IHM Power Index MVP Tracker (Midseason): Super 16 Edition
Date: January 8, 2026
By: IHM Newsroom
Midseason is where the standings lie to you and the process tells the truth. The NHL schedule may have technically crossed the midpoint earlier this month, but the real midseason checkpoint is when patterns become stable: special teams trends stop looking like noise, finishing talent shows up consistently, and goaltending either locks a team into contention or quietly erodes the margin night after night.
This IHM post is built in the spirit of our Power Index format, but with a twist: we are attaching a midseason “Most Valuable Player” lens to the Super 16. Not “best player on paper”, not “biggest name”, but the most valuable driver of results and stability for each ranked team right now. Value in January is a blend of production, usage, impact on team identity, and the ability to win the ugly minutes when the game tilts.
What this ranking is and how we treat “MVP” at IHM
In IHM language, “MVP” is not only goals and highlights. It is the player who most reliably shifts the team’s game state in their favor: turning low-event periods into manageable hockey, flipping momentum after a bad change, stabilizing the PK, or forcing matchups that break the opponent’s structure. Sometimes it is a superstar putting up elite numbers. Sometimes it is a goalie erasing defensive imperfections and letting the team play with confidence.
We also keep one constant rule: we do not overreact to a single week. We track direction. Who is rising because the underlying play finally matches the results. Who is falling because the margin has collapsed: injuries, depth scoring, special teams regression, or a system leak that opponents are now exploiting on tape.
Midseason Movers (IHM snapshot):
Up: Lightning, Islanders, Sabres, Kraken (new into the Super 16 conversation).
Down: Golden Knights, Oilers (not collapsing, but sliding relative to the top pack).
IHM Super 16: Midseason MVP Tracker
Below is our Super 16 lens for midseason. We keep the list order consistent with the current Super 16 structure, then add the IHM MVP driver for each team plus a short context note in our voice.
1) Colorado Avalanche
IHM MVP: Nathan MacKinnon
Colorado’s identity remains clear: pace, layers, and a transition engine that creates repeated second chances. MacKinnon is the center of gravity. Even when opponents try to slow the neutral zone, his ability to re-accelerate the game off one carry or one retrieval keeps the Avalanche from getting stuck in low-event hockey. At midseason, that is the difference between “good team” and “top seed threat.”
2) Tampa Bay Lightning
IHM MVP: Andrei Vasilevskiy
Tampa’s surge is not a mystery. When their goalie is elite, the Lightning can play a more aggressive puck-pressure game knowing the back end will not bleed soft goals. Vasilevskiy’s midseason form restores Tampa’s playoff ceiling. Kucherov remains the offensive conductor, but Vasilevskiy is the stability spine.
3) Minnesota Wild
IHM MVP: Matt Boldy
Minnesota’s “two-horse” conversation is real, but Boldy’s consistency and situational value has been a separator. He is not just scoring, he is driving sequences that end in possession and clean looks. At this point, that kind of repeatable offense is gold.
4) Dallas Stars
IHM MVP: Mikko Rantanen
Dallas has leaned into reliable point production with minimal cold stretches, and Rantanen is the cleanest example. Teams that win in April do not depend on perfect nights. They depend on stars who create value even in “quiet” games. Rantanen’s floor is extremely high.
5) Carolina Hurricanes
IHM MVP: Sebastian Aho
Carolina’s game is built around pressure and structure, but structure still needs a finisher and a connector. Aho is the link between system and scoreboard. When injuries hit, he is the player who keeps the line matchups stable and the possession advantage meaningful.
6) Detroit Red Wings
IHM MVP: Moritz Seider
Heavy minutes, every situation, and matchup deployments that allow Detroit to survive against top lines. Seider’s value is not only points. It is that the Red Wings can keep their shape when the game gets chaotic. That is midseason MVP value.
7) Montreal Canadiens
IHM MVP: Nick Suzuki
Montreal’s growth is not accidental. Suzuki’s usage, two-way responsibility, and ability to carry offensive sequences without breaking the team’s defensive discipline has been central. When you are building a contender, the first piece is always a center who can handle every script.
8) New York Islanders
IHM MVP: Matthew Schaefer
The Islanders’ rise is tied to blue line impact. When a defenseman can drive play, defend at a high level, and also add points without compromising structure, it changes the entire posture of the team. New York’s confidence is visible. That usually starts from the back.
9) Philadelphia Flyers
IHM MVP: Dan Vladar
Philly’s path to relevance this season runs through improved goaltending and fewer soft stretches. Vladar’s value is that he raises the baseline. When the baseline improves, the team can win games that would have been automatic losses in previous seasons.
10) Vegas Golden Knights
IHM MVP: Jack Eichel
Vegas has dipped, but a dip in January does not define a team. What matters is whether the primary engine returns to full influence. Eichel remains the most direct driver of their top-end ceiling. If Vegas re-stabilizes, it will start with his form and their five-on-five execution tightening.
11) Washington Capitals
IHM MVP: Tom Wilson
Physical edge, scoring, and a presence that changes how opponents manage puck battles. Wilson’s value is multi-layered: he is production, intimidation, and matchup disruption in one package. That is rare. That is why Washington’s identity holds even when the lineup gets stressed.
12) Buffalo Sabres
IHM MVP: Mattias Samuelsson
Buffalo’s surge has a clear narrative: something clicked, then the team stopped leaking momentum. Samuelsson’s value shows up in the defensive details that never trend on social media: blocks, retrievals, exits under pressure, and the ability to keep the team’s best attackers in favorable positions. When a team flips its season, it is often because someone quietly stabilizes the foundation.
13) Pittsburgh Penguins
IHM MVP: Sidney Crosby
There is not much debate. Crosby is still the control center. The Penguins can attempt a transition between eras, but he does not allow the team to drift into mediocrity. His impact is not nostalgia. It is still elite repeatable hockey.
14) Edmonton Oilers
IHM MVP: Connor McDavid
Edmonton has slipped in the weekly power conversation, but McDavid remains the defining game-breaker. Even when the Oilers are not clean defensively, he can tilt the ice so aggressively that opponents cannot survive long stretches without collapsing into their zone. Edmonton’s job is to rebuild the margin around him.
15) Florida Panthers
IHM MVP: Anton Lundell
When a top center is missing, teams usually lose their identity. Florida has not. Lundell’s value is that he has absorbed responsibilities that keep the Panthers’ style intact: defensive detail, PK work, and enough offense to prevent opponents from loading up on one line.
16) Seattle Kraken
IHM MVP: Jordan Eberle
Seattle’s entry into the Super 16 picture is about points and streaks, but also about rhythm. Eberle provides leadership and timely scoring without forcing the team out of its structure. When you win by committee, the “MVP” is often the veteran who keeps the committee organized.
Tier read: how IHM sees the board right now
Tier 1: Legitimate Cup posture
Colorado, Tampa Bay, Minnesota, Dallas, Carolina.
Tier 2: Dangerous if their top lever stays hot
Detroit, Montreal, Islanders, Flyers.
Tier 3: Talent heavy, currently searching for clean margin
Vegas, Washington, Buffalo, Pittsburgh, Edmonton, Florida.
Wildcard momentum team
Seattle.
This is why “midseason MVP” matters. At the top, the MVP is usually the player who turns dominance into points. In the middle, it is often the stabilizer: a defense anchor or goalie who makes a team reliable. In the lower part of the Super 16, it is frequently the star who prevents the team from falling out of the fight.
Coach Mark Comment
Midseason is the moment when structure becomes the real separator. Early in the year, you can survive on emotion and finishing. By January, opponents have tape and they build specific counters. This is why the MVP on many teams is not the most talented forward, it is the player who protects the system. A dominant goalie changes risk tolerance for the whole lineup. A defenseman who wins exits under pressure changes the entire transition profile. And a true No. 1 center changes matchups because coaches cannot hide against him. The teams that stay in the top tier after midpoint are the ones whose MVP gives them repeatable control, not just big nights.
Q&A
What is the IHM Power Index MVP Tracker?
It is a midseason ranking lens that pairs a power list with the single most valuable driver for each team so far, based on repeatable impact and team stability.
Does “MVP” here mean the best player on the roster?
Not always. It means the player whose presence most directly changes outcomes. Sometimes that is a superstar scorer. Sometimes it is a goalie or a defense anchor who prevents collapse and raises the baseline.
Why do goalies show up so often as MVPs?
Because elite goaltending changes how aggressively a team can play, how it handles mistakes, and how often it survives bad minutes. That can swing a season.
What is the biggest midseason trend in this Super 16?
Teams moving up are getting better structural stability: stronger goaltending, cleaner defensive detail, and more consistent special teams. Teams moving down are losing margin through injuries, regression, or inconsistent five-on-five execution.
How should fans read these rankings?
As direction, not a final verdict. The second half is where depth, health, and special teams usually decide who stays elite and who fades.
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