Bodies. This remains a team that can contend if the injury card stops punishing them.
6. Buffalo Sabres
Previous IHM Rank (Dec 21): 25 · Movement: ▲19
Buffalo is the biggest climber on the board. This is not charity. This is recognition. They are finally behaving like a team rather than a collection of talent. The structure is sharper, the belief level is higher, and the playoff drought no longer feels like a permanent identity.
The trade deadline did not turn them into a finished product, but it confirmed that the league now has to take them seriously.
March Need: A true difference-maker on the blue line, because that is still the missing piece between good and dangerous.
7. Montreal Canadiens
Previous IHM Rank (Dec 21): 17 · Movement: ▲10
Montreal has turned into one of the most impressive risers in the Eastern Conference. The defensive game is more trustworthy, the offense still has enough top-six quality through Suzuki and Caufield, and the overall profile feels more mature than it did two months ago.
They do not dominate many games, but they have become a difficult out, and that matters a lot in March.
March Need: Clarity in goal, because the overall team structure deserves stable crease leadership.
8. Pittsburgh Penguins
Previous IHM Rank (Dec 21): 16 · Movement: ▲8
Pittsburgh climbs into the top eight. Even with Sidney Crosby injured, this group has kept fighting, and the goaltending story has become impossible to ignore. The Penguins still carry volatility, but their game looks more stable than it did in the Holiday Edition.
If Crosby returns on schedule, this is the kind of team nobody wants to see in a first-round matchup.
March Need: Clean late-game management, because too many good efforts still wobble in the final minutes.
9. Detroit Red Wings
Previous IHM Rank (Dec 21): 10 · Movement: ▲1
Detroit nudges upward. They remain one of the more interesting teams in the playoff race because their ceiling depends on whether the defensive structure can keep up with the offensive talent. Larkin, DeBrincat and the rest of the forward group still make them dangerous, but the margin for error is not huge.
They are not an elite team, but they are still a serious one.
March Need: Better defensive suppression, because the skill level deserves cleaner team defense in front of it.
10. New York Islanders
Previous IHM Rank (Dec 21): 11 · Movement: ▲1
The Islanders climb a slot and remain one of the league’s most quietly annoying opponents. The defensive spine is there, the younger pieces continue to grow, and they are staying relevant because they do not beat themselves often.
They are not built to overwhelm. They are built to drag teams into Islander hockey and make them live there.
March Need: More secondary finishing, because low-event hockey becomes dangerous when one bad bounce decides everything.
11. Boston Bruins
Previous IHM Rank (Dec 21): 12 · Movement: ▲1
Boston keeps moving in the right direction, but the deadline felt underwhelming relative to their opportunity. The structure is still solid, the special teams still matter, and Jeremy Swayman returning to form gives them real life. But they left some immediate help on the table.
That keeps them strong, but not fully maximized.
March Need: One real NHL-impact reinforcement, because the room earned more than minor side moves.
12. Vegas Golden Knights
Previous IHM Rank (Dec 21): 5 · Movement: ▼7
Vegas falls from the top tier into the lower edge of the playoff heavyweight group. That does not mean they are weak. It means the Pacific has become noisy, and Vegas has not looked as consistently convincing as earlier in the season. Injuries continue to complicate the picture.
Still, this is Vegas. Nobody is eager to draw them.
March Need: Lineup stability, because the system only looks truly elite when the core is intact.
13. Anaheim Ducks
Previous IHM Rank (Dec 21): 6 · Movement: ▼7
Anaheim remains a real playoff race factor, but they slide a bit because the conference around them got harsher and expectations are now higher. The John Carlson move was bold and sends a strong signal. The young core is no longer just interesting. It is relevant.
This group feels ahead of schedule, and that changes how we grade them.
March Need: Experience under pressure, because this is now a real games-that-matter environment.
14. Columbus Blue Jackets
Previous IHM Rank (Dec 21): 24 · Movement: ▲10
Columbus makes a serious jump. There is more structure in the game now, the young players are giving them identity, and they are no longer easy to dismiss as a fun-but-flawed team. They are still chasing, but they are in the mix because they skate fast and compete honestly.
They have become one of the more credible surprise threats in the East.
March Need: A little more finishing touch, because the framework is increasingly respectable.
15. Utah Mammoth
Previous IHM Rank (Dec 21): 21 · Movement: ▲6
Utah has real playoff-life energy. The market is buying in, the club has built more structure than most expansion-style teams ever manage this quickly, and the deadline did not kill that momentum. They are not a finished team, but they look more legitimate now than they did in December.
March Need: Top-end scoring punch, because the overall process is good enough to justify wanting more offense.
16. Edmonton Oilers
Previous IHM Rank (Dec 21): 13 · Movement: ▼3
Edmonton slips slightly, and the reason is straightforward. There is still McDavid. There is still Draisaitl. There is still offense. But the deadline did not do enough for a team with such a clear window. That matters.
The Oilers remain dangerous because elite star power can overwhelm almost anyone. But this was a chance to sharpen a contender, and instead they mostly managed around the edges.
March Need: True defensive and goaltending certainty, because McDavid’s window should not be handled cautiously.
17. Ottawa Senators
Previous IHM Rank (Dec 21): 23 · Movement: ▲6
Ottawa moves up into the upper-middle cluster because the raw talent still gives them life and there are signs that the team is stabilizing. They are not fully there, but they are less fragile than they were earlier. This still feels like a group that can rise fast if the confidence wave returns.
March Need: Five-on-five scoring that actually matches the names on the roster.
18. Washington Capitals
Previous IHM Rank (Dec 21): 8 · Movement: ▼10
Washington takes a hard fall. The John Carlson trade changed the emotional and structural picture at once. This is not just about one defenseman leaving. It is about what that move says about the present and future. Ovechkin is still there, Tom Wilson is still there, but the old core has one fewer pillar.
The team still competes, but the long-view feels heavier now.
March Need: A clear direction, because mixed messaging at this stage helps nobody.
19. Seattle Kraken
Previous IHM Rank (Dec 21): 29 · Movement: ▲10
Seattle climbs back into a more respectable zone after bottoming out in the Holiday Edition. They are still not stable enough to trust fully, but the board cannot ignore that they remain in the Pacific conversation and are capable of dragging other teams into ugly games.
The confidence level is still not what it was in the opening part of the season, but they are no longer freefalling.
March Need: Consistency. Nothing else matters until the same team starts showing up night to night.
20. Philadelphia Flyers
Previous IHM Rank (Dec 21): 9 · Movement: ▼11
Philadelphia drops hard from their December high. The defensive identity that fueled their rise is still there in pieces, but the overall push has slowed and the path now feels narrower. The Flyers are not broken, but the “major riser” energy is gone for the moment.
They need a fresh run soon or they will become a good story that faded too early.
March Need: Enough offense to reward the structure they still play with.
21. San Jose Sharks
Previous IHM Rank (Dec 21): 19 · Movement: ▼2
San Jose slips a little but remains one of the league’s most interesting build-ahead teams. Macklin Celebrini has become a true headline piece, and the Sharks are closer to relevance than they were supposed to be. The issue is that the playoff race may simply be arriving a bit too early for the roster’s full maturity.
Still, the direction is clear. That matters.
March Need: More veteran calm, because the young core is good enough to justify better support.
22. Toronto Maple Leafs
Previous IHM Rank (Dec 21): 20 · Movement: ▼2
Toronto slides slightly, and the post-Olympic struggles explain why. The issue is not just losing games. It is the way they lose them. Defensive sequencing, coverage timing, and overall team stability have looked fragile. The offensive talent can still flash, but the structure keeps leaking.
They remain alive, but not trustworthy.
March Need: Defensive order, because the top-six skill is pointless if the game keeps tilting the other way.
23. Los Angeles Kings
Previous IHM Rank (Dec 21): 15 · Movement: ▼8
The Kings continue to drift. There is still defensive identity here, but the scoring need has become too obvious to ignore, and the pressure of trying to send Anze Kopitar out the right way only increases the spotlight. They needed more offensive certainty entering this stretch, and the board still feels incomplete.
March Need: Scoring help with structure, because random offense is not enough for the way LA wants to play.
24. Florida Panthers
Previous IHM Rank (Dec 21): 14 · Movement: ▼10
Florida falls more than most expected two months ago, but that is what happens when injuries, fatigue, and long-cycle wear all hit at once. This still feels like a team that knows how to survive, but it no longer feels like a machine. There is more vulnerability here now than during their recent peak years.
March Need: A healthier roster and one last real surge, because reputation alone will not save this spring.
25. New Jersey Devils
Previous IHM Rank (Dec 21): 18 · Movement: ▼7
New Jersey remains frustrating. The attack still looks dangerous in flashes, but the overall stability is not there. The Jack Hughes health cloud changed everything, and the Devils have never fully recovered their clean identity. When they are right, they can fly. But “when they are right” has become too rare.
March Need: A healthy, uninterrupted stretch from their top-end talent.
26. Nashville Predators
Previous IHM Rank (Dec 21): 28 · Movement: ▲2
Nashville edges up a little. They are still living near the bottom of the rankings, but they are not totally lifeless. There is enough structure to compete and enough pride to spoil someone’s night. The bigger issue is that the offensive ceiling remains limited.
March Need: Finishers, because too much work still produces too little reward.
27. Winnipeg Jets
Previous IHM Rank (Dec 21): 26 · Movement: ▼1
The Jets stay near the same zone, but that is hardly comforting. The Hellebuyck situation and the overall instability have kept Winnipeg from recovering into something stronger. Without elite goaltending covering everything, the cracks look much larger.
March Need: Full Hellebuyck form and blue-line calm, because otherwise the ceiling remains modest.
28. Chicago Blackhawks
Previous IHM Rank (Dec 21): 27 · Movement: ▼1
Chicago stays in the lower tier, and the Connor Bedard issue remains central to everything. This is a team whose offensive identity is too tightly tied to one player’s gravity. The future is still clear enough, but the present remains thin.
March Need: A fully healthy Bedard and more support around him once he returns.
29. Calgary Flames
Previous IHM Rank (Dec 21): 31 · Movement: ▲2
Calgary rises slightly, not because the on-ice picture suddenly became strong, but because the front office finally committed to direction. Craig Conroy has embraced the rebuild route with more conviction than many teams ever manage. That deserves recognition.
The wins are not here yet, but the plan is becoming clearer.
March Need: Drafting and development to match the asset collection.
30. New York Rangers
Previous IHM Rank (Dec 21): 22 · Movement: ▼8
The Rangers fall sharply. The split-personality profile from earlier is gone now. This looks more like a team staring at the draft than a team trying to scrape into relevance. The name value still outshines the reality.
March Need: Honesty. That is what teams at this stage need most.
31. St. Louis Blues
Previous IHM Rank (Dec 21): 30 · Movement: ▼1
St. Louis stays near the basement, but there is at least logic to what they did. Doug Armstrong turned a weak season into meaningful return value, and that is the correct play. The problem is simple: this is still a bad team in the present, even if the future looks a bit cleaner.
March Need: Patience, because this phase is now about what comes next, not what remains.
32. Vancouver Canucks
Previous IHM Rank (Dec 21): 32 · Movement: -
Vancouver remains last. The Quinn Hughes trade already pushed them into identity crisis mode, and the deadline did nothing to lift that reality. This is still a team searching for a new backbone, a new defensive center of gravity, and frankly a new emotional direction.
The return pieces may age well. The current version still looks broken.
March Need: Time, because no quick fix is solving this version of the Canucks.
IHM Q&A - Reading The Trade Deadline POWER INDEX
Why does Colorado remain number one after the deadline?
Because they were already the strongest team on the board and then improved one of the only areas where contenders can separate further: center depth. Colorado now has top-end star power and layered roster strength.
Which team made the biggest positive move since the Holiday Edition?
Buffalo is the clearest riser on the full board. Montreal, Columbus and Tampa also gained ground, but Buffalo’s jump reflects a much bigger shift in credibility.
Which team fell the hardest since December 21?
Philadelphia, Washington and Florida all took major hits relative to where they stood in the Holiday Edition. In different ways, each one now looks less secure than it did in late December.
Who is the most dangerous team outside the true top tier?
Pittsburgh. If Crosby returns near full strength and the goaltending keeps holding, they have enough experience and enough structure to become a serious playoff problem.
Which deadline result changed the board the most?
Colorado’s continued strengthening at the top had the biggest contender impact, while Calgary’s commitment to a true rebuild changed the long-term reading of the bottom tier.
Who is the most misleading team in the middle of the rankings?
Edmonton. The star power says danger. The deadline says incomplete. They are still capable of a deep run, but they look less reinforced than a McDavid team should.
Which lower-ranked teams are at least moving in the right direction?
Calgary and St. Louis made moves that make more sense for the future than the present. That matters, even if the standings remain ugly right now.
How often will the IHM POWER INDEX be updated now?
The plan is to keep the full 1-32 board for major checkpoints like the trade deadline and late-season push, with shorter IHM updates when injuries, deadline fallout, or major streaks force meaningful changes.