IHM NHL SHORT ICE
Trades, Streaks, Milestones | March 6, 2026
Date: 6 March 2026
By: IceHockeyMan Newsroom
The NHL delivered another heavy night of trade movement, milestone energy and momentum swings as contenders and bubble teams continued to reshape their late-season identity.
Garland Heads to Columbus
Conor Garland was traded from Vancouver to Columbus for future draft picks, giving the Blue Jackets another aggressive forward option as they try to maintain momentum in a crowded race.
Impact: Garland brings pace, puck pressure and inside-drive habits that can strengthen Columbus in transition and extend offensive-zone sequences.
Perron Returns to Detroit
David Perron was moved from Ottawa to Detroit for a conditional 2026 fourth-round pick. The veteran winger returns to an organization where he previously handled meaningful top-nine minutes and power-play work.
Impact: Detroit adds experience, net-front detail and controlled puck touches for pressure situations late in games.
Sabres Stay Red Hot
Buffalo rolled past Pittsburgh to extend its winning streak to five games. Owen Power and Josh Norris both made strong contributions as the Sabres continued to play with speed and attacking confidence.
Impact: Buffalo’s pace through the middle of the ice is creating repeated entry pressure and forcing defenders into rushed gap decisions.
Toronto’s Slide Gets Worse
The Rangers pulled away from the Maple Leafs with four goals in the third period, handing Toronto a sixth straight loss. New York finished stronger, while Toronto again struggled to stabilize the game under pressure.
Impact: When defensive structure erodes late in games, even skilled teams become vulnerable to layered attacks and momentum collapses.
Kopitar Reaches 1,500 Games
Anze Kopitar reached the 1,500-game mark and received a standing ovation on a milestone night for Los Angeles. The Kings also got a boost from Artemi Panarin, who scored his first goal for the club in the win against the Islanders.
Impact: Kopitar’s milestone highlights rare long-term consistency in detail, matchup intelligence and two-way reliability.
Predators Erupt, Jets Keep Rolling
Nashville exploded for four second-period goals to beat Boston, while Winnipeg extended its point streak to five with a win over Tampa Bay. Juuse Saros and Connor Hellebuyck again gave their teams stability from the crease outward.
Impact: Strong goaltending combined with compact defensive structure continues to separate organized teams from unstable ones in March.
Blue Jackets Add Win but Face Injury Concern
Columbus earned its third straight win by holding off Florida, but Mason Marchment left the game with a lower-body issue and will be evaluated further. The Blue Jackets are gaining traction, though health remains a variable.
Impact: Teams pushing upward in the standings need depth not only for matchups, but also for immediate in-game injury adaptation.
Utah Gets Shutout Performance
Vitek Vanecek recorded his first shutout of the season as Utah blanked Philadelphia 3-0. Nick Schmaltz contributed offensively, and Utah controlled the game well enough to protect the clean sheet without chaos.
Impact: Structured puck management in front of the goalie often matters as much as the saves themselves in preserving a shutout.
Coach Mark Comment
Late-season hockey is about repeatable structure. Teams that survive this stretch are not always the flashiest. They are the ones that manage line changes cleanly, protect the middle of the ice, and reset quickly after momentum swings. March rewards discipline more than emotion.
Q&A: NHL Momentum and Deadline Pressure
Q1: Why do trade additions matter so much in March?
Because the margin between winning and losing is smaller. A single forward or defenseman who improves matchup balance can change a team’s nightly floor.
Q2: Why are losing streaks so dangerous this late in the season?
They damage both standings position and team confidence. Recovery becomes harder when every game carries playoff implications.
Q3: Why is goaltending so decisive now?
Fatigue creates more coverage breakdowns late in the year, so goalies who can settle games quickly become even more valuable.
Q4: What makes veterans like Kopitar special over long careers?
Elite veterans maintain detail, positioning, puck management and situational awareness even when physical tools naturally change over time.