Tag: MARK LEHTONEN ANALYSIS

Washington Capitals vs Edmonton Oilers - Match Preview 20.11.2025 - NHL

Washington Capitals vs Edmonton Oilers – Match Preview 20.11.2025 - NHL

The Capitals return home looking to re-establish stability after a turbulent stretch, while Edmonton arrives with momentum built on sharper puck movement and a cleaner transition game. Washington’s recent inconsistency has been tied to breakdowns in defensive spacing, but their home performances have shown noticeably stronger structure and far more efficient zone exits. In matchups against aggressive forechecking teams like Edmonton, these details often determine whether Washington can dictate rhythm or gets forced into reactive play.

Edmonton, for their part, continue to rely heavily on quick-strike sequences and high-tempo neutral-zone exchanges. Their last outings highlighted improved cohesion between all three forward lines, especially in how they layered support in the offensive zone. However, without the puck, the Oilers remain vulnerable to wide-lane carries and late-trailer entries – an area Washington’s top line traditionally exploits well when the execution is clean.

The special-teams dynamic adds another compelling layer. Washington’s power-play structure has undergone adjustments lately, giving them more interchangeability in the bumper and weak-side slot. Edmonton, conversely, has leaned on their penalty kill to stabilize stretches of uneven defensive play. If the Oilers struggle to stay disciplined in Washington’s building – something that has been an issue at times – the Capitals may find additional momentum in set-piece situations.

In terms of recent form, IHM Premium members already know our performance metrics: yesterday’s Boston selection resulted in a loss, but today’s San Jose analysis landed perfectly – exactly as Coach Mark outlined in his breakdown. This next matchup sets up in a completely different stylistic frame, with far more emphasis on structural detail and pacing control from both sides. It’s a fascinating clash of tempo, discipline, and transitional sharpness.

To access Coach Mark’s full tactical breakdown, visit our Premium section.


San Jose Sharks vs Utah Mammoth - Match Preview 19.11.2025 - NHL

San Jose Sharks vs Utah Mammoth – Match Preview 19.11.2025 – NHL

Date: 19.11.2025 • League: NHL

San Jose approaches this matchup with renewed stability in their transition game and improved defensive structure compared to early-season struggles. The Sharks have tightened their slot coverage, reducing high-danger breakdowns and showing better puck support on exits. Their ability to turn defensive stops into quick counterattacks has been a central factor in their recent positive results.

Utah enters this contest in a challenging stretch, marked by inconsistent scoring and recurring defensive lapses. Their neutral-zone play has been vulnerable, especially against teams capable of generating speed through the middle. Despite this, Utah still carries enough individual skill to create isolated threats when given space.

From a matchup perspective, San Jose’s forecheck intensity and physical presence may dictate the pace early. Utah will likely look for controlled entries and sustained offensive-zone pressure to avoid getting pushed into a reactive style. Special-teams execution could become a deciding element, especially considering recent fluctuations in discipline for both sides.

Recent form trends show contrasting trajectories. San Jose has built confidence with structured, balanced play, while Utah is searching for consistency. Both teams have key injuries that may influence depth rotations and ice-time distribution.

To access Coach Mark’s full tactical breakdown, visit our Premium section.


Boston Bruins vs Carolina Hurricanes - Match Preview 18.11.2025 - NHL

Boston Bruins vs Carolina Hurricanes – Match Preview 18.11.2025 – NHL

Boston Bruins vs Carolina Hurricanes – Match Preview

Date: 18 November 2025
League: NHL

Boston enters this matchup after maintaining a stable rhythm over the past couple of weeks. Their structure remains one of the most reliable in the Eastern Conference, driven by disciplined defensive layers and strong puck support through the neutral zone. Even when the game settles into heavier low-cycle phases, Boston’s ability to close space and limit slot penetration continues to be one of their defining strengths this season.

Carolina arrives with a contrasting dynamic. Their transition game remains among the fastest in the league, generating rush momentum and forcing opponents into uncomfortable defensive recoveries. However, the Hurricanes have also shown stretches of inconsistency tied to turnovers and extended defensive-zone shifts. When Carolina’s forecheck clicks, they dictate pace; when it doesn’t, their structure can be exposed.

Both teams come into this matchup with key injuries affecting depth rotations, which may influence how coaches manage situational minutes. Special-teams performance could also play an important role, as both clubs rely heavily on momentum swings generated through power-play entries and penalty-kill pressure.

This matchup adds intrigue following our recent results. Yesterday’s Florida vs Tampa Bay game resulted in a push (void), while today’s verdict from Mark on Chicago delivered successfully. The Bruins-Hurricanes game becomes the next high-profile contest in a strong November stretch.

To access Coach Mark’s full tactical breakdown, visit our Premium section.


NHL One-Month Shock Meter | IHM Performance Metrics

NHL One-Month Shock Meter | IHM Performance Metrics

NHL One-Month Shock Meter | IHM Performance Metrics


Date: November 15, 2025 - Author: IHM News

NHL One-Month Shock Meter | IHM Performance Metrics

The opening month of the 2025-26 NHL campaign has already shredded more than one preseason prediction sheet. Teams we expected to chase lottery odds are sitting in playoff spots, and established contenders are leaning on unlikely heroes just to stay afloat. The same story runs through the player level: some skaters and goalies have rocketed out of the gate with elite numbers, while a few household names are still stuck in preseason gear. Below, IHM Performance Metrics walks through one month of shocks - ten unexpectedly strong starts and five big names searching for answers - with context, usage notes and what the underlying numbers tell us about whether these trends can actually last.


Shockingly Strong Starts

Brad Marchand, Florida Panthers (LW)

2025-26 stats: 15 GP | 11 G | 7 A

Florida was supposed to be hanging on by its fingernails while Aleksander Barkov and Matthew Tkachuk rehab. Instead, Brad Marchand has walked into South Florida and behaved like it is 2017 again. Eleven goals in fifteen games is top-line production on any contender, but the context makes it even louder: he has been the focal point of a forward group missing both of its franchise cornerstones and still finding line chemistry on the fly.

Marchand has driven play with several different linemates, toggling between a puck-retrieval role with Anton Lundell and Eetu Luostarinen and a shooting role higher in the lineup next to Carter Verhaeghe and Sam Bennett. His small-area hands around the net and on the power play remain elite; defenders simply cannot get the puck off him on short possession plays below the dots. For a 37-year-old winger to carry this much of the offensive burden in back-to-back seasons after a deep Cup run is exactly why Florida’s front office was comfortable committing term on his contract.

Leo Carlsson, Anaheim Ducks (C)

2025-26 stats: 16 GP | 11 G | 15 A

Anaheim’s rebuild has an undisputed centerpiece now. After two seasons of careful deployment and sheltered minutes, Leo Carlsson has been turned loose under coach Joel Quenneville, and the Ducks immediately look like a modern puck-control team built around a dominant first-line center. Twenty-six points in sixteen games only tell part of the story.

With Carlsson on the ice at five-on-five, Anaheim is living with the puck. The Ducks are controlling close to sixty percent of shot attempts and scoring chances, a massive step up from Carlsson’s first two seasons when those numbers hovered around break-even. He is touching everything on the power play as well, already collecting nine points with the extra skater on a unit that sat near the bottom of the league last year. His ability to extend offensive-zone time - winning pucks back, protecting them on the wall, then attacking seams - is the engine behind Anaheim’s rise up the Pacific standings.

Scott Wedgewood, Colorado Avalanche (G)

2025-26 stats: 14 GP | 2.26 GAA | .913 SV%

Colorado opened the season without its presumed number-one goalie, Mackenzie Blackwood, and could easily have stumbled out of the gate. Instead, Scott Wedgewood has turned a stop-gap assignment into a statement run. The 33-year-old journeyman has posted a 10-1-2 record with a .913 save percentage and 2.26 goals-against average, stabilising the back end for a club that expects to chase another Presidents’ Trophy.

The Avalanche score enough that their goalies rarely need to be perfect, but Wedgewood’s workload has not been a passenger ride. He has already saved roughly six goals above expected by IHM’s shot-quality model, cleaning up breakdowns when Colorado’s aggressive defence pinches and plays break the wrong way. Even as Blackwood returns, Wedgewood has likely earned a real share of the crease - and given the Avs something they did not have last year: a backup who can bank points on his own.

Kiefer Sherwood, Vancouver Canucks (RW)

2025-26 stats: 18 GP | 11 G | 1 A

Every season produces at least one “this cannot possibly be sustainable” scoring line. This year’s early leader is Kiefer Sherwood. The Vancouver winger has 11 goals in his first 18 games, with only a single assist to his name. Almost every contribution on the scoresheet has been the puck coming directly off his stick and into the net.

Sherwood is riding an outrageous shooting percentage near thirty percent, which will cool off, but his impact is more than random finishing luck. He plays straight-line, north-south hockey, exploding into soft ice between the circles and constantly arriving in scoring areas on time. On a Canucks team that can sometimes over-pass on entries, his “shoot first” mentality has given their forwards a different look. Contract-year motivation is real, and Vancouver suddenly has to price out what this kind of heater - and a growing cult-hero following - will mean on his next deal.

Dawson Mercer, New Jersey Devils (LW)

2025-26 stats: 17 GP | 9 G | 7 A

Two seasons ago, Dawson Mercer looked like a future cornerstone after a 27-goal breakout. The follow-up campaigns were frustratingly uneven, marked by streaky offence and difficulty sticking in the top six. One month into 2025-26, the Devils are seeing the player they believed they had locked up long term.

Mercer has re-established himself on a scoring line with Nico Hischier and Timo Meier, producing nine goals and seven assists while posting a team-best plus-9 rating. He is attacking with more pace through the neutral zone and closing quicker on pucks in his own end, which has earned him extra defensive-zone starts - a clear trust signal from the coaching staff. The tools were never in doubt; the difference this year is consistency in his off-puck routes and a willingness to get to the inside rather than living on the perimeter.

Dan Vladar, Philadelphia Flyers (G)

2025-26 stats: 10 GP | 2.15 GAA | .919 SV%

Goaltending stability has been a running joke in Philadelphia for years. Dan Vladar is doing his best to retire that punchline. Signed as a value free agent after an up-and-down run in Calgary, the 28-year-old has walked into a heavy-workload situation and turned it into one of the league’s best early bargains.

Through ten appearances, Vladar owns a .919 save percentage, a 2.15 goals-against average and six goals saved above expected. His calm, economical game has been a perfect match for Rick Tocchet’s structure: minimal extra movement, controlled rebounds and patience on east-west plays that burned the Flyers repeatedly last year. With Philly sitting in the early wild-card mix, it is hard to argue any single player has been more valuable to their start.

Spencer Knight, Chicago Blackhawks (G)

2025-26 stats: 12 GP | 2.46 GAA | .923 SV%

Chicago’s defensive environment is still a work in progress, but Spencer Knight is making sure their mistakes are not fatal. Acquired from Florida in the Seth Jones trade, the former Panthers blue-chip prospect has quietly rebuilt his profile in the Windy City with a superb first month.

Knight’s .923 save percentage and 2.46 goals-against average are backed by strong underlying numbers. He leads the league in goals saved above expected, and the Blackhawks have dramatically reduced the volume of high-danger goals against compared to last season when he is in net. Chicago’s new coaching staff has implemented an aggressive defensive-zone system that can occasionally leave seams exposed; Knight’s ability to track lateral movement and hold his edges has turned several would-be breakdowns into routine saves.

Matthew Schaefer, New York Islanders (D)

2025-26 stats: 16 GP | 5 G | 7 A

First overall picks rarely step into the NHL as polished, two-way defencemen. Matthew Schaefer is making it look that way on Long Island. The 18-year-old has jumped straight into top-four minutes, averaging more than twenty-two minutes per night while chipping in five goals and seven assists.

The Islanders score nearly sixty percent of the goals with Schaefer on the ice at five-on-five, and six of his points have come on a power play that has climbed out of the league cellar. He is not being protected, either: barely half of his shifts start in the offensive zone. Between his poise on breakouts and his ability to walk the blue line under pressure, Schaefer has given New York exactly what they have missed since their blue line started to age out - a high-ceiling, puck-moving defender who can also close physically.

Josh Doan, Buffalo Sabres (RW)

2025-26 stats: 16 GP | 4 G | 5 A

Very little has gone to script in Buffalo’s hunt for a long-awaited playoff return, but Josh Doan has been a genuine positive. Acquired from Utah in the JJ Peterka deal, Doan has carved out a middle-six role and produced nine points in sixteen games on a team still trying to find steady goaltending and structure.

The son of Coyotes legend Shane Doan brings a heavier, two-way dimension to the Sabres’ lineup. His ice time has climbed by almost two minutes per game compared to last season, and his shot volume has spiked: at five-on-five he is generating nearly ten shots on goal per sixty minutes, up significantly from his Utah numbers. Add in expanded power-play usage, and Doan is quietly pushing himself into the conversation for a bigger offensive role if Buffalo can stabilise around him.

Shea Theodore, Vegas Golden Knights (D)

2025-26 stats: 15 GP | 0 G | 6 A

Not all standout performances show up on the goal chart. When Alex Pietrangelo stepped away from the game to rehab a chronic hip issue, Vegas needed a new defensive anchor. Shea Theodore, long the Knights’ second pillar, has absorbed that challenge and turned in one of the most efficient defensive months in the league.

Theodore’s offensive line - six assists in fifteen games - looks ordinary until you dig deeper. His five-on-five goals-against rate sits under 0.90 per sixty minutes, putting him in an exclusive group of shutdown defencemen allowing fewer than a goal per full game of ice time. He is facing top competition nightly and starting a significant share of his shifts outside the offensive zone, yet Vegas tilts the ice in its favour whenever he and Brayden McNabb are over the boards. In a year of change, that kind of reliability has kept the Golden Knights’ defensive identity intact.


Shockingly Slow Starts

Marco Kasper, Detroit Red Wings (F)

2025-26 stats: 16 GP | 3 G | 0 A

After a promising rookie campaign, Marco Kasper was pencilled in as the third scoring threat on a second line with Alex DeBrincat and Patrick Kane. One month in, that experiment is on hold. The 2022 eighth-overall pick has only three goals and has yet to record an assist, skating to a minus-6 and recently sliding down to the third line.

The tools that made Kasper a top prospect - tenacity, straight-line speed, willingness to attack the middle - are still there, but his timing inside the offensive zone looks off. Detroit’s staff has noted a drop in his battle level and a tendency to arrive late on support routes, which has stalled cycles and limited his touches in dangerous areas. This is a classic second-year adjustment test; if he can simplify, get to the net front and win more fifty-fifty pucks, the production will follow. For now, expectations outpace the box score.

Sam Montembeault, Montreal Canadiens (G)

2025-26 stats: 9 GP | 3.52 GAA | .861 SV%

On a Montreal team still learning how to manage games, there was always pressure on the goaltending tandem. Jakob Dobes has answered the bell with strong numbers; Sam Montembeault has gone the other way. Through nine outings, the veteran netminder is sitting on a 3.52 goals-against average and an .861 save percentage, with one of the worst goals-saved-above-expected totals in the league.

The Canadiens give up their share of high-danger looks, but the gap between Dobes’ performance and Montembeault’s points to more than defensive issues. Montembeault has struggled to track traffic through layered screens and has been beaten too often clean from distance, particularly to the blocker side. Montreal does not need him to be an All-Star; they just need league-average. Getting there quickly would stabilise a group that otherwise has shown signs of progress.

Brayden Point, Tampa Bay Lightning (C)

2025-26 stats: 16 GP | 3 G | 6 A

Over the past three seasons, only a handful of players have scored more goals than Brayden Point, which makes his opening month line - three goals, six assists and a minus-11 rating - stand out for all the wrong reasons. On a Lightning team that still expects to score its way out of trouble, their most reliable finisher has yet to find his usual attacking rhythm.

Point’s shot generation has dipped sharply. His individual attempts per sixty minutes at five-on-five are well below his recent two-year average, and his shot on goal rate has followed. Whether it is a small injury, timing with new linemates or simply a cold stretch, Tampa Bay needs him attacking downhill again. History suggests the production will rebound - skating next to Nikita Kucherov is a good cure for most slumps - but for now, his start qualifies as one of the month’s bigger surprises.

Steven Stamkos, Nashville Predators (C)

2025-26 stats: 18 GP | 3 G | 1 A

Steven Stamkos has built a career on scoring in bunches. That is why his first month in Nashville looks so strange on the stat sheet: three goals, one assist and stretches of play where he rarely appears as a sustained threat. For a player with more than 580 career goals, that projects to a pace well below what both he and the Predators envisioned when he arrived.

The shot still pops off his stick, but Stamkos is not getting to his traditional shooting lanes as often, and Nashville’s power play has yet to consistently run through him on the flank. Mentally, he has talked about trying to avoid the spiral of negative self-talk that can drag a slump out. The Predators must decide whether to keep feeding him prime minutes in the hope that the dam finally breaks, or to rebalance usage if this stretch continues.

MacKenzie Weegar, Calgary Flames (D)

2025-26 stats: 18 GP | 0 G | 4 A

The Flames’ early-season struggles have many causes, but MacKenzie Weegar’s quiet offensive line is near the top of the list. After back-to-back seasons north of 45 points, the veteran defenceman sits on just four assists through eighteen games and a worrying minus-17 rating.

Calgary’s five-on-five scoring rate with Weegar on the ice has cratered, and constant shuffling of defensive partners has not helped. He has already logged at least ten minutes with seven different blue-line colleagues as the coaching staff searches for chemistry. The transition game that usually drives Calgary’s attack has looked disjointed, with more failed exits and fewer clean entries coming off his stick. For a team sitting last in goals per game, a return to form from their most reliable two-way defenceman would change the trajectory quickly.


IHM Verdict

  • Most sustainable surge: Leo Carlsson’s usage and underlying numbers suggest a true breakout, not a mirage.
  • Biggest swing factor: Dan Vladar’s play could single-handedly keep Philadelphia in the Eastern wildcard hunt.
  • Regression candidate: Kiefer Sherwood’s finishing will cool, but his shot volume should still deliver a career year.
  • Slump most likely to flip: Brayden Point’s track record and shot profile make a second-quarter scoring binge extremely likely.
  • Most concerning trend: MacKenzie Weegar’s minus-17 highlights a systems problem in Calgary, not just bad luck.

Questions & Answers | IHM Performance Metrics

Which breakout performance should teams trust the most?

Leo Carlsson’s combination of heavy minutes, strong possession numbers and power-play role makes his early production the most bankable. Even if his shooting percentage slides, the volume of touches and chances points to a true top-tier center.

Are any of the hot goalies likely to cool off dramatically?

Scott Wedgewood and Dan Vladar both play behind aggressive systems that occasionally leak chances, but their current save percentages are supported by improved defensive play in front of them. Expect some regression, but not a collapse unless team structure falls apart.

Which struggling star should fans be least worried about?

Brayden Point stands out. His career scoring rate, power-play role and chemistry with Nikita Kucherov give him multiple paths back to elite numbers. A small uptick in shot volume will swing his counting stats quickly.

Whose slump sends the loudest warning sign?

MacKenzie Weegar’s numbers are tied directly to Calgary’s broader issues. Until the Flames stabilise their pairings and offensive identity, it is hard to see his production snapping back to previous levels.

How should fantasy and betting markets react to these first-month shocks?

Short term, there is value in buying into sustainable breakouts such as Carlsson, Marchand and Mercer before their prices fully adjust. Long term, IHM Performance Metrics recommends treating extreme shooting heaters and unusually low percentages with caution; the league has a long history of pulling players back toward their established baselines.

More NHL analysis and performance breakdowns are available daily on IHM.


Chicago Blackhawks vs New York Islanders - NHL Match Preview 16.11.2025 - NHL

Chicago Blackhawks vs Toronto Maple Leafs – Match Preview 16.11.2025 – NHL

Date: 16 November 2025
League: NHL
Venue: United Center (Chicago, IL)

Chicago Blackhawks vs New York Islanders - NHL Match Preview 16.11.2025 - NHL

Chicago enters this matchup looking sharper offensively, showing improved puck movement through the neutral zone and more confident zone entries. Their recent games demonstrate a stronger transition rhythm and better support from the second line, which has helped them create sustained offensive shifts.

Toronto arrives in a difficult stretch results-wise, but their underlying metrics still show a team capable of generating scoring chances. They continue to rely on high-tempo rush attacks and aggressive forechecking, although defensive gaps and inconsistent backchecking have cost them in several recent matchups.

Both teams come into this game with contrasting momentum profiles, which increases the tactical importance of the opening ten minutes. Expect a fast pace, frequent rush exchanges, and a matchup where finishing quality may dictate the flow more than possession time.

Note: Yesterday’s analysis on Calgary vs San Jose was successful – our breakdown predicted the game flow accurately and the pick landed cleanly.
For today, the full tactical breakdown for Chicago vs Toronto is available inside the premium section.


Florida Panthers vs Tampa Bay Lightning - Match Preview 15.11.2025 - NHL

Florida Panthers vs Tampa Bay Lightning – Match Preview 15.11.2025 – NHL

Florida Panthers vs Tampa Bay Lightning – Match Preview 15.11.2025 – NHL

Florida Panthers vs Tampa Bay Lightning - Match Preview 15.11.2025 - NHL

Both teams enter this matchup with contrasting forms and significant roster questions. Florida continues to deal with several key absences, including Barkov, Kulikov, Nosek and Tkachuk, while Tampa Bay also carries a long injury list headlined by Cirelli, Hedman and Paul. With both sides missing important contributors, the depth charts and in-game adjustments will play a major role.

Florida’s recent performances have been inconsistent, alternating between strong execution and sudden breakdowns. Tampa Bay, meanwhile, shows signs of stabilising their structure after a shaky start in the standings. Their last few games highlight improved puck movement and more balanced transitions.

This matchup brings tactical interest on both sides – special teams usage, top-line matchups and handling of the injury situation will define the flow of the game.

Coach Mark has prepared a full tactical breakdown for today’s matchup.
Premium members can access the complete analysis on the private page.


NHL - Calgary Flames vs San Jose Sharks 14.11.2025 - Scotiabank Saddledome (Calgary, AB)

NHL – Calgary Flames vs San Jose Sharks 14.11.2025 – Scotiabank Saddledome (Calgary, AB)

The Flames come into this matchup looking to stabilise their form after a difficult stretch of games. Calgary showed flashes of structure in recent outings, but inconsistency inside the defensive zone continues to create issues. Their transition game has stalled at times, leading to extended pressure against them, especially when facing fast teams with aggressive forechecking.

San Jose, on the other hand, arrive in excellent rhythm. Their last few games highlight a strong defensive posture, improved neutral-zone recoveries, and disciplined puck management. The Sharks have been especially effective in late-game scenarios – their ability to control tempo in the final minutes has played a major role in their recent wins. Their current form suggests a confident, well-balanced group heading into Calgary.

Both sides match up with contrasting tendencies: Calgary rely on their top-six creation and zone-time cycling, while San Jose enter with speed-driven transitions and a more compact defensive structure. Much of this game may be dictated by who controls the middle of the ice, particularly through the first two periods.

Note: yesterday’s analysis on the Chicago Blackhawks resulted in a push – Chicago led confidently but allowed a late equaliser, sending the game to overtime.

For today’s Premium section, you will find one full tactical breakdown and one final verdict:
- San Jose Sharks matchup (full analysis)
- Anaheim Ducks matchup (additional premium pick)

👉 To read the full breakdown for this game in detail, subscribe to our Premium section.


Chicago Blackhawks vs New Jersey Devils - NHL Match Preview

Chicago Blackhawks vs New Jersey Devils – NHL Match Preview

Date: November 13, 2025 | Venue: United Center (Chicago, IL)

Tonight’s clash at the United Center features two teams on contrasting paths. The Chicago Blackhawks, who have found stability in their overall structure, look to build on their recent momentum. Their young core has developed confidence in transition play, and their puck support across all three zones has shown noticeable improvement in the past week.

New Jersey enters the contest looking to regain rhythm after a few inconsistent outings. Despite boasting one of the league’s most dynamic offensive rosters, the Devils have been prone to defensive lapses – particularly when under sustained forecheck pressure. Their puck management issues in the neutral zone have allowed opponents to generate clean entries and rebound opportunities.

Chicago’s success in recent games has been fueled by aggressive forechecking and quick counterattacks. The top line has been particularly effective in exploiting space between the dots, while the defensive core has tightened coverage in front of the net, limiting high-danger scoring chances against.

The Devils, on the other hand, remain dangerous on the rush. Their speed in transition and strong puck movement on the power play can shift momentum quickly. Maintaining discipline and limiting unnecessary penalties will be crucial for Chicago’s game plan tonight.

Both teams possess the offensive firepower to make this an exciting matchup, but the early minutes and control of the neutral zone could define the flow of the contest. Expect a high-tempo battle with plenty of emphasis on special teams and goaltending execution.

👉 To access Coach Mark’s full tactical breakdown and prediction for this matchup, join our Premium section today.

Carolina Hurricanes vs Washington Capitals - Match Preview - IHM

Carolina Hurricanes vs Washington Capitals – Match Preview

Date: 12.11.2025
Venue: Lenovo Center (Raleigh, NC)

The upcoming matchup in Raleigh brings together two teams, each carrying very different recent form and structural trends. Carolina continues to demonstrate one of the league’s most organized systems, relying on fast puck movement, strong retrieval habits, and high-quality offensive-zone rotations. Their play through the neutral zone has been especially sharp, allowing them to maintain territorial advantage for long stretches throughout recent games.

Washington approaches this meeting with several questions surrounding lineup stability and transition efficiency. In recent outings they have struggled with controlled exits, often being forced into dump-and-chase situations that limit their ability to sustain pressure. Defensive-zone rotations have also shown inconsistencies, particularly when opponents increase pace or attack through layered entries.

A key area to watch will be the midfield battle, where Carolina’s structured forecheck meets Washington’s attempts to generate speed through stretch outlets. Both teams have skaters capable of shifting momentum quickly, and special teams may play a significant role given the contrasting tactical approaches. Carolina tends to build pressure through cycling and inside-lane movement, while Washington continues to rely on perimeter puck control and point activation.

Goaltending matchups add another layer of intrigue. Carolina’s recent stability in net has contributed to their ability to close out tight periods, whereas Washington has faced inconsistency in rebound control and traffic management. With both teams playing on varied schedules, energy management and bench depth could influence the flow of the later stages.

In summary, this game offers an interesting clash between structural discipline and opportunistic playmaking. Both sides enter with distinct stylistic identities, and the tactical execution in the first 10-12 minutes may set the tone for the rest of the evening.


Note: our previous breakdown on the Anaheim game landed smoothly and without stress, as the team controlled the matchup from start to finish. Below is the full tactical analysis for tonight’s game, which you can review in detail here-


Tactical Breakdown

Anaheim approaches this matchup with their familiar layered 1-2-2 structure, a system built around disciplined puck support and rapid counterattacks. Their recent games show a strong emphasis on controlled exits, using their defensemen as the first activation point and attacking in waves through the neutral zone. The Ducks generate high-danger chances by rotating their wingers low and forcing opposing defenders into extended shifts.

Winnipeg enters with a more aggressive forecheck style, leaning heavily on their speed. Their 2-1-2 pressure has produced turnovers, but it also leaves gaps behind their forwards when the first wave is broken. Against Anaheim’s compact structure, these gaps could become liabilities in transition.
Advanced Metrics (Last 5 Games)

Anaheim Ducks: 5-0-0 record, allowing only 2.0 goals per game. Their expected goals against (xGA) is trending downward, sitting at 2.4 per 60. Offensive zone possession time increased by 11% over their previous 10-game average.
Winnipeg Jets: xG production remains respectable at 3.1 per 60, but their defensive numbers slipped, conceding 4+ goals in three of the last five. Their high-danger attempts allowed (HDCA) jumped noticeably due to inconsistent backchecking and fatigue on long shifts.

Line-Up & Usage Notes

Anaheim Injuries: Granlund (lower body), Gudas (lower body).
Winnipeg Injuries: Barron (injury), Perfetti (ankle), Samberg (wrist).
Anaheim’s first line continues to drive play with strong zone entries and effective east-west puck movement. Strome’s availability (questionable) will influence power-play structure. Ducks’ defensive core rotates efficiently, minimizing breakdowns.
Winnipeg relies on transition bursts but lacks depth support due to injuries. If their third line continues to struggle on defensive coverages, Anaheim’s forecheck may create sustained pressure.

Coach’s Verdict

This matchup brings together two teams on very different trajectories. Anaheim enters this game in strong form,
showing stability across all three zones and delivering consistent execution in transition play. Their recent stretch
of performances highlights excellent forecheck pressure and improved puck support, which reduces turnovers in the
neutral zone.

Winnipeg, despite sitting high in the standings earlier in the season, has recently shown vulnerability.
Their defensive structure has loosened, especially in the slot area, where they are allowing too many clean looks
on goal. Injuries to key depth players also affect their rotation and special teams efficiency.

Anaheim’s momentum, stronger current form (five consecutive wins), and home-ice advantage at Honda Center
make them the more reliable side here. Their offensive depth is balanced, and the team is creating a high number
of high-danger scoring chances.

Premium Pick - Anaheim Ducks - Win (Including Overtime)

Note: Our previous analysis on Philadelphia was extremely close, but the game slipped away in overtime - read yesterday’s recap for details.


Anaheim Ducks vs Winnipeg Jets - Match Preview

Anaheim Ducks vs Winnipeg Jets – Match Preview

Date: 10 November 2025 • Venue: Honda Center (Anaheim, CA)

Unfortunately, our previous analysis on the Flyers didn’t land. We were extremely close, but Philadelphia couldn’t finish it off in overtime. We move forward with today’s matchup, which promises a high-tempo and physical style from both sides.

Anaheim enters this game as one of the hottest teams in the league, riding an impressive winning streak and showing excellent structure in all phases of play. Their puck movement has been sharp, and their forecheck continues to be a major weapon against teams that struggle with controlled exits.

Winnipeg, meanwhile, has had a mixed run of form. After a strong early season, they’ve hit a rough stretch with defensive issues and several key injuries affecting their lineup depth. Their recent games show inconsistency in zone coverage and difficulties containing aggressive cycling teams.

The Honda Center atmosphere will add extra energy to Anaheim’s already confident group. Both teams possess dangerous offensive talent, but the contrasting forms and tactical tendencies set the stage for a fascinating contest. For the full premium analysis by Coach Mark Lehtonen, including the official pick, click below.

➡️ Read Full Premium Analysis