IHM Hockey News | March 12, 2026
Another dramatic week around the NHL delivered contract news, controversy on the ice, injury concerns and milestone watch for one of the league’s biggest superstars. From Utah locking up a key offensive piece to Colorado protesting a controversial penalty call, the league continues to produce headlines as the playoff race intensifies.
Utah Mammoth secure Nick Schmaltz with major contract extension
The Utah Mammoth made a major statement about the direction of their franchise by signing forward Nick Schmaltz to an eight year contract extension worth $64 million. The deal carries an average annual value of $8 million and keeps the veteran forward under contract through the 2033-34 NHL season.
Schmaltz, who is currently 30 years old, has been one of Utah’s most productive offensive players this season. He ranks second on the team in scoring with 59 points in 64 games and played a major role in helping the Mammoth remain in playoff position.
His strong early season production helped set the tone for Utah’s campaign. During the first ten games of the season he recorded 16 points, quickly establishing himself as a central piece of the team’s offensive structure.
Schmaltz expressed strong commitment to the franchise when discussing the extension.
“There was never a doubt that Utah is where I want to play the rest of my career. We have a great core and I believe this team can accomplish something special in the years ahead.”
Utah general manager Bill Armstrong praised the forward both for his production and his leadership inside the locker room.
“Nick is an outstanding player and person. He has been an important leader for our young forwards and we expect him to continue producing and guiding this group as we move forward.”
The Mammoth currently hold the first Western Conference wild card position and are attempting to reach the playoffs for the first time since the franchise relocated to Salt Lake City.
MacKinnon ejection sparks controversy in Avalanche loss
A controversial officiating decision became one of the most discussed moments of the week after Colorado Avalanche star Nathan MacKinnon received a major penalty and game misconduct for goalie interference during a loss against the Edmonton Oilers.
Late in the second period MacKinnon drove toward the net attempting to redirect a pass. During the play Oilers defenseman Darnell Nurse collided with MacKinnon which caused the Avalanche star to crash into goaltender Connor Ingram.
Officials ruled the play goalie interference and assessed a five minute major penalty along with an automatic game misconduct. The call remained in place after video review.
Colorado coach Jared Bednar strongly disagreed with the decision after the game.
“There is no chance he hits the goalie if our player is not pushed into him. That situation is not a penalty.”
Goaltender Connor Ingram left the game under concussion protocol and was replaced by Tristan Jarry, who helped Edmonton secure a 4-3 victory.
The Avalanche killed off the major penalty but eventually conceded the game winning goal to Connor McDavid on a third period power play.
PWHL exploring partnership with Ottawa Senators
The Professional Women’s Hockey League may be moving closer to securing a long term future for its Ottawa franchise.
League officials confirmed that discussions are underway with the NHL’s Ottawa Senators about potentially hosting the Ottawa Charge at the Canadian Tire Centre.
The Charge currently play their home games at TD Place but upcoming renovations will significantly reduce the arena’s seating capacity. That change has forced the league to evaluate new long term solutions.
PWHL executives described the relationship with the Senators organization as increasingly positive and productive.
An upcoming game between Ottawa and Montreal scheduled at the Senators arena on April 3 will serve as a major test of fan interest in the larger venue.
Charlie McAvoy shows toughness in dramatic Bruins victory
Boston Bruins defenseman Charlie McAvoy delivered one of the most memorable performances of the week despite suffering a painful facial injury during the game.
After being hit and losing several teeth during a collision in the second period, McAvoy returned to the ice and scored the game winning goal just 39 seconds into overtime to give Boston a 2-1 victory against the Los Angeles Kings.
The dramatic goal helped extend Boston’s home winning streak to thirteen games.
McAvoy admitted after the game that the injury was extremely painful but praised the team’s determination.
“My mouth couldn’t feel worse, but we got the two points and that’s what matters.”
Boston coach Marco Sturm praised the defenseman’s resilience and leadership inside the locker room.
“That type of effort sets the standard for everyone in the room. When young players see that level of commitment they understand what it takes to compete at this level.”
Florida Panthers may shut down Brad Marchand for the season
The Florida Panthers could soon make a difficult decision regarding veteran forward Brad Marchand, who has been playing through a lower body injury.
Coach Paul Maurice confirmed that the team is evaluating whether shutting the winger down for the remainder of the season would be the best option for his long term health.
Despite the injury Marchand has remained one of Florida’s most productive players, recording 27 goals and 54 points this season.
However the Panthers currently sit twelve points outside a playoff position, making a postseason return increasingly unlikely.
Marchand’s potential absence adds to a difficult season for Florida which has already been impacted by multiple major injuries.
Evgeni Malkin suspended five games
Pittsburgh Penguins forward Evgeni Malkin received a five game suspension after slashing Buffalo Sabres defenseman Rasmus Dahlin during a recent matchup.
The incident occurred during the second period when Malkin retaliated following a cross check from Dahlin.
The NHL Department of Player Safety determined that Malkin intentionally swung his stick at a dangerous height and issued supplemental discipline.
The suspension represents a significant loss for Pittsburgh, particularly with captain Sidney Crosby already sidelined by injury.
Connor McDavid closing in on 400 career goals
Edmonton Oilers captain Connor McDavid continues to add to his remarkable career and is now just three goals away from reaching the 400 goal milestone.
McDavid currently leads the NHL with 110 points in 65 games and has been on an extended scoring streak that has helped keep Edmonton near the top of the Western Conference standings.
While McDavid has long been known as one of the league’s greatest playmakers, this season has once again demonstrated his elite scoring ability.
If he reaches the milestone he will become only the fifth player in Oilers history to score 400 goals.
Teammates and coaches have emphasized that McDavid becomes even more dangerous when he maintains an aggressive shooting mentality in addition to his exceptional playmaking.
Coach Mark Weekly Analysis
This week says a lot about what hockey really is once the season moves into March. It is not just about talent. It is about structure under stress, discipline under pressure, and which organizations know exactly what they are building.
Let us start with Utah, because that is the type of move that coaches notice immediately. Nick Schmaltz signing long term is not just a contract story. It is a culture story. When a player says he wants to stay and believes in the direction of the club, that matters inside a room. Young teams become real teams when their core stops feeling temporary. Utah is no longer behaving like a franchise waiting to see what happens. It is acting like a franchise that expects to matter.
From a hockey perspective, Schmaltz gives them continuity in the top six, chemistry in the offensive structure, and another reason for the group to believe the project is real. Contracts like that can calm a room. They tell players the organization is building with intention.
Now to Colorado. I understand exactly why they were furious about the MacKinnon call. If a defending player creates the path of contact and the attacker is already committed to the play at speed, the judgment has to include that context. Goalies absolutely need protection. Everyone agrees on that. But if the standard becomes that any violent crease collision automatically means the attacking player is guilty, then defenders gain too much power to shape the ruling.
What frustrates coaches is not only the call itself. It is inconsistency. Players can accept hard rules if those rules are applied the same way every night. What they struggle with is uncertainty. In playoff hockey, uncertainty becomes poison because one call can alter a game, a series, or even a season.
Colorado’s reaction also tells you something about their competitive state. That room is not passive. That room believes it can win. Teams only burn that hard over officiating when they know the stakes are real.
The Edmonton side of that story matters too. Connor McDavid keeps reminding everyone that he is not just a passer who happens to score. He is one of the most complete offensive players the sport has seen. The reason his goal totals remain so impressive is that his first instinct often still leans toward making the extra play. Imagine how dangerous that is. A player can dominate the league while still not fully living in shooter mentality every shift.
For coaches, the phrase “attack mentality” is important. When McDavid attacks, he does not just generate shots. He changes the shape of the ice. Defenders collapse. Gaps stretch. Passing lanes appear because opponents panic. That is why his scoring push matters. It is not just about reaching 400 goals. It is about how his directness changes everything around him.
Boston’s McAvoy story is another classic March hockey lesson. Toughness still matters. Not fake toughness. Not staged toughness. Real toughness. Get hit, bleed, come back, score, win. That kind of sequence has an enormous effect on team belief. Coaches cannot manufacture that. It has to come from the player. And when it does, it spreads.
For young players in that room, nights like that become reference points. They remember who played through pain and who changed the game anyway. That becomes part of culture faster than any speech.
Florida is the opposite kind of story. It is the reminder that no matter how strong your culture is, injuries can still hollow out a season. Brad Marchand trying to manage an issue until it reaches the point of shutdown is the type of veteran calculation many teams face late in the year. If the standings gap grows too large, protecting the player becomes more logical than chasing unlikely mathematics.
What this tells me is that Florida’s season has crossed into management mode. Not surrender, but management. There is a difference. You stop asking what is possible in the ideal scenario and start asking what is responsible in the real one.
Then there is Malkin. Veteran players set emotional tone. That is part of leadership whether they want it or not. When a star retaliates and puts the team at risk, it is never only about the suspension itself. It changes how the team has to survive the next stretch, and it creates questions about control. Skilled teams cannot afford emotional undiscipline at this time of year.
The larger lesson from the week is simple. March is where identity becomes visible. Early in the season you can hide behind form, schedule, and hope. In March, hockey gets more honest. Contracts matter more. Health matters more. Discipline matters more. Structure matters more.
That is why this week was so revealing. Utah showed belief. Colorado showed fire. Edmonton showed star pressure. Boston showed leadership. Florida showed wear. Pittsburgh showed vulnerability.
This is the point of the calendar where every story begins leaning toward the playoffs, even when the playoffs are not directly mentioned. The league is tightening. The emotional temperature is rising. And the teams that understand themselves best are the ones that will handle that pressure most effectively.
That is the real meaning of this week.
Extended Q&A: NHL Weekly News Explained
Why is Nick Schmaltz’s extension so important for Utah?
This contract is about more than one productive season. Utah is trying to establish itself as a stable, ambitious franchise with a long-term core. By committing eight years to Nick Schmaltz, the Mammoth are signaling that they believe he is one of the pillars of that identity. He is not just a scorer on the stat sheet. He is one of the players helping define how this team wants to play and who it wants to build around.
Is $8 million per year fair value for Schmaltz?
In the current cap environment, the number is aggressive but understandable. Schmaltz is a top-six forward producing close to a point-per-game pace, and Utah is paying for both present value and continuity. The final judgment on the contract will depend on whether he remains a true top-line level contributor over the first half of the deal.
What does this deal say about Utah’s future?
It says the franchise no longer sees itself as transitional. Utah is acting like a team that expects to stay relevant rather than simply reach the playoffs once. Extensions like this matter because they create internal belief. Young players see that management is serious. Veterans see that the organization is willing to commit.
Why are teams so eager to lock up players before free agency?
Because free agency is expensive, unpredictable, and emotional. When a team knows a player fits its structure and culture, extending him early removes the risk of bidding wars and losing leverage in the summer.
Why did the MacKinnon penalty become such a major talking point?
Because it touches on one of the most difficult parts of officiating in hockey: collisions involving goaltenders. The rule is meant to protect the goalie, but the interpretation becomes controversial when contact is created by a defending player forcing the attacker into the crease. Colorado’s argument was not that goalies should be unprotected. Their argument was that MacKinnon did not create the collision on his own.
Why is goalie interference one of the hardest calls in hockey?
It combines speed, physical contact, body positioning, and split-second chain reactions. Officials must judge intent, force, angle, and whether the attacker made a reasonable effort to avoid contact. Those variables make consistency difficult.
Did the ejection change the game between Colorado and Edmonton?
Yes. Even if Colorado killed the major penalty, losing a player like MacKinnon changes how a team attacks, how it rotates lines, and how much pressure it can apply. In a one-goal game, that kind of absence can reshape the entire flow.
Why were Avalanche players so vocal after the game?
Because players want consistency in rule application, especially in situations involving stars and playoff-style intensity. When a team feels a major call does not reflect the actual sequence of contact, frustration usually spills over into public comments.
Why is Connor McDavid’s 400-goal chase significant if he is known more as a playmaker?
Because it highlights the full scale of his offensive ability. McDavid is widely discussed as one of the greatest creators in modern hockey, but reaching 400 goals reminds everyone that he is also one of the elite finishers of his era. A player who can threaten both as passer and scorer becomes almost impossible to defend cleanly.
Why does McDavid become even more dangerous when he shoots more?
Because defenders and goaltenders already fear his passing lanes. If he becomes more direct as a shooter, they cannot sit on passing options. That forces defenders to hesitate, and hesitation is fatal against a player with McDavid’s speed and edge control.
How impressive is McDavid’s current production?
It is elite even by his own standards. Leading the league with 110 points while sitting near another major goal milestone shows that he remains one of the most complete offensive forces in hockey. His point streak and road production underline how consistently he can dictate games.
Why is the Florida situation with Brad Marchand so important?
Because it shows how quickly a season can shift from playoff chase to health management. Marchand is still one of Florida’s most productive players, but if the postseason path becomes unrealistic, the conversation changes. At that point, protecting long-term health can become more logical than forcing a veteran through the final stretch.
What does Marchand’s injury say about Florida’s season?
It reinforces the theme of attrition. The Panthers have taken repeated hits to key players, and those losses have affected both results and overall structure. Eventually, even deep teams struggle to absorb that much damage.
Why was Charlie McAvoy’s overtime winner such a powerful story?
Because it combined pain tolerance, leadership, and timing. Hockey culture values players who return to the ice after taking serious punishment, but what elevated McAvoy’s night was that he returned and then directly decided the game. That kind of sequence stays in a locker room.
Can moments like McAvoy’s actually affect a team beyond one game?
Yes. Teammates remember them. Young players especially watch how leaders respond to adversity. When a player battles through visible pain and still produces in a decisive moment, it can strengthen internal standards across the room.
Why is Boston’s home winning streak so meaningful right now?
Because home ice is becoming a serious weapon for them. In tight playoff races, building a reliable environment at home can stabilize a team that may still be uneven on the road.
How damaging is Evgeni Malkin’s suspension for Pittsburgh?
It is significant because of timing and context. Pittsburgh is already dealing with injuries, including the absence of Sidney Crosby. Losing Malkin as well removes another major offensive and emotional piece from the lineup during a crucial stretch of the standings race.
Why do repeated disciplinary issues matter when the league reviews a play?
Because history influences how the Department of Player Safety evaluates intent and recklessness. A player with prior fines and suspensions is less likely to receive the benefit of the doubt in borderline situations.
Could Malkin’s suspension affect Pittsburgh beyond just five games?
Yes. It affects line balance, power-play structure, emotional discipline, and potentially the organization’s long-term thinking. Veteran stars are always judged not only by what they produce, but by what they cost the team when they lose control.
Why does the PWHL situation in Ottawa matter in a broader hockey sense?
Because arena stability is one of the biggest factors in long-term franchise growth. If the Ottawa Charge secure a better long-term venue with support from the Senators, it would strengthen the club’s financial and competitive future while reinforcing women’s hockey presence in the city.
What does the Ottawa Charge situation reveal about PWHL growth?
It shows that the league has moved beyond launch mode and into infrastructure questions. Expansion is important, but long-term success depends on stable arenas, sustainable attendance, and strong relationships with NHL markets and ownership groups.
Which weekly storyline has the biggest long-term impact?
Utah locking up Schmaltz probably has the biggest long-term significance because it directly shapes the identity and cap structure of a rising team for years. MacKinnon’s controversy was the loudest short-term story, but the Utah deal could matter much longer.
Which weekly storyline has the biggest emotional impact?
Charlie McAvoy’s performance likely wins that category. It had toughness, pain, leadership, and a game-winning finish. Those are the stories that players and fans remember beyond the box score.
Which weekly storyline should contenders pay closest attention to?
The MacKinnon goalie interference controversy. Playoff hockey is built on thin margins and officiating interpretation. Teams will absolutely study how these situations are being called because similar moments could decide postseason games.