NHL Projected Lineups - April 4, 2026

NHL Projected Lineups - April 4, 2026

NHL Projected Lineups - Game Day April 4, 2026

Date: April 3, 2026
By IceHockeyMan Newsroom

Update: Additional matchups will be added as projected lineups are updated throughout the day.


New York Islanders vs Philadelphia Flyers

Faceoff: 01:00 CET

Islanders - Projected lineup

Forwards
Anders Lee - Bo Horvat - Emil Heineman
Calum Ritchie - Brayden Schenn - Mathew Barzal
Ondrej Palat - Jean-Gabriel Pageau - Simon Holmstrom
Kyle MacLean - Casey Cizikas - Marc Gatcomb

Defense
Matthew Schaefer - Ryan Pulock
Adam Pelech - Carson Soucy
Scott Mayfield - Adam Boqvist

Goalies
Ilya Sorokin
David Rittich

Scratched
Anthony Duclair
Adam Boqvist
Isaiah George

Injured
Tony DeAngelo (lower body)
Kyle Palmieri (ACL)
Alexander Romanov (upper body)
Semyon Varlamov (knee)

IHM Lineup Note:
The Islanders still look like a structure-first team built around Sorokin, Horvat and Barzal. Their path here is to slow the middle, manage the puck cleanly and let the top six attack off controlled possession rather than chaos.

IHM Tactical Signals:
Pace Signal: Islanders prefer a more controlled tempo.
Forecheck Signal: Moderate pressure with strong support underneath.
Blue Line Signal: Pulock and Pelech still provide the cleaner defensive base.
Goalie Stability Signal: Islanders.
X-Factor Signal: Holmstrom’s availability matters because it affects third-line balance and transition detail.

Flyers - Projected lineup

Forwards
Tyson Foerster - Trevor Zegras - Owen Tippett
Travis Konecny - Christian Dvorak - Porter Martone
Denver Barkey - Noah Cates - Matvei Michkov
Sean Couturier - Luke Glendening - Carl Grundstrom

Defense
Travis Sanheim - Rasmus Ristolainen
Cam York - Jamie Drysdale
Nick Seeler - Emil Andrae

Goalies
Dan Vladar
Samuel Ersson

Scratched
Garrett Wilson
Alex Bump
Garnet Hathaway

Injured
Rodrigo Abols (lower body)
Nikita Grebenkin (upper body)
Noah Juulsen (undisclosed)

IHM Lineup Note:
Philadelphia brings more pace and skill variety than the Islanders, especially through Zegras, Tippett, Konecny and Michkov. The Flyers are more dangerous when they can force rush situations and avoid long, low-event defensive sequences.

IHM Tactical Signals:
Pace Signal: Flyers.
Forecheck Signal: More aggressive than New York’s when they get legs underneath the puck.
Blue Line Signal: More mobile than stable.
Goalie Stability Signal: Islanders.
X-Factor Signal: Martone’s continued integration gives Philadelphia extra offensive unpredictability.

IHM Match Pressure Index

Offensive Pressure
Flyers

Transition Edge
Flyers

Defensive Stability
Islanders

Goaltending Edge
Islanders

Game Control Projection
Philadelphia has the better route to a faster, more open game, but the Islanders still own the safer defensive structure and the clearer path if this turns into a tighter territorial battle.


Anaheim Ducks vs St. Louis Blues

Faceoff: 04:00 CET

Ducks - Projected lineup

Forwards
Chris Kreider - Leo Carlsson - Troy Terry
Alex Killorn - Tim Washe - Mikael Granlund
Jeffrey Viel - Ryan Poehling - Beckett Sennecke
Mason McTavish - Nathan Gaucher - Frank Vatrano

Defense
Jackson LaCombe - Jacob Trouba
Ian Moore - John Carlson
Olen Zellweger - Drew Helleson

Goalies
Lukas Dostal
Ville Husso

Scratched
None

Injured
Jansen Harkins (hand surgery)
Ross Johnston (lower body)
Pavel Mintyukov (lower body)
Radko Gudas (lower body)
Cutter Gauthier (upper body)

IHM Lineup Note:
Anaheim still has enough offensive spread to threaten through Carlsson, Terry, Granlund, McTavish and Vatrano, but the missing blue-line pieces reduce their defensive bite and physical edge. Dostal remains a key stabilizer in this matchup.

IHM Tactical Signals:
Pace Signal: Ducks can play faster than St. Louis if the game opens up.
Forecheck Signal: Stronger through the forward group than the current injured defense group.
Blue Line Signal: Reduced without Mintyukov and Gudas.
Goalie Stability Signal: Ducks slight edge with Dostal.
X-Factor Signal: Terry’s maintenance note matters because Anaheim loses finishing quality if he is not fully sharp.

Blues - Projected lineup

Forwards
Dylan Holloway - Robert Thomas - Jimmy Snuggerud
Jake Neighbours - Pavel Buchnevich - Jordan Kyrou
Otto Stenberg - Dalibor Dvorsky - Jonatan Berggren
Alexey Toropchenko - Jack Finley - Pius Suter

Defense
Philip Broberg - Logan Mailloux
Theo Lindstein - Colton Parayko
Cam Fowler - Justin Holl

Goalies
Joel Hofer
Jordan Binnington

Scratched
Nathan Walker
Matthew Kessel
Oskar Sundqvist
Jonathan Drouin

Injured
Tyler Tucker (lower body)

IHM Lineup Note:
St. Louis brings the more settled overall structure, especially with Thomas back driving the middle and Parayko anchoring the defensive shape. The Blues should feel comfortable if they can stop Anaheim from creating repeated rush exchanges.

IHM Tactical Signals:
Pace Signal: Blues prefer a more measured game than Anaheim.
Forecheck Signal: Blues can pressure effectively through heavier support routes.
Blue Line Signal: Blues.
Goalie Stability Signal: Even.
X-Factor Signal: Thomas is the key connector because he gives St. Louis cleaner exits and better offensive rhythm.

IHM Match Pressure Index

Offensive Pressure
Even

Transition Edge
Ducks

Defensive Stability
Blues

Goaltending Edge
Ducks slight edge

Game Control Projection
Anaheim has the better route to a speed-driven game, but St. Louis still looks like the more structurally reliable team if they can slow entries and keep Thomas dictating the center lane.


New York Rangers vs Detroit Red Wings

Faceoff: 18:30 CET

Rangers - Projected lineup

Forwards
Gabe Perreault - Mika Zibanejad - Alexis Lafreniere
Tye Kartye - J.T. Miller - Conor Sheary
Jonny Brodzinski - Vincent Trocheck - Will Cuylle
Adam Sykora - Noah Laba - Jaroslav Chmelar

Defense
Vladislav Gavrikov - Adam Fox
Drew Fortescue - Braden Schneider
Matthew Robertson - Will Borgen

Goalies
Jonathan Quick
Igor Shesterkin

Scratched
Vincent Iorio
Adam Edstrom
Taylor Raddysh
Dylan Garand

Injured
Matt Rempe (upper body)
Urho Vaakanainen (upper body)

IHM Lineup Note:
New York still has a strong structural spine with Fox, Gavrikov, Zibanejad, Miller, Trocheck and Quick returning to the crease mix. The Rangers are more dangerous when they stay organized and let their better defensive habits support the skill forwards.

IHM Tactical Signals:
Pace Signal: Rangers prefer a controlled pace over a track meet.
Forecheck Signal: Measured but effective through support pressure.
Blue Line Signal: Rangers.
Goalie Stability Signal: Rangers.
X-Factor Signal: Quick’s return matters because it restores depth and calm in goal management.

Red Wings - Projected lineup

Forwards
Emmitt Finnie - Dylan Larkin - Carter Mazur
Alex DeBrincat - Andrew Copp - Patrick Kane
David Perron - J.T. Compher - Lucas Raymond
James van Riemsdyk - Marco Kasper - Mason Appleton

Defense
Simon Edvinsson - Moritz Seider
Ben Chiarot - Justin Faulk
Albert Johansson - Jacob Bernard-Docker

Goalies
John Gibson
Cam Talbot

Scratched
Travis Hamonic
Dominik Shine

Injured
Michael Rasmussen (undisclosed)
Michael Brandsegg-Nygard (undisclosed)

IHM Lineup Note:
Detroit keeps enough scoring depth to challenge New York, especially with Larkin, Kane, DeBrincat and Raymond all in the lineup. The main question is whether the Wings can stay as clean structurally as the Rangers over a full game.

IHM Tactical Signals:
Pace Signal: Red Wings can play faster than New York if they get room in transition.
Forecheck Signal: Competitive but less disciplined than the Rangers.
Blue Line Signal: Seider gives Detroit real stability, but New York’s overall pair control is stronger.
Goalie Stability Signal: Slight edge Rangers.
X-Factor Signal: Faulk’s status matters because Detroit’s second pair loses reliability if he is limited or out.

IHM Match Pressure Index

Offensive Pressure
Red Wings slight edge

Transition Edge
Red Wings

Defensive Stability
Rangers

Goaltending Edge
Rangers

Game Control Projection
Detroit has the better route to an open-ice game through Larkin, Kane and Raymond, but New York still looks better built for a tighter matchup where structure and goaltending become decisive.


Ottawa Senators vs Minnesota Wild

Faceoff: 19:00 CET

Senators - Projected lineup

Forwards
Fabian Zetterlund - Tim Stutzle - Drake Batherson
Brady Tkachuk - Dylan Cozens - Ridly Greig
Claude Giroux - Shane Pinto - Michael Amadio
Warren Foegele - Lars Eller - Nick Cousins

Defense
Jorian Donovan - Artem Zub
Nikolas Matinpalo - Jordan Spence
Lassi Thomson - Cameron Crotty

Goalies
Linus Ullmark
James Reimer

Scratched
Stephen Halliday
Kurtis MacDermid

Injured
Jake Sanderson (upper body)
Nick Jensen (lower body)
Dennis Gilbert (upper body)
Thomas Chabot (upper body)
Carter Yakemchuk (upper body)
Tyler Kleven (upper body)

IHM Lineup Note:
Ottawa is dealing with serious blue-line attrition, which changes the entire structural outlook of the matchup. Ullmark gives them a chance, but the missing defense depth puts a lot of pressure on Stutzle, Tkachuk and Batherson to generate enough offense.

IHM Tactical Signals:
Pace Signal: Senators need pace and attack to offset the defensive losses.
Forecheck Signal: Ottawa should pressure hard through the top six.
Blue Line Signal: Wild clear edge.
Goalie Stability Signal: Senators with Ullmark.
X-Factor Signal: Sanderson’s status remains huge because Ottawa’s entire back-end shape changes if he returns.

Wild - Projected lineup

Forwards
Kirill Kaprizov - Ryan Hartman - Mats Zuccarello
Marcus Johansson - Joel Eriksson Ek - Matt Boldy
Vladimir Tarasenko - Danila Yurov - Bobby Brink
Yakov Trenin - Michael McCarron - Marcus Foligno

Defense
Quinn Hughes - Brock Faber
Jonas Brodin - Jared Spurgeon
Jake Middleton - Zach Bogosian

Goalies
Jesper Wallstedt
Filip Gustavsson

Scratched
Nick Foligno
Daemon Hunt
Hunter Haight
Robby Fabbri
Nico Sturm
Jeff Petry

Injured
None

IHM Lineup Note:
Minnesota comes in with one of the cleaner overall matchup profiles on the day. Kaprizov, Boldy, Eriksson Ek, Hughes and Faber give the Wild a strong mix of top-end skill and defensive control.

IHM Tactical Signals:
Pace Signal: Wild can play either controlled or fast depending on the flow.
Forecheck Signal: Strong layered pressure.
Blue Line Signal: Wild.
Goalie Stability Signal: Even.
X-Factor Signal: Wallstedt starting adds intrigue, but the skater support in front of him is excellent.

IHM Match Pressure Index

Offensive Pressure
Wild

Transition Edge
Wild

Defensive Stability
Wild

Goaltending Edge
Senators slight edge with Ullmark

Game Control Projection
Ottawa still has enough scoring talent to produce pushback, but Minnesota owns the much cleaner defensive setup and should control more of the full-game shape unless Ullmark steals key stretches.


Dallas Stars vs Colorado Avalanche

Faceoff: 21:00 CET

Stars - Projected lineup

Forwards
Jason Robertson - Wyatt Johnston - Mikko Rantanen
Jamie Benn - Matt Duchene - Colin Blackwell
Oskar Back - Justin Hryckowian - Mavrik Bourque
Arttu Hyry - Adam Erne

Defense
Esa Lindell - Miro Heiskanen
Thomas Harley - Nils Lundkvist
Lian Bichsel - Ilya Lyubushkin
Kyle Capobianco

Goalies
Jake Oettinger
Casey DeSmith

Scratched
Cameron Hughes
Alexander Petrovic

Injured
Nathan Bastian (hand)
Michael Bunting (lower body)
Radek Faksa (lower body)
Roope Hintz (lower body)
Tyler Myers (undisclosed)
Tyler Seguin (ACL)
Sam Steel (undisclosed)

IHM Lineup Note:
Dallas still has enough top-end quality through Robertson, Johnston, Rantanen, Duchene and Heiskanen to stay dangerous against anyone. Dressing 11 forwards and seven defensemen gives them extra flexibility on the back end, but also changes forward rhythm.

IHM Tactical Signals:
Pace Signal: Stars can play fast, but they are also comfortable in structure.
Forecheck Signal: Strong layered pressure.
Blue Line Signal: Stars slight edge with Heiskanen and depth flexibility.
Goalie Stability Signal: Even.
X-Factor Signal: Johnston and Rantanen together give Dallas major finishing gravity.

Avalanche - Projected lineup

Forwards
Artturi Lehkonen - Nathan MacKinnon - Martin Necas
Gabriel Landeskog - Brock Nelson - Valeri Nichushkin
Parker Kelly - Nazem Kadri - Joel Kiviranta
Ross Colton - Jack Drury - Logan O’Connor

Defense
Devon Toews - Sam Malinski
Brett Kulak - Josh Manson
Nick Blankenburg - Brent Burns

Goalies
Mackenzie Blackwood
Scott Wedgewood

Scratched
Zakhar Bardakov

Injured
Cale Makar (upper body)
Nicolas Roy (upper body)

IHM Lineup Note:
Colorado still has elite offensive speed through MacKinnon, Necas, Lehkonen, Landeskog and Nichushkin, but missing Makar changes the entire defensive and transition ceiling of the group. Even so, the Avalanche remain explosive.

IHM Tactical Signals:
Pace Signal: Avalanche.
Forecheck Signal: Colorado through speed and repeated entries.
Blue Line Signal: Stars slight edge without Makar in the lineup.
Goalie Stability Signal: Even.
X-Factor Signal: MacKinnon is the fastest game-breaker on the ice and can change the flow almost alone.

IHM Match Pressure Index

Offensive Pressure
Avalanche slight edge

Transition Edge
Avalanche

Defensive Stability
Stars

Goaltending Edge
Even

Game Control Projection
Colorado has the better route to a high-speed game, but Dallas still looks better equipped for a tighter tactical battle because of the cleaner defensive shape and Heiskanen-led stability.


Pittsburgh Penguins vs Florida Panthers

Faceoff: 23:00 CET

Penguins - Projected lineup

Forwards
Egor Chinakhov - Sidney Crosby - Bryan Rust
Tommy Novak - Ben Kindel - Evgeni Malkin
Anthony Mantha - Rikard Rakell - Justin Brazeau
Elmer Soderblom - Connor Dewar - Noel Acciari

Defense
Parker Wotherspoon - Erik Karlsson
Samuel Girard - Kris Letang
Ryan Shea - Connor Clifton

Goalies
Arturs Silovs
Stuart Skinner

Scratched
Ilya Solovyov
Ryan Graves
Avery Hayes

Injured
Kevin Hayes (upper body)
Filip Hallander (blood clot)
Blake Lizotte (upper body)
Jack St. Ivany (upper body)

IHM Lineup Note:
Pittsburgh still has enough offensive intelligence through Crosby, Malkin, Karlsson, Letang and Rakell to challenge a depleted Panthers team. The issue remains overall structure and whether the Penguins can defend cleanly enough after the first breakdown.

IHM Tactical Signals:
Pace Signal: Medium-high if Crosby and Karlsson get the game moving.
Forecheck Signal: Penguins can pressure smartly through veteran reads.
Blue Line Signal: Offensive upside but defensive volatility.
Goalie Stability Signal: Panthers slight edge with Bobrovsky.
X-Factor Signal: Crosby remains the best all-around controller of game rhythm in this matchup.

Panthers - Projected lineup

Forwards
Carter Verhaeghe - Sam Bennett - Matthew Tkachuk
Mackie Samoskevich - Eetu Luostarinen - A.J. Greer
Noah Gregor - Tomas Nosek - Jesper Boqvist
Nolan Foote - Luke Kunin - Vinnie Hinostroza

Defense
Gustav Forsling - Seth Jones
Donovan Sebrango - Mike Benning
Tobias Bjornfot - Mikulas Hovorka

Goalies
Sergei Bobrovsky
Daniil Tarasov

Scratched
Cole Reinhardt

Injured
Aaron Ekblad (hand)
Dmitry Kulikov (broken nose)
Evan Rodrigues (finger)
Sam Reinhart (foot)
Niko Mikkola (knee)
Anton Lundell (ribs)
Uvis Balinskis (fractured foot)
Brad Marchand (lower body)
Cole Schwindt (lower body)
Aleksander Barkov (knee)
Jonah Gadjovich (upper body)

IHM Lineup Note:
Florida is operating with a severely damaged lineup, but Tkachuk, Bennett, Verhaeghe, Forsling, Jones and Bobrovsky still make the Panthers dangerous. This is now more of a survival-through-structure team than a full-strength depth machine.

IHM Tactical Signals:
Pace Signal: Panthers will try to keep it controlled and heavy.
Forecheck Signal: Strong through Tkachuk, Bennett and Greer.
Blue Line Signal: Reduced but still functional through Forsling and Jones.
Goalie Stability Signal: Panthers.
X-Factor Signal: Bobrovsky can become the central matchup changer if Pittsburgh generates volume.

IHM Match Pressure Index

Offensive Pressure
Penguins slight edge

Transition Edge
Penguins

Defensive Stability
Panthers slight edge

Goaltending Edge
Panthers

Game Control Projection
Pittsburgh has more route to offense through veteran skill, but Florida still owns the tougher, more grinding path if Bobrovsky anchors the game and the forecheck keeps the matchup from opening up too much.


Q&A: Projected Lineups and Starting Goalies

Q1: What is the difference between a projected lineup and the final lineup card?

A projected lineup is the best available estimate based on practices, media reports, travel notes and coach comments. The final lineup card can still change because of warmup decisions, illness updates or late scratches.

Q2: Why is lineup order important when reading hockey analysis?

Line order shows more than talent hierarchy. It reveals who is expected to drive offense, which players are trusted in matchup minutes and where coaches are concentrating scoring pressure.

Q3: What should readers check first in a lineup post?

Start with the top center, first power-play unit and confirmed goalie. Those three areas usually reveal the tactical identity of the matchup fastest.

Q4: Why can one missing defenseman change an entire game?

A single blue-line absence can change zone exits, retrieval speed, gap control, penalty killing and offensive support. The effect often spreads through the entire structure.

Q5: How should readers interpret a game-time decision?

It usually means the player is close enough to matter to the tactical setup but not safe enough to treat as fully available until warmups confirm it.

Q6: What do IHM Tactical Signals add that raw line combinations do not?

IHM Tactical Signals translate names into game logic by identifying likely pace control, forecheck identity, blue-line leverage, goalie stability and key swing points.

Q7: What does IHM Match Pressure Index do?

It condenses the matchup into a direct read on offensive burden, transition edge, defensive stability, goaltending and likely control direction.

Q8: Why does center depth matter so much?

Centers drive faceoffs, low-zone support, transition routes and matchup defense. When center depth drops, the whole team shape becomes less stable.

Q9: Why are power-play units so important in lineup analysis?

Because special teams often decide close NHL games. Power-play personnel also reveal who the coaching staff trusts most in high-leverage offensive situations.

Q10: What usually points to a lower-event game?

Reliable goaltending, veteran centers, steady top-pair defense and conservative team structure usually indicate a tighter, more territorial matchup.

Q11: Why does home ice still matter?

The home coach gets last change, which helps create favorable matchups, protect weaker combinations and control deployment in key situations.

Q12: Can projected lineups still change after this post is published?

Yes. Treat projected lineups as the latest reliable snapshot, not the final card. Always recheck closer to puck drop for confirmed changes and late updates.