Tag: NHL Lineups

NHL Projected Lineups Apr 15 2026 | IHM

NHL Projected Lineups Apr 15 2026 | IHM

NHL Projected Lineups – Game Day April 15, 2026

Date: April 14, 2026
By IceHockeyMan Newsroom

Final update: All projected lineups for today have been added.

Matchup: New York Islanders vs Carolina Hurricanes

Faceoff: 01:00 CET

New York Islanders – Projected lineup

Forwards
Simon Holmstrom – Bo Horvat – Victor Eklund
Calum Ritchie – Mathew Barzal – Brayden Schenn
Anders Lee – Jean-Gabriel Pageau – Emil Heineman
Ondrej Palat – Casey Cizikas – Liam Foudy

Defense
Adam Pelech – Matthew Schaefer
Carson Soucy – Tony DeAngelo
Isaiah George – Scott Mayfield

Goalies
David Rittich
Ilya Sorokin

Scratched: Anthony Duclair, Adam Boqvist, Marc Gatcomb
Injured: Ryan Pulock (undisclosed), Maxim Shabanov (upper body), Kyle Palmieri (ACL), Alexander Romanov (upper body)

IHM Lineup Note:
The Islanders still bring a more natural NHL top-nine shape in this matchup, and that matters against a Carolina group resting major pieces. Horvat and Barzal remain the central drivers of structure and pace, while Eklund adds fresh unpredictability in his debut.

IHM Tactical Signals:
Forecheck Signal: Islanders can apply more direct pressure through their middle six than this version of Carolina usually sees.
Transition Signal: Barzal remains the main pace accelerator through the neutral zone.
Blue Line Signal: Missing Pulock lowers some defensive comfort, but Pelech still anchors the back end.
Goalie Stability Signal: Sorokin provides the strongest crease layer in this matchup if he starts.
X-Factor Signal: New York should target Carolina’s reduced finishing threat and force the game into controlled structure.

Carolina Hurricanes – Projected lineup

Forwards
Taylor Hall – Logan Stankoven – Jackson Blake
Nikolaj Ehlers – Jesperi Kotkaniemi – Bradly Nadeau
William Carrier – Mark Jankowski – Nicolas Deslauriers
Eric Robinson – Skyler Brind’Amour – Jordan Martinook

Defense
K’Andre Miller – Jalen Chatfield
Alexander Nikishin – Sean Walker
Mike Reilly – Charles Alexis Legault

Goalies
Frederik Andersen
Brandon Bussi

Scratched: Sebastian Aho, Jordan Staal, Andrei Svechnikov, Seth Jarvis, Jaccob Slavin, Shayne Gostisbehere, Felix Unger Sorum, Pyotr Kochetkov
Injured: None

IHM Lineup Note:
This is a heavily rotated Hurricanes version with much of the elite core sitting out. Carolina still keeps its system identity, but the offensive ceiling and matchup pressure are clearly reduced compared with its standard playoff-level setup.

IHM Tactical Signals:
Forecheck Signal: Carolina still pressures in layers, though with less finishing danger at the end of possessions.
Transition Signal: Hall and Ehlers carry most of the clean-entry creation.
Blue Line Signal: Chatfield and Walker help preserve structure, but the unit lacks the usual star support.
Goalie Stability Signal: Andersen keeps Carolina organized from the crease outward.
X-Factor Signal: The Hurricanes need system discipline and low-event control rather than a skill-heavy game.

IHM Match Pressure Index:
Offensive Pressure: Islanders edge
Transition Edge: Islanders slight edge
Defensive Stability: Even
Goaltending Edge: Islanders slight edge
Game Control Projection: New York projects to control more of the meaningful possession and should carry the cleaner game script if it avoids feeding Carolina transition turnovers.

Matchup: Philadelphia Flyers vs Montreal Canadiens

Faceoff: 01:00 CET

Philadelphia Flyers – Projected lineup

Forwards
Tyson Foerster – Trevor Zegras – Owen Tippett
Travis Konecny – Christian Dvorak – Porter Martone
Denver Barkey – Noah Cates – Matvei Michkov
Luke Glendening – Sean Couturier – Garnet Hathaway

Defense
Cam York – Jamie Drysdale
Hunter McDonald – Oliver Bonk
Nick Seeler – Emil Andrae

Goalies
Samuel Ersson
Aleksei Kolosov

Scratched: Garrett Wilson, Carl Grundstrom, Alex Bump, Anthony Richard, Jacob Gaucher, Noah Juulsen, David Jiricek, Travis Sanheim, Rasmus Ristolainen, Dan Vladar
Injured: Rodrigo Abols (lower body), Nikita Grebenkin (upper body)

IHM Lineup Note:
Philadelphia still has enough attack talent to stay dangerous off the rush, but the blue line is much thinner than usual and the debut factor on defense adds volatility against Montreal’s structured top six.

IHM Tactical Signals:
Forecheck Signal: Flyers can create disruption through work rate and pace, especially on the wings.
Transition Signal: Zegras, Tippett, and Michkov remain the main quick-strike weapons.
Blue Line Signal: Young pairings create uncertainty under sustained pressure.
Goalie Stability Signal: Ersson gives Philadelphia a credible chance, but not a clear edge.
X-Factor Signal: The Flyers need an aggressive, momentum-based game rather than a long structure battle.

Montreal Canadiens – Projected lineup

Forwards
Cole Caufield – Nick Suzuki – Juraj Slafkovsky
Alexandre Texier – Alex Newhook – Ivan Demidov
Oliver Kapanen – Zachary Bolduc – Kirby Dach
Jake Evans – Phillip Danault – Josh Anderson

Defense
Mike Matheson – Lane Hutson
Jayden Struble – Arber Xhekaj
Kaiden Guhle – Alexandre Carrier

Goalies
Jakub Dobes
Jacob Fowler

Scratched: Joe Veleno, Samuel Montembeault, Brendan Gallagher
Injured: Noah Dobson (upper body), Patrik Laine (lower body)

IHM Lineup Note:
Montreal brings the more complete offensive framework in this matchup. Suzuki, Caufield, Slafkovsky, and Demidov give the Canadiens multiple creation layers, and the back end still moves the puck well even without Dobson.

IHM Tactical Signals:
Forecheck Signal: Montreal can apply steady pressure without overextending its structure.
Transition Signal: Suzuki remains the cleanest pace and decision driver in open ice.
Blue Line Signal: Matheson and Hutson give Montreal strong puck-flow control.
Goalie Stability Signal: Slight uncertainty remains in goal, but the team structure helps protect it.
X-Factor Signal: Montreal’s top-six skill should test Philadelphia’s thinner defensive group repeatedly.

IHM Match Pressure Index:
Offensive Pressure: Canadiens edge
Transition Edge: Canadiens edge
Defensive Stability: Canadiens slight edge
Goaltending Edge: Even
Game Control Projection: Montreal projects as the more balanced and repeatable team, while Philadelphia needs pace, chaos, and rush finishing to tilt the matchup.

Matchup: Columbus Blue Jackets vs Washington Capitals

Faceoff: 01:00 CET

Columbus Blue Jackets – Projected lineup

Forwards
Isac Lundestrom – Adam Fantilli – Kirill Marchenko
Danton Heinen – Charlie Coyle – Cole Sillinger
Mason Marchment – Boone Jenner – Conor Garland
Kent Johnson – Sean Monahan – Miles Wood

Defense
Zach Werenski – Dante Fabbro
Ivan Provorov – Denton Mateychuk
Jake Christiansen – Erik Gudbranson

Goalies
Jet Greaves
Elvis Merzlikins

Scratched: Egor Zamula, Luca Del Bel Belluz, Zach Aston-Reese
Injured: Damon Severson (shoulder surgery), Dmitri Voronkov (hand), Mathieu Olivier (hand)

IHM Lineup Note:
Columbus still looks deeper and more balanced through all four lines. Fantilli, Marchenko, Jenner, Monahan, and Werenski give the Blue Jackets enough speed and structure to control the game’s main phases.

IHM Tactical Signals:
Forecheck Signal: Columbus can pressure with more depth and more sustained support than Washington.
Transition Signal: Fantilli and Johnson raise the pace ceiling in open ice.
Blue Line Signal: Werenski remains the core transport and matchup piece.
Goalie Stability Signal: The crease is stable enough, though not a huge separator.
X-Factor Signal: Columbus should lean into its lineup depth and force Washington below its top-end comfort zone.

Washington Capitals – Projected lineup

Forwards
Alex Ovechkin – Dylan Strome – Anthony Beauvillier
Aliaksei Protas – Ilya Protas – Tom Wilson
Connor McMichael – Justin Sourdif – Ryan Leonard
Brandon Duhaime – Hendrix Lapierre – Ivan Miroshnichenko

Defense
Martin Fehervary – Dylan McIlrath
Jakub Chychrun – Trevor van Riemsdyk
Cole Hutson – Matt Roy

Goalies
Clay Stevenson
Logan Thompson

Scratched: Ethen Frank, David Kampf, Declan Chisholm, Timothy Liljegren
Injured: Pierre-Luc Dubois (upper body), Rasmus Sandin (lower body), Charlie Lindgren (upper body)

IHM Lineup Note:
Washington still has meaningful top-end presence because Ovechkin, Wilson, and Chychrun can change games, but the overall depth profile is less comfortable than Columbus over a full sixty minutes.

IHM Tactical Signals:
Forecheck Signal: Washington can bring heavy, direct pressure, especially through Wilson-driven shifts.
Transition Signal: The Capitals are more dangerous when they get straight-line entries rather than extended flow.
Blue Line Signal: Chychrun carries the main puck-moving burden from the back end.
Goalie Stability Signal: Thompson would be the stronger stabilizer if he starts.
X-Factor Signal: Ovechkin’s finishing and power-play gravity remain the single biggest weapons.

IHM Match Pressure Index:
Offensive Pressure: Blue Jackets slight edge
Transition Edge: Blue Jackets edge
Defensive Stability: Blue Jackets slight edge
Goaltending Edge: Even
Game Control Projection: Columbus projects to control more of the five-on-five flow through depth and balance, while Washington needs its stars to swing key moments decisively.

Matchup: Boston Bruins vs New Jersey Devils

Faceoff: 01:00 CET

Boston Bruins – Projected lineup

Forwards
Morgan Geekie – Elias Lindholm – David Pastrnak
Casey Mittelstadt – Pavel Zacha – Viktor Arvidsson
James Hagens – Fraser Minten – Marat Khusnutdinov
Tanner Jeannot – Sean Kuraly – Mark Kastelic

Defense
Jonathan Aspirot – Charlie McAvoy
Hampus Lindholm – Mason Lohrei
Nikita Zadorov – Andrew Peeke

Goalies
Jeremy Swayman
Joonas Korpisalo

Scratched: Alex Steeves, Jordan Harris, Henri Jokiharju, Lukas Reichel, Michael Eyssimont
Injured: None

IHM Lineup Note:
Boston looks more stable on the back end and still carries a true game-breaker in Pastrnak. With McAvoy, Lindholm, and Swayman in place, the Bruins have the cleaner overall structure in this matchup.

IHM Tactical Signals:
Forecheck Signal: Bruins can pressure through heavy support and reliable line spacing.
Transition Signal: Pastrnak remains the most explosive attacking lever in the game.
Blue Line Signal: McAvoy and Lindholm give Boston the stronger defensive foundation.
Goalie Stability Signal: Swayman is the clearest crease edge in this matchup.
X-Factor Signal: Boston should test New Jersey’s goalie situation early and often.

New Jersey Devils – Projected lineup

Forwards
Timo Meier – Nico Hischier – Dawson Mercer
Jesper Bratt – Jack Hughes – Connor Brown
Evgenii Dadonov – Cody Glass – Nick Bjugstad
Paul Cotter – Marc McLaughlin – Maxim Tsyplakov

Defense
Jonas Siegenthaler – Dougie Hamilton
Brenden Dillon – Simon Nemec
Topias Vilen – Johnathan Kovacevic

Goalies
Nico Daws
Jake Allen

Scratched: Dennis Cholowski
Injured: Luke Hughes (upper body), Arseny Gritsyuk (upper body), Stefan Noesen (knee), Zack MacEwen (upper body), Brett Pesce (lower body), Jacob Markstrom (undisclosed)

IHM Lineup Note:
New Jersey still has enough top-six talent to make this dangerous, especially through Jack Hughes and Bratt, but the missing pieces in goal and on defense lower the overall stability level against a structured Boston team.

IHM Tactical Signals:
Forecheck Signal: Devils can create pressure through speed, but not always with full defensive insurance behind it.
Transition Signal: Jack Hughes remains the main tempo breaker and rush creator.
Blue Line Signal: Hamilton carries a massive share of the puck-moving responsibility.
Goalie Stability Signal: Daws is a workable option, but the edge remains on Boston’s side.
X-Factor Signal: New Jersey must turn pace into real slot danger, not just possession volume.

IHM Match Pressure Index:
Offensive Pressure: Even
Transition Edge: Devils slight edge
Defensive Stability: Bruins edge
Goaltending Edge: Bruins clear edge
Game Control Projection: Boston projects to have the more reliable game script through defense and goaltending, while New Jersey’s best route is a speed-driven chance-creation game.

Matchup: Minnesota Wild vs Anaheim Ducks

Faceoff: 02:00 CET

Minnesota Wild – Projected lineup

Forwards
Yakov Trenin – Danila Yurov – Vladimir Tarasenko
Marcus Johansson – Hunter Haight – Bobby Brink
Nico Sturm – Michael McCarron – Nick Foligno
Robby Fabbri – Ben Jones – Nicolas Aube-Kubel

Defense
Viking Gustafsson-Nyberg – Jared Spurgeon
Jake Middleton – Brock Faber
Daemon Hunt – Matt Kiersted

Goalies
Jesper Wallstedt
Filip Gustavsson

Scratched: Jonas Brodin, Mats Zuccarello, Joel Eriksson Ek, Zach Bogosian, Jeff Petry, Matt Boldy, Marcus Foligno, Ryan Hartman, Quinn Hughes, Kirill Kaprizov
Injured: None

IHM Lineup Note:
Minnesota is clearly in a rest-heavy mode again, and that strips a lot of the usual top-end control from the lineup. The Wild still have enough defensive intelligence to compete, but the scoring ceiling is much lower than normal.

IHM Tactical Signals:
Forecheck Signal: Wild pressure is more workmanlike than dangerous in this version of the lineup.
Transition Signal: Tarasenko and Yurov have to do more of the offensive lifting than usual.
Blue Line Signal: Faber and Spurgeon remain the main stabilizers.
Goalie Stability Signal: Wallstedt or Gustavsson gives Minnesota a credible crease base.
X-Factor Signal: Minnesota needs a low-event, disciplined game to compensate for missing stars.

Anaheim Ducks – Projected lineup

Forwards
Chris Kreider – Leo Carlsson – Troy Terry
Alex Killorn – Mikael Granlund – Beckett Sennecke
Jeffrey Viel – Mason McTavish – Cutter Gauthier
Tim Washe – Ryan Poehling – Ian Moore

Defense
Jackson LaCombe – Jacob Trouba
Pavel Mintyukov – John Carlson
Tyson Hinds – Radko Gudas

Goalies
Lukas Dostal
Ville Husso

Scratched: Olen Zellweger, Frank Vatrano, Drew Helleson
Injured: Jansen Harkins (hand surgery), Ross Johnston (lower body)

IHM Lineup Note:
Anaheim brings the stronger natural lineup in this matchup, especially because Minnesota is resting so many regulars. Carlsson, Terry, McTavish, Gauthier, and Dostal give the Ducks more game-breaking elements over sixty minutes.

IHM Tactical Signals:
Forecheck Signal: Ducks can create more pressure and more dangerous recoveries than this version of Minnesota.
Transition Signal: Carlsson and Terry give Anaheim a better rush ceiling.
Blue Line Signal: LaCombe, Mintyukov, Trouba, and Carlson provide a stronger puck-moving base.
Goalie Stability Signal: Dostal is a meaningful edge if he starts.
X-Factor Signal: Anaheim should push pace early before Minnesota settles into a low-event script.

IHM Match Pressure Index:
Offensive Pressure: Ducks edge
Transition Edge: Ducks edge
Defensive Stability: Ducks slight edge
Goaltending Edge: Ducks slight edge
Game Control Projection: Anaheim projects to control more of the game’s dangerous sequences, while Minnesota needs structure and goaltending to keep the contest within reach.

Matchup: Utah Mammoth vs Winnipeg Jets

Faceoff: 03:00 CET

Utah Mammoth – Projected lineup

Forwards
Clayton Keller – Nick Schmaltz – Lawson Crouse
Kailer Yamamoto – Logan Cooley – Dylan Guenther
JJ Peterka – Alexander Kerfoot – Michael Carcone
Liam O’Brien – Kevin Stenlund – Brandon Tanev

Defense
Mikhail Sergachev – MacKenzie Weegar
Nate Schmidt – Dmitri Simashev
Ian Cole – Sean Durzi

Goalies
Karel Vejmelka
Vitek Vanecek

Scratched: Nick DeSimone, Kevin Rooney
Injured: Barrett Hayton (upper body), Jack McBain (lower body), John Marino (upper body)

IHM Lineup Note:
Utah still has a strong balance of pace, edge, and defensive structure. Keller, Cooley, Guenther, Sergachev, and Weegar give the Mammoth the better overall shape against a Winnipeg lineup missing several support pieces.

IHM Tactical Signals:
Forecheck Signal: Utah can apply hard pressure without sacrificing shape.
Transition Signal: Cooley and Keller remain the main entry and attack connectors.
Blue Line Signal: Sergachev and Weegar create a reliable two-way platform.
Goalie Stability Signal: Vejmelka keeps Utah steady in game-state management.
X-Factor Signal: Utah should test Winnipeg’s thinner depth by pushing pace through multiple lines.

Winnipeg Jets – Projected lineup

Forwards
Kyle Connor – Mark Scheifele – Gabriel Vilardi
Cole Perfetti – Adam Lowry – Brad Lambert
Cole Koepke – Jonathan Toews – Isak Rosen
Nino Niederreiter – Brayden Yager – Nikita Chibrikov

Defense
Josh Morrissey – Dylan DeMelo
Dylan Samberg – Colin Miller
Haydn Fleury – Jacob Bryson

Goalies
Eric Comrie
Connor Hellebuyck

Scratched: Ville Heinola
Injured: Morgan Barron (lower body), Alex Iafallo (undisclosed), Neal Pionk (undisclosed), Vladislav Namestnikov (undisclosed), Gustav Nyquist (undisclosed), Elias Salomonsson (concussion)

IHM Lineup Note:
Winnipeg still has important top-end pieces, but the lineup looks less complete than usual and that lowers the margin for error. Connor, Scheifele, Morrissey, and Hellebuyck still keep the Jets dangerous in any game script.

IHM Tactical Signals:
Forecheck Signal: Jets can still pressure smartly, though with slightly less depth support than normal.
Transition Signal: Connor and Scheifele remain the main rush-finishing duo.
Blue Line Signal: Morrissey still controls the game’s direction from the back end.
Goalie Stability Signal: Hellebuyck is the strongest single stabilizer in the matchup if he starts.
X-Factor Signal: Winnipeg needs its stars to own the middle of the ice and keep Utah from rolling four-line pressure.

IHM Match Pressure Index:
Offensive Pressure: Mammoth slight edge
Transition Edge: Even
Defensive Stability: Mammoth slight edge
Goaltending Edge: Jets edge
Game Control Projection: Utah projects to have the cleaner five-on-five structure overall, while Winnipeg’s best route is star-driven efficiency backed by Hellebuyck.

Matchup: Calgary Flames vs Colorado Avalanche

Faceoff: 03:00 CET

Calgary Flames – Projected lineup

Forwards
Blake Coleman – Mikael Backlund – Joel Farabee
Matvei Gridin – Morgan Frost – Victor Olofsson
Connor Zary – Rory Kerins – Adam Klapka
Yegor Sharangovich – Tyson Gross – Aydar Suniev

Defense
Zayne Parekh – Zach Whitecloud
Olli Maatta – Hunter Brzustewicz
Abram Wiebe – Brayden Pachal

Goalies
Dustin Wolf
Devin Cooley

Scratched: Ryan Lomberg, John Beecher, Martin Pospisil, Ryan Strome
Injured: Jake Bean (undisclosed), Samuel Honzek (upper body), Jonathan Huberdeau (hip surgery), Joel Hanley (upper body), Kevin Bahl (lower body), Yan Kuznetsov (upper body), Matt Coronato (undisclosed)

IHM Lineup Note:
Calgary has some interesting youth and enough effort to stay competitive, but this is still a thinner lineup than Colorado’s in terms of top-end finishing, transition pressure, and overall control.

IHM Tactical Signals:
Forecheck Signal: Flames need straight-line, physical pressure rather than an open-ice skill battle.
Transition Signal: Calgary does not want to trade rushes with Colorado for long stretches.
Blue Line Signal: The defensive group can compete, but it faces a major speed test.
Goalie Stability Signal: Wolf can keep Calgary alive if the shot quality stays manageable.
X-Factor Signal: Calgary has to compress space and force Colorado into a lower-event night.

Colorado Avalanche – Projected lineup

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

Defense
Devon Toews – Sam Malinski
Brett Kulak – Brent Burns
Nick Blankenburg – Jack Ahcan

Goalies
Scott Wedgewood
Mackenzie Blackwood

Scratched: Zakhar Bardakov
Injured: Nazem Kadri (finger), Cale Makar (upper body), Josh Manson (upper body)

IHM Lineup Note:
Even without Makar, Colorado still carries far more high-end power in this matchup. MacKinnon, Landeskog, Nichushkin, Necas, and Toews give the Avalanche multiple ways to take over the game.

IHM Tactical Signals:
Forecheck Signal: Colorado can overwhelm retrievals through pace and second-man support.
Transition Signal: MacKinnon remains the biggest neutral-zone force in the matchup.
Blue Line Signal: Missing Makar lowers the ceiling, but Toews still anchors the structure well.
Goalie Stability Signal: Colorado’s crease profile remains solid enough to support an aggressive game plan.
X-Factor Signal: If Colorado gets inside the dots consistently, Calgary will struggle to absorb the pressure.

IHM Match Pressure Index:
Offensive Pressure: Avalanche edge
Transition Edge: Avalanche clear edge
Defensive Stability: Avalanche slight edge
Goaltending Edge: Even to slight Avalanche edge
Game Control Projection: Colorado projects to control the most dangerous parts of the game through speed and top-end talent, while Calgary needs a very compact, goalie-driven performance to stay close.

Matchup: St. Louis Blues vs Pittsburgh Penguins

Faceoff: 03:30 CET

St. Louis Blues – Projected lineup

Forwards
Dylan Holloway – Robert Thomas – Jimmy Snuggerud
Pavel Buchnevich – Pius Suter – Jordan Kyrou
Jake Neighbours – Dalibor Dvorsky – Jonathan Drouin
Alexey Toropchenko – Jack Finley – Oskar Sundqvist

Defense
Philip Broberg – Logan Mailloux
Cam Fowler – Colton Parayko
Tyler Tucker – Justin Holl

Goalies
Jordan Binnington
Joel Hofer

Scratched: Jonatan Berggren, Matthew Kessel, Nathan Walker
Injured: None

IHM Lineup Note:
St. Louis brings a far more normal NHL structure into this game. Thomas, Buchnevich, Kyrou, Parayko, and Binnington give the Blues the clear edge in lineup continuity and game management.

IHM Tactical Signals:
Forecheck Signal: Blues can pressure with more quality and more offensive support than Pittsburgh’s rested group.
Transition Signal: Thomas remains the cleanest puck-distribution engine on the ice.
Blue Line Signal: Parayko and Fowler give St. Louis a stable and experienced backbone.
Goalie Stability Signal: Binnington is a strong advantage in game-state control.
X-Factor Signal: St. Louis should dictate pace simply by rolling its more intact lineup.

Pittsburgh Penguins – Projected lineup

Forwards
Elmer Soderblom – Ben Kindel – Anthony Mantha
Ville Koivunen – Tommy Novak – Justin Brazeau
Rutger McGroarty – Kevin Hayes – Avery Hayes
Rafael Harvey-Pinard – Joona Koppanen – Noel Acciari

Defense
Ryan Shea – Connor Clifton
Ryan Graves – Ilya Solovyov
Jake Livanavage – Jack St. Ivany

Goalies
Stuart Skinner
Arturs Silovs

Scratched: Evgeni Malkin, Egor Chinakhov, Sidney Crosby, Bryan Rust, Rickard Rakell, Parker Wotherspoon, Erik Karlsson, Samuel Girard, Kris Letang
Injured: Connor Dewar (lower body), Filip Hallander (blood clot), Blake Lizotte (upper body)

IHM Lineup Note:
Pittsburgh is clearly in rest mode with many core names out, and that completely changes the matchup. The Penguins can still compete through effort, but the lineup lacks the skill and structure it normally uses to control games.

IHM Tactical Signals:
Forecheck Signal: Pittsburgh can bring work rate, but not the same offensive threat or support detail.
Transition Signal: The lineup has fewer clean possession drivers than usual.
Blue Line Signal: Defensive depth is stretched and relies on simpler play.
Goalie Stability Signal: Skinner is capable, but the team context around him is much weaker here.
X-Factor Signal: Pittsburgh needs energy, opportunism, and special-teams swings to stay even.

IHM Match Pressure Index:
Offensive Pressure: Blues edge
Transition Edge: Blues edge
Defensive Stability: Blues edge
Goaltending Edge: Blues slight edge
Game Control Projection: St. Louis projects to control the game through lineup quality, structure, and continuity, while Pittsburgh’s best chance is a messy, opportunistic script that breaks the expected flow.

Q&A: Projected Lineups and Starting Goalies

What are NHL projected lineups?
Projected lineups are expected forward lines, defense pairs, and goalies based on team reports, morning skates, and coaching decisions before official confirmation.

How accurate are projected lineups?
They are usually close to final, but game-time decisions, maintenance situations, and late scratches can still change the lineup.

Why do line combinations matter?
They reveal chemistry, matchup strategy, puck-distribution roles, and how a coach wants the team to control pace and pressure.

Why are starting goalies so important?
Goalies directly shape rebound control, save margin, confidence, and the overall game script.

What does a healthy scratch mean?
It means a player is available to play but is left out of the lineup by coaching choice.

Why do teams change lines late in the day?
Because of injuries, illness, maintenance, tactical decisions, or late adjustments based on the opponent.

What is the value of checking scratches and injuries?
They show which structure pieces are missing and where a team may become weaker in transition, defense, or finishing.

How should readers interpret projected lineups?
Focus on center depth, top-four defense quality, goalie situation, and whether the lineup still supports the team’s normal identity.

Can a lineup reveal tactical intent?
Yes. Coaches often show whether they want more pace, more forecheck, more safety, or more matchup control.

Why does IHM add tactical notes to projected lineups?
Because names alone do not explain how a lineup may actually function together inside the game.

When are final lineups confirmed?
Most often during warmups or shortly before puck drop.

What should readers watch for after publication?
Late goalie confirmations, game-time decisions, and last-minute lineup switches that can change the tactical balance of a matchup.

NHL Projected Lineups Apr 10 2026 | IHM

NHL Projected Lineups Apr 10 2026 | IHM

NHL Projected Lineups – Game Day April 10, 2026

Date: April 9, 2026
By IceHockeyMan Newsroom

Final update: All projected lineups for today have been added.

Matchup: New York Islanders vs Toronto Maple Leafs

Faceoff: 00:45 CET

New York Islanders – Projected lineup

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

Defense
Matthew Schaefer – Ryan Pulock
Adam Pelech – Tony DeAngelo
Carson Soucy – Scott Mayfield

Goalies
Ilya Sorokin
David Rittich

Scratched: Anthony Duclair, Adam Boqvist, Isaiah George
Injured: Kyle Palmieri (ACL), Alexander Romanov (upper body), Semyon Varlamov (knee)

IHM Lineup Note:
The Islanders carry a more settled matchup structure here, with Horvat and Barzal giving them two clear middle-lane engines. If DeAngelo is available, puck movement from the back end becomes cleaner and helps New York exit pressure faster.

IHM Tactical Signals:
Forecheck Signal: New York can apply more layered pressure through its top nine.
Transition Signal: Barzal remains the main pace accelerator through the neutral zone.
Blue Line Signal: Pulock and Pelech stabilize the defensive reads, especially below the dots.
Goalie Stability Signal: Sorokin gives the Islanders a strong control layer in second-chance situations.
X-Factor Signal: The Islanders can attack Toronto’s current center-depth issues through matchup deployment.

Toronto Maple Leafs – Projected lineup

Forwards
Easton Cowan – John Tavares – William Nylander
Matias Maccelli – Max Domi – Matthew Knies
Michael Pezzetta – Luke Haymes – Nicholas Robertson
Steven Lorentz – Jacob Quillan – Calle Jarnkrok

Defense
Morgan Rielly – Philippe Myers
Jake McCabe – William Villeneuve
Simon Benoit – Oliver Ekman-Larsson

Goalies
Artur Akhtyamov
Joseph Woll

Scratched: Troy Stecher
Injured: Auston Matthews (MCL), Chris Tanev (groin), Anthony Stolarz (lower body), Brandon Carlo (lower body), Dakota Joshua (upper body)

IHM Lineup Note:
Without Matthews, Toronto loses its most important center-ice driver and matchup anchor. That forces more offensive creation onto Nylander and Tavares while also increasing defensive strain on a blue line that is already missing key support pieces.

IHM Tactical Signals:
Forecheck Signal: Toronto likely needs shorter, simpler offensive-zone possessions rather than extended cycle control.
Transition Signal: Nylander is the main clean-entry threat and will be leaned on heavily.
Blue Line Signal: The pairings lack full shutdown confidence and may struggle versus layered attacks.
Goalie Stability Signal: Akhtyamov making his first NHL start adds volatility to the game script.
X-Factor Signal: Toronto’s center depth and defensive rhythm remain the biggest stress points.

IHM Match Pressure Index:
Offensive Pressure: Islanders edge
Transition Edge: Islanders slight edge
Defensive Stability: Islanders edge
Goaltending Edge: Islanders clear edge
Game Control Projection: New York projects as the more structured team and should control more of the game flow if its forecheck establishes early pressure.

Matchup: Ottawa Senators vs Florida Panthers

Faceoff: 01:00 CET

Ottawa Senators – Projected lineup

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

Defense
Jake Sanderson – Artem Zub
Thomas Chabot – Jordan Spence
Lassi Thomson – Nikolas Matinpalo

Goalies
James Reimer
Linus Ullmark

Scratched: Stephen Halliday, Kurtis MacDermid, Cameron Crotty
Injured: Nick Jensen (lower body), Dennis Gilbert (upper body), Tyler Kleven (upper body)

IHM Lineup Note:
Ottawa comes in with a far more complete offensive spine and gets a major boost from Chabot’s return. This lineup can roll more natural puck-moving sequences and should dictate the territorial battle against a heavily depleted Florida group.

IHM Tactical Signals:
Forecheck Signal: Ottawa can pressure Florida’s inexperienced defensive combinations with more consistency.
Transition Signal: Stutzle and Cozens give the Senators clear speed and attack layers through the middle.
Blue Line Signal: Chabot’s return improves breakout quality and offensive-zone support timing.
Goalie Stability Signal: Ullmark remains the higher-end safety net if he gets the start.
X-Factor Signal: Ottawa’s health advantage should show up in pace, support spacing, and in-zone recovery.

Florida Panthers – Projected lineup

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

Defense
Gustav Forsling – Mike Benning
Donovan Sebrango – Ludvig Jansson
Tobias Bjornfot – Marek Alcher

Goalies
Sergei Bobrovsky
Daniil Tarasov

Scratched: Matthew Tkachuk, Cole Reinhardt, Mikulas Hovorka
Injured: Aaron Ekblad (hand), Dmitry Kulikov (broken finger), Evan Rodrigues (finger), Sam Reinhart (foot), Niko Mikkola (knee), Anton Lundell (ribs), Uvis Balinskis (fractured foot), Brad Marchand (lower body), Aleksander Barkov (knee), Jonah Gadjovich (upper body), Seth Jones (foot)

IHM Lineup Note:
Florida is no longer operating with its usual identity structure. Too many core pieces are out, and that changes everything from line support to defensive-zone exits. Bobrovsky may have to cover for extended breakdowns.

IHM Tactical Signals:
Forecheck Signal: Florida’s pressure game is likely to be less connected and less punishing than normal.
Transition Signal: Clean exits and support routes become harder with so many regulars missing.
Blue Line Signal: Debut-level and depth-level defenders create obvious management risk under forecheck heat.
Goalie Stability Signal: Bobrovsky is the main survival mechanism in this setup.
X-Factor Signal: Florida’s ability to keep the game low-event is critical.

IHM Match Pressure Index:
Offensive Pressure: Senators edge
Transition Edge: Senators edge
Defensive Stability: Senators edge
Goaltending Edge: Panthers slight edge if Bobrovsky starts
Game Control Projection: Ottawa should carry the cleaner structure and more repeatable territorial control, while Florida will need a tighter, lower-event script to stay in range.

Matchup: New Jersey Devils vs Pittsburgh Penguins

Faceoff: 01:00 CET

New Jersey Devils – Projected lineup

Forwards
Timo Meier – Nico Hischier – Dawson Mercer
Jesper Bratt – Jack Hughes – Connor Brown
Lenni Hameenaho – Cody Glass – Nick Bjugstad
Paul Cotter – Marc McLaughlin – Brian Halonen

Defense
Jonas Siegenthaler – Dougie Hamilton
Dennis Cholowski – Johnathan Kovacevic
Brenden Dillon – Simon Nemec

Goalies
Jake Allen
Jacob Markstrom

Scratched: Evgenii Dadonov, Maxim Tsyplakov
Injured: Luke Hughes (upper body), Arseny Gritsyuk (upper body), Stefan Noesen (knee), Zack MacEwen (ACL), Brett Pesce (lower body)

IHM Lineup Note:
New Jersey still has enough top-six talent to generate pace and shot volume, but the loss of Luke Hughes removes an important transition and possession piece from the back end. Hamilton now carries a bigger creative load.

IHM Tactical Signals:
Forecheck Signal: Devils can pressure well with their top two lines, especially off turnovers.
Transition Signal: Jack Hughes and Bratt remain the speed engine for quick-strike entries.
Blue Line Signal: The absence of Luke Hughes reduces some exit fluidity and offensive support timing.
Goalie Stability Signal: Markstrom provides stronger game-shaping security if he starts.
X-Factor Signal: New Jersey can attack Pittsburgh’s deeper-line defensive vulnerabilities if it wins the pace battle early.

Pittsburgh Penguins – Projected lineup

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

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

Goalies
Stuart Skinner
Arturs Silovs

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 leans on elite veteran brains down the middle, but this configuration can become unstable outside the Crosby and Malkin orbit. Skinner returning from injury adds another uncertain layer.

IHM Tactical Signals:
Forecheck Signal: Pittsburgh may rely more on smart route pressure than pure speed pressure.
Transition Signal: Karlsson and Letang can still move play, but support layers must stay compact.
Blue Line Signal: There is puck-moving talent, but not always enough shutdown balance.
Goalie Stability Signal: Skinner’s return introduces uncertainty after time away.
X-Factor Signal: Crosby’s line remains the main structure-setter and matchup equalizer.

IHM Match Pressure Index:
Offensive Pressure: Devils slight edge
Transition Edge: Devils edge
Defensive Stability: Devils slight edge
Goaltending Edge: Devils slight edge
Game Control Projection: New Jersey projects to have more sustainable puck control and pace, but Pittsburgh can swing the script if its veteran core wins the middle of the ice.

Matchup: Detroit Red Wings vs Philadelphia Flyers

Faceoff: 01:00 CET

Detroit Red Wings – Projected lineup

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

Defense
Simon Edvinsson – Moritz Seider
Ben Chiarot – Justin Faulk
Albert Johansson – Axel Sandin-Pellikka

Goalies
John Gibson
Cam Talbot

Scratched: Travis Hamonic, Jacob Bernard-Docker
Injured: Michael Rasmussen (lower body), Mason Appleton (upper body)

IHM Lineup Note:
Detroit’s top six carries enough shooting and finishing skill to punish coverage lapses quickly. If Larkin is fully ready after maintenance, the Red Wings regain their most important pace and transition organizer.

IHM Tactical Signals:
Forecheck Signal: Detroit can pressure selectively, but it is most dangerous when attacking off quick regains.
Transition Signal: Larkin and Raymond drive the cleanest rush patterns.
Blue Line Signal: Edvinsson and Seider are the core stabilizers on retrievals and exits.
Goalie Stability Signal: Gibson gives Detroit a strong battle-save layer if he starts.
X-Factor Signal: Detroit’s ability to turn neutral-zone touches into immediate offense is the key threat.

Philadelphia Flyers – Projected lineup

Forwards
Tyson Foerster – Trevor Zegras – Owen Tippett
Travis Konecny – Christian Dvorak – Porter Martone
Alex Bump – Noah Cates – Matvei Michkov
Denver Barkey – Luke Glendening – Sean Couturier

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

Goalies
Dan Vladar
Samuel Ersson

Scratched: Garrett Wilson, Carl Grundstrom, Noah Juulsen, Garnet Hathaway
Injured: Rodrigo Abols (lower body), Nikita Grebenkin (upper body)

IHM Lineup Note:
Philadelphia comes in with lineup continuity after sticking with the same group from its last win. The Flyers can create strong pressure through work rate and puck pursuit, especially if Zegras and Michkov generate interior touches.

IHM Tactical Signals:
Forecheck Signal: Flyers can bring disruptive energy and second-man pressure on retrievals.
Transition Signal: The attack can be dangerous if Konecny and Michkov get support on the rush.
Blue Line Signal: Sanheim remains the main stabilizer and transport defender.
Goalie Stability Signal: The crease is solid enough, though not a clear dominant edge.
X-Factor Signal: Philadelphia’s work rate and turnover creation can make this matchup uncomfortable.

IHM Match Pressure Index:
Offensive Pressure: Red Wings slight edge
Transition Edge: Red Wings slight edge
Defensive Stability: Even
Goaltending Edge: Red Wings slight edge
Game Control Projection: Detroit projects to have the cleaner top-end scoring routes, but Philadelphia can disrupt the rhythm if it turns the game into a pressure-heavy forecheck battle.

Matchup: Buffalo Sabres vs Columbus Blue Jackets

Faceoff: 01:00 CET

Buffalo Sabres – Projected lineup

Forwards
Peyton Krebs – Tage Thompson – Alex Tuch
Jason Zucker – Ryan McLeod – Jack Quinn
Zach Benson – Josh Norris – Josh Doan
Jordan Greenway – Tyson Kozak – Beck Malenstyn

Defense
Mattias Samuelsson – Rasmus Dahlin
Bowen Byram – Owen Power
Logan Stanley – Michael Kesselring

Goalies
Colten Ellis
Ukko-Pekka Luukkonen

Scratched: Zach Metsa, Conor Timmins, Josh Dunne, Tanner Pearson
Injured: Alex Lyon (lower body), Sam Carrick (upper body), Noah Ostlund (upper body), Jiri Kulich (blood clot), Justin Danforth (lower body)

IHM Lineup Note:
Buffalo has more natural attacking flow in this setup, especially with Dahlin and Power able to feed tempo from the back end. If Ellis starts, though, the Sabres bring a new-variable crease situation into an otherwise strong matchup profile.

IHM Tactical Signals:
Forecheck Signal: Buffalo can apply meaningful pressure when its defense joins the attack quickly.
Transition Signal: Dahlin-driven puck movement gives the Sabres a clear speed advantage.
Blue Line Signal: Buffalo’s top four can transport and extend offensive possessions well.
Goalie Stability Signal: Luukkonen is the more established control option, Ellis adds uncertainty if used.
X-Factor Signal: Tage Thompson’s release remains the most dangerous single-shot weapon in the game.

Columbus Blue Jackets – Projected lineup

Forwards
Cole Sillinger – Adam Fantilli – Kent Johnson
Kirill Marchenko – Charlie Coyle – Conor Garland
Mason Marchment – Boone Jenner – Danton Heinen
Isac Lundestrom – Sean Monahan – Miles Wood

Defense
Zach Werenski – Dante Fabbro
Ivan Provorov – Denton Mateychuk
Egor Zamula – Erik Gudbranson

Goalies
Jet Greaves
Elvis Merzlikins

Scratched: Luca Del Bel Belluz, Jake Christiansen, Zach Aston-Reese
Injured: Damon Severson (shoulder surgery), Dmitri Voronkov (hand), Mathieu Olivier (upper body)

IHM Lineup Note:
Columbus still has enough center depth and wing support to be dangerous, but Buffalo’s back-end mobility can stress the Blue Jackets if their defensive spacing breaks down under repeated transition pressure.

IHM Tactical Signals:
Forecheck Signal: Columbus can bring heavy pressure through Jenner and Marchment shifts.
Transition Signal: Fantilli and Johnson remain the main speed-threat duo.
Blue Line Signal: Werenski is the central distributor and matchup-balancer.
Goalie Stability Signal: The crease is workable, but not a major projected edge here.
X-Factor Signal: Columbus must win more of the middle-lane battles to prevent Buffalo from dictating pace.

IHM Match Pressure Index:
Offensive Pressure: Sabres edge
Transition Edge: Sabres edge
Defensive Stability: Sabres slight edge
Goaltending Edge: Slight Sabres edge
Game Control Projection: Buffalo projects to own more of the puck-driving phases, while Columbus needs a more physical and disruptive game to slow the Sabres’ tempo.

Matchup: Montreal Canadiens vs Tampa Bay Lightning

Faceoff: 01:00 CET

Montreal Canadiens – Projected lineup

Forwards
Cole Caufield – Nick Suzuki – Juraj Slafkovsky
Alexandre Texier – Alex Newhook – Ivan Demidov
Josh Anderson – Jake Evans – Kirby Dach
Joe Veleno – Phillip Danault – Oliver Kapanen

Defense
Mike Matheson – Noah Dobson
Jayden Struble – Lane Hutson
Adam Engstrom – Arber Xhekaj

Goalies
Jakub Dobes
Jacob Fowler

Scratched: Zachary Bolduc, Brendan Gallagher, Samuel Montembeault
Injured: Kaiden Guhle (maintenance), Alexander Carrier (upper body), Patrik Laine (lower body)

IHM Lineup Note:
Montreal still has enough skill in its top six to create dangerous scoring pockets, but the absence of some stabilizing pieces leaves the Canadiens more dependent on puck management and structure discipline.

IHM Tactical Signals:
Forecheck Signal: Montreal can pressure well in bursts, especially through Anderson and Slafkovsky shifts.
Transition Signal: Suzuki and Caufield remain the smartest attack connectors in open ice.
Blue Line Signal: Matheson, Dobson, and Hutson give Montreal real puck-moving potential.
Goalie Stability Signal: The projected crease setup is less established than Tampa Bay’s.
X-Factor Signal: Montreal needs its young skill to convert on limited clean looks.

Tampa Bay Lightning – Projected lineup

Forwards
Jake Guentzel – Brayden Point – Nikita Kucherov
Gage Goncalves – Anthony Cirelli – Corey Perry
Zemgus Girgensons – Yanni Gourde – Oliver Bjorkstrand
Jakob Pelletier – Nick Paul – Scott Sabourin

Defense
J.J. Moser – Darren Raddysh
Ryan McDonagh – Erik Cernak
Charle-Edouard D’Astous – Emil Lilleberg

Goalies
Andrei Vasilevskiy
Jonas Johansson

Scratched: Steve Santini, Victor Hedman
Injured: Declan Carlile (lower body), Max Crozier (core muscle), Dominic James (lower body), Brandon Hagel (lower body), Pontus Holmberg (upper body)

IHM Lineup Note:
Even without Hagel and with Hedman scratched, Tampa Bay still brings elite top-end offensive control. The return of Cirelli strengthens matchup responsibility and gives the Lightning more detail in both directions.

IHM Tactical Signals:
Forecheck Signal: Tampa can alternate between controlled pressure and quick-strike entries.
Transition Signal: Kucherov and Point remain among the league’s best pace manipulators.
Blue Line Signal: Missing Hedman lowers the ceiling, but the structure still holds enough experience.
Goalie Stability Signal: Vasilevskiy is the strongest goalie presence in this matchup.
X-Factor Signal: Tampa’s elite execution on rush timing and slot access is the difference-maker.

IHM Match Pressure Index:
Offensive Pressure: Lightning edge
Transition Edge: Lightning clear edge
Defensive Stability: Lightning slight edge
Goaltending Edge: Lightning clear edge
Game Control Projection: Tampa Bay projects to own the more dangerous and repeatable offensive sequences, especially if its top six establishes early puck-possession rhythm.

Matchup: St. Louis Blues vs Winnipeg Jets

Faceoff: 02:00 CET

St. Louis Blues – Projected lineup

Forwards
Dylan Holloway – Robert Thomas – Jimmy Snuggerud
Jake Neighbours – Pavel Buchnevich – Jonatan Berggren
Otto Stenberg – Dalibor Dvorsky – Jordan Kyrou
Alexey Toropchenko – Jack Finley – Nathan Walker

Defense
Philip Broberg – Logan Mailloux
Theo Lindstein – Colton Parayko
Cam Fowler – Tyler Tucker

Goalies
Jordan Binnington
Joel Hofer

Scratched: Justin Holl, Jonathan Drouin, Matthew Kessel, Oskar Sundqvist, Pius Suter
Injured: None

IHM Lineup Note:
St. Louis brings a reasonably balanced lineup with enough youth and veteran support to play with pace. Thomas and Buchnevich remain the key connectors if the Blues want to challenge Winnipeg’s structure through the middle.

IHM Tactical Signals:
Forecheck Signal: The Blues can generate effective pressure if Walker and Toropchenko tilt the bottom-six energy shifts.
Transition Signal: Thomas is still the cleanest possession carrier in the lineup.
Blue Line Signal: Parayko and Broberg give St. Louis real reach and puck-retrieval value.
Goalie Stability Signal: Binnington can hold the game steady if under volume.
X-Factor Signal: The Blues need their young offensive pieces to be direct and decisive.

Winnipeg Jets – Projected lineup

Forwards
Kyle Connor – Mark Scheifele – Alex Iafallo
Cole Perfetti – Adam Lowry – Gabriel Vilardi
Cole Koepke – Jonathan Toews – Isak Rosen
Nino Niederreiter – Vladislav Namestnikov – Brad Lambert

Defense
Josh Morrissey – Dylan DeMelo
Dylan Samberg – Neal Pionk
Haydn Fleury – Jacob Bryson

Goalies
Connor Hellebuyck
Eric Comrie

Scratched: Colin Miller, Ville Heinola
Injured: Morgan Barron (lower body), Elias Salomonsson (concussion), Gustav Nyquist (undisclosed)

IHM Lineup Note:
Winnipeg still has the stronger game-breaking core here, especially with Connor, Scheifele, Morrissey, and Hellebuyck. The lineup is built to control key zones rather than chase chaos.

IHM Tactical Signals:
Forecheck Signal: Winnipeg can apply smart pressure without opening its structure too much.
Transition Signal: Connor and Scheifele remain the main rush-conversion duo.
Blue Line Signal: Morrissey drives the flow and controls exit quality.
Goalie Stability Signal: Hellebuyck is a major matchup edge.
X-Factor Signal: Winnipeg’s ability to compress space after losing possession is the hidden separator.

IHM Match Pressure Index:
Offensive Pressure: Jets slight edge
Transition Edge: Jets edge
Defensive Stability: Jets edge
Goaltending Edge: Jets clear edge
Game Control Projection: Winnipeg projects to manage the game more efficiently through structure and crease control, while St. Louis needs a higher-event script to increase upset chances.

Matchup: Chicago Blackhawks vs Carolina Hurricanes

Faceoff: 02:30 CET

Chicago Blackhawks – Projected lineup

Forwards
Teuvo Teravainen – Connor Bedard – Nick Lardis
Tyler Bertuzzi – Anton Frondell – Ilya Mikheyev
Ryan Donato – Frank Nazar – Andre Burakovsky
Andrew Mangiapane – Ryan Greene – Landon Slaggert

Defense
Wyatt Kaiser – Sam Rinzel
Alex Vlasic – Louis Crevier
Kevin Korchinski – Ethan Del Mastro

Goalies
Spencer Knight
Arvid Soderblom

Scratched: Sam Lafferty, Dominic Toninato, Sacha Boisvert
Injured: Matt Grzelcyk (upper body), Artyom Levshunov (hand), Oliver Moore (lower body)

IHM Lineup Note:
Chicago still has some offensive talent, but this is a difficult matchup for a team that can get trapped in its own zone for long stretches. Bedard must become the main pressure-release option.

IHM Tactical Signals:
Forecheck Signal: Chicago can only pressure consistently if its support timing stays tight.
Transition Signal: Bedard and Nazar are the main acceleration points.
Blue Line Signal: Young defenders may face sustained retrieval pressure from Carolina’s depth.
Goalie Stability Signal: Knight may need to steal sequences under heavy shot and rebound volume.
X-Factor Signal: Chicago’s ability to survive the first wave of pressure is everything.

Carolina Hurricanes – Projected lineup

Forwards
Andrei Svechnikov – Sebastian Aho – Seth Jarvis
Taylor Hall – Logan Stankoven – Jackson Blake
Nikolaj Ehlers – Jordan Staal – Jordan Martinook
William Carrier – Mark Jankowski – Eric Robinson

Defense
Jaccob Slavin – Jalen Chatfield
K’Andre Miller – Sean Walker
Shayne Gostisbehere – Alexander Nikishin

Goalies
Frederik Andersen
Brandon Bussi

Scratched: Jesperi Kotkaniemi, Nicolas Deslauriers, Mike Reilly, Skyler Brind’Amour, Bradley Nadeau, Josiah Slavin, Charles Alexis Legault
Injured: Pyotr Kochetkov (lower body)

IHM Lineup Note:
Carolina brings one of the deepest pressure structures in hockey. This lineup can roll four lines, activate the weak side, and suffocate exits through layered forecheck detail and quick reloads.

IHM Tactical Signals:
Forecheck Signal: Carolina has a clear edge in volume, route discipline, and reload timing.
Transition Signal: The Hurricanes create speed by support structure more than by individual rushes alone.
Blue Line Signal: Slavin anchors the defensive reads, while Gostisbehere adds attack extension.
Goalie Stability Signal: Andersen gives the Hurricanes reliable game-state calm.
X-Factor Signal: Carolina’s pressure consistency can break Chicago’s breakout rhythm early.

IHM Match Pressure Index:
Offensive Pressure: Hurricanes clear edge
Transition Edge: Hurricanes edge
Defensive Stability: Hurricanes clear edge
Goaltending Edge: Hurricanes edge
Game Control Projection: Carolina projects to control territory, possession, and recovery cycles for large stretches unless Chicago gets elite finishing from a small number of chances.

Matchup: Dallas Stars vs Minnesota Wild

Faceoff: 03:00 CET

Dallas Stars – Projected lineup

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

Defense
Esa Lindell – Miro Heiskanen
Thomas Harley – Tyler Myers
Lian Bichsel – Ilya Lyubushkin

Goalies
Jake Oettinger
Casey DeSmith

Scratched: Kyle Capobianco, Alexander Petrovic
Injured: Nathan Bastian (hand), Michael Bunting (lower body), Radek Faksa (lower body), Roope Hintz (lower body), Nils Lundkvist (illness), Tyler Seguin (ACL), Sam Steel (undisclosed)

IHM Lineup Note:
Even with important absences, Dallas still has elite high-end offensive talent and one of the strongest top defensive pairs in the league. Oettinger behind Heiskanen and Lindell remains a major playoff-style stability layer.

IHM Tactical Signals:
Forecheck Signal: Dallas can pressure more selectively and then attack off quick recoveries.
Transition Signal: Heiskanen and Harley help Dallas keep the puck moving cleanly out of pressure.
Blue Line Signal: The Stars still have enough puck-moving quality to maintain territorial control.
Goalie Stability Signal: Oettinger is one of the most important matchup advantages on the board.
X-Factor Signal: Rantanen and Robertson raise the finishing ceiling even when support depth is reduced.

Minnesota Wild – Projected lineup

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

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

Goalies
Filip Gustavsson
Jesper Wallstedt

Scratched: Bobby Brink, Robby Fabbri, Daemon Hunt, Jeff Petry, Nico Sturm
Injured: None

IHM Lineup Note:
Minnesota is healthy and dangerous, with enough experience and skill to challenge Dallas in both rush play and half-ice structure. Kaprizov remains the purest offensive game-breaker in the matchup.

IHM Tactical Signals:
Forecheck Signal: The Wild can pressure effectively through their winger depth and net-front habits.
Transition Signal: Kaprizov and Boldy give Minnesota strong east-west creation potential.
Blue Line Signal: Faber, Hughes, Brodin, and Spurgeon provide a mobile and intelligent defensive core.
Goalie Stability Signal: Gustavsson is reliable, but the overall crease edge still leans Dallas.
X-Factor Signal: Minnesota can absolutely win this game if it turns Dallas’ missing-depth issues into a prolonged pace battle.

IHM Match Pressure Index:
Offensive Pressure: Even
Transition Edge: Slight Stars edge
Defensive Stability: Even
Goaltending Edge: Stars slight edge
Game Control Projection: This projects as one of the tighter games on the slate, with Dallas having a cleaner control ceiling and Minnesota holding enough skill and structure to disrupt that script.

Matchup: Utah Mammoth vs Nashville Predators

Faceoff: 03:00 CET

Utah Mammoth – Projected lineup

Forwards
Clayton Keller – Nick Schmaltz – Lawson Crouse
Kailer Yamamoto – Logan Cooley – Dylan Guenther
JJ Peterka – Alexander Kerfoot – Michael Carcone
Liam O’Brien – Kevin Stenlund – Brandon Tanev

Defense
Mikhail Sergachev – MacKenzie Weegar
Nate Schmidt – John Marino
Ian Cole – Sean Durzi

Goalies
Karel Vejmelka
Vitek Vanecek

Scratched: Nick DeSimone, Kevin Rooney, Dmitri Simashev
Injured: Barrett Hayton (upper body), Jack McBain (lower body)

IHM Lineup Note:
Utah brings the stronger overall lineup balance here. Keller, Cooley, and Guenther give them enough speed and creativity, while the blue line has real structure and bite with Sergachev and Weegar.

IHM Tactical Signals:
Forecheck Signal: Utah can pressure hard through its middle six and keep the game physically honest.
Transition Signal: Cooley and Keller create the cleanest pace changes in the matchup.
Blue Line Signal: Sergachev and Weegar give Utah a reliable two-way foundation.
Goalie Stability Signal: Vejmelka can handle volume and keep Utah’s structure connected.
X-Factor Signal: Utah’s defensive depth should matter over sixty minutes.

Nashville Predators – Projected lineup

Forwards
Zachary L’Heureux – Ryan O’Reilly – Steven Stamkos
Filip Forsberg – Matthew Wood – Jonathan Marchessault
Tyson Jost – Erik Haula – Luke Evangelista
Reid Schaefer – Fedor Svechkov – Joakim Kemell

Defense
Brady Skjei – Roman Josi
Adam Wilsby – Nick Perbix
Ryan Ufko – Justin Barron

Goalies
Juuse Saros
Justus Annunen

Scratched: Jordan Oesterle, Ozzy Wiesblatt
Injured: Nicolas Hague (upper body)

IHM Lineup Note:
Nashville still has legitimate top-end names, but this version of the lineup depends heavily on Josi, Forsberg, and Saros carrying large minutes and game-shaping responsibility.

IHM Tactical Signals:
Forecheck Signal: The Predators can still pressure with physicality and reach, but not always with elite connection.
Transition Signal: Nashville needs cleaner puck support from the centers to avoid stalled rushes.
Blue Line Signal: Josi remains the primary possession engine from the back end.
Goalie Stability Signal: Saros can erase mistakes, but he may need to do it often.
X-Factor Signal: If Nashville’s stars do not control the first half of the game, Utah’s depth can take over.

IHM Match Pressure Index:
Offensive Pressure: Mammoth slight edge
Transition Edge: Mammoth edge
Defensive Stability: Mammoth slight edge
Goaltending Edge: Predators slight edge
Game Control Projection: Utah projects to have the more stable and repeatable five-on-five control, while Nashville’s best path is a star-driven, lower-margin game shaped by Saros.

Matchup: Colorado Avalanche vs Calgary Flames

Faceoff: 03:00 CET

Colorado Avalanche – Projected lineup

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

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), Nazem Kadri (finger)

IHM Lineup Note:
Colorado still looks dangerous because MacKinnon drives so much of the game himself, but missing Makar changes the entire back-end dynamic. The Avalanche remain elite in bursts, though not quite as fluid in total structure.

IHM Tactical Signals:
Forecheck Signal: Colorado can overwhelm teams with pace when its top six gets inside support.
Transition Signal: MacKinnon remains the single biggest neutral-zone force in this matchup.
Blue Line Signal: Without Makar, the breakout loses one of its most explosive dimensions.
Goalie Stability Signal: Blackwood has given Colorado steadier crease reliability.
X-Factor Signal: If Landeskog and Nichushkin establish net-front presence, Calgary’s defense will be under constant stress.

Calgary Flames – Projected lineup

Forwards
Yegor Sharangovich – Mikael Backlund – Matt Coronato
Joel Farabee – Morgan Frost – Matvei Gridin
Connor Zary – Ryan Strome – Aydar Suniev
Victor Olofsson – John Beecher – Adam Klapka

Defense
Yan Kuznetsov – Zach Whitecloud
Olli Maatta – Hunter Brzustewicz
Brayden Pachal – Zayne Parekh

Goalies
Dustin Wolf
Devin Cooley

Scratched: Ryan Lomberg, Tyson Gross, Blake Coleman, Martin Pospisil
Injured: Jake Bean (undisclosed), Samuel Honzek (upper body), Jonathan Huberdeau (hip surgery), Joel Hanley (upper body), Kevin Bahl (lower body)

IHM Lineup Note:
Calgary has some young skill and enough effort players to stay competitive, but the overall lineup still looks thinner than Colorado’s, especially in terms of elite transition control and finishing ceiling.

IHM Tactical Signals:
Forecheck Signal: Calgary needs straight-line pressure and physical disruption more than an open-ice game.
Transition Signal: The Flames do not want this to become a rush-trading matchup.
Blue Line Signal: The pairings can compete, but they face a speed and skill test against Colorado’s top end.
Goalie Stability Signal: Wolf gives Calgary a chance if the shot quality stays manageable.
X-Factor Signal: Calgary must keep MacKinnon from owning the middle of the ice.

IHM Match Pressure Index:
Offensive Pressure: Avalanche edge
Transition Edge: Avalanche clear edge
Defensive Stability: Avalanche slight edge
Goaltending Edge: Even to slight Avalanche edge
Game Control Projection: Colorado projects to command the most dangerous phases of the game through pace and top-end attack, while Calgary’s path depends on goalie support and a more physical, compressed style.

Matchup: Anaheim Ducks vs San Jose Sharks

Faceoff: 04:00 CET

Anaheim Ducks – Projected lineup

Forwards
Chris Kreider – Leo Carlsson – Troy Terry
Alex Killorn – Mikael Granlund – Beckett Sennecke
Frank Vatrano – Mason McTavish – Jeffrey Viel
Tim Washe – Ryan Poehling – Ian Moore

Defense
Jackson LaCombe – Jacob Trouba
Pavel Mintyukov – John Carlson
Tyson Hinds – Drew Helleson

Goalies
Lukas Dostal
Ville Husso

Scratched: Olen Zellweger
Injured: Jansen Harkins (hand surgery), Ross Johnston (lower body), Radko Gudas (lower body), Cutter Gauthier (upper body)

IHM Lineup Note:
Anaheim’s lineup is not perfect, but it still holds more proven offensive balance and better top-four structure than San Jose. Dostal gives the Ducks a real chance to control the game if they stay organized.

IHM Tactical Signals:
Forecheck Signal: Anaheim can create useful pressure through McTavish, Vatrano, and Kreider shifts.
Transition Signal: Carlsson and Terry are the cleanest attack creators in open ice.
Blue Line Signal: LaCombe, Mintyukov, Trouba, and Carlson give Anaheim a stronger back-end foundation.
Goalie Stability Signal: Dostal is a clear positive for the Ducks.
X-Factor Signal: Anaheim should attack San Jose’s defensive spacing off broken neutral-zone layers.

San Jose Sharks – Projected lineup

Forwards
Collin Graf – Macklin Celebrini – Will Smith
William Eklund – Alexander Wennberg – Kiefer Sherwood
Igor Chernyshov – Michael Misa – Tyler Toffoli
Barclay Goodrow – Zack Ostapchuk – Adam Gaudette

Defense
Dmitry Orlov – Vincent Desharnais
Mario Ferraro – John Klingberg
Sam Dickinson – Nick Leddy

Goalies
Yaroslav Askarov
Alex Nedeljkovic

Scratched: Pavol Regenda, Philipp Kurashev, Shakir Mukhamadullin, Ty Dellandrea
Injured: Ryan Reaves (upper body)

IHM Lineup Note:
San Jose has exciting skill, especially through Celebrini and Smith, but the defensive management and full-line consistency can still fluctuate too much against teams that move the puck with purpose.

IHM Tactical Signals:
Forecheck Signal: The Sharks can create moments of pressure, but not always enough sustained structure behind it.
Transition Signal: Celebrini and Smith remain the main pace-breakers and creative levers.
Blue Line Signal: The defense has names, but not always enough clean cohesion under pressure.
Goalie Stability Signal: Askarov can elevate the team’s ceiling if he gets the nod.
X-Factor Signal: San Jose’s young skill can make this dangerous if Anaheim gets loose defensively.

IHM Match Pressure Index:
Offensive Pressure: Ducks slight edge
Transition Edge: Even
Defensive Stability: Ducks edge
Goaltending Edge: Ducks slight edge
Game Control Projection: Anaheim projects as the more stable team across sixty minutes, while San Jose’s best chance lies in letting its young skill turn the game into a looser exchange.

Matchup: Seattle Kraken vs Vegas Golden Knights

Faceoff: 04:00 CET

Seattle Kraken – Projected lineup

Forwards
Bobby McMann – Matty Beniers – Jordan Eberle
Jared McCann – Berkly Catton – Frederick Gaudreau
Jaden Schwartz – Chandler Stephenson – Kaapo Kakko
Ryan Winterton – Oscar Fisker Molgaard – Jacob Melanson

Defense
Vince Dunn – Adam Larsson
Josh Mahura – Brandon Montour
Ryker Evans – Jamie Oleksiak

Goalies
Joey Daccord
Nikke Kokko

Scratched: Ryan Lindgren, Ben Meyers, Eeli Tolvanen, Matt Murray
Injured: Shane Wright (upper body), Philipp Grubauer (lower body)

IHM Lineup Note:
Seattle still has enough skating and puck-moving ability to stay competitive, but the lineup loses some punch without Shane Wright and also enters with crease depth questions behind Daccord.

IHM Tactical Signals:
Forecheck Signal: Seattle can pressure well when Beniers and McCann lines get moving downhill.
Transition Signal: Dunn and Montour help Seattle keep the puck alive and generate second-wave attacks.
Blue Line Signal: The defense is mobile enough to create offense, but can be exposed by elite finishing talent.
Goalie Stability Signal: Daccord is solid, but the overall crease situation is less comfortable than Vegas’.
X-Factor Signal: Seattle must win special teams and transition details to tilt this matchup.

Vegas Golden Knights – Projected lineup

Forwards
Brett Howden – Jack Eichel – Pavel Dorofeyev
Ivan Barbashev – Mitch Marner – Mark Stone
Brandon Saad – Tomas Hertl – Colton Sissons
Cole Smith – Nic Dowd – Keegan Kolesar

Defense
Brayden McNabb – Shea Theodore
Noah Hanifin – Rasmus Andersson
Jeremy Lauzon – Ben Hutton

Goalies
Adin Hill
Carter Hart

Scratched: Akira Schmid, Kaedan Korczak, Reilly Smith
Injured: Alexander Holtz (upper body), William Karlsson (lower body)

IHM Lineup Note:
Vegas still looks deeper, heavier, and cleaner in its matchup structure. Eichel, Marner, Stone, Hertl, Theodore, and Hanifin give the Golden Knights a strong blend of brains, finish, and control.

IHM Tactical Signals:
Forecheck Signal: Vegas can pressure with weight and timing without overextending.
Transition Signal: Eichel and Marner give this lineup elite entry and delay-game skill.
Blue Line Signal: Theodore, Hanifin, and Andersson create a strong puck-moving defensive core.
Goalie Stability Signal: Hill provides the more trusted matchup profile in net.
X-Factor Signal: Vegas can control this game simply by owning the walls and middle support routes.

IHM Match Pressure Index:
Offensive Pressure: Golden Knights edge
Transition Edge: Golden Knights edge
Defensive Stability: Golden Knights edge
Goaltending Edge: Golden Knights slight edge
Game Control Projection: Vegas projects to own the more mature, structured, and repeatable game script, while Seattle needs higher chaos and better finishing conversion to break that control.

Matchup: Los Angeles Kings vs Vancouver Canucks

Faceoff: 04:30 CET

Los Angeles Kings – Projected lineup

Forwards
Artemi Panarin – Anze Kopitar – Adrian Kempe
Trevor Moore – Quinton Byfield – Alex Laferriere
Joel Armia – Scott Laughton – Jared Wright
Jeff Malott – Samuel Helenius – Taylor Ward

Defense
Mikey Anderson – Drew Doughty
Joel Edmundson – Brandt Clarke
Brian Dumoulin – Cody Ceci

Goalies
Anton Forsberg
Darcy Kuemper

Scratched: Mathieu Joseph, Jacob Moverare
Injured: Alex Turcotte (undisclosed), Andrei Kuzmenko (meniscus)

IHM Lineup Note:
Los Angeles has the more mature two-way structure and better matchup balance. Kopitar, Panarin, Kempe, Byfield, Doughty, and Anderson give the Kings enough veteran control to dictate the game’s shape.

IHM Tactical Signals:
Forecheck Signal: The Kings can pressure with detail and stay above the puck consistently.
Transition Signal: Panarin and Kempe add more creative threat than Vancouver can comfortably match.
Blue Line Signal: Doughty and Anderson are still the main control pair for pace and defensive reads.
Goalie Stability Signal: Kuemper gives Los Angeles the stronger projected crease profile.
X-Factor Signal: The Kings should be able to lean on structure and matchup discipline over time.

Vancouver Canucks – Projected lineup

Forwards
Drew O’Connor – Elias Pettersson – Jake DeBrusk
Liam Ohgren – Marco Rossi – Brock Boeser
Max Sasson – Teddy Blueger – Linus Karlsson
Curtis Douglas – Aatu Raty – Nils Hoglander

Defense
Zeev Buium – Filip Hronek
Marcus Pettersson – Tom Willander
Elias Pettersson – Victor Mancini

Goalies
Nikita Tolopilo
Jiri Patera

Scratched: P.O. Joseph, Ty Mueller
Injured: Kevin Lankinen (upper body), Evander Kane (undisclosed), Filip Chytil (facial fracture), Thatcher Demko (hip surgery), Derek Forbort (undisclosed)

IHM Lineup Note:
Vancouver still has some offensive names, but the goaltending situation and overall roster balance place a lot of stress on the skaters. The Canucks need efficiency because they are unlikely to win a long territorial game.

IHM Tactical Signals:
Forecheck Signal: Vancouver must pressure in short, targeted waves rather than trying to force a nonstop chase game.
Transition Signal: Pettersson and Boeser remain the primary offensive connectors.
Blue Line Signal: The defense can move the puck in spots, but it is not a projected strength against Los Angeles’ structure.
Goalie Stability Signal: This is the biggest risk area for Vancouver.
X-Factor Signal: The Canucks need a high-conversion finishing night to offset the matchup disadvantages.

IHM Match Pressure Index:
Offensive Pressure: Kings edge
Transition Edge: Kings slight edge
Defensive Stability: Kings clear edge
Goaltending Edge: Kings clear edge
Game Control Projection: Los Angeles projects to control the game through structure, matchup discipline, and crease stability, while Vancouver needs a more chaotic and opportunistic script to create upset conditions.

Q&A: Projected Lineups and Starting Goalies

What are NHL projected lineups?
Projected lineups are expected forward lines, defense pairs, and goalies based on team reports, skates, and coaching decisions before official warmup confirmation.

How accurate are projected lineups?
They are usually close to final, but late scratches, maintenance decisions, and game-time calls can still change the setup.

Why do line combinations matter?
They show chemistry, matchup intentions, puck-distribution roles, and how a coach wants to control pace and pressure.

Why are starting goalies so important?
Goalies directly change shot quality management, rebound control, confidence level, and overall game script.

What does a healthy scratch mean?
It means a player is available to play but is left out of the lineup by coaching choice.

Why do teams change lines late in the day?
Because of injuries, illness, maintenance, tactical matchup changes, or coaches reacting to the opponent.

What is the value of checking scratches and injuries?
They reveal missing structure pieces, role changes, and where a team may become weaker in transition, defense, or finishing.

How should fans read a projected lineup correctly?
Look at center depth, top-four defense quality, goalie situation, and whether the lineup still supports the team’s normal identity.

Can a lineup reveal tactical intent?
Yes. Coaches often show whether they want more pace, more forecheck, more defensive safety, or more matchup control.

Why does IHM add tactical notes to projected lineups?
Because raw line combinations only show names. Tactical notes explain how those names may actually function together in the game.

When are final lineups usually confirmed?
Most often during warmups or shortly before puck drop.

What should readers watch for after publication?
Late goalie confirmations, game-time decisions, and last-minute lineup switches that can change the tactical balance of a matchup.

NHL Projected Lineups - April 8, 2026

NHL Projected Lineups - April 8, 2026

NHL Projected Lineups - Game Day April 8, 2026

Date: April 7, 2026
By IceHockeyMan Newsroom

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


Carolina Hurricanes vs Boston Bruins

Faceoff: 01:00 CET

Hurricanes - Projected lineup

Forwards
Andrei Svechnikov - Sebastian Aho - Seth Jarvis
Taylor Hall - Logan Stankoven - Jackson Blake
Nikolaj Ehlers - Jordan Staal - Jordan Martinook
William Carrier - Mark Jankowski - Nicolas Deslauriers

Defense
Jaccob Slavin - Jalen Chatfield
K’Andre Miller - Sean Walker
Shayne Gostisbehere - Alexander Nikishin

Goalies
Brandon Bussi
Frederik Andersen

Scratched
Jesperi Kotkaniemi
Eric Robinson
Mike Reilly

Injured
Pyotr Kochetkov (lower body)

IHM Lineup Note:
Carolina still looks like the more complete pressure team here, with Aho, Jarvis, Svechnikov and Gostisbehere driving the puck north and the Slavin pair stabilizing the defensive shape. Deslauriers staying in adds a slightly heavier bottom-six look.

IHM Tactical Signals:
Pace Signal: Hurricanes.
Forecheck Signal: Hurricanes through repeat pressure and reload discipline.
Blue Line Signal: Hurricanes slight edge on mobility and support.
Goalie Stability Signal: Bruins slight edge if Swayman stays sharp, but Carolina structure helps Bussi.
X-Factor Signal: Aho line tempo against Boston’s top checking layers is the key opening battle.

Bruins - Projected lineup

Forwards
Marat Khusnutdinov - Fraser Minten - David Pastrnak
Casey Mittelstadt - Pavel Zacha - Viktor Arvidsson
Lukas Reichel - Elias Lindholm - Morgan Geekie
Tanner Jeannot - Sean Kuraly - Mark Kastelic

Defense
Jonathan Aspirot - Charlie McAvoy
Hampus Lindholm - Mason Lohrei
Nikita Zadorov - Andrew Peeke

Goalies
Jeremy Swayman
Joonas Korpisalo

Scratched
Alex Steeves
Jordan Harris
Michael Eyssimont
Henri Jokiharju

Injured
None

IHM Lineup Note:
Boston comes in healthier and more settled than it was earlier, and the McAvoy-Pastrnak core still gives the Bruins enough top-end control to keep this close if they survive Carolina’s pace pressure.

IHM Tactical Signals:
Pace Signal: Bruins prefer a more controlled game than Carolina.
Forecheck Signal: Bruins can pressure physically but less continuously.
Blue Line Signal: Even, with McAvoy balancing Carolina’s mobile back end.
Goalie Stability Signal: Bruins.
X-Factor Signal: Pastrnak’s ability to finish off limited space is the biggest single offensive threat on either side outside Aho’s line rhythm.

IHM Match Pressure Index

Offensive Pressure
Hurricanes

Transition Edge
Hurricanes

Defensive Stability
Even

Goaltending Edge
Bruins

Game Control Projection
Boston has enough structure and goaltending to hang in, but Carolina still owns the cleaner all-zone pressure model and should control more of the territorial flow if their forecheck gets established early.


Detroit Red Wings vs Columbus Blue Jackets

Faceoff: 01:00 CET

Red Wings - Projected lineup

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

Defense
Simon Edvinsson - Moritz Seider
Ben Chiarot - Axel Sandin-Pellikka
Albert Johansson - Jacob Bernard-Docker

Goalies
John Gibson
Cam Talbot

Scratched
Travis Hamonic
Dominik Shine

Injured
Justin Faulk (lower body)
Mason Appleton (upper body)

IHM Lineup Note:
Detroit still has enough scoring touch through Larkin, Kane, DeBrincat and Raymond to push the pace, but the blue line remains thinner if Faulk cannot go. Seider is the main stabilizer against Columbus’ skill depth.

IHM Tactical Signals:
Pace Signal: Red Wings can play with tempo, especially through Larkin and Raymond.
Forecheck Signal: Active but less layered than Columbus when lines are intact.
Blue Line Signal: Blue Jackets slight edge if Faulk is absent.
Goalie Stability Signal: Even.
X-Factor Signal: Rasmussen returning to the lineup improves the lower-half center structure and physical detail.

Blue Jackets - Projected lineup

Forwards
Cole Sillinger - Adam Fantilli - Kent Johnson
Kirill Marchenko - Charlie Coyle - Conor Garland
Mason Marchment - Boone Jenner - Danton Heinen
Luca Del Bel Belluz - Sean Monahan - Isac Lundestrom

Defense
Zach Werenski - Dante Fabbro
Ivan Provorov - Denton Mateychuk
Jake Christiansen - Erik Gudbranson

Goalies
Jet Greaves
Elvis Merzlikins

Scratched
Egor Zamula
Zach Aston-Reese
Miles Wood

Injured
Damon Severson (shoulder surgery)
Dmitri Voronkov (hand)
Mathieu Olivier (upper body)

IHM Lineup Note:
Columbus reshaped the lineup significantly, and the skill ceiling is still real because Fantilli, Werenski, Marchenko, Monahan and Garland give them multiple attack routes. The question is whether the exact combinations hold or shift again at game time.

IHM Tactical Signals:
Pace Signal: Blue Jackets.
Forecheck Signal: More dangerous than Detroit’s if the top nine clicks.
Blue Line Signal: Blue Jackets through Werenski and Mateychuk’s mobility.
Goalie Stability Signal: Even.
X-Factor Signal: Fantilli’s speed through the neutral zone is the cleanest transition weapon in the matchup.

IHM Match Pressure Index

Offensive Pressure
Blue Jackets slight edge

Transition Edge
Blue Jackets

Defensive Stability
Even

Goaltending Edge
Even

Game Control Projection
Detroit has enough veteran offense to make this close, but Columbus carries the more dynamic transition profile if the reworked lines settle quickly and Werenski controls the puck from the back end.


Montreal Canadiens vs Florida Panthers

Faceoff: 01:00 CET

Canadiens - Projected lineup

Forwards
Cole Caufield - Nick Suzuki - Juraj Slafkovsky
Alex Newhook - Oliver Kapanen - Ivan Demidov
Zachary Bolduc - Jake Evans - Kirby Dach
Alexandre Texier - Phillip Danault - Josh Anderson

Defense
Mike Matheson - Noah Dobson
Jayden Struble - Lane Hutson
Kaiden Guhle - Arber Xhekaj

Goalies
Jakub Dobes
Jacob Fowler

Scratched
Brendan Gallagher
Samuel Montembeault
Adam Engstrom

Injured
Joe Veleno (undisclosed)
Alexander Carrier (upper body)
Patrik Laine (lower body)

IHM Lineup Note:
Montreal gets a big boost if Dach and Texier both return, because that gives the Canadiens much better center-wing support deeper in the lineup. The top six already had enough skill; now the lower half looks more functional too.

IHM Tactical Signals:
Pace Signal: Canadiens can play fast enough to stress Florida’s thinner structure.
Forecheck Signal: Active, skill-driven and more effective with a deeper lineup.
Blue Line Signal: Canadiens slight edge on puck-moving depth tonight.
Goalie Stability Signal: Panthers slight edge if Bobrovsky starts, otherwise even.
X-Factor Signal: Demidov and Dach add a different level of playmaking and size variation to Montreal’s attack map.

Panthers - Projected lineup

Forwards
Carter Verhaeghe - Sam Bennett - Mackie Samoskevich
Jesper Boqvist - Eetu Luostarinen - A.J. Greer
Cole Schwindt - Tomas Nosek - Noah Gregor
Cole Reinhardt - Luke Kunin - Vinnie Hinostroza

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

Goalies
Daniil Tarasov
Sergei Bobrovsky

Scratched
Nolan Foote
Matthew Tkachuk

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)
Aleksander Barkov (knee)
Jonah Gadjovich (upper body)

IHM Lineup Note:
Florida is now surviving on structure, goaltending and a limited offensive core rather than full lineup depth. With Tkachuk away and the injury list still massive, the Panthers need Bennett, Verhaeghe, Forsling and Jones to carry a heavy burden.

IHM Tactical Signals:
Pace Signal: Panthers want a controlled, lower-event game.
Forecheck Signal: Florida still has enough hard-area pressure to make the game uncomfortable.
Blue Line Signal: Canadiens edge on overall depth tonight.
Goalie Stability Signal: Panthers slight edge if Bobrovsky plays.
X-Factor Signal: Bennett remains the one forward who can still tilt the game physically and offensively for Florida.

IHM Match Pressure Index

Offensive Pressure
Canadiens

Transition Edge
Canadiens

Defensive Stability
Even

Goaltending Edge
Panthers slight edge

Game Control Projection
Florida can still drag this into a heavier structure game, but Montreal now looks deeper, faster and more flexible offensively, which gives the Canadiens the better route to controlling the matchup.


New Jersey Devils vs Philadelphia Flyers

Faceoff: 01:00 CET

Devils - Projected lineup

Forwards
Timo Meier - Nico Hischier - Dawson Mercer
Jesper Bratt - Jack Hughes - Connor Brown
Lenni Hameenaho - Cody Glass - Nick Bjugstad
Paul Cotter - Marc McLaughlin - Brian Halonen

Defense
Jonas Siegenthaler - Dougie Hamilton
Luke Hughes - Johnathan Kovacevic
Brenden Dillon - Simon Nemec

Goalies
Jacob Markstrom
Jake Allen

Scratched
Dennis Cholowski
Evgenii Dadonov
Maksim Tsyplakov

Injured
Arseny Gritsyuk (upper body)
Stefan Noesen (knee)
Zack MacEwen (ACL)
Brett Pesce (lower body)

IHM Lineup Note:
New Jersey stays with the same winning lineup and still carries the better pure top-six firepower. Hughes, Bratt, Meier and Hamilton remain the key to stretching the Flyers and forcing the pace into a Devils-style game.

IHM Tactical Signals:
Pace Signal: Devils.
Forecheck Signal: Devils through quick pressure and speed support.
Blue Line Signal: Devils slight edge in offensive influence.
Goalie Stability Signal: Slight edge Devils with Markstrom likely in a stronger position than Philadelphia’s tandem.
X-Factor Signal: Jack Hughes is still the cleanest pace-breaker on the ice.

Flyers - Projected lineup

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

Defense
Travis Sanheim - Rasmus Ristolainen
Cam York - Jamie Drysdale
Nick Seeler - Noah Juulsen

Goalies
Dan Vladar
Samuel Ersson

Scratched
Garrett Wilson
Carl Grundstrom
Emil Andrae
Garnet Hathaway

Injured
Rodrigo Abols (lower body)
Nikita Grebenkin (upper body)

IHM Lineup Note:
Philadelphia still has enough pace and creativity through Zegras, Konecny, Tippett, Michkov and Martone to threaten New Jersey’s depth defense, but the Flyers need to keep the game fast and not get trapped in a structured half-ice battle.

IHM Tactical Signals:
Pace Signal: Flyers want pace too, but they are less stable inside it than New Jersey.
Forecheck Signal: Active and disruptive, especially from the top nine.
Blue Line Signal: Even to slight Devils edge.
Goalie Stability Signal: Devils.
X-Factor Signal: Michkov and Martone together give Philadelphia live game-breaking skill if the game gets loose.

IHM Match Pressure Index

Offensive Pressure
Devils slight edge

Transition Edge
Even

Defensive Stability
Devils

Goaltending Edge
Devils

Game Control Projection
Philadelphia can make this volatile through speed and skill, but New Jersey still owns the more complete top-end attack and the steadier path if the game settles into structure after the opening rush phase.


Ottawa Senators vs Tampa Bay Lightning

Faceoff: 01:00 CET

Senators - Projected lineup

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

Defense
Jake Sanderson - Artem Zub
Nikolas Matinpalo - Jordan Spence
Lassi Thomson - Cameron Crotty

Goalies
Linus Ullmark
James Reimer

Scratched
Stephen Halliday
Kurtis MacDermid

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

IHM Lineup Note:
Ottawa gets an important structural lift with Sanderson back on the first pair. Ullmark, Sanderson, Stutzle and Tkachuk give the Senators a much more believable all-zone profile than they had a few days ago.

IHM Tactical Signals:
Pace Signal: Senators can match Tampa’s pace better with this setup.
Forecheck Signal: Senators through Tkachuk, Greig and the middle-six grind.
Blue Line Signal: Slightly reduced by the remaining injuries, but Sanderson changes the equation.
Goalie Stability Signal: Even.
X-Factor Signal: Sanderson’s return is the single biggest tactical shift in the matchup.

Lightning - Projected lineup

Forwards
Gage Goncalves - Brayden Point - Nikita Kucherov
Jake Guentzel - Nick Paul - Oliver Bjorkstrand
Zemgus Girgensons - Yanni Gourde - Conor Geekie
Jakob Pelletier - Scott Sabourin - Corey Perry

Defense
J.J. Moser - Darren Raddysh
Ryan McDonagh - Erik Cernak
Emil Lilleberg - Charle-Edouard D’Astous

Goalies
Jonas Johansson
Andrei Vasilevskiy

Scratched
Steve Santini
Victor Hedman
Dylan Duke

Injured
Declan Carlile (lower body)
Max Crozier (core muscle)
Dominic James (lower body)
Brandon Hagel (lower body)
Pontus Holmberg (upper body)
Anthony Cirelli (undisclosed)

IHM Lineup Note:
Tampa is significantly more wounded than usual and Johansson starting instead of Vasilevskiy lowers the safety margin. Even so, Point, Kucherov, Guentzel, McDonagh and Cernak still give the Lightning enough structure and elite finishing potential.

IHM Tactical Signals:
Pace Signal: Lightning still prefer speed and offensive skill flow.
Forecheck Signal: More dangerous from the top six than the bottom half tonight.
Blue Line Signal: Senators slight edge if Sanderson is fully effective and Hedman remains out.
Goalie Stability Signal: Senators slight edge with Ullmark over Johansson.
X-Factor Signal: Kucherov remains the one player most capable of overriding matchup logic by himself.

IHM Match Pressure Index

Offensive Pressure
Lightning slight edge

Transition Edge
Lightning

Defensive Stability
Senators slight edge

Goaltending Edge
Senators

Game Control Projection
Tampa still has the higher-end offensive talent, but Ottawa now looks better positioned to turn this into a more balanced matchup thanks to Sanderson’s return and Ullmark’s stability behind the defense.


St. Louis Blues vs Colorado Avalanche

Faceoff: 02:00 CET

Blues - Projected lineup

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

Defense
Philip Broberg - Logan Mailloux
Theo Lindstein - Colton Parayko
Cam Fowler - Tyler Tucker

Goalies
Joel Hofer
Jordan Binnington

Scratched
Justin Holl
Nathan Walker
Matthew Kessel
Oskar Sundqvist
Otto Stenberg

Injured
None

IHM Lineup Note:
St. Louis brings back the same lineup after beating Colorado and now gets a second look at the same opponent. Thomas, Kyrou and Buchnevich remain the key drivers if the Blues want to repeat that result.

IHM Tactical Signals:
Pace Signal: Blues still want this more controlled than Colorado does.
Forecheck Signal: Blues through layered wall pressure and support routes.
Blue Line Signal: Even.
Goalie Stability Signal: Even.
X-Factor Signal: Thomas controlling the middle is still the best way for St. Louis to shorten Colorado’s speed advantage.

Avalanche - Projected lineup

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

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

Goalies
Scott Wedgewood
Mackenzie Blackwood

Scratched
Joel Kiviranta
Zakhar Bardakov

Injured
Cale Makar (upper body)

IHM Lineup Note:
Colorado gets Roy and Nichushkin back, which restores more forward depth and improves their matchup flexibility. Even without Makar, the Avalanche still have the highest raw pace ceiling in this game through MacKinnon, Necas and their forward speed.

IHM Tactical Signals:
Pace Signal: Avalanche.
Forecheck Signal: Avalanche through speed and re-attack pressure.
Blue Line Signal: Blues slight structural edge without Makar, but Colorado still has enough mobility.
Goalie Stability Signal: Even.
X-Factor Signal: Nichushkin returning gives Colorado more second-line finishing and net-front detail.

IHM Match Pressure Index

Offensive Pressure
Avalanche

Transition Edge
Avalanche

Defensive Stability
Even

Goaltending Edge
Even

Game Control Projection
St. Louis has already shown they can handle this matchup, but Colorado now looks deeper up front and still owns the best route to controlling the pace if MacKinnon and the restored forward group get the game moving.


Dallas Stars vs Calgary Flames

Faceoff: 02:00 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
Tyler Myers

Goalies
Jake Oettinger
Casey DeSmith

Scratched
Cameron Hughes
Alexander Petrovic
Kyle Capobianco

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

IHM Lineup Note:
Dallas still looks deeper, more balanced and more dangerous than Calgary overall, especially with Robertson, Johnston, Rantanen and Heiskanen driving the top half of the lineup. Myers returning as the extra defenseman gives them added flexibility again.

IHM Tactical Signals:
Pace Signal: Stars can play with pace or structure depending on the matchup flow.
Forecheck Signal: Strong layered pressure from the top nine.
Blue Line Signal: Stars.
Goalie Stability Signal: Stars.
X-Factor Signal: Johnston and Rantanen together keep stretching defensive assignments in ways Calgary will struggle to absorb.

Flames - Projected lineup

Forwards
Blake Coleman - Mikael Backlund - Matt Coronato
Joel Farabee - Morgan Frost - Matvei Gridin
Aydar Suniev - Ryan Strome - Martin Pospisil
Yegor Sharangovich - Connor Zary - Adam Klapka

Defense
Kevin Bahl - Zach Whitecloud
Yan Kuznetsov - Zayne Parekh
Olli Maatta - Hunter Brzustewicz

Goalies
Devin Cooley
Dustin Wolf

Scratched
Ryan Lomberg
John Beecher
Tyson Gross
Brayden Pachal
Victor Olofsson

Injured
Jake Bean (undisclosed)
Samuel Honzek (upper body)
Jonathan Huberdeau (hip surgery)
Joel Hanley (upper body)

IHM Lineup Note:
Calgary gets a new look with Suniev debuting, which adds intrigue but not necessarily stability. The Flames still need Backlund, Coleman, Coronato and Wolf or Cooley to keep the matchup in a manageable range.

IHM Tactical Signals:
Pace Signal: Flames would rather keep this more controlled than Dallas allows.
Forecheck Signal: Competitive but lighter than Dallas overall.
Blue Line Signal: Stars clear edge.
Goalie Stability Signal: Stars slight edge.
X-Factor Signal: Suniev’s debut is a wild card, but Dallas still has the stronger known offensive structure by a wide margin.

IHM Match Pressure Index

Offensive Pressure
Stars

Transition Edge
Stars

Defensive Stability
Stars

Goaltending Edge
Stars slight edge

Game Control Projection
Calgary can compete through work rate and goaltending, but Dallas owns the stronger attack map, deeper blue line and much cleaner overall route to controlling the game.


Minnesota Wild vs Seattle Kraken

Faceoff: 02:00 CET

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
Robby Fabbri
Nico Sturm
Jeff Petry

Injured
None

IHM Lineup Note:
Minnesota still brings one of the cleaner top-six and top-four combinations in the conference. Kaprizov, Eriksson Ek, Boldy, Hughes and Faber give the Wild a strong mix of skill, support and control.

IHM Tactical Signals:
Pace Signal: Wild can play fast, but with much cleaner structure than Seattle.
Forecheck Signal: Wild through layered pressure and retrieval support.
Blue Line Signal: Wild.
Goalie Stability Signal: Even.
X-Factor Signal: Brink returning helps the lower-half scoring support and gives Minnesota a deeper offensive look.

Kraken - Projected lineup

Forwards
Bobby McMann - Matty Beniers - Jordan Eberle
Jaden Schwartz - Chandler Stephenson - Eeli Tolvanen
Jared McCann - Berkly Catton - Kaapo Kakko
Ryan Winterton - Oscar Fisker Molgaard - Frederick Gaudreau

Defense
Vince Dunn - Cale Fleury
Ryker Evans - Adam Larsson
Ryan Lindgren - Brandon Montour

Goalies
Joey Daccord
Matt Murray

Scratched
Josh Mahura
Jamie Oleksiak
Ben Meyers

Injured
Shane Wright (upper body)
Philipp Grubauer (lower body)

IHM Lineup Note:
Seattle’s forward group still has enough speed and skill to create problems, but the loss of Grubauer and the blue-line shuffle put more pressure on Daccord and the top four to absorb sustained Wild pressure.

IHM Tactical Signals:
Pace Signal: Kraken can play with tempo, but not as cleanly as Minnesota.
Forecheck Signal: Active but less repeatable than the Wild’s.
Blue Line Signal: Wild clear edge.
Goalie Stability Signal: Wild slight edge.
X-Factor Signal: McCann and Beniers need to tilt the game early before Minnesota’s structure settles in.

IHM Match Pressure Index

Offensive Pressure
Wild

Transition Edge
Wild

Defensive Stability
Wild

Goaltending Edge
Wild slight edge

Game Control Projection
Seattle has enough pace to threaten in waves, but Minnesota still carries the stronger top-end structure and should control more of the game if their top six establishes possession early.


Utah Mammoth vs Edmonton Oilers

Faceoff: 03:30 CET

Mammoth - Projected lineup

Forwards
Clayton Keller - Nick Schmaltz - Lawson Crouse
Kailer Yamamoto - Logan Cooley - Dylan Guenther
JJ Peterka - Alexander Kerfoot - Michael Carcone
Liam O’Brien - Kevin Stenlund - Brandon Tanev

Defense
Mikhail Sergachev - MacKenzie Weegar
Nate Schmidt - John Marino
Ian Cole - Sean Durzi

Goalies
Karel Vejmelka
Vitek Vanecek

Scratched
Nick DeSimone
Kevin Rooney
Dmitri Simashev

Injured
Barrett Hayton (upper body)
Jack McBain (lower body)

IHM Lineup Note:
Utah still looks structurally balanced despite a few missing forwards, with Keller, Cooley, Peterka, Sergachev and Weegar driving the most important minutes. This is a team that can punish Edmonton if the game turns into a loose transition exchange.

IHM Tactical Signals:
Pace Signal: Mammoth can match Edmonton’s pace better than most teams.
Forecheck Signal: Strong enough to disrupt Edmonton’s depth lines.
Blue Line Signal: Mammoth slight edge in overall balance tonight.
Goalie Stability Signal: Even.
X-Factor Signal: Cooley’s speed and Keller’s puck skill can stress Edmonton’s defensive layers if McDavid does not control play.

Oilers - Projected lineup

Forwards
Vasily Podkolzin - Connor McDavid - Matt Savoie
Jack Roslovic - Ryan Nugent-Hopkins - Kasperi Kapanen
Colton Dach - Jason Dickinson - Trent Frederic
Max Jones - Adam Henrique - Curtis Lazar

Defense
Mattias Ekholm - Evan Bouchard
Darnell Nurse - Connor Murphy
Jake Walman - Ty Emberson

Goalies
Tristan Jarry
Connor Ingram

Scratched
Spencer Stastney
Josh Samanski

Injured
Leon Draisaitl (lower body)
Zach Hyman (undisclosed)
Mattias Janmark (shoulder)

IHM Lineup Note:
Edmonton gets Dach back, which helps the center depth and lower-six shape, but the Oilers still look thinner than normal without Draisaitl and Hyman. McDavid remains the one player most capable of tilting the whole game by himself.

IHM Tactical Signals:
Pace Signal: Oilers want a fast game through McDavid entries.
Forecheck Signal: More dangerous off speed than sustained pressure.
Blue Line Signal: Even.
Goalie Stability Signal: Even.
X-Factor Signal: McDavid versus Utah’s balanced top four is the defining tactical battle.

IHM Match Pressure Index

Offensive Pressure
Even

Transition Edge
Oilers slight edge with McDavid factor

Defensive Stability
Mammoth

Goaltending Edge
Even

Game Control Projection
Edmonton still has the most explosive player in the matchup, but Utah looks more balanced and structurally cleaner overall, which makes this a dangerous spot for the Oilers if they fail to control the pace.


Anaheim Ducks vs Nashville Predators

Faceoff: 04:00 CET

Ducks - Projected lineup

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

Defense
Jackson LaCombe - Jacob Trouba
Pavel Mintyukov - John Carlson
Tyson Hinds - Drew Helleson

Goalies
Lukas Dostal
Ville Husso

Scratched
Olen Zellweger

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

IHM Lineup Note:
Anaheim gets Mintyukov and Vatrano back, which improves both the transition profile and the scoring pressure. The Ducks still have enough skill to make this game open if Nashville allows too much neutral-zone speed.

IHM Tactical Signals:
Pace Signal: Ducks can play faster than Nashville prefers.
Forecheck Signal: More active with Vatrano back in.
Blue Line Signal: More balanced now that Mintyukov returns.
Goalie Stability Signal: Even.
X-Factor Signal: Carlsson and Terry need to turn Anaheim’s speed into clean offensive-zone possession.

Predators - Projected lineup

Forwards
Zachary L’Heureux - Ryan O’Reilly - Steven Stamkos
Filip Forsberg - Matthew Wood - Jonathan Marchessault
Tyson Jost - Erik Haula - Luke Evangelista
Reid Schaefer - Fedor Svechkov - Joakim Kemell

Defense
Brady Skjei - Roman Josi
Adam Wilsby - Nick Perbix
Ryan Ufko - Justin Barron

Goalies
Justus Annunen
Juuse Saros

Scratched
Jordan Oesterle
Ozzy Wiesblatt

Injured
Nicolas Hague (upper body)

IHM Lineup Note:
Nashville still has more veteran scoring intelligence through O’Reilly, Forsberg, Stamkos, Marchessault and Josi. The Predators should feel comfortable if the game gets more tactical and less speed-driven.

IHM Tactical Signals:
Pace Signal: Predators prefer medium pace.
Forecheck Signal: Controlled and efficient.
Blue Line Signal: Predators slight edge through Josi’s influence.
Goalie Stability Signal: Even.
X-Factor Signal: Josi’s puck control remains the cleanest counter to Anaheim’s young speed game.

IHM Match Pressure Index

Offensive Pressure
Even

Transition Edge
Ducks slight edge

Defensive Stability
Predators

Goaltending Edge
Even

Game Control Projection
Anaheim can make this game faster and more uncomfortable, but Nashville still owns the more veteran tactical profile and should be better positioned if the pace becomes more measured.


Vancouver Canucks vs Vegas Golden Knights

Faceoff: 04:00 CET

Canucks - Projected lineup

Forwards
Drew O’Connor - Elias Pettersson - Jake DeBrusk
Liam Ohgren - Marco Rossi - Brock Boeser
Max Sasson - Teddy Blueger - Linus Karlsson
Curtis Douglas - Aatu Raty - Nils Hoglander

Defense
Zeev Buium - Filip Hronek
Marcus Pettersson - Tom Willander
Elias Nils Pettersson - Victor Mancini

Goalies
Nikita Tolopilo
Jiri Patera

Scratched
Ty Mueller
P.O. Joseph

Injured
Kevin Lankinen (upper body)
Evander Kane (undisclosed)
Filip Chytil (facial fracture)
Thatcher Demko (hip surgery)
Derek Forbort (undisclosed)

IHM Lineup Note:
Vancouver is still fighting through instability in goal and a moving lineup card, but Pettersson, Rossi, Boeser and Hronek are enough to generate offense if they can keep the game from turning into a long defensive shift pattern.

IHM Tactical Signals:
Pace Signal: Canucks need pace to stay dangerous.
Forecheck Signal: More opportunistic than sustained.
Blue Line Signal: Golden Knights edge.
Goalie Stability Signal: Golden Knights clear edge.
X-Factor Signal: Lankinen being out changes the whole comfort level of the matchup for Vancouver.

Golden Knights - Projected lineup

Forwards
Brett Howden - Jack Eichel - Pavel Dorofeyev
Ivan Barbashev - Mitch Marner - Mark Stone
Brandon Saad - Tomas Hertl - Colton Sissons
Cole Smith - Nic Dowd - Keegan Kolesar

Defense
Brayden McNabb - Shea Theodore
Noah Hanifin - Rasmus Andersson
Jeremy Lauzon - Ben Hutton

Goalies
Carter Hart
Adin Hill

Scratched
Akira Schmid
Kaedan Korczak
Reilly Smith

Injured
Alexander Holtz (upper body)
William Karlsson (lower body)

IHM Lineup Note:
Vegas still looks deeper, calmer and more complete than Vancouver, especially with Hart now getting the crease and Marner-Stone-Eichel-Hertl all in the top offensive structure. Saad drawing back in deepens the middle of the lineup.

IHM Tactical Signals:
Pace Signal: Golden Knights can play with pace but do not need chaos to win.
Forecheck Signal: Strong layered pressure.
Blue Line Signal: Golden Knights.
Goalie Stability Signal: Golden Knights.
X-Factor Signal: Marner and Stone give Vegas a level of possession detail Vancouver may struggle to match over sixty minutes.

IHM Match Pressure Index

Offensive Pressure
Golden Knights

Transition Edge
Golden Knights slight edge

Defensive Stability
Golden Knights

Goaltending Edge
Golden Knights

Game Control Projection
Vancouver still has enough skill to create stretches of offense, but Vegas owns the much deeper and more stable full-lineup profile, especially with the Canucks dealing with uncertainty in goal.


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, likely starting goalie and any major changes in the top six or top four. Those areas usually show the tactical identity of the matchup fastest.

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

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

Q5: How should readers interpret lineup uncertainty in goal?

Goalie uncertainty changes the whole risk profile of a game. Even when the skater groups stay the same, a weaker or less settled goalie situation can alter pace, confidence and deployment.

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 returning players important even if they are not stars?

Because lineup balance matters. A returning depth forward or defenseman can restore normal usage, improve line chemistry and reduce overloading elsewhere in the lineup.

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.

NHL Projected Lineups - April 6, 2026

NHL Projected Lineups - April 6, 2026

NHL Projected Lineups - Game Day April 6, 2026

Date: April 5, 2026
By IceHockeyMan Newsroom

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


New York Rangers vs Washington Capitals

Faceoff: 01:00 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
Matthew Robertson - Will Borgen
Drew Fortescue - Braden Schneider

Goalies
Igor Shesterkin
Jonathan Quick

Scratched
Vincent Iorio
Adam Edstrom
Taylor Raddysh
Dylan Garand

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

IHM Lineup Note:
The Rangers still lean on a familiar structural spine through Shesterkin, Fox, Zibanejad, Trocheck and Miller. They are most effective when the game stays organized and their top skill players can attack off cleaner support rather than chase a broken pace.

IHM Tactical Signals:
Pace Signal: Rangers prefer a controlled game with selective bursts.
Forecheck Signal: Balanced pressure, more positional than chaotic.
Blue Line Signal: Rangers slight edge through Fox and Gavrikov’s overall control.
Goalie Stability Signal: Rangers.
X-Factor Signal: Shesterkin gives New York the biggest pure stability piece in the matchup.

Capitals - Projected lineup

Forwards
Aliaksei Protas - Dylan Strome - Alex Ovechkin
Connor McMichael - Pierre-Luc Dubois - Tom Wilson
Anthony Beauvillier - Justin Sourdif - Ryan Leonard
Brandon Duhaime - Hendrix Lapierre - Ethen Frank

Defense
Martin Fehervary - Rasmus Sandin
Jakub Chychrun - Trevor van Riemsdyk
Cole Hutson - Matt Roy

Goalies
Charlie Lindgren
Logan Thompson

Scratched
Ivan Miroshnichenko
David Kampf
Declan Chisholm
Dylan McIlrath
Timothy Liljegren

Injured
None

IHM Lineup Note:
Washington keeps a strong veteran identity with Ovechkin, Wilson, Dubois, Strome and Chychrun still driving the key minutes. The Capitals remain dangerous when they keep the puck moving north and make the game direct and physical.

IHM Tactical Signals:
Pace Signal: Capitals can play medium pace with strong direct pressure.
Forecheck Signal: Capitals through heavier physical pressure and straight-line support.
Blue Line Signal: Capitals are solid, but New York has the cleaner overall top-pair profile.
Goalie Stability Signal: Even, with Lindgren starting and Shesterkin on the other side.
X-Factor Signal: Ovechkin’s finishing gravity still changes how the Rangers must defend the weak side.

IHM Match Pressure Index

Offensive Pressure
Capitals slight edge

Transition Edge
Rangers

Defensive Stability
Rangers

Goaltending Edge
Rangers

Game Control Projection
Washington has enough veteran offense and direct pressure to make this uncomfortable, but New York still owns the cleaner structural path if Shesterkin and Fox settle the game into a more disciplined rhythm.


Montreal Canadiens vs New Jersey Devils

Faceoff: 01:00 CET

Canadiens - Projected lineup

Forwards
Cole Caufield - Nick Suzuki - Juraj Slafkovsky
Alex Newhook - Oliver Kapanen - Ivan Demidov
Zachary Bolduc - Jake Evans - Josh Anderson
Joe Veleno - Phillip Danault - Brendan Gallagher

Defense
Mike Matheson - Noah Dobson
Jayden Struble - Lane Hutson
Kaiden Guhle - Arber Xhekaj

Goalies
Jacob Fowler
Jakub Dobes

Scratched
Samuel Montembeault
Adam Engstrom

Injured
Kirby Dach (upper body)
Alexandre Texier (lower body)
Alexander Carrier (upper body)
Patrik Laine (lower body)

IHM Lineup Note:
Montreal still carries a dangerous mix of speed, creativity and puck-moving support through Suzuki, Caufield, Demidov, Hutson and Dobson. Fowler likely starting adds intrigue, but the skater structure in front of him is strong enough to keep the Canadiens competitive.

IHM Tactical Signals:
Pace Signal: Canadiens can play with tempo if the top six gets touches early.
Forecheck Signal: Active and skill-driven rather than heavy.
Blue Line Signal: Canadiens have real offensive movement through Hutson, Matheson and Dobson.
Goalie Stability Signal: Slight edge Devils if experience matters, but this is close.
X-Factor Signal: Demidov continues to give Montreal a live offensive swing factor every night.

Devils - Projected lineup

Forwards
Timo Meier - Nico Hischier - Dawson Mercer
Jesper Bratt - Jack Hughes - Connor Brown
Lenni Hameenaho - Cody Glass - Nick Bjugstad
Paul Cotter - Marc McLaughlin - Brian Halonen

Defense
Jonas Siegenthaler - Dougie Hamilton
Luke Hughes - Johnathan Kovacevic
Brenden Dillon - Simon Nemec

Goalies
Jacob Markstrom
Jake Allen

Scratched
Dennis Cholowski
Evgenii Dadonov
Maksim Tsyplakov

Injured
Arseny Gritsyuk (upper body)
Stefan Noesen (knee)
Zack MacEwen (ACL)
Brett Pesce (lower body)

IHM Lineup Note:
New Jersey still has the stronger pure top-six offensive engine, with Hughes, Bratt, Meier, Hischier and Hamilton giving the Devils multiple routes to tilt play. The concern remains whether the lower-half structure holds consistently enough on a back-to-back road spot.

IHM Tactical Signals:
Pace Signal: Devils.
Forecheck Signal: Devils through quicker pressure and transition entries.
Blue Line Signal: Devils slight edge on overall upside, especially offensively.
Goalie Stability Signal: Even.
X-Factor Signal: Jack Hughes remains the fastest single driver of game flow in this matchup.

IHM Match Pressure Index

Offensive Pressure
Devils slight edge

Transition Edge
Devils

Defensive Stability
Even

Goaltending Edge
Even

Game Control Projection
Montreal has enough skill and puck-moving support to make this dangerous again, but New Jersey still carries the better pure offensive ceiling and the cleaner route to controlling the game if Hughes and Hamilton dictate the tempo.


Colorado Avalanche vs St. Louis Blues

Faceoff: 03:30 CET

Avalanche - Projected lineup

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

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 massive top-end speed and skill through MacKinnon, Necas, Lehkonen, Landeskog and Nichushkin, even without Makar. The overall transition ceiling is slightly lower than full strength, but the Avalanche remain explosive enough to overwhelm teams quickly.

IHM Tactical Signals:
Pace Signal: Avalanche.
Forecheck Signal: Colorado through speed, repeat entries and pressure off retrievals.
Blue Line Signal: Even to slight Blues edge structurally without Makar, but Colorado still carries enough mobility.
Goalie Stability Signal: Avalanche slight edge.
X-Factor Signal: MacKinnon remains the dominant pace driver and hardest player in the matchup to contain through the middle.

Blues - Projected lineup

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

Defense
Philip Broberg - Logan Mailloux
Theo Lindstein - Colton Parayko
Cam Fowler - Tyler Tucker

Goalies
Joel Hofer
Jordan Binnington

Scratched
Justin Holl
Nathan Walker
Matthew Kessel
Oskar Sundqvist
Otto Stenberg

Injured
None

IHM Lineup Note:
St. Louis gets useful reinforcements back with Toropchenko and Buchnevich returning, which deepens the lineup and improves puck support. The Blues still need Robert Thomas and Kyrou to keep the game from becoming a pure Colorado speed contest.

IHM Tactical Signals:
Pace Signal: Blues want to keep it more controlled than Colorado does.
Forecheck Signal: Blues can pressure effectively if they force heavier sequences along the walls.
Blue Line Signal: Blues have decent structure but less overall dynamic threat than Colorado’s forward-driven pace.
Goalie Stability Signal: Even.
X-Factor Signal: Thomas is the one Blue who can most directly slow Colorado down by owning the puck through the middle.

IHM Match Pressure Index

Offensive Pressure
Avalanche

Transition Edge
Avalanche

Defensive Stability
Even

Goaltending Edge
Avalanche slight edge

Game Control Projection
St. Louis is deeper than it looked a few days ago, but Colorado still owns the cleaner top-end route to tempo, transition and sustained offensive pressure, especially if MacKinnon gets the game moving early.


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, confirmed goalie and the first special-teams look. Those areas usually show the team’s tactical identity fastest.

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

A single blue-line absence can affect 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 back-to-back situation in lineup analysis?

Back-to-backs can affect goalie usage, bench energy, pace tolerance and deployment choices, especially in the bottom six and on the third pair.

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 special-teams and first units so important in lineup analysis?

Because high-leverage players on the first unit often reveal who the coaching staff trusts most to decide close games. That usually shapes game flow as much as even-strength lines.

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.

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.


NHL Lineups Mar 28 2026

NHL Lineups Mar 28 2026

NHL Projected Lineups - Game Day March 28, 2026

Date: 28 March 2026
By IceHockeyMan Newsroom

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


New York Rangers vs Chicago Blackhawks

Faceoff: 00:00 CET

Rangers - Projected lineup

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

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

Goalies
Dylan Garand
Igor Shesterkin

Scratched
Adam Edstrom
Vincent Iorio
Juuso Parssinen

Injured
Matt Rempe (upper body)
Urho Vaakanainen (upper body)
Noah Laba (lower body)
Jonathan Quick (upper body)

IHM Lineup Note:
The Rangers look thinner than usual but still carry strong puck control through Fox, Zibanejad and Miller. Garand stepping in adds uncertainty, so New York needs cleaner team defense and better puck management than usual.

IHM Tactical Signals:
The Rangers should try to keep the puck and avoid letting this become a loose, mistake-heavy game. Their clearest edge is controlling play through structure and making Chicago defend in layers rather than in open ice.

Blackhawks - Projected lineup

Forwards
Ryan Greene - Connor Bedard - Anton Frondell
Tyler Bertuzzi - Frank Nazar - Nick Lardis
Andre Burakovsky - Ryan Donato - Ilya Mikheyev
Teuvo Teravainen - Sacha Boisvert - Landon Slaggert

Defense
Alex Vlasic - Artyom Levshunov
Wyatt Kaiser - Sam Rinzel
Ethan Del Mastro - Louis Crevier

Goalies
Arvid Soderblom
Spencer Knight

Scratched
Sam Lafferty
Dominic Toninato

Injured
Oliver Moore (lower body)
Andrew Mangiapane (undisclosed)
Matt Grzelcyk (upper body)

IHM Lineup Note:
Chicago still leans on Bedard and Nazar to generate high-skill moments, but the support structure remains inconsistent. This lineup is most dangerous when it can play with speed and not get pinned into long defensive-zone shifts.

IHM Tactical Signals:
The Blackhawks should want pace, rush chances and a game with more broken structure. If they get stuck in a controlled territorial battle, New York’s overall shape should give the Rangers the cleaner edge.

IHM Match Pressure Index:
The Rangers carry pressure because they are using a season-debut goalie and a debut defenseman, so their team structure has to stay sharp. Chicago carries the usual pressure of protecting young skill with enough detail and support to stay competitive for a full sixty minutes.


Buffalo Sabres vs Detroit Red Wings

Faceoff: 00:00 CET

Sabres - Projected lineup

Forwards
Peyton Krebs - Tage Thompson - Alex Tuch
Jason Zucker - Ryan McLeod - Jack Quinn
Noah Ostlund - Josh Norris - Josh Doan
Zach Benson - Sam Carrick - Beck Malenstyn

Defense
Mattias Samuelsson - Rasmus Dahlin
Bowen Byram - Owen Power
Logan Stanley - Conor Timmins

Goalies
Alex Lyon
Colten Ellis

Scratched
Ukko-Pekka Luukkonen
Michael Kesselring
Luke Schenn
Josh Dunne
Tyson Kozak

Injured
Tanner Pearson (lower body)
Jordan Greenway (middle body)
Jiri Kulich (blood clot)
Justin Danforth (lower body)

IHM Lineup Note:
Buffalo still has one of the better top-end offensive structures through Thompson, Tuch and Dahlin. The Sabres are dangerous when they get their defense involved and attack with speed through the middle.

IHM Tactical Signals:
Buffalo should try to push pace and use Dahlin, Byram and Power to create layered offense off the rush and second touches. Their strongest route is making Detroit defend in motion rather than in set shape.

Red Wings - Projected lineup

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

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

Goalies
John Gibson
Cam Talbot

Scratched
Travis Hamonic
Michal Postava

Injured
Michael Rasmussen (undisclosed)

IHM Lineup Note:
Detroit gets a major lift with Larkin back in the projected lineup, which changes the center structure and the pace potential of the top six. Kane, Raymond and DeBrincat now have a more natural framework to attack from.

IHM Tactical Signals:
The Red Wings should try to balance speed and control, because Buffalo can punish sloppy exchanges. Their best chance is to make this a more selective transition game and trust the Seider-Edvinsson pair to handle the toughest minutes.

IHM Match Pressure Index:
Detroit carries pressure because Larkin’s return raises expectations and changes the offensive ceiling immediately. Buffalo still has the more dynamic blue-line-driven attack, but the Sabres must finish chances because Detroit’s top-end talent can answer quickly now.


New York Islanders vs Florida Panthers

Faceoff: 18:00 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
Maxim Shabanov
Isaiah George

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

IHM Lineup Note:
The Islanders remain a structure-first team built around Sorokin’s stability, Horvat’s support game and Barzal’s controlled offense. This lineup is most effective when the game stays patient and physical rather than wide open.

IHM Tactical Signals:
New York should try to close the middle, keep Florida to one-and-done looks and force the Panthers to earn everything through traffic. Their clearest route is low-event discipline with quick counters off turnovers.

Panthers - Projected lineup

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

Defense
Gustav Forsling - Aaron Ekblad
Dmitry Kulikov - Seth Jones
Donovan Sebrango - Mike Benning

Goalies
Sergei Bobrovsky
Daniil Tarasov

Scratched
None

Injured
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)

Suspended
A.J. Greer

IHM Lineup Note:
Florida is still heavily depleted, but Bennett, Tkachuk, Forsling and Jones give the Panthers enough structure and edge to remain dangerous. This is no longer a pure skill-and-depth lineup, so the Panthers need to win through battle level and territorial push.

IHM Tactical Signals:
The Panthers should try to make this game harder, heavier and more chaotic in the corners, where their forecheck and physical identity can wear the Islanders down. Their main challenge is replacing too much missing finishing talent with pressure and volume.

IHM Match Pressure Index:
Florida carries the bigger pressure burden because the Panthers are still missing too much offensive depth and cannot rely on talent alone. The Islanders have the cleaner low-event blueprint, but New York still needs enough offense behind Sorokin to punish Florida’s thinner lineup.


Edmonton Oilers vs Anaheim Ducks

Faceoff: 20:30 CET

Oilers - Projected lineup

Forwards
Vasily Podkolzin - Connor McDavid - Matthew Savoie
Jack Roslovic - Ryan Nugent-Hopkins - Zach Hyman
Josh Samanski - Jason Dickinson - Kasperi Kapanen
Max Jones - Adam Henrique - Roby Jarventie

Defense
Mattias Ekholm - Evan Bouchard
Darnell Nurse - Connor Murphy
Jake Walman - Ty Emberson

Goalies
Connor Ingram
Tristan Jarry

Scratched
Spencer Stastney

Injured
Colton Dach (undisclosed)
Leon Draisaitl (lower body)
Trent Frederic (undisclosed)
Mattias Janmark (shoulder)
Curtis Lazar (undisclosed)

IHM Lineup Note:
Edmonton is still very dangerous because McDavid and Bouchard remain elite game drivers, but without Draisaitl the center spine and overall finishing depth are clearly thinner. The Oilers need strong support play behind the first line to keep pressure balanced.

IHM Tactical Signals:
The Oilers should still attack through pace, quick puck movement and controlled entries led by McDavid. Their biggest risk is letting Anaheim create enough speed and chaos to expose the thinner supporting structure below the top unit.

Ducks - Projected lineup

Forwards
Chris Kreider - Leo Carlsson - Frank Vatrano
Alex Killorn - Mikael Granlund - Beckett Sennecke
Jeffrey Viel - Ryan Poehling - Cutter Gauthier
Mason McTavish - Tim Washe - Ian Moore

Defense
Jackson LaCombe - Jacob Trouba
Pavel Mintyukov - John Carlson
Olen Zellweger - Radko Gudas

Goalies
Lukas Dostal
Ville Husso

Scratched
Nathan Gaucher
Drew Helleson

Injured
Jansen Harkins (upper body)
Ross Johnston (lower body)
Petr Mrazek (hip)
Troy Terry (lower body)

IHM Lineup Note:
Anaheim carries a more balanced look than earlier in the season with Carlsson, Vatrano, McTavish, Gauthier and Carlson giving the Ducks multiple ways to create. Their issue is still consistency in defensive structure against elite pace teams.

IHM Tactical Signals:
The Ducks should try to make this game quick enough that Edmonton’s missing depth becomes visible, but they cannot trade chance-for-chance too recklessly against McDavid. Their best path is selective speed with stronger puck support than usual.

IHM Match Pressure Index:
Edmonton carries pressure because the Oilers still need to control a matchup like this even without Draisaitl. Anaheim carries pressure to prove its added skill and depth can hold up against a true pace-driver rather than just create occasional flashes.


Pittsburgh Penguins vs Dallas Stars

Faceoff: 22:00 CET

Penguins - Projected lineup

Forwards
Egor Chinahkov - Rickard Rakell - Bryan Rust
Anthony Mantha - Tommy Novak - Avery Hayes
Ville Koivunen - Ben Kindel - 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
Joona Koppanen

Injured
Sidney Crosby (lower body)
Evgeni Malkin (upper body)
Caleb Jones (lower body)
Kevin Hayes (upper body)
Filip Hallander (blood clot)
Blake Lizotte (upper body)
Jack St. Ivany (upper body)

IHM Lineup Note:
Without Crosby and likely Malkin, Pittsburgh loses too much center control and top-end puck possession. Karlsson and Letang can still keep the game alive from the blue line, but the overall structure is stretched thin against a team like Dallas.

IHM Tactical Signals:
The Penguins should try to keep this game controlled, protect the middle and avoid trading rushes against a more balanced Stars side. Their only realistic route is disciplined defending and opportunistic finishing rather than sustained territorial control.

Stars - Projected lineup

Forwards
Jason Robertson - Wyatt Johnston - Mavrik Bourque
Michael Bunting - Matt Duchene - Jamie Benn
Oskar Back - Justin Hryckowian - Colin Blackwell
Adam Erne - Arttu Hyry - Nathan Bastian

Defense
Esa Lindell - Miro Heiskanen
Thomas Harley - Nils Lundkvist
Lian Bichsel - Tyler Myers

Goalies
Jake Oettinger
Casey DeSmith

Scratched
Kyle Capobianco
Ilya Lyubushkin
Alexander Petrovic

Injured
Radek Faksa (lower body)
Roope Hintz (lower body)
Mikko Rantanen (lower body)
Tyler Seguin (ACL)
Sam Steel (undisclosed)

IHM Lineup Note:
Dallas still has enough structure, goaltending and blue-line control to dominate matchups like this. Even with injuries, the Stars remain one of the cleanest territorial teams in the league, especially through Heiskanen and Oettinger.

IHM Tactical Signals:
The Stars should want a patient, layered game where their puck support and defensive posture gradually squeeze Pittsburgh out. Their strongest advantage is in making the Penguins defend repeatedly without enough center relief.

IHM Match Pressure Index:
Pittsburgh carries enormous pressure because the Penguins are missing too much core talent to comfortably match Dallas over sixty minutes. The Stars have the clearer route to control, but they still need to convert that structure into enough offense against a team that can occasionally create chaos through veteran defensemen.


Carolina Hurricanes vs New Jersey Devils

Faceoff: 22:00 CET

Hurricanes - Projected lineup

Forwards
Andrei Svechnikov - Sebastian Aho - Seth Jarvis
Taylor Hall - Logan Stankoven - Jackson Blake
Nikolaj Ehlers - Jordan Staal - Jordan Martinook
William Carrier - Mark Jankowski - Eric Robinson

Defense
Jaccob Slavin - Jalen Chatfield
K’Andre Miller - Sean Walker
Shayne Gostisbehere - Alexander Nikishin

Goalies
Brandon Bussi
Frederik Andersen

Scratched
Jesperi Kotkaniemi
Nicolas Deslauriers
Mike Reilly

Injured
Pyotr Kochetkov (lower body)

IHM Lineup Note:
Carolina gets an important lift with Gostisbehere back, restoring more blue-line puck movement and offensive support. The Hurricanes remain one of the strongest pressure teams in hockey when they can play off retrievals and repeat attacks.

IHM Tactical Signals:
Carolina should want territorial pressure, fast reloads and a game built on deep support and forecheck volume. Their clearest route is to deny New Jersey clean exits and keep the Devils from turning this into a rush contest.

Devils - Projected lineup

Forwards
Timo Meier - Nico Hischier - Dawson Mercer
Jesper Bratt - Jack Hughes - Connor Brown
Evgenii Dadonov - Cody Glass - Lenni Hameenaho
Paul Cotter - Nick Bjugstad - Maxim Tsyplakov

Defense
Jonas Siegenthaler - Dougie Hamilton
Luke Hughes - Johnathan Kovacevic
Brenden Dillon - Simon Nemec

Goalies
Jacob Markstrom
Jake Allen

Scratched
Dennis Cholowski

Injured
Stefan Noesen (knee)
Zack MacEwen (ACL)
Brett Pesce (lower body)
Arseny Gritsyuk (undisclosed)

IHM Lineup Note:
New Jersey still has one of the more dangerous transition identities in the conference, especially through Hughes, Bratt and Hamilton. The Devils are at their best when they can move the puck cleanly and turn speed into layered entries.

IHM Tactical Signals:
The Devils should want pace, east-west movement and enough clean exits to keep Carolina from trapping them below the goal line. If they can survive the first forecheck layer, their speed can create real problems.

IHM Match Pressure Index:
Carolina carries pressure to convert territorial control into actual scoreboard separation against a dangerous speed team. New Jersey carries pressure to prove its transition game can still function under one of the league’s heaviest forecheck systems.


Columbus Blue Jackets vs San Jose Sharks

Faceoff: 22:00 CET

Blue Jackets - Projected lineup

Forwards
Mason Marchment - Adam Fantilli - Kirill Marchenko
Danton Heinen - Sean Monahan - Conor Garland
Cole Sillinger - Charlie Coyle - Mathieu Olivier
Isac Lundestrom - Boone Jenner - Miles Wood

Defense
Zach Werenski - Dante Fabbro
Egor Zamula - Ivan Provorov
Denton Mateychuk - Erik Gudbranson

Goalies
Jet Greaves
Elvis Merzlikins

Scratched
Kent Johnston
Dimitri Voronkov
Jake Christiansen

Injured
Damon Severson (upper body)

IHM Lineup Note:
Columbus keeps a strong top-six structure and still has enough center quality through Fantilli, Monahan and Coyle to control games like this. Werenski’s puck movement remains the key piece in turning defense into sustained offense.

IHM Tactical Signals:
The Blue Jackets should try to make San Jose defend in layers, use their center depth to win support battles and force the Sharks into extended zone coverage. Their best route is patient offensive pressure rather than a loose track meet.

Sharks - Projected lineup

Forwards
Igor Chernyshov - Macklin Celebrini - Will Smith
William Eklund - Alexander Wennberg - Collin Graf
Pavol Regenda - Michael Misa - Kiefer Sherwood
Barclay Goodrow - Zack Ostapchuk - Adam Gaudette

Defense
Dmitry Orlov - John Klingberg
Shakir Mukhamadullin - Mario Ferraro
Sam Dickinson - Vincent Desharnais

Goalies
Alex Nedeljkovic
Yaroslav Askarov

Scratched
Nick Leddy
Philipp Kurashev

Injured
Tyler Toffoli (lower body)
Ryan Reaves (upper body)
Ty Dellandrea (lower body)

IHM Lineup Note:
San Jose still has enough young skill to create dangerous stretches, especially if Celebrini, Smith, Eklund and Misa get the game into open ice. The issue remains overall team structure and whether the Sharks can survive the heavier details over sixty minutes.

IHM Tactical Signals:
The Sharks should want movement, rush play and enough speed to stop Columbus from building a comfortable territorial advantage. If they get trapped in long defensive shifts, their margin disappears quickly.

IHM Match Pressure Index:
San Jose carries the bigger pressure burden because the Sharks need too many things to go right structurally against a more stable opponent. Columbus has the clearer tactical route, but the Blue Jackets still have to avoid getting careless against young high-end skill that can change the game fast.


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, visa delays, maintenance issues or late scratches.

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

Line order shows much more than talent hierarchy. It reveals matchup usage, offensive-zone trust, defensive roles and which players are expected to drive special situations.

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

Start with the top two centers, the first two defense pairs and the expected starting goalie. Those three areas usually reveal the tactical identity of the matchup fastest.

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

A single blue-line absence can affect retrievals, breakout timing, gap control, penalty killing and overall defensive stability. The impact often reaches far beyond one position slot.

Q5: How should readers interpret a maintenance day?

Maintenance usually signals workload control rather than a guaranteed absence, but it still matters because it can hint at reduced usage, uncertainty or a late decision near puck drop.

Q6: What do IHM Tactical Signals add to raw line combinations?

IHM Tactical Signals translate personnel into game logic by identifying likely pace control, forecheck strength, blue-line leverage, goalie stability and hidden swing factors in the matchup.

Q7: What does IHM Match Pressure Index do?

It condenses the matchup into a quick tactical read of burden, execution stress and likely game-flow leverage, helping readers understand which side carries more structural pressure.

Q8: Why does center depth matter so much?

Centers drive faceoffs, low-zone support, matchup defense and transition structure. Losing top centers often destabilizes all three zones at once.

Q9: Why do some teams dress 11 forwards and 7 defensemen?

That setup can protect an injured roster, create more blue-line flexibility or shelter specific matchups, but it also increases the importance of bench management and shift distribution.

Q10: What lineup clues point to a lower-event game?

Heavier bottom-six usage, conservative third-pair deployment and strong shutdown-center profiles often indicate a slower, tighter and more territorial game environment.

Q11: Why is home ice so important in lineup analysis?

The home coach gets last change, which helps control matchups, hide weaker combinations and deploy key players against more favorable opposition.

Q12: Can projected lineups still change after publication?

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


NHL Lineups Mar 27 2026

NHL Lineups Mar 27 2026

NHL Projected Lineups - Game Day March 27, 2026

Date: 27 March 2026
By IceHockeyMan Newsroom

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


New York Islanders vs Dallas Stars

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
Adam Pelech - Matthew Schaefer
Carson Soucy - Adam Boqvist
Isaiah George - Scott Mayfield

Goalies
Ilya Sorokin
David Rittich

Scratched
Anthony Duclair

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

IHM Lineup Note:
The Islanders are clearly thinner on the blue line, which puts more responsibility on Sorokin and on Horvat’s line to help control the pace. This group still has enough structure to survive, but the margin gets smaller if Dallas turns this into a sustained territorial game.

IHM Tactical Signals:
New York needs compact defensive-zone coverage and efficient clears, because Dallas can punish second and third possessions. The Islanders’ best route is to keep the game layered, patient and relatively low-event.

Stars - Projected lineup

Forwards
Jason Robertson - Wyatt Johnston - Mavrik Bourque
Michael Bunting - Matt Duchene - Jamie Benn
Sam Steel - Justin Hryckowian - Colin Blackwell
Oskar Back - Arttu Hyry - Adam Erne

Defense
Esa Lindell - Miro Heiskanen
Thomas Harley - Nils Lundkvist
Lian Bichsel - Tyler Myers

Goalies
Jake Oettinger
Casey DeSmith

Scratched
Nathan Bastian
Kyle Capobianco
Ilya Lyubushkin
Alexander Petrovic

Injured
Radek Faksa (lower body)
Roope Hintz (lower body)
Mikko Rantanen (lower body)
Tyler Seguin (ACL)

IHM Lineup Note:
Dallas still looks like one of the most structurally reliable teams in the league even with major absences. Heiskanen, Robertson and Johnston remain enough to control flow, support exits and keep offensive pressure organized.

IHM Tactical Signals:
The Stars should prefer a measured territorial game with patient puck movement and clean re-loads through the neutral zone. If they keep pressure alive below the dots, New York’s thin defense can get exposed over time.

IHM Match Pressure Index:
The Islanders carry the heavier pressure because they need to survive against a deeper and more structurally stable opponent while managing multiple defensive injuries. Dallas has the cleaner route to control, but the Stars still need to finish enough of their zone time against Sorokin to make that edge matter.


Florida Panthers vs Minnesota Wild

Faceoff: 01:00 CET

Panthers - Projected lineup

Forwards
Carter Verhaeghe - Sam Bennett - Matthew Tkachuk
Eetu Luostarinen - Evan Rodrigues - Jesper Boqvist
Nolan Foote - Luke Kunin - Noah Gregor
Cole Reinhardt - Tomas Nosek - Vinnie Hinostroza

Defense
Gustav Forsling - Aaron Ekblad
Dmitry Kulikov - Seth Jones
Donovan Sebrango - Mike Benning

Goalies
Daniil Tarasov
Sergei Bobrovsky

Scratched
None

Injured
Sam Reinhart (foot)
Mackie Samoskevich (neck laceration)
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)

Suspended
A.J. Greer

IHM Lineup Note:
Florida is operating with heavy injury pressure, but Bennett, Tkachuk, Forsling and Jones still give the Panthers a strong battle identity. Their lineup is thinner offensively, so they need to win through edge, forecheck weight and territorial pressure rather than pure finishing depth.

IHM Tactical Signals:
The Panthers should try to make this game physically demanding and force Minnesota into repeated retrievals under pressure. Their cleanest route is to turn the game into a grind where structure and battle level matter more than offensive talent depth.

Wild - Projected lineup

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

Defense
Quinn Hughes - Jared Spurgeon
Jonas Brodin - Brock Faber
Jake Middleton - Jeff Petry

Goalies
Jesper Wallstedt
Filip Gustavsson

Scratched
Danila Yurov
Daemon Hunt
Zach Bogosian
Hunter Haight
Robby Fabbri
Nico Sturm

Injured
None

IHM Lineup Note:
Minnesota gets back a far more complete-looking top six with Kaprizov and Eriksson Ek in place, which changes both offensive ceiling and matchup stability. The Wild also have enough blue-line quality to move the puck efficiently against pressure.

IHM Tactical Signals:
The Wild should want controlled exits, stronger center support and enough composure to break Florida’s forecheck cleanly. If they survive the first layer, Minnesota has the skill advantage to create higher-quality offense.

IHM Match Pressure Index:
Florida carries the greater pressure because the Panthers are still missing a huge amount of scoring and lineup depth. Minnesota has the cleaner talent profile, but the Wild still need to handle Florida’s physicality and avoid letting the game become a pure trench battle.


Tampa Bay Lightning vs Seattle Kraken

Faceoff: 01:00 CET

Lightning - Projected lineup

Forwards
Brandon Hagel - Anthony Cirelli - Nikita Kucherov
Gage Goncalves - Brayden Point - Jake Guentzel
Zemgus Girgensons - Yanni Gourde - Pontus Holmberg
Corey Perry - Nick Paul - Oliver Bjorkstrand

Defense
Darren Raddysh - J.J. Moser
Ryan McDonagh - Erik Cernak
Emil Lilleberg - Charle-Edouard D’Astous

Goalies
Andrei Vasilevskiy
Jonas Johansson

Scratched
Scott Sabourin
Steve Santini
Victor Hedman

Injured
Declan Carlile (undisclosed)
Maxwell Crozier (core muscle)
Dominic James (lower body)

IHM Lineup Note:
Tampa still carries elite game-breaking ability through Kucherov, Point and Guentzel, but Hedman’s absence removes a major blue-line control piece. That means the Lightning need sharper team structure behind the puck to protect their rush defense and exits.

IHM Tactical Signals:
The Lightning should still try to play through their high-end puck-touch players and finish off transition openings quickly. Their biggest task is keeping Seattle from turning the game into a volume-driven pace contest that tests their blue-line depth.

Kraken - Projected lineup

Forwards
Berkly Catton - Matty Beniers - Jordan Eberle
Bobby McMann - Chandler Stephenson - Kaapo Kakko
Eel Tolvanen - Oscar Fisker Molgaard - Shane Wright
Ben Meyers - Frederick Gaudreau - Jacob Melanson

Defense
Vince Dunn - Adam Larsson
Ryan Lindgren - Brandon Montour
Ryker Evans - Jamie Oleksiak

Goalies
Philipp Grubauer
Matt Murray

Scratched
Josh Mahura
Joey Daccord
Cale Fleury
Ryan Winterton

Injured
Jared McCann (lower body)
Jaden Schwartz (upper body)

IHM Lineup Note:
Seattle is thinner offensively without McCann and Schwartz, but the Kraken still have enough mobile support from the back end to keep the game competitive. Their success depends heavily on team pace, support layers and getting enough out of Beniers and Stephenson lines.

IHM Tactical Signals:
The Kraken should try to make this game fast enough to stress Tampa’s current blue-line structure. If they can create repeated rush entries and second-wave support from Dunn and Montour, Seattle can keep the matchup more even than expected.

IHM Match Pressure Index:
Seattle carries more pressure because the Kraken need to replace missing offensive support while handling one of the league’s most dangerous finishing teams. Tampa has the higher ceiling, but the Lightning still need to manage life without Hedman and avoid becoming too dependent on raw star power alone.


Philadelphia Flyers vs Chicago Blackhawks

Faceoff: 01:00 CET

Flyers - Projected lineup

Forwards
Alex Bump - Christian Dvorak - Travis Konecny
Denver Barkey - Trevor Zegras - Owen Tippett
Carl Grundstrom - Noah Cates - Matvei Michkov
Sean Couturier - Luke Glendening - Garnet Hathaway

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

Goalies
Dan Vladar
Samuel Ersson

Scratched
Noah Juulsen
Garrett Wilson

Injured
Tyson Foerster (arm)
Rodrigo Abols (lower body)
Nikita Grebenkin (upper body)

IHM Lineup Note:
Philadelphia still has enough bite and offensive pace through Zegras, Tippett, Konecny and Michkov to trouble Chicago, but the Flyers need stronger finishing consistency. Their structure is usually more reliable when Couturier and Cates keep the middle honest.

IHM Tactical Signals:
The Flyers should want a direct game with strong wall work, pressure on Chicago’s younger defense pairs and enough net-front traffic to test the goalie consistently. Their clearest edge is in making this a harder, more mature game.

Blackhawks - Projected lineup

Forwards
Ryan Greene - Connor Bedard - Anton Frondell
Tyler Bertuzzi - Frank Nazar - Nick Lardis
Andre Burakovsky - Ryan Donato - Ilya Mikheyev
Teuvo Teravainen - Sacha Boisvert - Landon Slaggert

Defense
Alex Vlasic - Artyom Levshunov
Wyatt Kaiser - Sam Rinzel
Ethan Del Mastro - Louis Crevier

Goalies
Spencer Knight
Arvid Soderblom

Scratched
Sam Lafferty
Dominic Toninato

Injured
Oliver Moore (lower body)
Andrew Mangiapane (upper body)
Matt Grzelcyk (upper body)

IHM Lineup Note:
Chicago keeps injecting youth and skill into the lineup, which raises offensive upside but also increases volatility. Bedard and Nazar can drive dangerous moments, yet the overall group still needs better support and defensive discipline over a full game.

IHM Tactical Signals:
The Blackhawks should want this game played with pace and space, where their younger skill can create through movement. If they get pinned into long defensive-zone shifts, Philadelphia’s heavier style can wear them down.

IHM Match Pressure Index:
Chicago carries the heavier pressure because the Blackhawks still need cleaner team defense and more consistent support than they usually provide. Philadelphia has the more natural structure for this matchup, but the Flyers still need to convert enough offense to avoid giving Bedard’s group life late.


Ottawa Senators vs Pittsburgh Penguins

Faceoff: 01:00 CET

Senators - Projected lineup

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

Defense
Tyler Kleven - Artem Zub
Jordan Spence - Nikolas Matinpalo
Jorian Donovan - Carter Yakemchuk

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)
Lassi Thomson (undisclosed)

IHM Lineup Note:
Ottawa is clearly under pressure on the blue line, but the Senators still have enough top-six bite through Stutzle, Tkachuk and Cozens to drive offense. Ullmark gives them a major stabilizer behind a defense group that is running thinner than usual.

IHM Tactical Signals:
The Senators need to protect the slot, keep shifts short on the back end and avoid letting Pittsburgh’s veteran skill attack their inexperienced pairings repeatedly. Their best chance is to play direct, energetic hockey and let the top six carry the pace.

Penguins - Projected lineup

Forwards
Rickard Rakell - Sidney Crosby - Bryan Rust
Egor Chinakhov - Tommy Novak - Anthony Mantha
Ville Koivunen - Ben Kindel - Justin Brazeau
Elmer Soderblom - Connor Dewar - Noel Acciari

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

Goalies
Stuart Skinner
Arturs Silovs

Scratched
Ilya Solovyov
Ryan Graves

Injured
Evgeni Malkin (upper body)
Caleb Jones (lower body)
Kevin Hayes (upper body)
Filip Hallander (blood clot)
Blake Lizotte (upper body)
Jack St. Ivany (upper body)

IHM Lineup Note:
Pittsburgh still looks dangerous when Crosby, Karlsson and Letang are all driving the game through the middle and from the back end. The concern is depth stability, but the top-end experience gives the Penguins enough structure to attack Ottawa’s weakened defense.

IHM Tactical Signals:
The Penguins should want controlled offensive-zone time and enough composure to make Ottawa’s defense work through multiple reads. Their cleanest route is patience and puck control rather than trying to force a wide-open game.

IHM Match Pressure Index:
Ottawa carries major structural pressure because the Senators are missing too many important defense pieces. Pittsburgh has the clearer tactical path, but the Penguins still need to respect Ottawa’s top-six speed and emotional push, especially at home.


Montreal Canadiens vs Columbus Blue Jackets

Faceoff: 01:00 CET

Canadiens - Projected lineup

Forwards
Cole Caufield - Nick Suzuki - Juraj Slafkovsky
Alex Newhook - Oliver Kapanen - Ivan Demidov
Alexandre Texier - Jake Evans - Zachary Bolduc
Josh Anderson - Phillip Danault - Brendan Gallagher

Defense
Mike Matheson - Noah Dobson
Jayden Struble - Lane Hutson
Kaiden Guhle - Alexandre Carrier

Goalies
Jakub Dobes
Jacob Fowler

Scratched
Arber Xhekaj
Joe Veleno
Samuel Montembeault

Injured
Kirby Dach (upper body)
Patrik Laine (lower body)

IHM Lineup Note:
Montreal continues to look organized and dangerous through Suzuki, Caufield and a mobile puck-moving defense. This lineup is most effective when it can play fast off clean exits and avoid spending too much time in heavy defensive-zone battles.

IHM Tactical Signals:
The Canadiens should try to use their speed and skill in transition before Columbus gets its forecheck established. Their blue-line movement is strong enough to create control if the first pass remains sharp.

Blue Jackets - Projected lineup

Forwards
Mason Marchment - Adam Fantilli - Kirill Marchenko
Danton Heinen - Sean Monahan - Conor Garland
Cole Sillinger - Charlie Coyle - Mathieu Olivier
Isac Lundestrom - Boone Jenner - Miles Wood

Defense
Zach Werenski - Damon Severson
Ivan Provorov - Dante Fabbro
Denton Mateychuk - Erik Gudbranson

Goalies
Jet Greaves
Elvis Merzlikins

Scratched
Kent Johnston
Dimitri Voronkov
Egor Zamula
Jake Christiansen

Injured
None

IHM Lineup Note:
Columbus still has one of the more balanced offensive looks in this part of the league, with Fantilli, Monahan and Werenski giving them real play-driving quality. Their structure is strong enough to make Montreal work for exits and middle-lane access.

IHM Tactical Signals:
The Blue Jackets should want to pressure through depth and use Werenski’s puck movement to push Montreal back. Their best route is to force the Canadiens into a heavier, more physical rhythm than they prefer.

IHM Match Pressure Index:
Montreal carries the pressure to maintain speed and structure against a team that can match them through depth and center balance. Columbus has the more naturally layered lineup, but the Blue Jackets still need to handle Montreal’s top-line skill carefully or the game can turn quickly.


St Louis Blues vs San Jose Sharks

Faceoff: 02:00 CET

Blues - Projected lineup

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

Defense
Philip Broberg - Logan Mailloux
Theo Lindstein - Colton Parayko
Cam Fowler - Matthew Kessel

Goalies
Joel Hofer
Jordan Binnington

Scratched
Jonathan Drouin
Oskar Sundqvist
Justin Holl

Injured
Robert Thomas (upper body)
Tyler Tucker (lower body)

IHM Lineup Note:
St Louis loses a major offensive connector in Thomas, which changes the shape of the top six and reduces overall control. The Blues still have enough wing talent and enough structure to manage this game, but they are less dangerous through the middle.

IHM Tactical Signals:
The Blues should try to simplify, play direct and use their size and defense to prevent San Jose from creating too much speed through open ice. Their cleanest route is a structured, lower-event approach with better puck security.

Sharks - Projected lineup

Forwards
Igor Chernyshov - Macklin Celebrini - Will Smith
William Eklund - Alexander Wennberg - Collin Graf
Pavol Regenda - Michael Misa - Kiefer Sherwood
Barclay Goodrow - Zack Ostapchuk - Adam Gaudette

Defense
Dmitry Orlov - John Klingberg
Shakir Mukhamadullin - Mario Ferraro
Sam Dickinson - Vincent Desharnais

Goalies
Yaroslav Askarov
Alex Nedeljkovic

Scratched
Nick Leddy
Philipp Kurashev

Injured
Tyler Toffoli (lower body)
Ryan Reaves (upper body)
Ty Dellandrea (lower body)

IHM Lineup Note:
San Jose still leans heavily on young skill and tempo, especially through Celebrini, Smith, Misa and Eklund. Askarov’s return gives the Sharks a much stronger chance of surviving structurally if they can stay out of long defensive breakdowns.

IHM Tactical Signals:
The Sharks should try to keep this game open enough for their skill to matter and avoid letting St Louis drag them into a heavy cycle contest. Their best path is fast support and quick transition play through the middle.

IHM Match Pressure Index:
St Louis carries the pressure to prove it can still control the matchup without Thomas, while San Jose carries the usual structural burden of protecting young skill with enough team defense. This game could swing heavily based on whether the Sharks turn it into pace or the Blues slow it down.


Nashville Predators vs New Jersey Devils

Faceoff: 02:00 CET

Predators - Projected lineup

Forwards
Steven Stamkos - Ryan O’Reilly - Luke Evangelista
Filip Forsberg - Matthew Wood - Jonathan Marchessault
Zachary L’Heureux - Erik Haula - Tyson Jost
Reid Schaefer - Fedor Svechkov - Joakim Kemell

Defense
Brady Skjei - Roman Josi
Nicolas Hague - Nick Perbix
Adam Wilsby - Ryan Ufko

Goalies
Justus Annunen
Juuse Saros

Scratched
Ozzy Wiesblatt
Justin Barron

Injured
None

IHM Lineup Note:
Nashville still has enough upper-line threat through Forsberg, Stamkos, Marchessault and Josi to make this dangerous if the game opens up. Their issue is keeping enough structure behind the skill to avoid giving away easy speed entries against New Jersey.

IHM Tactical Signals:
The Predators should want to build through Josi’s puck movement and use O’Reilly’s line to keep the game manageable structurally. If they can close the middle and force New Jersey wide, the matchup becomes much more even.

Devils - Projected lineup

Forwards
Timo Meier - Nico Hischier - Dawson Mercer
Jesper Bratt - Jack Hughes - Connor Brown
Evgenii Dadonov - Cody Glass - Lenni Hameenaho
Paul Cotter - Nick Bjugstad - Maxim Tsyplakov

Defense
Jonas Siegenthaler - Dougie Hamilton
Luke Hughes - Johnathan Kovacevic
Brenden Dillon - Simon Nemec

Goalies
Jacob Markstrom
Jake Allen

Scratched
Dennis Cholowski

Injured
Stefan Noesen (knee)
Zack MacEwen (ACL)
Brett Pesce (lower body)
Arseny Gritsyuk (undisclosed)

IHM Lineup Note:
New Jersey still has the cleaner transition identity through Hughes, Bratt and Hamilton, even with some supporting injuries. The Devils are most dangerous when they can stretch coverage and attack off speed rather than get trapped in a grinding cycle game.

IHM Tactical Signals:
The Devils should want pace, quick zone exits and repeated attacks through the middle lane. If they can keep Nashville from settling into a half-ice structure, their speed edge should show up more clearly.

IHM Match Pressure Index:
Nashville carries the pressure to hold shape against one of the better speed teams in the conference. New Jersey has the cleaner route through pace, but the Devils still need to avoid careless puck management against a veteran group that can punish mistakes.


Winnipeg Jets vs Colorado Avalanche

Faceoff: 02:00 CET

Jets - Projected lineup

Forwards
Kyle Connor - Mark Scheifele - Alex Iafallo
Cole Perfetti - Adam Lowry - Gabriel Vilardi
Isak Rosen - Morgan Barron - Brad Lambert
Cole Koepke - Jonathan Toews - Gustav Nyquist

Defense
Josh Morrissey - Neal Pionk
Dylan Samberg - Elias Salomonsson
Haydn Fleury - Dylan DeMelo

Goalies
Connor Hellebuyck
Eric Comrie

Scratched
Ville Heinola
Jacob Bryson

Injured
Nino Niederreiter (knee)
Colin Miller (knee)
Vladislav Namestnikov (lower body)

IHM Lineup Note:
Winnipeg remains dangerous because of Hellebuyck’s stability, Scheifele’s top-line offense and Morrissey’s puck-moving control. The Jets are at their best when they can keep games layered and force opponents to earn everything through structure.

IHM Tactical Signals:
The Jets should try to limit Colorado’s rush space and make the Avalanche work through traffic and defensive layers. Their strongest route is to stay patient, use Hellebuyck as a foundation and counter with discipline.

Avalanche - Projected lineup

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

Defense
Brett Kulak - Cale Makar
Devon Toews - Sam Malinski
Josh Manson - Brent Burns

Goalies
Scott Wedgewood
Mackenzie Blackwood

Scratched
Nick Blankenburg
Gavin Brindley
Joel Kiviranta

Injured
Nicolas Roy (upper body)

IHM Lineup Note:
Colorado looks much closer to full strength again, which makes the top nine and overall pace profile extremely dangerous. MacKinnon, Makar, Landeskog and Nichushkin give the Avalanche a clear ability to overwhelm games if the pace opens up.

IHM Tactical Signals:
The Avalanche should want speed, layered rush support and active blue-line involvement from Makar and Toews. Their main challenge is not giving Winnipeg enough predictable structure to settle into a low-event survival mode.

IHM Match Pressure Index:
Winnipeg carries the pressure to keep this game under control because Colorado’s restored speed ceiling can break structure quickly. The Avalanche have the higher upside, but they still need to solve one of the league’s strongest goaltending-and-shape combinations in Hellebuyck and Winnipeg’s team defense.


Utah Mammoth vs Washington Capitals

Faceoff: 03:00 CET

Mammoth - Projected lineup

Forwards
Clayton Keller - Nick Schmaltz - Lawson Crouse
Daniil But - Logan Cooley - Dylan Guenther
JJ Peterka - Jack McBain - Michael Carcone
Alexander Kerfoot - Kevin Stenlund - Brandon Tanev

Defense
Mikhail Sergachev - MacKenzie Weegar
Nate Schmidt - John Marino
Ian Cole - Sean Durzi

Goalies
Vitek Vanecek
Karel Vejmelka

Scratched
Liam O’Brien
Nick DeSimone
Kailer Yamamoto

Injured
Barrett Hayton (upper body)

IHM Lineup Note:
Utah continues to look fast, balanced and difficult to defend through its top-six speed and mobile defense. Hayton’s absence hurts center depth, but the Mammoth still have enough pace and transport ability to keep games uncomfortable for older, heavier teams.

IHM Tactical Signals:
The Mammoth should try to make this game quick and attack Washington before the Capitals can lock into their preferred structure. Their best route is open-ice tempo and clean exits that let Cooley, Peterka and Guenther attack with speed.

Capitals - Projected lineup

Forwards
Alex Ovechkin - Dylan Strome - Anthony Beauvillier
Aleksei Protas - Pierre-Luc Dubois - Tom Wilson
Connor McMichael - Justin Sourdif - Ryan Leonard
Brandon Duhaime - Hendrix Lapierre - Ivan Miroshnichenko

Defense
Martin Fehervary - Rasmus Sandin
Jakob Chychrun - Trevor van Riemsdyk
Cole Hutson - Matt Roy

Goalies
Logan Thompson
Charlie Lindgren

Scratched
David Kampf
Declan Chisholm
Dylan McIlrath
Timothy Liljegren

Injured
Ethen Frank (lower body)

IHM Lineup Note:
Washington still has enough physicality, structure and finishing gravity to remain difficult, especially through Ovechkin, Wilson and Dubois. The Capitals do not want this game played at Utah’s preferred pace, so team defense and matchup control become crucial.

IHM Tactical Signals:
The Capitals should try to slow the game, manage the middle and make Utah work through contact and layers rather than speed alone. If Washington can keep the rushes under control, their veteran structure gives them a much better chance.

IHM Match Pressure Index:
Washington carries the pressure to keep up with a faster team in a road environment that favors pace. Utah has the more natural rhythm for this matchup, but the Mammoth still need to prove they can break through a disciplined veteran team without Hayton in the lineup.


Calgary Flames vs Anaheim Ducks

Faceoff: 03:00 CET

Flames - Projected lineup

Forwards
Blake Coleman - Mikael Backlund - Joel Farabee
Matvei Gridin - Morgan Frost - Matt Coronato
Yegor Sharangovich - Ryan Strome - Victor Olofsson
Martin Pospisil - John Beecher - Adam Klapka

Defense
Kevin Bahl - Zach Whitecloud
Olli Maatta - Hunter Brzustewicz
Joel Hanley - Zayne Parekh

Goalies
Devin Cooley
Dustin Wolf

Scratched
Ryan Lomberg
Tyson Gross
Brayden Pachal
Yan Kuznetsov

Injured
Jake Bean (undisclosed)
Samuel Honzek (upper body)
Jonathan Huberdeau (hip surgery)
Connor Zary (upper body)

IHM Lineup Note:
Calgary still plays its best hockey through structure, back pressure and disciplined work from Backlund’s line. This lineup is not built to trade offense freely, so detail and patience remain the identity.

IHM Tactical Signals:
The Flames should want a measured, lower-event game where Wolf or Cooley can support a structured defensive approach. Their cleanest route is forcing Anaheim into harder, uglier offensive possessions rather than clean skill sequences.

Ducks - Projected lineup

Forwards
Chris Kreider - Leo Carlsson - Troy Terry
Alex Killorn - Mikael Granlund - Beckett Sennecke
Jeffrey Viel - Ryan Poehling - Cutter Gauthier
Ian Moore - Mason McTavish - Frank Vatrano

Defense
Jackson LaCombe - Jacob Trouba
Pavel Mintyukov - John Carlson
Drew Helleson - Radko Gudas

Goalies
Ville Husso
Lukas Dostal

Scratched
Tim Washe
Nathan Gaucher
Olen Zellweger

Injured
Ross Johnston (lower body)
Jansen Harkins (upper body)

IHM Lineup Note:
Anaheim brings more offensive imagination and more pace than Calgary, especially through Carlsson, Terry, Gauthier and McTavish. With Gudas back in and Carlson helping on the blue line, the Ducks also look more complete structurally than they did a few games ago.

IHM Tactical Signals:
The Ducks should try to use their skill and mobility to prevent Calgary from controlling the pace. Their clearest path is to create cleaner rush looks and use their defensemen to support entries before the game turns into a grind.

IHM Match Pressure Index:
Calgary carries pressure to drag this into the type of low-event game it prefers, while Anaheim carries pressure to turn skill and pace into enough real control. This matchup is a classic identity clash between structure and speed.


Vancouver Canucks vs Los Angeles Kings

Faceoff: 04:00 CET

Canucks - Projected lineup

Forwards
Liam Ohgren - Marco Rossi - Brock Boeser
Drew O’Connor - Elias Pettersson - Evander Kane
Max Sasson - Teddy Blueger - Linus Karlsson
Jake DeBrusk - Aatu Raty - Nils Hoglander

Defense
Elias Pettersson - Filip Hronek
Marcus Pettersson - Tom Willander
Zeev Buium - P.O Joseph

Goalies
Kevin Lankinen
Nikita Tolopilo

Scratched
Curtis Douglas
Victor Mancini

Injured
Filip Chytil (facial fracture)
Thatcher Demko (hip surgery)
Derek Forbort (undisclosed)

IHM Lineup Note:
Vancouver keeps enough skill and pace to be dangerous, but the Canucks still need more stability around the goaltending picture and bottom-six support. Hronek’s expected presence matters because the defense needs smoother puck movement against Los Angeles’ structure.

IHM Tactical Signals:
The Canucks should try to attack with speed and avoid prolonged board battles against a veteran Kings team. Their clearest path is to use Pettersson and Boeser in open space before Los Angeles can compress the game.

Kings - Projected lineup

Forwards
Artemi Panarin - Anze Kopitar - Adrian Kempe
Trevor Moore - Quinton Byfield - Alex Laferriere
Joel Armia - Scott Laughton - Jared Wright
Jeff Malott - Samuel Helenius - Mathieu Joseph

Defense
Mikey Anderson - Drew Doughty
Joel Edmundson - Brandt Clarke
Brian Dumoulin - Cody Ceci

Goalies
Darcy Kuemper
Anton Forsberg

Scratched
Alex Turcotte
Taylor Ward
Jacob Moverare

Injured
Andrei Kuzmenko (meniscus)

IHM Lineup Note:
Los Angeles still carries strong veteran structure through Kopitar, Doughty and Anderson, while Panarin and Kempe add enough offensive danger to tilt games. The Kings are at their best when they compress space and force opponents into low-quality offense.

IHM Tactical Signals:
The Kings should try to own the middle, manage the walls and make Vancouver play through traffic and contact rather than speed and flow. Their cleanest route is a disciplined, controlled road game shaped by defensive posture.

IHM Match Pressure Index:
Vancouver carries the greater pressure because the Canucks need to beat a structurally disciplined opponent without their ideal goaltending stability. Los Angeles has the more natural tactical shape here, but the Kings still need to respect Vancouver’s top-line skill and not let the game drift into transition chaos.


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, visa delays, maintenance issues or late scratches.

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

Line order shows much more than talent hierarchy. It reveals matchup usage, offensive-zone trust, defensive roles and which players are expected to drive special situations.

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

Start with the top two centers, the first two defense pairs and the expected starting goalie. Those three areas usually reveal the tactical identity of the matchup fastest.

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

A single blue-line absence can affect retrievals, breakout timing, gap control, penalty killing and overall defensive stability. The impact often reaches far beyond one position slot.

Q5: How should readers interpret a maintenance day?

Maintenance usually signals workload control rather than a guaranteed absence, but it still matters because it can hint at reduced usage, uncertainty or a late decision near puck drop.

Q6: What do IHM Tactical Signals add to raw line combinations?

IHM Tactical Signals translate personnel into game logic by identifying likely pace control, forecheck strength, blue-line leverage, goalie stability and hidden swing factors in the matchup.

Q7: What does IHM Match Pressure Index do?

It condenses the matchup into a quick tactical read of burden, execution stress and likely game-flow leverage, helping readers understand which side carries more structural pressure.

Q8: Why does center depth matter so much?

Centers drive faceoffs, low-zone support, matchup defense and transition structure. Losing top centers often destabilizes all three zones at once.

Q9: Why do some teams dress 11 forwards and 7 defensemen?

That setup can protect an injured roster, create more blue-line flexibility or shelter specific matchups, but it also increases the importance of bench management and shift distribution.

Q10: What lineup clues point to a lower-event game?

Heavier bottom-six usage, conservative third-pair deployment and strong shutdown-center profiles often indicate a slower, tighter and more territorial game environment.

Q11: Why is home ice so important in lineup analysis?

The home coach gets last change, which helps control matchups, hide weaker combinations and deploy key players against more favorable opposition.

Q12: Can projected lineups still change after publication?

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


NHL Lineups Mar 25 2026

NHL Lineups Mar 25 2026

NHL Projected Lineups - Game Day March 25, 2026

Date: March 25, 2026
By IceHockeyMan Newsroom

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


Buffalo Sabres vs Boston Bruins

Faceoff: 00:30 CET

Sabres - Projected lineup

Forwards
Peyton Krebs – Tage Thompson – Alex Tuch
Jason Zucker – Ryan McLeod – Jack Quinn
Noah Ostlund – Josh Norris – Josh Doan
Zach Benson – Sam Carrick – Beck Malenstyn

Defense
Mattias Samuelsson – Rasmus Dahlin
Bowen Byram – Owen Power
Logan Stanley – Conor Timmins

Goalies
Ukko-Pekka Luukkonen
Colten Ellis

Scratched
Alex Lyon
Zach Metsa
Michael Kesselring
Luke Schenn
Josh Dunne
Tyson Kozak

Injured
Tanner Pearson (lower body)
Jordan Greenway (middle body)
Jiri Kulich (blood clot)
Justin Danforth (lower body)

IHM Lineup Note:
Buffalo brings one of the most balanced offensive structures with Thompson driving elite finishing while Dahlin and Power control puck movement from the back end. This lineup can attack in waves if given space.

IHM Tactical Signals:
The Sabres should aim to control tempo through puck possession and activate their defensemen in transition. Their biggest edge comes from speed through the neutral zone and second-layer support.

Bruins - Projected lineup

Forwards
Marat Khusnutdinov – Fraser Minten – David Pastrnak
Casey Mittelstadt – Pavel Zacha – Viktor Arvidsson
Lukas Reichel – Elias Lindholm – Morgan Geekie
Tanner Jeannot – Sean Kuraly – Mark Kastelic

Defense
Jonathan Aspirot – Charlie McAvoy
Hampus Lindholm – Mason Lohrei
Nikita Zadorov – Henri Jokiharju

Goalies
Joonas Korpisalo
Jeremy Swayman

Scratched
Alex Steeves
Andrew Peeke
Jordan Harris
Michael Eyssimont

IHM Lineup Note:
Boston continues to rely on structure and discipline with McAvoy anchoring the defense and Pastrnak providing elite offensive finishing. Their depth allows them to stay competitive in controlled games.

IHM Tactical Signals:
The Bruins should slow the pace and reduce transition chances. Their best route is structured defense and efficient counterattacks rather than open play.

IHM Match Pressure Index:
Buffalo carries momentum and offensive edge, while Boston faces pressure to control tempo and limit high-danger chances. The outcome depends on whether the game becomes fast or structured.


Toronto Maple Leafs vs New York Rangers

Faceoff: 00:30 CET

Maple Leafs - Projected lineup

Forwards
Matias Maccelli – John Tavares – William Nylander
Matthew Knies – Max Domi – Easton Cowan
Dakota Joshua – Bo Groulx – Nicholas Robertson
Steven Lorentz – Jacob Quillan – Michael Pezzetta

Defense
Morgan Rielly – Brandon Carlo
Jake McCabe – Oliver Ekman-Larsson
Simon Benoit – Troy Stecher

Goalies
Joseph Woll
Anthony Stolarz

Scratched
Calle Jarnkrok
Philippe Myers

Injured
Auston Matthews (MCL)
Chris Tanev (groin)

IHM Lineup Note:
Toronto remains dangerous through wing-driven offense led by Nylander, but the absence of Matthews weakens the central structure. This lineup depends heavily on transition scoring.

IHM Tactical Signals:
Toronto should push pace and rely on quick offensive entries. Extended defensive sequences could expose their lack of depth down the middle.

Rangers - Projected lineup

Forwards
Gabe Perreault – Mika Zibanejad – Alexis Lafreniere
Will Cuylle – Vincent Trocheck – Adam Sykora
Tye Kartye – J.T. Miller – Conor Sheary
Taylor Raddysh – Adam Edstrom – Jaroslav Chmelar

Defense
Vladislav Gavrikov – Adam Fox
Braden Schneider – Will Borgen
Matthew Robertson – Vincent Iorio

Goalies
Igor Shesterkin
Dylan Garand

Scratched
Jonny Brodzinski
Drew Fortescue
Juuso Parssinen
Connor Mackey

Injured
Matt Rempe (upper body)
Urho Vaakanainen (upper body)
Noah Laba (lower body)
Jonathan Quick (upper body)

IHM Lineup Note:
The Rangers combine high-end skill with strong puck-moving defense led by Adam Fox. Their structure allows them to generate both controlled offense and transition threats.

IHM Tactical Signals:
New York should aim to control puck possession and force Toronto into defensive-zone play. Their advantage lies in balance and defensive stability.

IHM Match Pressure Index:
Toronto carries pressure to generate offense without Matthews, while the Rangers must capitalize on structural advantages and avoid high-tempo chaos.


Q&A: Projected Lineups and Starting Goalies

What is a projected lineup?

A projected lineup is an expected combination of players based on practices and team reports before the game.

Why are starting goalies important?

Goalies significantly impact game outcomes, influencing defensive confidence and game pace.

Can lineups change before games?

Yes, final lineups can change due to warmups, injuries or coaching decisions.


NHL Lineups - Game Day March 22, 2026

NHL Lineups - Game Day March 22, 2026

NHL Projected Lineups - Game Day March 22, 2026

Date: March 22, 2026
By IceHockeyMan Newsroom

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


Vancouver Canucks vs St Louis Blues

Faceoff: 01:00 CET

Canucks - Projected lineup

Forwards
Jake DeBrusk – Elias Pettersson – Drew O’Connor
Liam Ohgren – Marco Rossi – Brock Boeser
Max Sasson – Teddy Blueger – Linus Karlsson
Nils Hoglander – Aatu Raty – Evander Kane

Defense
Elias Pettersson – Filip Hronek
Marcus Pettersson – Tom Willander
Zeev Buium – Victor Mancini

Goalies
Nikita Tolopilo
Kevin Lankinen

Scratched
Curtis Douglas

Injured
P.O Joseph (upper body)
Filip Chytil (facial fracture)
Thatcher Demko (hip surgery)
Derek Forbort (undisclosed)

IHM Lineup Note:
Vancouver still builds its structure around Pettersson and Hronek controlling puck flow, but the absence of Demko changes the stability layer. This team needs cleaner defensive reads and quicker support below the dots to protect its goaltending situation.

IHM Tactical Signals:
The Canucks should prioritize controlled exits and limit extended defensive-zone time. If they allow St Louis to establish a cycle, the pressure will accumulate quickly against their depth goaltending.

Blues - Projected lineup

Forwards
Dylan Holloway – Robert Thomas – Jimmy Snuggerud
Jake Neighbours – Pavel Buchnevich – Jordan Kyrou
Jonathan Drouin – Dalibor Dvorsky – Otto Stenberg
Alexey Toropchenko – Jack Finley – Pius Suter

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

Goalies
Jordan Binnington
Joel Hofer

Scratched
Nathan Walker
Jonatan Berggren
Oskar Sundqvist
Matthew Kessel

Injured
Tyler Tucker (undisclosed)

IHM Lineup Note:
St Louis brings a more balanced offensive structure with Thomas driving play and Kyrou adding transition speed. The Blues can generate layered pressure if their top six maintains puck possession.

IHM Tactical Signals:
The Blues should lean into forecheck pressure and force Vancouver into turnovers. Their edge appears in sustained offensive-zone time and physical puck retrieval.

IHM Match Pressure Index:
Vancouver carries the higher pressure due to instability in goal and defensive depth. St Louis has a clearer tactical path but must capitalize early to avoid a skill-driven response from Pettersson’s line.


Ottawa Senators vs Toronto Maple Leafs

Faceoff: 01:00 CET

Senators - Projected lineup

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

Defense
Thomas Chabot – Artem Zub
Tyler Kleven – Jordan Spence
Dennis Gilbert – Nikolas Matinpalo

Goalies
Linus Ullmark
James Reimer

IHM Lineup Note:
Ottawa has strong center depth and a physical identity through Tkachuk and Cozens. This lineup is built to control the middle and pressure opponents below the goal line.

IHM Tactical Signals:
Expect Ottawa to attack through net-front presence and high-slot pressure. Their structure is designed to win second pucks and extend offensive sequences.

Maple Leafs - Projected lineup

Forwards
Easton Cowan – John Tavares – Nicholas Robertson
Matthew Knies – Max Domi – William Nylander
Matias Maccelli – Bo Groulx – Dakota Joshua
Steven Lorentz – Jacob Quillan – Calle Jarnkrok

Defense
Jake McCabe – Oliver Ekman-Larsson
Morgan Rielly – Brandon Carlo
Simon Benoit – Troy Stecher

Goalies
Anthony Stolarz
Joseph Woll

IHM Lineup Note:
Toronto remains dangerous on the wings, but without Matthews their central structure is weakened. Much depends on Nylander’s ability to create offense off the rush.

IHM Tactical Signals:
Toronto should focus on speed and transition rather than prolonged zone play. Their best path is quick-strike offense.

IHM Match Pressure Index:
Toronto carries more pressure due to missing elite center depth. Ottawa has a more stable structure and a clearer physical advantage.


Montreal Canadiens vs New York Islanders

Faceoff: 01:00 CET

Canadiens - Projected lineup

Forwards
Cole Caufield – Nick Suzuki – Juraj Slafkovsky
Alex Newhook – Oliver Kapanen – Ivan Demidov
Alexandre Texier – Jake Evans – Zachary Bolduc
Joe Veleno – Phillip Danault – Brendan Gallagher

Defense
Mike Matheson – Noah Dobson
Jayden Struble – Lane Hutson
Kaiden Guhle – Alexandre Carrier

Goalies
Jacob Fowler
Jakub Dobes

IHM Lineup Note:
Montreal combines young offensive talent with structured defensive support. Suzuki’s line remains the main driver of pace and creativity.

IHM Tactical Signals:
The Canadiens should aim to play fast and stretch the Islanders’ defensive shape.

Islanders - Projected lineup

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

Defense
Matthew Schaefer – Ryan Pulock
Adam Pelech – Tony DeAngelo
Carson Soucy – Scott Mayfield

Goalies
Ilya Sorokin
David Rittich

IHM Lineup Note:
The Islanders rely on structured defensive play and Sorokin’s stability. This is a system-first lineup.

IHM Tactical Signals:
Expect a slower, controlled game built around defensive discipline.

IHM Match Pressure Index:
Montreal must break structure with speed. Islanders must prevent chaos and control tempo.


Q&A: Projected Lineups and Starting Goalies

What do projected lineups indicate?

They reflect expected player deployment based on practices and reports before puck drop.

Why are goalies important in lineup analysis?

Goaltending stability often defines game flow and outcome probability.

Can lineups change before games?

Yes, final decisions can change during warmups or due to late updates.


NHL Projected Lineups - March 21, 2026

NHL Projected Lineups – March 21, 2026

NHL Projected Lineups – Game Day March 21, 2026

Date: 20 March 2026
By IceHockeyMan Newsroom

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


Toronto Maple Leafs vs Carolina Hurricanes

Faceoff: 01:00 CET

Maple Leafs – Projected lineup

Forwards
Matias Maccelli – John Tavares – William Nylander
Matthew Knies – Max Domi – Easton Cowan
Dakota Joshua – Bo Groulx – Nicholas Robertson
Steven Lorentz – Jacob Quillan – Calle Jarnkrok

Defense
Morgan Rielly – Brandon Carlo
Jake McCabe – Oliver Ekman-Larsson
Simon Benoit – Troy Stecher

Goalies
Joseph Woll
Anthony Stolarz

Scratched
Michael Pezzetta
Philippe Myers

Injured
Auston Matthews (MCL)
Chris Tanev (groin)

IHM Lineup Note:
Toronto still has enough wing skill to threaten off transition, but the center spine looks thinner without Matthews. Rielly’s return matters because the Maple Leafs need smoother exits and quicker puck delivery into the offensive zone.

IHM Tactical Signals:
Toronto should try to use Nylander and Tavares to create offense before Carolina settles into its forecheck rhythm. If the Leafs get pinned into repeated retrievals, their missing center depth becomes a much bigger problem.

Hurricanes – Projected lineup

Forwards
Andrei Svechnikov – Sebastian Aho – Seth Jarvis
Taylor Hall – Logan Stankoven – Jackson Blake
Nikolaj Ehlers – Jordan Staal – Jordan Martinook
William Carrier – Mark Jankowski – Eric Robinson

Defense
Jaccob Slavin – Jalen Chatfield
K’Andre Miller – Sean Walker
Mike Reilly – Alexander Nikishin

Goalies
Brandon Bussi
Frederik Andersen

Scratched
Jesperi Kotkaniemi
Nicolas Deslauriers

Injured
Shayne Gostisbehere (lower body)
Pyotr Kochetkov (lower body)

IHM Lineup Note:
Carolina still brings one of the league’s strongest pressure identities through pace, retrievals and repeat attacks. Aho, Svechnikov and Jarvis can tilt the top-end talent battle, but the real strength is how deep the Hurricanes can keep the forecheck going.

IHM Tactical Signals:
Carolina should want a game built on territorial pressure, quick reloads and low-zone support. Their clearest route is to suffocate Toronto’s exits and force the Maple Leafs into a lower-quality attack profile.

IHM Match Pressure Index:
Toronto carries the heavier pressure because it must protect a thinner middle against one of the league’s strongest structure-and-pace teams. Carolina owns the cleaner tactical path, but the Hurricanes still need to finish enough of their volume to keep Toronto from hanging around on talent alone.


Washington Capitals vs New Jersey Devils

Faceoff: 01:00 CET

Capitals – Projected lineup

Forwards
Anthony Beauvillier – Dylan Strome – Alex Ovechkin
Aleksei Protas – Pierre-Luc Dubois – Tom Wilson
Connor McMichael – Justin Sourdif – Ryan Leonard
Brandon Duhaime – Hendrix Lapierre – Ethen Frank

Defense
Martin Fehervary – Rasmus Sandin
Jakub Chychrun – Trevor van Riemsdyk
Cole Hutson – Matt Roy

Goalies
Logan Thompson
Charlie Lindgren

Scratched
David Kampf
Ivan Miroshnichenko
Declan Chisholm
Dylan McIlrath
Timothy Liljegren

Injured
None

IHM Lineup Note:
Washington keeps enough veteran bite and finishing gravity to stay difficult to play against, especially with Ovechkin and Wilson shaping the interior pressure. The Capitals are most effective when they can make games physical and controlled rather than loose and rush-heavy.

IHM Tactical Signals:
The Capitals should try to close the middle, protect the slot and lean on line matching to disrupt New Jersey’s pace. If Washington forces the Devils into a more direct, heavier game, the matchup becomes far more manageable.

Devils – Projected lineup

Forwards
Timo Meier – Nico Hischier – Dawson Mercer
Jesper Bratt – Jack Hughes – Connor Brown
Arseny Gritsyuk – Cody Glass – Lenni Hameenaho
Paul Cotter – Nick Bjugstad – Maxim Tsyplakov

Defense
Jonas Siegenthaler – Dougie Hamilton
Luke Hughes – Johnathan Kovacevic
Brenden Dillon – Simon Nemec

Goalies
Jake Allen
Jacob Markstrom

Scratched
Dennis Cholowski
Evgenii Dadonov

Injured
Stefan Noesen (knee)
Zack MacEwen (ACL)
Brett Pesce (lower body)

IHM Lineup Note:
New Jersey’s game still runs through speed, skill and quick transition reads from Hughes, Bratt and Hamilton. The Devils are dangerous when they get into open-ice exchanges and attack with layers rather than single-man rushes.

IHM Tactical Signals:
The Devils should want pace, lateral movement and fast exits from the back end. If they can keep the Capitals from locking the game into a half-ice structure, New Jersey’s speed advantage becomes much more visible.

IHM Match Pressure Index:
Washington carries pressure to disrupt the game early and prevent New Jersey from dictating the pace. The Devils carry pressure to turn their transition edge into actual territorial control instead of letting the Capitals drag them into a slower, heavier contest.


Chicago Blackhawks vs Colorado Avalanche

Faceoff: 02:30 CET

Blackhawks – Projected lineup

Forwards
Ryan Greene – Connor Bedard – Andre Burakovsky
Tyler Bertuzzi – Frank Nazar – Teuvo Teravainen
Andrew Mangiapane – Ryan Donato – Ilya Mikheyev
Nick Lardis – Sam Lafferty – Landon Slaggert

Defense
Alex Vlasic – Artyom Levshunov
Wyatt Kaiser – Sam Rinzel
Matt Grzelcyk – Louis Crevier

Goalies
Arvid Soderblom
Spencer Knight
Ethan Del Mastro

Scratched
Dominic Toninato
Sacha Boisvert

Injured
Oliver Moore (lower body)

IHM Lineup Note:
Chicago still depends on Bedard and Nazar to create the offensive spark, but against Colorado that is not enough by itself. The Blackhawks need disciplined support, sharper puck decisions and strong goaltending just to keep the game within reach.

IHM Tactical Signals:
Chicago should try to keep the game chaotic and opportunistic rather than controlled and territorial. If the Blackhawks allow Colorado to build speed through the neutral zone and activate the blue line cleanly, the matchup can get away quickly.

Avalanche – Projected lineup

Forwards
Valeri Nichushkin – Nathan MacKinnon – Martin Necas
Nazem Kadri – Brock Nelson – Nicolas Roy
Parker Kelly – Jack Drury – Joel Kiviranta
Ivan Ivan – Zakhar Bardakov – Gavin Brindley

Defense
Brett Kulak – Cale Makar
Devon Toews – Sam Malinski
Josh Manson – Brent Burns

Goalies
Mackenzie Blackwood
Scott Wedgewood

Scratched
Nick Blankenburg

Injured
Ross Colton (upper body)
Gabriel Landeskog (lower body)
Artturi Lehkonen (upper body)
Logan O’Connor (hip surgery)

IHM Lineup Note:
Colorado still has enough speed, puck movement and star power to dictate most matchups, especially with MacKinnon, Makar and Nichushkin leading the top end. Even when the lineup is not at full health, the Avalanche remain extremely dangerous through transition and blue-line support.

IHM Tactical Signals:
Colorado should want open ice, quick reloads and repeated speed entries that put Chicago’s coverage under stress. Their strongest route is to overwhelm the Blackhawks with pace and turn defensive-zone retrievals into sustained offensive pressure.

IHM Match Pressure Index:
Chicago carries almost all the structural pressure because the Blackhawks need a near-perfect support game to survive Colorado’s pace. The Avalanche hold the tactical edge, but they still need to avoid careless turnovers that could give Bedard and company enough life to create swings.


Calgary Flames vs Florida Panthers

Faceoff: 03:00 CET

Flames – Projected lineup

Forwards
Blake Coleman – Mikael Backlund – Joel Farabee
Matvei Gridin – Morgan Frost – Matt Coronato
Yegor Sharangovich – Ryan Strome – Connor Zary
Victor Olofsson – Martin Pospisil – Adam Klapka

Defense
Kevin Bahl – Zach Whitecloud
Olli Maatta – Hunter Brzustewicz
Joel Hanley – Zayne Parekh

Goalies
Dustin Wolf
Devin Cooley

Scratched
Ryan Lomberg
John Beecher
Tyson Gross
Brayden Pachal

Injured
Jake Bean (undisclosed)
Samuel Honzek (upper body)
Jonathan Huberdeau (hip surgery)
Yan Kuznetsov (upper body)

IHM Lineup Note:
Calgary continues to rely on Backlund’s line and Wolf’s stability to keep games under control. The Flames are more dangerous when they can play layered hockey, stay patient and make opponents work through traffic and pressure.

IHM Tactical Signals:
The Flames should try to keep this game measured, close the middle and lean on Wolf to handle the first wave. Their best chance is to frustrate Florida’s forecheck and make the Panthers chase offense through a less natural rhythm.

Panthers – Projected lineup

Forwards
Carter Verhaeghe – Sam Bennett – Matthew Tkachuk
Eetu Luostarinen – Anton Lundell – Jesper Boqvist
A.J. Greer – Evan Rodrigues – Vinnie Hinostroza
Cole Reinhardt – Tomas Nosek – Luke Kunin

Defense
Gustav Forsling – Aaron Ekblad
Niko Mikkola – Seth Jones
Dmitry Kulikov – Michael Benning

Goalies
Daniil Tarasov
Sergei Bobrovsky

Scratched
Nolan Foote
Mackie Samoskevich
Donovan Sebrango

Injured
Uvis Balinskis (lower body)
Aleksander Barkov (lower body)
Jonah Gadjovich (upper body)
Brad Marchand (lower body)
Sam Reinhart (undisclosed)
Cole Schwindt (lower body)

IHM Lineup Note:
Florida is still missing major pieces, but the Panthers retain enough edge and forecheck identity through Tkachuk, Bennett, Forsling and Jones. Their lineup can still make games physically demanding even when the top-end scoring depth is thinner than usual.

IHM Tactical Signals:
Florida should want a grinding, physical game where the forecheck and defensive engagement wear Calgary down over time. If the Panthers establish enough offensive-zone pressure, they can offset some of the injury losses through sheer territorial force.

IHM Match Pressure Index:
Both teams are managing absences, but Florida carries more pressure because the Panthers need to replace missing elite offense with structure and edge. Calgary has a clearer low-event survival route, but the Flames still need to handle Florida’s physical push and avoid getting trapped below the dots.


Utah Mammoth vs Anaheim Ducks

Faceoff: 04:00 CET

Mammoth – Projected lineup

Forwards
Clayton Keller – Nick Schmaltz – Lawson Crouse
JJ Peterka – Logan Cooley – Dylan Guenther
Jack McBain – Barrett Hayton – Michael Carcone
Alexander Kerfoot – Kevin Stenlund – Kailer Yamamoto

Defense
Mikhail Sergachev – MacKenzie Weegar
Nate Schmidt – John Marino
Ian Cole – Sean Durzi

Goalies
Karel Vejmelka
Vitek Vanecek

Scratched
Liam O’Brien
Brandon Tanev
Nick DeSimone

Injured
None

IHM Lineup Note:
Utah remains a fast, balanced team with strong puck movement from the back end and enough top-six skill to create constant pressure. Cooley, Peterka and Guenther continue to give the Mammoth a dangerous transition identity.

IHM Tactical Signals:
The Mammoth should try to keep the game moving and use their speed to stretch Anaheim’s defensive support. If Utah turns this into a fast north-south contest, their depth and blue-line mobility become major advantages.

Ducks – Projected lineup

Forwards
Chris Kreider – Leo Carlsson – Troy Terry
Alex Killorn – Mikael Granlund – Beckett Sennecke
Jeffrey Viel – Ryan Poehling – Cutter Gauthier
Jansen Harkins – Tim Washe – Mason McTavish

Defense
Jackson LaCombe – Jacob Trouba
Olen Zellweger – John Carlson
Pavel Mintukov – Ian Moore

Goalies
Lukas Dostal
Ville Husso

Scratched
Drew Helleson
Frank Vatrano

Injured
Ross Johnston (lower body)

Suspended
Radko Gudas

IHM Lineup Note:
Anaheim gets McTavish back into the lineup, which gives the Ducks another key puck carrier and offensive layer. The concern remains defensive edge and net-front bite without Gudas, especially against a team that can attack with speed from multiple lines.

IHM Tactical Signals:
The Ducks should try to create offense off skill plays and quick counters rather than prolonged defensive-zone work. If they get drawn into a heavy-speed hybrid game without enough puck support, Utah’s balance can take control.

IHM Match Pressure Index:
Anaheim carries more tactical pressure because the Ducks need both top-end skill and better defensive discipline to survive Utah’s pace. The Mammoth own the more natural structure for this matchup, but they still need to finish enough of their zone time to prevent Anaheim’s skill from hanging around.


Pittsburgh Penguins vs Winnipeg Jets

Faceoff: 19:00 CET

Penguins – Projected lineup

Forwards
Rickard Rakell – Sidney Crosby – Bryan Rust
Egor Chinakhov – Tommy Novak – Evgeni Malkin
Anthony Mantha – Ben Kindel – 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
Ryan Graves
Ville Koivunen
Jack St. Ivany
Ilya Solovyov

Injured
Caleb Jones (lower body)
Kevin Hayes (upper body)
Filip Hallander (blood clot)
Blake Lizotte (upper body)

IHM Lineup Note:
Pittsburgh looks much more dangerous with Crosby back in the middle and the Karlsson-Letang spine intact. Girard potentially returning also helps the transition game and gives the Penguins more composure on exits.

IHM Tactical Signals:
The Penguins should want controlled puck possession through the middle and enough support to avoid gifting Winnipeg easy counterattacks. If Crosby and Malkin can dictate offensive-zone time, Pittsburgh becomes much harder to out-structure.

Jets – Projected lineup

Forwards
Kyle Connor – Mark Scheifele – Alex Iafallo
Cole Perfetti – Adam Lowry – Gabriel Vilardi
Gustav Nyquist – Jonathan Toews – Isak Rosen
Cole Koepke – Morgan Barron – Brad Lambert

Defense
Josh Morrissey – Dylan DeMelo
Dylan Samberg – Elias Salomonsson
Haydn Fleury – Jacob Bryson

Goalies
Connor Hellebuyck
Eric Comrie

Scratched
Ville Heinola

Injured
Nino Niederreiter (knee)
Neal Pionk (undisclosed)
Colin Miller (knee)
Vladislav Namestnikov (lower body)

IHM Lineup Note:
Winnipeg remains difficult to play against because of Hellebuyck’s stability and the structure around Scheifele, Morrissey and Lowry. The Jets do not need fireworks if they can keep the game under control and lean on their defensive shape.

IHM Tactical Signals:
The Jets should want a layered, patient game where their back pressure and defensive reads limit Pittsburgh’s playmakers through the middle. If they force the Penguins into rushed puck decisions, their structure becomes a major edge.

IHM Match Pressure Index:
Pittsburgh carries pressure to prove the reloaded spine can immediately translate into structure and results. Winnipeg carries the more stable tactical platform, but the Jets still need to handle Crosby and Malkin carefully because that veteran skill can punish small defensive lapses.


Minnesota Wild vs Dallas Stars

Faceoff: 22:00 CET

Wild – Projected lineup

Forwards
Marcus Johansson – Danila Yurov – Matt Boldy
Vladimir Tarasenko – Ryan Hartman – Mats Zuccarello
Nick Foligno – Michael McCarron – Bobby Brink
Nico Sturm – Hunter Haight – Yakov Trenin

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

Goalies
Filip Gustavsson
Jesper Wallstedt

Scratched
Daemon Hunt
Jeff Petry
Hunter Haight
Robby Fabbri

Injured
Marcus Foligno (lower body)
Joel Eriksson Ek (lower body)
Kirill Kaprizov (upper body)

IHM Lineup Note:
Minnesota is missing major top-end pieces, especially Kaprizov and Eriksson Ek, which changes both the finishing ceiling and center structure. The Wild still have enough blue-line strength and enough support players to stay competitive, but the margin is smaller.

IHM Tactical Signals:
The Wild should want a lower-event game built on goaltending, slot protection and disciplined support off the puck. Their best route is to slow Dallas down and avoid giving the Stars easy transitional rhythm.

Stars – Projected lineup

Forwards
Jason Robertson – Wyatt Johnston – Mavrik Bourque
Sam Steel – Matt Duchene – Jamie Benn
Michael Bunting – Justin Hryckowian – Colin Blackwell
Oskar Back – Nathan Bastian – Adam Erne

Defense
Esa Lindell – Miro Heiskanen
Thomas Harley – Nils Lundkvist
Tyler Myers – Lian Bichsel

Goalies
Jake Oettinger
Casey DeSmith

Scratched
Arttu Hyry
Kyle Capobianco
Ilya Lyubushkin
Alexander Petrovic

Injured
Radek Faksa (lower body)
Roope Hintz (lower body)
Mikko Rantanen (lower body)
Tyler Seguin (ACL)

IHM Lineup Note:
Dallas remains one of the most structurally reliable teams in the league even while carrying injuries. Heiskanen, Robertson and Johnston still give the Stars enough all-zone quality to control possession and create offense without forcing pace.

IHM Tactical Signals:
The Stars should prefer a measured territorial game with strong exits, patient offensive-zone play and quick defensive resets. If they avoid overextending, their lineup depth and structure should gradually wear Minnesota down.

IHM Match Pressure Index:
Minnesota carries the heavier burden because its lineup is missing critical offensive and center pieces. Dallas owns the cleaner tactical route, but the Stars still need to respect the Wild’s blue-line quality and the possibility of a lower-event grind shaped by Gustavsson.


Columbus Blue Jackets vs Seattle Kraken

Faceoff: 23:00 CET

Blue Jackets – Projected lineup

Forwards
Mason Marchment – Adam Fantilli – Kirill Marchenko
Kent Johnson – Sean Monahan – Conor Garland
Cole Sillinger – Charlie Coyle – Mathieu Olivier
Isac Lundestrom – Boone Jenner – Danton Heinen

Defense
Zach Werenski – Damon Severson
Ivan Provorov – Denton Mateychuk
Dante Fabbro – Erik Gudbranson

Goalies
Elvis Merzlikins
Jet Greaves

Scratched
Miles Wood
Dimitri Voronkov
Egor Zamula
Jake Christiansen

Injured
None

IHM Lineup Note:
Columbus continues to look dangerous because Fantilli, Marchenko and Werenski give the Blue Jackets real speed and offensive-driving quality. The Monahan line also adds a more controlled layer that helps balance the overall attack.

IHM Tactical Signals:
The Blue Jackets should try to control the game through puck support and cleaner middle-lane play rather than allowing Seattle to make it overly chaotic. If Columbus exits well, its top six has enough bite to turn possession into sustained pressure.

Kraken – Projected lineup

Forwards
Bobby McMann – Matty Beniers – Jordan Eberle
Jared McCann – Chandler Stephenson – Frederick Gaudreau
Berkly Catton – Shane Wright – Kaapo Kakko
Ryan Winterton – Ben Meyers – Jacob Melanson

Defense
Vince Dunn – Adam Larsson
Jamie Oleksiak – Brandon Montour
Ryker Evans – Ryan Lindgren

Goalies
Joey Daccord
Philipp Grubauer

Scratched
Josh Mahura
Cale Fleury
Matt Murray
Jani Nyman

Injured
Jaden Schwartz (upper body)
Eeli Tolvanen (upper body)

IHM Lineup Note:
Seattle still has enough depth and enough blue-line movement to make this uncomfortable for Columbus, especially if Dunn and Montour are controlling the pace of exits. The Kraken’s issue is replacing some forward finish and support with Schwartz and Tolvanen out.

IHM Tactical Signals:
The Kraken should try to push tempo and create movement off the rush before Columbus locks into its structure. If Seattle can keep the game wide enough and use its blue line to support transition, the matchup becomes more even than it looks on paper.

IHM Match Pressure Index:
Seattle carries the bigger pressure load because the Kraken need to replace lost support minutes and still solve a Blue Jackets team that has been more stable lately. Columbus has the more balanced offensive profile, but the Blue Jackets still need to defend Seattle’s mobile blue line and avoid allowing the game to drift into a transition-heavy track meet.


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, visa delays, maintenance issues or last-minute scratches.

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

Line order tells you more than just talent hierarchy. It shows who is expected to handle top matchups, who may get offensive-zone starts, and which players are trusted in defensive situations or special teams rotation.

Q3: What is the first thing serious readers should look at in a lineup post?

Start with the top two centers, the first two defense pairs and the expected starting goalie. Those three areas usually reveal the tactical identity of the matchup more clearly than any other section.

Q4: Why can one scratched defenseman change an entire game plan?

Because a single blue-line change affects puck retrievals, breakout speed, gap control, penalty killing and offensive blue-line stability. The effect often spreads far beyond the player being replaced.

Q5: How should readers interpret a maintenance day in a status report?

A maintenance day usually suggests workload management rather than a full injury absence, but it still matters. It can signal reduced minutes, uncertain usage or a real chance of a late caution call before faceoff.

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

IHM Tactical Signals translates personnel into game logic. It tells you who may control pace, who brings the stronger forecheck, where the blue-line edge sits, which goalie gives the best stability and what hidden factor could swing the matchup.

Q7: What does IHM Match Pressure Index do?

It condenses the matchup into a direct tactical read of stress points, execution demands and likely game-flow pressure. It helps readers quickly understand which side carries more structural burden and where the game may tilt.

Q8: Why does center depth matter so much in projected lineups?

Centers drive faceoffs, low-zone support, matchup defense and transition structure. When a team loses top centers, its entire shape often becomes less stable in all three zones.

Q9: Why do some teams dress 11 forwards and 7 defensemen?

That setup is usually used to protect an injured roster, give a coach more blue-line options or shelter certain matchups. It can help tactically, but it also puts more pressure on bench management and shift timing.

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

Heavier bottom-six usage, more conservative third-pair deployment and a strong shutdown center profile usually indicate a game expected to be tighter, slower and more territorial rather than rush-heavy.

Q11: Why is home ice important in lineup analysis?

Because the home coach gets last change and can better target matchups. That allows stronger control over which line sees the opponent’s best players and which defense pair gets exposed or protected.

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 goalies, illness updates and late scratches.