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NHL Projected Lineups - Game Day

NHL Projected Lineups - Game Day

NHL Projected Lineups - Game Day

By IceHockeyMan Newsroom


Pittsburgh Penguins vs Vegas Golden Knights

Faceoff: 19:00 CET

Penguins - Projected lineup

Forwards
Egor Chinakhov - Tommy Novak - Evgeni Malkin
Avery Hayes - Rickard Rakell - Bryan Rust
Anthony Mantha - Ben Kindel - Justin Brazeau
Connor Dewar - Blake Lizotte - Noel Acciari

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

Goalies
Arturs Silovs
Stuart Skinner

IHM Lineup Note: Pittsburgh’s puck movement flows through Karlsson and Letang. Without Crosby, offensive structure shifts toward layered support and slot rotations rather than individual zone entries.

Golden Knights - Projected lineup

Forwards
Ivan Barbashev - Jack Eichel - Mark Stone
Pavel Dorofeyev - Mitch Marner - Reilly Smith
Braeden Bowman - Tomas Hertl - Keegan Kolesar
Brandon Saad - Colton Sissons - Alexander Holtz

Defense
Jeremy Lauzon - Shea Theodore
Noah Hanifin - Rasmus Andersson
Brayden McNabb - Kaedan Korczak

Goalies
Akira Schmid
Adin Hill

IHM Lineup Note: Vegas remains transition-driven through Eichel. Defensive activation from Theodore and Hanifin supports controlled exits and offensive blue-line pressure.


Utah Mammoth vs Chicago Blackhawks

Faceoff: 22:00 CET

Mammoth - Projected lineup

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

Defense
Mikhail Sergachev - Sean Durzi
Nate Schmidt - John Marino
Ian Cole - Olli Maatta

Goalies
Karel Vejmelka
Vitek Vanecek

IHM Lineup Note: Utah plays structured middle-lane defense with controlled breakouts. Keller line drives offensive tempo through high-slot support positioning.

Blackhawks - Projected lineup

Forwards
Ryan Greene - Connor Bedard - Andre Burakovsky
Oliver Moore - Frank Nazar - Teuvo Teravainen
Tyler Bertuzzi - Jason Dickinson - Ilya Mikheyev
Ryan Donato - Nick Foligno - Colton Dach

Defense
Alex Vlasic - Louis Crevier
Matt Grzelcyk - Artyom Levshunov
Connor Murphy - Kevin Korchinski

Goalies
Arvid Soderblom
Spencer Knight

IHM Lineup Note: Chicago’s scoring chances depend heavily on Bedard’s puck touches and controlled entries. Defensive gaps must remain tight against Utah’s balanced top-six.


San Jose Sharks vs Winnipeg Jets

Faceoff: 22:00 CET

Sharks - Projected lineup

Forwards
Will Smith - Macklin Celebrini - Kiefer Sherwood
Philipp Kurashev - Alexander Wennberg - Collin Graf
William Eklund - Michael Misa - Tyler Toffoli
Barclay Goodrow - Zack Ostapchuk - Pavol Regenda

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

Goalies
Alex Nedeljkovic
Yaroslav Askarov

IHM Lineup Note: Sharks rely on youth speed and quick-strike transitions. Defensive structure must hold inside positioning against Winnipeg’s heavy cycle.

Jets - Projected lineup

Forwards
Kyle Connor - Mark Scheifele - Gabriel Vilardi
Cole Perfetti - Adam Lowry - Alex Iafallo
Gustav Nyquist - Jonathan Toews - Walker Duehr
Cole Koepke - Morgan Barron - Tanner Pearson

Defense
Dylan Samberg - Elias Salomonsson
Logan Stanley - Dylan DeMelo
Haydn Fleury - Luke Schenn

Goalies
Connor Hellebuyck
Eric Comrie

IHM Lineup Note: Winnipeg’s strength remains layered forecheck and net-front presence. If Hellebuyck controls rebounds, Jets can dictate game flow.


Minnesota Wild vs St. Louis Blues

Faceoff: 23:00 CET

Wild - Projected lineup

Forwards
Kirill Kaprizov - Ryan Hartman - Mats Zuccarello
Marcus Johansson - Joel Eriksson Ek - Matt Boldy
Yakov Trenin - Danila Yurov - Vladimir Tarasenko
Marcus Foligno - Nico Sturm - Vinnie Hinostroza

Defense
Quinn Hughes - Brock Faber
Jake Middleton - Jared Spurgeon
Daemon Hunt - Zach Bogosian

Goalies
Filip Gustavsson
Jesper Wallstedt

IHM Lineup Note: Minnesota controls pace through disciplined neutral-zone structure and strong low support in the defensive zone.

Blues - Projected lineup

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

Defense
Philip Broberg - Justin Faulk
Cam Fowler - Logan Mailloux
Tyler Tucker - Matthew Kessel

Goalies
Joel Hofer
Jordan Binnington

IHM Lineup Note: St. Louis must simplify exits and protect the slot. Defensive breakdowns against Kaprizov’s unit will be costly.


New York Islanders vs Florida Panthers

Faceoff: 00:30 CET

Islanders - Projected lineup

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

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

Goalies
David Rittich
Ilya Sorokin

IHM Lineup Note: Islanders play compact five-man structure. Defensive layers and low-slot coverage are key against Florida’s cycle.

Panthers - Projected lineup

Forwards
Carter Verhaeghe - Evan Rodrigues - Sam Reinhart
Mackie Samoskevich - Sam Bennett - Matthew Tkachuk
Eetu Luostarinen - Anton Lundell - Brad Marchand
A.J. Greer - Jesper Boqvist - Sandis Vilmanis

Defense
Gustav Forsling - Aaron Ekblad
Niko Mikkola - Dmitry Kulikov
Donovan Sebrango - Jeff Petry

Goalies
Sergei Bobrovsky
Daniil Tarasov

IHM Lineup Note: Florida thrives on aggressive forecheck pressure and offensive-zone cycling. Reinhart’s positioning in the slot remains central to their scoring efficiency.


Anaheim Ducks vs Calgary Flames

Faceoff: 02:00 CET

Ducks - Projected lineup

Forwards
Chris Kreider - Leo Carlsson - Cutter Gauthier
Jeffrey Viel - Mason McTavish - Beckett Sennecke
Jansen Harkins - Ryan Poehling - Alex Killorn
Ross Johnston - Tim Washe - Frank Vatrano

Defense
Jackson LaCombe - Jacob Trouba
Olen Zellweger - Radko Gudas
Pavel Mintyukov - Drew Helleson

Goalies
Lukas Dostal
Ville Husso

IHM Lineup Note: Anaheim plays physical down low with net-front traffic. Defensive gaps must remain tight against Calgary’s balanced top six.

Flames - Projected lineup

Forwards
Yegor Sharangovich - Mikael Backlund - Matt Coronato
Connor Zary - Nazem Kadri - Joel Farabee
Blake Coleman - Morgan Frost - Matvei Gridin
Martin Pospisil - John Beecher - Adam Klapka

Defense
Kevin Bahl - Mackenzie Weegar
Yan Kuznetsov - Zach Whitecloud
Joel Hanley - Zayne Parekh

Goalies
Devin Cooley
Dustin Wolf

IHM Lineup Note: Calgary’s defensive posture centers around Weegar’s puck management and strong middle-lane coverage.


Q&A: Projected Lineups and Starting Goalies

Why are projected lineups important?
They reflect expected tactical deployment and matchups before puck drop.

When are goalies confirmed?
Usually after morning skate or pregame media availability.

Can lineups change?
Yes. Always check for late scratches and game-time decisions.

NHL Daily Recap - 01 March 2026 | IHM

NHL Daily Recap – 01 March 2026 | IHM

NHL DAILY RECAP – 01 MARCH 2026

Date: 01 March 2026
By IceHockeyMan Newsroom


Final Scores

Colorado Avalanche 3-1 Chicago Blackhawks
Columbus Blue Jackets 3-4 New York Islanders (OT)
Carolina Hurricanes 5-2 Detroit Red Wings
Los Angeles Kings 2-0 Calgary Flames
Montreal Canadiens 6-2 Washington Capitals
Tampa Bay Lightning 2-6 Buffalo Sabres
Toronto Maple Leafs 2-5 Ottawa Senators
Dallas Stars 3-2 Nashville Predators (OT)
Seattle Kraken 5-1 Vancouver Canucks


Game-by-Game Breakdown

Colorado Avalanche 3-1 Chicago Blackhawks

Shots on Goal: 35-15
Shooting %: 8.57% - 6.67%
Saves: 14-32
Save %: 93.33% - 94.12%
Penalties: 5-4
PIM: 10-8

Colorado controlled possession and limited Chicago to just 15 shots. Avalanche structured zone entries and sustained offensive zone time dictated pace.

Columbus Blue Jackets 3-4 New York Islanders (OT)

Shots on Goal: 30-26
Shooting %: 10% - 15.38%
Saves: 22-27
Save %: 84.62% - 90%
Penalties: 2-0
PIM: 4-0

Islanders capitalized on efficiency. Columbus generated more attempts but finishing edge and overtime execution favored New York.

Carolina Hurricanes 5-2 Detroit Red Wings

Shots on Goal: 36-29
Shooting %: 13.89% - 6.9%
Saves: 27-31
Save %: 93.1% - 86.11%
Penalties: 2-4
PIM: 4-10

Carolina dominated shot quality and defensive structure. Detroit struggled containing slot pressure.

Los Angeles Kings 2-0 Calgary Flames

Shots on Goal: 37-29
Shooting %: 5.41% - 0%
Saves: 29-35
Save %: 100% - 97.22%
Penalties: 0-0
PIM: 0-0

A clean defensive performance from Los Angeles. Structured neutral zone control and a shutout performance sealed it.

Montreal Canadiens 6-2 Washington Capitals

Shots on Goal: 25-29
Shooting %: 24% - 6.9%
Saves: 27-19
Save %: 93.1% - 82.61%
Penalties: 5-4
PIM: 10-8

Montreal converted at an elite rate. Capitals generated volume but lacked finishing and defensive stability.

Tampa Bay Lightning 2-6 Buffalo Sabres

Shots on Goal: 38-35
Shooting %: 5.26% - 17.14%
Saves: 29-36
Save %: 82.86% - 94.74%
Penalties: 10-6
PIM: 26-12

Buffalo showed clinical finishing and strong goaltending efficiency. Tampa’s defensive breakdowns proved costly.

Toronto Maple Leafs 2-5 Ottawa Senators

Shots on Goal: 23-40
Shooting %: 8.7% - 12.5%
Saves: 35-21
Save %: 87.5% - 91.3%
Penalties: 8-6
PIM: 27-15

Ottawa overwhelmed Toronto in shot volume and offensive zone time. Leafs were forced into reactive hockey.

Dallas Stars 3-2 Nashville Predators (OT)

Shots on Goal: 25-27
Shooting %: 12% - 7.41%
Saves: 25-22
Save %: 92.59% - 88%
Penalties: 4-4
PIM: 11-11

Tight matchup. Dallas capitalized in overtime with structured transition play.

Seattle Kraken 5-1 Vancouver Canucks

Shots on Goal: 25-28
Shooting %: 20% - 3.57%
Saves: 27-20
Save %: 96.43% - 83.33%
Penalties: 3-4
PIM: 6-16

Seattle demonstrated high shooting efficiency and strong goaltending. Vancouver struggled to convert chances.


Coach Mark Comment

This was a high-variance scoring night across the league. Teams that controlled slot access and neutral-zone transition dictated outcomes. Efficiency separated winners from volume-based teams. Defensive structure and goaltending percentage were the decisive metrics.


Q&A: NHL Game Day Recap

Why is shooting percentage important in recaps?
Because it reflects finishing efficiency relative to shot volume.

What does Save Percentage indicate?
Goaltending performance relative to shots faced.

Why compare Shots on Goal?
It measures territorial control and offensive pressure.

Why track PIM and penalties?
Special teams opportunities significantly influence outcomes.

Does higher shot volume guarantee a win?
No. Shot quality and conversion rate are more decisive.

Why are overtime results important?
They show situational execution under pressure.

What metric most influenced tonight’s results?
Shooting efficiency combined with defensive structure.

NHL Projected Lineups - Game Day Feb 29, 2026

NHL Projected Lineups – Game Day Feb 29, 2026

Date: 29 February 2026
By IceHockeyMan Newsroom

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


Columbus Blue Jackets vs New York Islanders

Faceoff: 00:00 CET

Blue Jackets – Projected lineup

Forwards
Mason Marchment – Adam Fantilli – Kirill Marchenko
Boone Jenner – Sean Monahan – Danton Heinen
Cole Sillinger – Charlie Coyle – Mathieu Olivier
Dmitri Voronkov – Isac Lundestrom – Miles Wood

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

Goalies
Jet Greaves
Elvis Merzlikins

Scratched
Jake Christiansen
Egor Zamula
Kent Johnson

Injured
Brendan Smith (knee surgery)

IHM Lineup Note: Columbus can play straight-line, north-south hockey with heavy slot drives, but the key will be controlled exits under pressure. Werenski’s activation adds a second-wave threat; the risk is the back side if coverage is late on reloads and the gap opens in transition.

Islanders – Projected lineup

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

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

Goalies
Ilya Sorokin
David Rittich

Scratched
Maxim Shabanov
Anthony Duclair
Adam Boqvist

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

IHM Lineup Note: New York will try to keep the game layered through the neutral zone with tighter tracking and fewer free entries allowed. Barzal’s line drives pace off controlled entries, while Sorokin stabilizes aggressive defensive reads when the Islanders push their gaps at the blue line.


Colorado Avalanche vs Chicago Blackhawks

Faceoff: 00:00 CET

Avalanche – Projected lineup

Forwards
Gabriel Landeskog – Nathan MacKinnon – Martin Necas
Artturi Lehkonen – Brock Nelson – Valeri Nichushkin
Ross Colton – Jack Drury – Victor Olofsson
Parker Kelly – Zakhar Bardakov – Gavin Brindley

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

Goalies
Mackenzie Blackwood
Scott Wedgewood

Scratched
None

Injured
Logan O’Connor (hip surgery)
Joel Kiviranta (undisclosed)

IHM Lineup Note: Colorado remains an elite transition team when MacKinnon has speed through the middle lane. Toews and Makar can tilt the ice with fast breakouts and quick re-entries, but the priority is clean puck support on retrievals to avoid getting caught on long-change turnovers.

Blackhawks – Projected lineup

Forwards
Ryan Greene – Connor Bedard – Andre Burakovsky
Oliver Moore – Frank Nazar – Teuvo Teravainen
Tyler Bertuzzi – Jason Dickinson – Ilya Mikheyev
Ryan Donato – Nick Foligno – Landon Slaggert

Defense
Alex Vlasic – Louis Crevier
Matt Grzelcyk – Artyom Levshunov
Connor Murphy – Sam Rinzel

Goalies
Spencer Knight
Arvid Soderblom

Scratched
Sam Lafferty
Colton Dach
Kevin Korchinski

Injured
Wyatt Kaiser (lower body)

IHM Lineup Note: Chicago’s path is simplified: survive shifts, manage the puck, then attack off quick strike counters. Bedard’s line must create separation on entries, while the defense needs strong box-outs and inside positioning to limit slot looks against Colorado’s layered attack.


Los Angeles Kings vs Calgary Flames

Faceoff: 01:00 CET

Kings – Projected lineup

Forwards
Warren Foegele – Anze Kopitar – Corey Perry
Artemi Panarin – Alex Laferriere – Adrian Kempe
Trevor Moore – Quinton Byfield – Taylor Ward
Jeff Malott – Alex Turcotte – Samuel Helenius

Defense
Mikey Anderson – Brian Dumoulin
Joel Edmundson – Brandt Clarke
Jacob Moverare – Cody Ceci

Goalies
Darcy Kuemper
Anton Forsberg

Scratched
Angus Booth

Injured
Drew Doughty (lower body)
Joel Armia (upper body)
Andrei Kuzmenko (lower body)
Kevin Fiala (fractured leg)

IHM Lineup Note: LA can lean into cycle pressure and low-to-high possessions, but without key pieces they must protect the middle and avoid trading chances. Kopitar’s unit should be deployed to control matchups and slow Calgary’s forecheck momentum.

Flames – Projected lineup

Forwards
Yegor Sharangovich – Mikael Backlund – Matt Coronato
Connor Zary – Nazem Kadri – Joel Farabee
Blake Coleman – Morgan Frost – Matvei Gridin
Martin Pospisil – John Beecher – Adam Klapka

Defense
Kevin Bahl – Mackenzie Weegar
Yan Kuznetsov – Zach Whitecloud
Joel Hanley – Zayne Parekh

Goalies
Dustin Wolf
Devin Cooley

Scratched
Ryan Lomberg
Brayden Pachal

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

IHM Lineup Note: Calgary’s best chance is structured pressure: hard rims, strong F1 routes, and quick slot layers once pucks are recovered. Defensive pairs must keep tight gaps to prevent LA from exiting cleanly and setting up controlled entries.


Toronto Maple Leafs vs Ottawa Senators

Faceoff: 01:00 CET

Maple Leafs – Projected lineup

Forwards
Matthew Knies – Auston Matthews – Max Domi
Matias Maccelli – John Tavares – William Nylander
Easton Cowan – Nicolas Roy – Bobby McMann
Dakota Joshua – Scott Laughton – Nicholas Robertson

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

Goalies
Joseph Woll
Anthony Stolarz

Scratched
Steven Lorentz
Calle Jarnkrok
Philippe Myers

Injured
Chris Tanev (groin)
Dakota Mermis (lower body)

IHM Lineup Note: Toronto is built for controlled entries and east-west creation, especially when Nylander is the primary carrier. Matthews can manage the middle with low support, but the Leafs must stay disciplined on turnovers or Ottawa will punish via quick counter attacks.

Senators – Projected lineup

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

Defense
Jake Sanderson – Artem Zub
Thomas Chabot – Nick Jensen
Tyler Kleven – Jordan Spence

Goalies
Linus Ullmark
James Reimer

Scratched
Kurtis MacDermid

Injured
David Perron (sports hernia)
Nikolas Matinpalo (undisclosed)

IHM Lineup Note: Ottawa can generate chaos with a heavy forecheck and net-front traffic, but puck management on exits is non-negotiable versus Toronto’s speed through the neutral zone. If the Senators get stretched, Leafs transition will create high-danger looks.


Carolina Hurricanes vs Detroit Red Wings

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 – Eric Robinson

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

Goalies
Frederik Andersen
Brandon Bussi

Scratched
Jesperi Kotkaniemi
Mike Reilly

Injured
Pyotr Kochetkov (lower body)

IHM Lineup Note: Carolina’s identity is relentless forecheck pressure and rapid retrievals that turn into layered offense. If the Canes win races and keep clean reload positioning, they can tilt shot volume and control matchup flow.

Red Wings – Projected lineup

Forwards
Marco Kasper – Dylan Larkin – Lucas Raymond
Alex DeBrincat – Andrew Copp – Patrick Kane
Emmitt Finnie – J.T. Compher – Mason Appleton
Elmer Soderblom – Michael Rasmussen – James van Riemsdyk

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

Goalies
Cam Talbot
John Gibson

Scratched
Erik Gustafsson
Travis Hamonic
Dominik Shine

Injured
None

IHM Lineup Note: Detroit needs clean zone exits and quick support routes to beat Carolina’s pressure. Larkin’s line can create rush looks, but extended defensive-zone shifts against Carolina’s cycle will test puck retrieval execution.


Montreal Canadiens vs Washington Capitals

Faceoff: 01:00 CET

Canadiens – Projected lineup

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

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

Goalies
Jakub Dobes
Samuel Montembeault

Scratched
Arber Xhekaj
Joe Veleno
Alexandre Texier

Injured
Patrik Laine (lower body)

IHM Lineup Note: Montreal can create pace off quick puck movement from the back end, but they must protect the middle on turnovers. Suzuki line is the possession driver; the key is turning speed into inside-lane chances rather than perimeter volume.

Capitals – Projected lineup

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

Defense
Martin Fehervary – Rasmus Sandin
Jakob Chychrun – Matt Roy
Declan Chisholm – Trevor van Riemsdyk

Goalies
Charlie Lindgren
Logan Thompson

Scratched
Dylan McIlrath
Hendrix Lapierre

Injured
John Carlson (lower body)

IHM Lineup Note: Washington’s attack still funnels to Ovechkin’s weak-side shooting lane, but without full blue-line stability they must manage risk. If the Caps keep their F3 high and exits simple, they can avoid feeding Montreal’s transition game.


Tampa Bay Lightning vs Buffalo Sabres

Faceoff: 01:00 CET

Lightning – Projected lineup

Forwards
Gage Goncalves – Brayden Point – Nikita Kucherov
Jake Guentzel – Dominic James – Brandon Hagel
Zemgus Girgensons – Yanni Gourde – Pontus Holmberg
Oliver Bjorkstrand – Scott Sabourin

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

Goalies
Andrei Vasilevskiy
Jonas Johansson

Scratched
Curtis Douglas
Declan Carlile

Injured
Anthony Cirelli (upper body)
Nick Paul (lower body)
Max Crozier (core muscle)

IHM Lineup Note: Tampa can still manufacture premium looks through Kucherov’s half-wall manipulation and rapid puck rotation. If they dress 11F and 7D, shift management becomes critical, especially on the backcheck and defensive-zone matchups.

Sabres – Projected lineup

Forwards
Peyton Krebs – Tage Thompson – Alex Tuch
Jason Zucker – Ryan McLeod – Jack Quinn
Noah Ostlund – Josh Norris – Josh Doan
Josh Dunne – Tyson Kozak – Beck Malenstyn

Defense
Mattias Samuelsson – Rasmus Dahlin
Bowen Byram – Owen Power
Zach Metsa – Michael Kesselring

Goalies
Ukko-Pekka Luukkonen
Alex Lyon

Scratched
Jacob Bryson
Anton Wahlberg
Colten Ellis

Injured
Zach Benson (upper body)
Jordan Greenway (middle body)
Conor Timmins (broken leg)
Jiri Kulich (blood clot)
Justin Danforth (lower body)

IHM Lineup Note: Buffalo’s ceiling is driven by Dahlin and Power creating offense from the blue line and pushing pace. The Sabres must avoid long defensive shifts and keep their spacing on exits clean to prevent Tampa from feasting on turnovers.


Dallas Stars vs Nashville Predators

Faceoff: 02:00 CET

Stars – Projected lineup

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

Defense
Esa Lindell – Miro Heiskanen
Thomas Harley – Nils Lundkvist
Ilya Lyubushkin – Lian Bichsel

Goalies
Jake Oettinger
Casey DeSmith

Scratched
Kyle Capobianco
Alexander Petrovic

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

IHM Lineup Note: Dallas can run controlled possessions through Heiskanen’s puck movement and strong wall play from the top six. Missing key pieces means they must win the middle and keep their defensive-zone routes efficient to avoid being worn down.

Predators – Projected lineup

Forwards
Steven Stamkos – Ryan O’Reilly – Luke Evangelista
Filip Forsberg – Erik Haula – Michael Bunting
Cole Smith – Michael McCarron – Jonathan Marchessault
Zachary L’Heureux – Tyson Jost – Matthew Wood

Defense
Brady Skjei – Roman Josi
Nicolas Hague – Nick Blankenburg
Adam Wilsby – Nick Perbix

Goalies
Justus Annunen
Juuse Saros

Scratched
Ozzy Wiesblatt
Justin Barron

Injured
None

IHM Lineup Note: Nashville can drive offense through Josi’s activation and Forsberg’s inside-lane attacks. If the Preds win forecheck battles and generate net-front layers, they can stress Dallas’ depth and force penalties.


Seattle Kraken vs Vancouver Canucks

Faceoff: 04:00 CET

Kraken – Projected lineup

Forwards
Jared McCann – Matty Beniers – Jordan Eberle
Jaden Schwartz – Chandler Stephenson – Eeli Tolvanen
Berkly Catton – Shane Wright – Kaapo Kakko
Ben Meyers – Frederick Gaudreau – Jacob Melanson

Defense
Vince Dunn – Adam Larsson
Jamie Oleksiak – Brandon Montour
Ryker Evans – Cale Fleury

Goalies
Joey Daccord
Philipp Grubauer

Scratched
Josh Mahura
Ryan Winterton

Injured
Matt Murray (lower body)
Ryan Lindgren (upper body)

IHM Lineup Note: Seattle can play a strong forecheck game when the puck gets behind the opposing defense, but they must connect short passes in the neutral zone to avoid one-and-done entries. Dunn’s puck moving sets the breakout rhythm when gaps are tight.

Canucks – Projected lineup

Forwards
Evander Kane – Elias Pettersson – Jake DeBrusk
Drew O’Connor – Marco Rossi – Brock Boeser
Liam Ohgren – Teddy Blueger – Conor Garland
Nils Hoglander – David Kampf – Linus Karlsson

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

Goalies
Kevin Lankinen
Nikita Tolopilo

Scratched
Max Sasson
Aatu Raty
Tyler Myers

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

IHM Lineup Note: Vancouver’s best look is off controlled entries with Pettersson orchestrating the middle lane and Boeser finishing from the slot-side pocket. If Myers sits again, defensive zone retrievals and first-pass execution become even more important under Seattle’s pressure.


Q&A: Projected Lineups and Starting Goalies

Q1: What are projected lineups?

Projected lineups are the expected forward lines and defense pairs based on the latest practice information, morning skate reports, and beat-writer updates. They can change closer to puck drop.

Q2: When are starting goalies confirmed?

Starters are most often confirmed after morning skate or during pregame media availability. Final confirmation can also come 30 to 90 minutes before faceoff.

Q3: Why do line combinations change on game day?

Coaches adjust lines for matchups, injury status, travel fatigue, and special teams roles. Late scratches can force quick reshuffles and role changes.

Q4: What is the difference between scratched and injured?

A scratched player is healthy but not in the lineup. Injured players are unavailable due to a reported injury or medical status designation.

Q5: How should I read forward lines and defense pairs?

Lines reflect expected even-strength usage, while defense pairs indicate matchup structure and puck-moving roles. Special teams usage can differ from the listed units.

Q6: What do the IHM lineup notes focus on?

The notes focus on forecheck structure, neutral-zone approach, transition quality, and how personnel changes affect matchups, tempo, and scoring chance quality.

Q7: Can projected lineups change after this post is published?

Yes. Treat projected lineups as the latest snapshot. Always re-check starters and late lineup updates closer to puck drop.


NHL Recap Feb 28, 2026 | IHM

NHL Recap Feb 28, 2026 | IHM

Date: February 28, 2026
By: IceHockeyMan Newsroom

Final Scores

Florida Panthers 2-3 Buffalo Sabres | Washington Capitals 3-2 Vegas Golden Knights | Utah Mammoth 5-2 Minnesota Wild | Anaheim Ducks 5-4 Winnipeg Jets (OT)

Game-by-Game Breakdown

Florida Panthers 2-3 Buffalo Sabres

Buffalo controlled shot volume and slightly edged efficiency. Florida generated secondary pressure but could not match Buffalo’s finishing rhythm.

  • Shots on Goal: FLA 29 | BUF 39
  • Shots off Target: FLA 18 | BUF 14
  • Shooting %: FLA 6.90 | BUF 7.69
  • Blocked Shots: FLA 18 | BUF 16
  • Goalkeeper Saves: FLA 36 | BUF 27
  • Saves %: FLA 94.74 | BUF 93.10
  • Penalties: FLA 3 | BUF 4
  • PIM: FLA 6 | BUF 8

Washington Capitals 3-2 Vegas Golden Knights

Washington capitalized on higher shooting efficiency while maintaining structural discipline in the neutral zone to limit Vegas transition bursts.

  • Shots on Goal: WSH 29 | VGK 26
  • Shots off Target: WSH 14 | VGK 21
  • Shooting %: WSH 10.34 | VGK 7.69
  • Blocked Shots: WSH 12 | VGK 17
  • Goalkeeper Saves: WSH 24 | VGK 26
  • Saves %: WSH 92.31 | VGK 89.66
  • Penalties: WSH 3 | VGK 5
  • PIM: WSH 6 | VGK 10

Utah Mammoth 5-2 Minnesota Wild

Utah imposed territorial dominance with strong shot margin and superior finishing rate, overwhelming Minnesota’s defensive rotations.

  • Shots on Goal: UTA 37 | MIN 23
  • Shots off Target: UTA 14 | MIN 14
  • Shooting %: UTA 13.51 | MIN 8.70
  • Blocked Shots: UTA 19 | MIN 8
  • Goalkeeper Saves: UTA 21 | MIN 32
  • Saves %: UTA 91.30 | MIN 86.49
  • Penalties: UTA 3 | MIN 4
  • PIM: UTA 6 | MIN 6

Anaheim Ducks 5-4 Winnipeg Jets (OT)

A high-event overtime game where Anaheim converted slightly more efficiently in decisive moments despite comparable goaltending percentages.

  • Shots on Goal: ANA 40 | WPG 33
  • Shots off Target: ANA 25 | WPG 21
  • Shooting %: ANA 12.50 | WPG 12.12
  • Blocked Shots: ANA 6 | WPG 15
  • Goalkeeper Saves: ANA 29 | WPG 35
  • Saves %: ANA 87.88 | WPG 87.50
  • Penalties: ANA 5 | WPG 3
  • PIM: ANA 13 | WPG 9

Coach Mark Comment

This slate reinforces the balance between volume and efficiency. Buffalo and Utah combined territorial control with sustainable finishing, while Washington showed how structural discipline can offset small shot deficits.

The Anaheim overtime game highlights how transition precision and puck support become critical in three-on-three situations. In short formats, spacing and defensive recovery speed outweigh raw possession time.

Q&A: Understanding This Game Day

What stat mattered most tonight?

Shot differential combined with finishing efficiency was the clearest separator in three of the four games.

Why did Utah win convincingly?

They controlled pace, generated more interior shots, and maintained consistent zone time pressure.

What decided the overtime game?

Transition awareness and quick puck movement created the decisive breakdown.


NHL Projected Lineups - Game Day February 28, 2026

NHL Projected Lineups - Game Day February 28, 2026

Date: 28 February
By IceHockeyMan Newsroom

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


Florida Panthers vs Buffalo Sabres

Faceoff: 01:00 CET

Panthers - Projected lineup

Forwards

  • Carter Verhaeghe - Evan Rodrigues - Sam Reinhart
  • Mackie Samoskevich - Sam Bennett - Matthew Tkachuk
  • Eetu Luostarinen - Anton Lundell - Brad Marchand
  • A.J. Greer - Cole Schwindt - Sandis Vilmanis

Defense

  • Gustav Forsling - Aaron Ekblad
  • Niko Mikkola - Uvis Balinskis
  • Donovan Sebrango - Jeff Petry

Goalies

  • Sergei Bobrovsky
  • Daniil Tarasov

Scratched

  • Luke Kunin
  • Jesper Boqvist
  • Tobias Bjornfot

Injured

  • Seth Jones (collarbone)
  • Aleksander Barkov (knee)
  • Tomas Nosek (knee)
  • Jonah Gadjovich (upper body)
  • Dmitry Kulikov (shoulder)

IHM Lineup Note:
Florida’s forward groups are built for layered O-zone pressure: strong F1 pursuit, quick support routes, and constant net-front presence. Without Barkov, their center depth leans more on pace and forecheck structure than pure two-way control, so defensive reloads and slot coverage timing become even more important.

Sabres - Projected lineup

Forwards

  • Peyton Krebs - Tage Thompson - Alex Tuch
  • Jason Zucker - Ryan McLeod - Jack Quinn
  • Noah Ostlund - Josh Norris - Josh Doan
  • Josh Dunne - Tyson Kozak - Beck Malenstyn

Defense

  • Mattias Samuelsson - Rasmus Dahlin
  • Zach Metsa - Michael Kesselring
  • Bowen Byram - Owen Power

Goalies

  • Alex Lyon
  • Ukko-Pekka Luukkonen

Scratched

  • Jacob Bryson
  • Anton Wahlberg
  • Colten Ellis

Injured

  • Zach Benson (upper body)
  • Jordan Greenway (middle body)
  • Conor Timmins (broken leg)
  • Jiri Kulich (blood clot)
  • Justin Danforth (lower body)

IHM Lineup Note:
Buffalo’s blueprint is pace and shot volume with Dahlin driving transition and activating into the rush as a second-layer attacker. Against Florida’s forecheck, the Sabres must prioritize clean zone exits and avoid soft rims under pressure, because extended D-zone shifts will lead to breakdowns in the low slot.


Washington Capitals vs Vegas Golden Knights

Faceoff: 01:00 CET

Capitals - Projected lineup

Forwards

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

Defense

  • Martin Fehervary - Trevor van Riemsdyk
  • Jakob Chychrun - Matt Roy
  • Declan Chisholm - Rasmus Sandin

Goalies

  • Logan Thompson
  • Charie Lindgren

Scratched

  • Dylan McIlrath
  • Hendrix Lapierre

Injured

  • John Carlson (lower body)

IHM Lineup Note:
Without Carlson, Washington loses a key puck-moving hub and first-pass distributor, so breakouts may lean more on simple support and chip-and-chase sequences. Ovechkin still hunts the weak-side shooting pocket, and Dubois adds puck protection down the middle to help sustain O-zone time.

Golden Knights - Projected lineup

Forwards

  • Ivan Barbashev - Jack Eichel - Mark Stone
  • Pavel Dorofeyev - Mitch Marner - Reilly Smith
  • Braeden Bowman - Tomas Hertl - Keegan Kolesar
  • Brandon Saad - Colton Sissons - Alexander Holtz

Defense

  • Jeremy Lauzon - Shea Theodore
  • Noah Hanifin - Rasmus Andersson
  • Brayden McNabb - Kaedan Korczak

Goalies

  • Akira Schmid
  • Adin Hill

Scratched

  • Cole Reinhardt
  • Ben Hutton

Injured

  • Carter Hart (lower body)
  • Brett Howden (lower body)
  • William Karlsson (lower body)
  • Jonas Rondbjerg (lower body)

IHM Lineup Note:
Vegas is built for matchup control and aggressive neutral-zone pressure that forces rushed exits and quick re-entries. With Eichel and Theodore back, their transition pace and blue-line activation improve, and Marner adds elite puck transport to drive controlled entries and high-danger looks off seams.


Utah Mammoth vs Minnesota Wild

Faceoff: 03:00 CET

Mammoth - Projected lineup

Forwards

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

Defense

  • Mikhail Sergachev - Sean Durzi
  • Nate Schmidt - John Marino
  • Ian Cole - Nick DeSimone

Goalies

  • Karel Vejmelka
  • Vitek Vanecek

Scratched

  • Olli Maatta
  • Liam O’Brien
  • Brandon Tanev

Injured

  • None

IHM Lineup Note:
Utah has multiple lines that can attack off transition with speed, but the key is defending the middle lane on the backcheck. Sergachev-Durzi can drive controlled exits and quick counterattacks, yet they must manage pinches to avoid giving Minnesota odd-man rushes.

Wild - Projected lineup

Forwards

  • Kirill Kaprizov - Ryan Hartman - Mats Zuccarello
  • Marcus Johansson - Joel Eriksson Ek - Matt Boldy
  • Yakov Trenin - Danila Yurov - Vladimir Tarasenko
  • Marcus Foligno - Nico Sturm - Vinnie Hinostroza

Defense

  • Quinn Hughes - Brock Faber
  • Jacob Middleton - Jared Spurgeon
  • Daemon Hunt - Zach Bogosian

Goalies

  • Jesper Wallstedt
  • Filip Gustavsson

Scratched

  • Ben Jones
  • Matt Kiersted

Injured

  • Jonas Brodin (lower body)

IHM Lineup Note:
Minnesota can generate layered offense through strong puck support and quick slot rotations, with Eriksson Ek acting as a net-front and retrieval anchor. The Hughes-Faber pair brings elite puck movement, so expect Minnesota to look for fast up-ice distribution and controlled entries rather than dumping pucks blindly.


Anaheim Ducks vs Winnipeg Jets

Faceoff: 04:00 CET

Ducks - Projected lineup

Forwards

  • Chris Kreider - Leo Carlsson - Cutter Gauthier
  • Alex Killorn - Mason McTavish - Beckett Sennecke
  • Jeffrey Viel - Ryan Poehling - Jansen Harkins
  • Ross Johnston - Tim Washe - Frank Vatrano

Defense

  • Jackson LaCombe - Jacob Trouba
  • Olen Zellweger - Radko Gudas
  • Pavel Mintyukov - Ian Moore

Goalies

  • Lukas Dostal
  • Ville Husso

Scratched

  • Drew Helleson
  • Ryan Strome

Injured

  • Mikael Granlund (upper body)
  • Troy Terry (undisclosed)

IHM Lineup Note:
Anaheim’s forward mix can produce net-front pressure and cycle shifts, but their biggest need is clean execution on exits to avoid getting trapped. Trouba’s presence changes the physical tone and defensive spacing, yet puck movement under pressure will decide whether they can transition efficiently.

Jets - Projected lineup

Forwards

  • Kyle Connor - Mark Scheifele - Gabriel Vilardi
  • Cole Perfetti - Adam Lowry - Alex Iafallo
  • Gustav Nyquist - Jonathan Toews - Vladislav Namestnikov
  • Cole Koepke - Morgan Barron - Tanner Pearson

Defense

  • Dylan Samberg - Elias Salomonsson
  • Logan Stanley - Dylan DeMelo
  • Ville Heinola - Luke Schenn

Goalies

  • Connor Hellebuyck
  • Eric Comrie

Scratched

  • Walker Duehr
  • Kale Clague
  • Domenic DiVincentiis

Injured

  • Josh Morrissey (upper body)
  • Nino Niederreiter (undisclosed)
  • Neal Pionk (undisclosed)
  • Haydn Fleury (bruised back)
  • Colin Miller (knee)

IHM Lineup Note:
Winnipeg’s top line can tilt the ice with controlled entries and quick-strike offense, but injuries on the blue line reduce breakout options. If Morrissey and Pionk remain out, the Jets will likely simplify retrievals, prioritize safe wall plays, and lean on Hellebuyck to stabilize high-danger moments.


New York Rangers vs Pittsburgh Penguins

Faceoff: 18:30 CET

Rangers - Projected lineup

Forwards

  • J.T. Miller - Mika Zibanejad - Gabe Perreault
  • Will Cuylle - Vincent Trocheck - Alexis Lafreniere
  • Conor Sheary - Noah Laba - Brendan Brisson
  • Tye Kartye - Sam Carrick - Taylor Raddysh

Defense

  • Vladislav Gavrikov - Adam Fox
  • Braden Schneider - Will Borgen
  • Matthew Robertson - Vincent Iorio

Goalies

  • Igor Shesterkin
  • Jonathan Quick

Scratched

  • Jonny Brodzinski
  • Scott Morrow
  • Urho Vaakanainen

Injured

  • Matt Rempe (upper body)
  • Adam Edstrom (lower body)

IHM Lineup Note:
With Fox back in the top pair, New York’s transition game and controlled exits improve immediately. The Rangers will look to manage the neutral zone with layered structure, then attack off quick entries and middle-lane drives to create second chances in the slot.

Penguins - Projected lineup

Forwards

  • Egor Chinakhov - Tommy Novak - Evgeni Malkin
  • Avery Hayes - Rickard Rakell - Bryan Rust
  • Anthony Mantha - Ben Kindel - Justin Brazeau
  • Connor Dewar - Blake Lizotte - Noel Acciari

Defense

  • Parker Wotherspoon - Erik Karlsson
  • Ryan Shea - Kris Letang
  • Ryan Graves - Connor Clifton

Goalies

  • Stuart Skinner
  • Arturs Silovs

Scratched

  • Kevin Hayes
  • Ilya Solovyov

Injured

  • Sidney Crosby (lower body)
  • Samuel Girard (lower body)
  • Jack St. Ivany (hand surgery)
  • Caleb Jones (lower body)

IHM Lineup Note:
Without Crosby, Pittsburgh’s center depth shifts and their puck-possession baseline drops, so they must play cleaner, simpler hockey. Karlsson still drives transition, but the Penguins need tight gap control and disciplined puck support to avoid being stretched by New York’s speed through the neutral zone.


Philadelphia Flyers vs Boston Bruins

Faceoff: 21:00 CET

Flyers - Projected lineup

Forwards

  • Trevor Zegras - Christian Dvorak - Travis Konecny
  • Denver Barkey - Sean Couturier - Owen Tippett
  • Matvei Michkov - Noah Cates - Bobby Brink
  • Nik ita Grebenkin - Carl Grundstrom - Garnet Hathaway

Defense

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

Goalies

  • Dan Vladar
  • Samuel Ersson

Scratched

  • Emil Andrae
  • Nicolas Deslauriers

Injured

  • Tyson Foerster (arm)
  • Rodrigo Abols (lower body)

IHM Lineup Note:
Philadelphia’s best chance is to win the forecheck battle and create east-west movement before Boston’s structure sets. Zegras can drive creative entries, but Couturier’s line has to handle heavy defensive-zone matchups and protect the slot against Bruins net-front pressure.

Bruins - Projected lineup

Forwards

  • Marat Khusnutdinov - Elias Lindholm - David Pastrnak
  • Casey Mittelstadt - Pavel Zacha - Viktor Arvidsson
  • Michael Eyssimont - Fraser Minten - 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
  • Henri Jokiharju
  • Jordan Harris

Injured

  • None

IHM Lineup Note:
Boston’s game revolves around controlled zone time, layered slot presence, and strong wall play that turns into second-chance offense. With McAvoy and Lindholm anchoring matchups, the Bruins can keep tight gaps and force low-percentage shots, then counter off quick retrievals.


San Jose Sharks vs Edmonton Oilers

Faceoff: 22:00 CET

Sharks - Projected lineup

Forwards

  • Will Smith - Macklin Celebrini - Kiefer Sherwood
  • Philipp Kurashev - Alexander Wennberg - Collin Graf
  • William Eklund - Michael Misa - Tyler Toffoli
  • Barclay Goodrow - Zack Ostapchuk - Ryan Reaves

Defense

  • Dmitry Orlov - John Klingberg
  • Mario Ferraro - Timothy Liljegren
  • Sam Dickinson - Vincent Desharnais

Goalies

  • Yaroslav Askarov
  • Alex Nedeljkovic

Scratched

  • Adam Gaudette
  • Pavol Regenda
  • Shakir Mukhamadullin

Injured

  • Ty Dellandrea (lower body)

IHM Lineup Note:
San Jose will need strong puck support on exits and disciplined spacing to survive Edmonton’s speed through the neutral zone. If the Sharks cannot protect the middle lane, they will be forced into extended defensive-zone shifts and repeated slot collapses.

Oilers - Projected lineup

Forwards

  • Ryan Nugent-Hopkins - Connor McDavid - Zach Hyman
  • Matt Savoie - Leon Draisaitl - Jack Roslovic
  • Vasily Podkolzin - Adam Henrique - Trent Frederic
  • Andrew Mangiapane - Curtis Lazar - Kasperi Kapanen

Defense

  • Mattias Ekholm - Evan Bouchard
  • Darnell Nurse - Jake Walman
  • Spencer Stastney - Ty Emberson

Goalies

  • Connor Ingram
  • Tristan Jarry

Scratched

  • None

Injured

  • Mattias Janmark (undisclosed)

IHM Lineup Note:
Edmonton’s top unit is an entry machine, forcing early defensive collapses and creating slot looks off speed and quick support routes. If the Oilers win the retrieval battle, Bouchard can keep pucks alive at the blue line and sustain pressure through layered attacks.


St. Louis Blues vs New Jersey Devils

Faceoff: 23:00 CET

Blues - Projected lineup

Forwards

  • Brayden Schenn - Dalibor Dvorsky - Jimmy Snuggerud
  • Jake Neighbours - Pavel Buchnevich - Jordan Kyrou
  • Dylan Holloway - Pius Suter - Jonatan Berggren
  • Alexey Toropchenko - Jack Finley - Nathan Walker

Defense

  • Philip Broberg - Colton Parayko
  • Tyler Tucker - Justin Faulk
  • Cam Fowler - Logan Mailloux

Goalies

  • Jordan Binnington
  • Joel Hofer

Scratched

  • Robby Fabbri
  • Matthew Kessel

Injured

  • Robert Thomas (lower body)
  • Oskar Sundqvist (upper body)

IHM Lineup Note:
St. Louis is built to play direct and attack off quick turnovers, but without Thomas their center depth and controlled-entry efficiency drop. The Blues need strong wall play, net-front presence, and disciplined tracking to avoid getting stretched by New Jersey speed.

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

  • Brett Pesce - Johnathan Kovacevic
  • Jonas Siegenthaler - Dougie Hamilton
  • Brenden Dillon - Simon Nemec

Goalies

  • Jacob Markstrom
  • Jake Allen

Scratched

  • Luke Glendening
  • Evgenii Dadonov
  • Colton White

Injured

  • Luke Hughes (shoulder)
  • Stefan Noesen (knee)
  • Zack MacEwen (ACL)

IHM Lineup Note:
With Jack Hughes back in the top six, New Jersey’s transition pace and controlled-entry threat rises immediately. The Devils can create seam looks off quick puck movement, but they must manage turnovers at both blue lines to avoid giving St. Louis momentum through counterattacks.


Q&A: Projected Lineups and Starting Goalies

Q1: What are projected lineups?
Projected lineups are the expected forward lines and defense pairs based on the latest practice information, morning skate reports, and beat-writer updates. They can change closer to puck drop.

Q2: When are starting goalies confirmed?
Starters are most often confirmed after morning skate or during pregame media availability. Final confirmation can also come 30 to 90 minutes before faceoff.

Q3: Why do line combinations change on game day?
Coaches adjust lines for matchups, injury status, travel fatigue, and special teams roles. Late scratches can force quick reshuffles and role changes.

Q4: What is the difference between scratched and injured?
A scratched player is healthy but not in the lineup. Injured players are unavailable due to a reported injury or medical status designation.

Q5: How should I read forward lines and defense pairs?
Lines reflect expected even-strength usage, while defense pairs indicate matchup structure and puck-moving roles. Special teams usage can differ from the listed units.

Q6: What do the IHM lineup notes focus on?
The notes focus on forecheck structure, neutral-zone approach, transition quality, and how personnel changes affect matchups, tempo, and scoring chance quality.

Q7: Can projected lineups change after this post is published?
Yes. Treat projected lineups as the latest snapshot. Always re-check starters and late lineup updates closer to puck drop.


NHL SHORT NEWS | Feb 27

NHL SHORT NEWS | Feb 27

IHM NHL SHORT NEWS

Status, Scoring, Trade Pressure | February 27, 2026

Date: 27 February 2026
By IceHockeyMan Newsroom

Playoff race tightens. Injuries, returns and deadline tension all collide.

Wilson Returns for Capitals

Tom Wilson is back in the lineup for Washington against Vegas. Meanwhile, John Carlson has been ruled out for the back-to-back.

Why it matters: Washington regains physical edge, but blue-line stability takes a hit without Carlson.

Girard Sidelined, Thomas Could Return

Samuel Girard is out with a lower-body injury for Pittsburgh. Robert Thomas could return for St. Louis.

Why it matters: Penguins’ puck movement suffers without Girard. Blues gain center depth if Thomas returns.

Schaefer’s Historic Rookie Push

Matthew Schaefer scored twice, including a power-play goal, in a 4-3 overtime win in Montreal. Advanced metrics continue to support his Calder Trophy trajectory.

Why it matters: Elite offensive production from the back end changes matchup structure nightly.

Multi-Goal Nights

Viktor Arvidsson scored twice in a 4-2 win. Noah Dobson scored two goals in a 4-3 overtime loss.

Why it matters: Secondary scoring continues to swing tight games.

Trade Deadline Pressure Builds

Minnesota GM Bill Guerin indicated the Wild “still have work to do.” League chatter suggests several clubs may wait until the final days before making major moves.

Why it matters: Standings over the next few days will dictate aggressor vs seller identity.

Goalie Watch

Charlie Lindgren starts Saturday in Montreal. Akira Schmid starts against Washington. Logan Thompson starts Friday.

Why it matters: Goaltending decisions become sharper as points tighten.

Coach Mark Comment

Late February hockey is about stability. Teams that control defensive pair rhythm and avoid emotional swings after trade rumors gain immediate advantage.

Q&A: NHL Status and Trade Watch

Q1: Why is Wilson’s return important for Washington?
His physical presence and net-front pressure immediately affect forecheck intensity and power-play structure.

Q2: How does Girard’s injury impact Pittsburgh?
It reduces puck-moving depth on the blue line, especially in transition setups.

Q3: Are teams waiting before making trades?
Yes. Several general managers indicate decisions may come closer to the Deadline depending on standings.

Q4: Why are rookie performances gaining attention?
Metrics-driven analysis highlights long-term development trends beyond traditional scoring totals.

IceHockeyMan Newsroom


NHL Daily Recap Feb 27, 2026 | IHM

NHL Daily Recap Feb 27, 2026 | IHM


By IceHockeyMan Newsroom | Date: February 27, 2026

Final Scores

Boston Bruins 4-2 Columbus Blue Jackets | Carolina Hurricanes 5-4 Tampa Bay Lightning | Florida Panthers 5-1 Toronto Maple Leafs | Montreal Canadiens 3-4 New York Islanders (OT) | Ottawa Senators 1-2 Detroit Red Wings (OT) | Pittsburgh Penguins 4-1 New Jersey Devils | Nashville Predators 4-2 Chicago Blackhawks | New York Rangers 2-3 Philadelphia Flyers (OT) | St. Louis Blues 5-1 Seattle Kraken | Colorado Avalanche 2-5 Minnesota Wild | San Jose Sharks 1-4 Calgary Flames | Los Angeles Kings 1-8 Edmonton Oilers

Game-by-Game Breakdown

Boston Bruins 4-2 Columbus Blue Jackets

Boston won the finishing battle early and protected the middle with layers, even as Columbus carried major shot volume for long stretches.

Team Stats

  • Shots on Goal: BOS 23 | CBJ 40
  • Shots off Target: BOS 19 | CBJ 15
  • Shooting %: BOS 17.39 | CBJ 5.00
  • Blocked Shots: BOS 11 | CBJ 20
  • Goalkeeper Saves: BOS 38 | CBJ 19
  • Saves %: BOS 95.00 | CBJ 86.36
  • Penalties: BOS 1 | CBJ 3
  • PIM: BOS 2 | CBJ 6

Carolina Hurricanes 5-4 Tampa Bay Lightning

A tight, high-conversion game where both teams finished at a strong rate, with Carolina holding the edge on total volume and puck management in key moments.

Team Stats

  • Shots on Goal: CAR 33 | TBL 28
  • Shots off Target: CAR 8 | TBL 12
  • Shooting %: CAR 15.15 | TBL 14.29
  • Blocked Shots: CAR 20 | TBL 16
  • Goalkeeper Saves: CAR 24 | TBL 28
  • Saves %: CAR 85.71 | TBL 84.85
  • Penalties: CAR 2 | TBL 2
  • PIM: CAR 4 | TBL 4

Florida Panthers 5-1 Toronto Maple Leafs

Florida controlled the game with consistent pressure and clean defensive posture, forcing Toronto into a low-efficiency shot profile and limiting second chances.

Team Stats

  • Shots on Goal: FLA 37 | TOR 29
  • Shots off Target: FLA 16 | TOR 12
  • Shooting %: FLA 13.51 | TOR 3.45
  • Blocked Shots: FLA 12 | TOR 10
  • Goalkeeper Saves: FLA 28 | TOR 32
  • Saves %: FLA 96.55 | TOR 91.43
  • Penalties: FLA 4 | TOR 4
  • PIM: FLA 8 | TOR 8

Montreal Canadiens 3-4 New York Islanders (OT)

Both teams played a balanced shot game, and the Islanders’ slightly better finishing rate was the difference in an overtime finish.

Team Stats

  • Shots on Goal: MTL 24 | NYI 26
  • Shots off Target: MTL 12 | NYI 16
  • Shooting %: MTL 12.50 | NYI 15.38
  • Blocked Shots: MTL 20 | NYI 20
  • Goalkeeper Saves: MTL 23 | NYI 21
  • Saves %: MTL 84.62 | NYI 87.50
  • Penalties: MTL 2 | NYI 3
  • PIM: MTL 4 | NYI 6

Ottawa Senators 1-2 Detroit Red Wings (OT)

Ottawa owned shot volume but could not convert, while Detroit stayed composed, protected the slot, and got elite goaltending efficiency to steal it in overtime.

Team Stats

  • Shots on Goal: OTT 27 | DET 20
  • Shots off Target: OTT 17 | DET 13
  • Shooting %: OTT 3.70 | DET 10.00
  • Blocked Shots: OTT 21 | DET 25
  • Goalkeeper Saves: OTT 18 | DET 26
  • Saves %: OTT 90.00 | DET 96.30
  • Penalties: OTT 6 | DET 5
  • PIM: OTT 23 | DET 13

Pittsburgh Penguins 4-1 New Jersey Devils

Pittsburgh carried the flow with stronger finishing and a big saves edge, while New Jersey’s shot volume did not translate into high-value looks.

Team Stats

  • Shots on Goal: PIT 35 | NJD 29
  • Shots off Target: PIT 14 | NJD 21
  • Shooting %: PIT 11.43 | NJD 3.45
  • Blocked Shots: PIT 11 | NJD 21
  • Goalkeeper Saves: PIT 28 | NJD 31
  • Saves %: PIT 96.55 | NJD 91.18
  • Penalties: PIT 5 | NJD 3
  • PIM: PIT 10 | NJD 6

Nashville Predators 4-2 Chicago Blackhawks

Nashville converted at a higher rate and held Chicago to a manageable finishing level, with a clean saves edge and strong special-teams discipline.

Team Stats

  • Shots on Goal: NSH 26 | CHI 23
  • Shots off Target: NSH 9 | CHI 8
  • Shooting %: NSH 15.38 | CHI 8.70
  • Blocked Shots: NSH 6 | CHI 12
  • Goalkeeper Saves: NSH 21 | CHI 22
  • Saves %: NSH 91.30 | CHI 88.00
  • Penalties: NSH 5 | CHI 2
  • PIM: NSH 12 | CHI 4

New York Rangers 2-3 Philadelphia Flyers (OT)

A one-goal game where Philadelphia’s finishing efficiency edged it, and the overtime finish reflected how tight the margins were across five-on-five.

Team Stats

  • Shots on Goal: NYR 24 | PHI 25
  • Shots off Target: NYR 17 | PHI 8
  • Shooting %: NYR 8.33 | PHI 12.00
  • Blocked Shots: NYR 11 | PHI 15
  • Goalkeeper Saves: NYR 22 | PHI 22
  • Saves %: NYR 88.00 | PHI 91.67
  • Penalties: NYR 6 | PHI 4
  • PIM: NYR 15 | PHI 11

St. Louis Blues 5-1 Seattle Kraken

St. Louis put the game away with elite conversion and a strong goaltending layer, while Seattle’s offense stayed mostly perimeter-based.

Team Stats

  • Shots on Goal: STL 31 | SEA 24
  • Shots off Target: STL 11 | SEA 17
  • Shooting %: STL 16.13 | SEA 4.17
  • Blocked Shots: STL 11 | SEA 12
  • Goalkeeper Saves: STL 23 | SEA 26
  • Saves %: STL 95.83 | SEA 86.67
  • Penalties: STL 3 | SEA 0
  • PIM: STL 6 | SEA 0

Colorado Avalanche 2-5 Minnesota Wild

Colorado drove massive shot volume but could not finish, while Minnesota turned fewer looks into goals and backed it with high-level saves efficiency.

Team Stats

  • Shots on Goal: COL 47 | MIN 36
  • Shots off Target: COL 20 | MIN 16
  • Shooting %: COL 4.26 | MIN 13.89
  • Blocked Shots: COL 13 | MIN 12
  • Goalkeeper Saves: COL 31 | MIN 45
  • Saves %: COL 91.18 | MIN 95.74
  • Penalties: COL 6 | MIN 3
  • PIM: COL 12 | MIN 6

San Jose Sharks 1-4 Calgary Flames

Calgary won with clear finishing separation and a strong goaltending result, while San Jose’s shot volume did not translate into goals.

Team Stats

  • Shots on Goal: SJS 35 | CGY 29
  • Shots off Target: SJS 10 | CGY 10
  • Shooting %: SJS 2.86 | CGY 13.79
  • Blocked Shots: SJS 23 | CGY 7
  • Goalkeeper Saves: SJS 25 | CGY 34
  • Saves %: SJS 89.29 | CGY 97.14
  • Penalties: SJS 3 | CGY 3
  • PIM: SJS 6 | CGY 6

Los Angeles Kings 1-8 Edmonton Oilers

Edmonton buried its chances at a dominant rate, and the game broke open on finishing and sustained pressure, with Los Angeles unable to stabilize the defensive layer.

Team Stats

  • Shots on Goal: LAK 22 | EDM 37
  • Shots off Target: LAK 13 | EDM 12
  • Shooting %: LAK 4.55 | EDM 21.62
  • Blocked Shots: LAK 14 | EDM 11
  • Goalkeeper Saves: LAK 29 | EDM 21
  • Saves %: LAK 78.38 | EDM 95.45
  • Penalties: LAK 3 | EDM 2
  • PIM: LAK 6 | EDM 4

Coach Mark Comment

The main separator across this slate was finishing efficiency versus raw volume. Colorado and Columbus both carried heavy shot counts, but the results show what happens when shots do not consistently arrive from the interior with screens, rebounds, and layered second chances. Minnesota and Boston absorbed pressure, stayed compact, and leaned on goaltending efficiency to turn long defensive segments into wins.

Several games also show how goaltending plus discipline can bend outcomes. Detroit taking an overtime win while being outshot is a classic example of surviving the event count, protecting the slot, and letting saves percentage carry the marginal moments. In the tighter overtime games, small edges in shot quality and defensive retrievals decide the finish, especially when fatigue changes matchup control late.

If you are trend-spotting, track the relationship between shooting percentage and saves percentage over a short window. When a team wins repeatedly with low conversion, it usually signals sustainable territorial control or elite defensive structure. When wins rely on extreme finishing spikes, it can be volatile unless the team is consistently creating slot looks off forecheck pressure and clean zone entries.

Q&A: Understanding NHL Daily Recaps

1) What should I look at first in a recap?

Start with the final score, then check shots on goal and shooting percentage to understand whether the result was driven by volume, finishing, or both.

2) Why do some teams win while being outshot?

Efficiency and game state matter. A team can win on higher-quality looks, elite goaltending, or by scoring first and defending the middle with layers.

3) What does saves percentage tell me in one game?

It indicates goaltending efficiency on the shots that reached the net, but it does not fully capture shot quality or screens. Use it with context.

4) How should I interpret blocked shots?

Blocked shots can show strong defensive buy-in, but very high totals may also suggest the team spent too much time defending in-zone.

5) Why are penalties and PIM important in recaps?

Penalty volume disrupts line rhythm, increases fatigue, and can swing matchups. PIM helps quantify how chaotic or disciplined the game was.

6) What is a quick sign a game was high-event?

Look for high shots on goal combined with strong shooting percentages, or an overtime finish with both teams pushing pace late.

7) How do I use recaps to spot trends?

Track repeated patterns across multiple games: shot share, finishing rate, penalties, and saves efficiency. Trends become clearer over a 5 to 10 game window.


NHL Trade Deadline Watch 2026- IHM

NHL Trade Deadline Watch 2026

Date: 26 February 2026
By IceHockeyMan Newsroom

NHL Trade Deadline Watch: Kings Searching, Flames Listening, Market Reset After Olympics

The Olympic freeze has lifted. The gold medals are handed out. Now the real season resumes – and the NHL trade market is accelerating.

With just over a week until the deadline, front offices are recalibrating after Milano Cortina. Some contenders gained clarity. Others exposed structural holes.

Los Angeles Kings: Scoring Emergency

The Kings entered the Olympic break needing secondary scoring. They exit it with even greater urgency.

Kevin Fiala remains out long-term, and internally there is recognition that playoff hockey demands more finishing depth.

Patrik Laine has been mentioned externally, but league sources suggest he is not viewed as a structural fit in Los Angeles’ current system.

The Kings want controlled offense, not streak volatility. They are searching for middle-six production with defensive accountability.

Montreal Canadiens: Strategic Patience

The Canadiens are not acting emotionally. They are evaluating asset timing.

Montreal is listening more than initiating. They are not forced sellers. But they will extract premium value if a contender becomes desperate.

Calgary Flames: Kadri and Weegar Calls Increasing

Nazem Kadri’s name continues to surface. Calgary has received strong offers – and they believe better ones could emerge as the deadline approaches.

MacKenzie Weegar is drawing calls. The Flames are listening. But listening does not equal moving.

Calgary understands market leverage. Patience increases value.

Vancouver Canucks: Pettersson Watch

Elias Pettersson speculation remains alive but controlled. Vancouver will not initiate pressure. They will respond to it.

Internally, there is recognition that moving a franchise center shifts identity. It requires overwhelming return.

Winnipeg Jets and San Jose Sharks: Blue Line Conversations

Some teams are monitoring Winnipeg’s defensive depth. Meanwhile, San Jose is evaluating multiple defense targets.

Expect right-handed defensemen to command higher deadline value this year. The pending UFA market is stronger on that side.

Toronto, Colorado, Rangers: Quiet Calculations

Toronto has decisions to make regarding depth forwards. Colorado has flexibility if the right center becomes available.

New York Rangers could expand re-tool discussions depending on internal evaluation over the next five games.

Top Trade Watch List Themes

  • Secondary scoring depth for Western contenders
  • Right-handed defensemen premium market
  • Veteran centers with playoff experience
  • Pending UFAs driving bidding wars

Coach Mark - Trade Market Intelligence

The trade deadline is never about who wants to move. It is about who is forced to move.

After the Olympics, some teams gained belief. Others lost structural confidence. Confidence changes aggression.

Los Angeles will act. They cannot enter the playoffs thin upfront.

Calgary will wait. Patience is leverage.

Vancouver will only move if overwhelmed. Anything less is noise.

The most dangerous buyers are the teams that look stable but know internally they are not deep enough. Those front offices make decisive moves in the final 72 hours.

Watch Western Conference contenders. The East is calculating. The West is urgent.

Trade Pressure Meter - Deadline Urgency Scale

As the deadline approaches, urgency levels are separating contenders from pretenders. Here is the current pressure index across key teams.

  • Los Angeles Kings - HIGH: Offensive depth is not optional. They must add scoring support before entering playoff rounds.
  • Calgary Flames - MEDIUM: Listening aggressively, but not desperate. Kadri and Weegar leverage increases as the clock ticks.
  • Vancouver Canucks - CONTROLLED: Pettersson speculation exists, but internal pressure is low unless a blockbuster offer appears.
  • Montreal Canadiens - LOW: Strategic flexibility, no urgency.
  • Winnipeg Jets - WATCH: Blue line depth creates trade optionality.
  • Toronto Maple Leafs - QUIET CALCULATION: Depth tweaks possible.

Post-Olympic Market Shift

The Olympic tournament revealed more than medals. It exposed fatigue, chemistry dynamics, defensive reliability, and composure under pressure. Front offices adjust valuations after events like this.

Players who elevated under international spotlight have strengthened their leverage. Players who struggled may find their market quietly cooling.

This deadline will not only reflect standings. It will reflect Olympic data.

Coach Mark - Trade Deadline Psychology

Deadlines are not about talent. They are about pressure.

The teams that move early are confident. The teams that wait are calculating. The teams that move in the final 48 hours are usually reacting.

Los Angeles cannot afford hesitation. Calgary benefits from patience. Vancouver will only act from strength.

The most dangerous moves are the quiet ones – the depth defenseman, the reliable third-line center, the playoff penalty killer. Championship teams are built through stability, not splash.

IHM Trade Watch Report - Volume 2 will monitor final 72-hour acceleration across the league. The market is warming.


Q&A: NHL Trade Deadline 2026 - Market Intelligence Breakdown

Why is the trade market accelerating immediately after the Olympics?

International tournaments compress evaluation timelines. Front offices receive high-pressure performance data in elimination settings. That exposure forces clarity. Teams either confirm internal belief or identify structural gaps. Once the Olympic freeze lifted, recalibration began instantly.

Why are the Los Angeles Kings under high deadline pressure?

Los Angeles lacks consistent middle-six finishing depth. In playoff series, scoring depth becomes survival currency. With Fiala unavailable long-term, the Kings must add reliable offensive support without sacrificing defensive structure. Hesitation increases vulnerability in the Western Conference.

Is Patrik Laine a realistic fit for the Kings?

From a structural perspective, volatility conflicts with Los Angeles’ controlled system. The Kings prioritize defensive accountability within layered transition play. Laine offers high-end shot talent, but stylistic fit remains questionable. Deadline decisions will favor repeatable playoff utility over isolated scoring bursts.

Why are the Calgary Flames holding leverage with Nazem Kadri?

Calgary is not forced to move him. Patience creates bidding escalation. As contenders become nervous about center depth, offer quality improves. The Flames benefit from time. The closer to deadline, the stronger their negotiating position.

Could MacKenzie Weegar realistically be traded?

Calls are being taken, but moving a top-four defenseman requires elite return. Defense scarcity inflates value at the deadline. Calgary would only move Weegar if structural retooling outweighs short-term playoff positioning.

How serious is the Elias Pettersson trade speculation?

Speculation exists because elite centers always generate inquiry. However, Vancouver understands identity cost. A franchise center trade requires overwhelming return - multiple premium assets plus controllable value. Anything less is noise.

Are right-handed defensemen the true premium this year?

Yes. The pending UFA class is stronger on the right side. Playoff hockey magnifies breakout efficiency and defensive zone retrieval. Right-shot defenders capable of handling forecheck pressure will command elevated prices.

Which conference is more likely to make aggressive moves?

The Western Conference. The competitive density forces decisive action. The East has structured contenders with stable cores, while the West includes teams with identifiable scoring gaps.

What is the most dangerous type of deadline move?

The quiet move. A defensively responsible third-line center. A penalty-kill specialist. A stabilizing depth defenseman. Championship teams are often shaped by understated acquisitions rather than headline trades.

How does Olympic fatigue impact trade evaluation?

Performance swings post-tournament are common. Front offices separate fatigue from structural limitation. Smart teams avoid overreacting to short-term regression in the first NHL week back.

Is there a risk of overpaying this year?

Yes. Scarcity plus deadline psychology inflates cost. Teams chasing playoff positioning are vulnerable to panic bidding. Disciplined contenders avoid emotional escalation.

What is Coach Mark’s central principle at the deadline?

Acquire stability, not excitement. Depth, not headlines. Championship windows close because of structural cracks, not lack of star power.

Will Volume 2 focus on final-hour acceleration?

Yes. The final 72 hours reveal which general managers are confident and which are reacting. Trade Watch Report - Volume 2 will monitor market escalation patterns.



NHL Daily Recap Feb 26 2026 Final Scores

NHL Daily Recap Feb 26 2026 Final Scores

IHM NHL Daily Recap - February 26, 2026 | Final Scores and Game Stats

NHL Daily Recap - February 26, 2026

Date: February 26, 2026
By IceHockeyMan Newsroom


Final Scores

New Jersey Devils 1-2 Buffalo Sabres | Washington Capitals 3-1 Philadelphia Flyers | Tampa Bay Lightning 4-2 Toronto Maple Leafs | Dallas Stars 4-1 Seattle Kraken | Utah Mammoth 2-4 Colorado Avalanche | Los Angeles Kings 4-6 Vegas Golden Knights | Vancouver Canucks 2-3 Winnipeg Jets (OT) | Anaheim Ducks 6-5 Edmonton Oilers


Game-by-Game Breakdown

New Jersey Devils 1-2 Buffalo Sabres

Buffalo edged this one through slightly better finishing efficiency and controlled defensive layers late, despite a nearly even shot profile. New Jersey generated volume but struggled to convert interior looks.

Team Stats

  • Shots on Goal: NJD 28 | BUF 30
  • Shots off Target: NJD 18 | BUF 16
  • Shooting %: NJD 3.57 | BUF 6.67
  • Blocked Shots: NJD 10 | BUF 13
  • Goalkeeper Saves: NJD 28 | BUF 27
  • Saves %: NJD 93.33 | BUF 96.43
  • Penalties: NJD 4 | BUF 3
  • PIM: NJD 11 | BUF 9

Washington Capitals 3-1 Philadelphia Flyers

Washington converted at a significantly higher rate and protected the middle of the ice effectively. Philadelphia’s lower shooting percentage reflected limited clean slot access.

Team Stats

  • Shots on Goal: WSH 29 | PHI 24
  • Shots off Target: WSH 16 | PHI 10
  • Shooting %: WSH 10.34 | PHI 4.17
  • Blocked Shots: WSH 19 | PHI 14
  • Goalkeeper Saves: WSH 23 | PHI 26
  • Saves %: WSH 95.83 | PHI 92.86
  • Penalties: WSH 2 | PHI 1
  • PIM: WSH 4 | PHI 2

Tampa Bay Lightning 4-2 Toronto Maple Leafs

Tampa Bay carried a strong offensive push with balanced shot volume and superior finishing. Toronto generated chances but could not match the Lightning’s conversion rate.

Team Stats

  • Shots on Goal: TBL 36 | TOR 34
  • Shots off Target: TBL 23 | TOR 14
  • Shooting %: TBL 11.11 | TOR 5.88
  • Blocked Shots: TBL 17 | TOR 11
  • Goalkeeper Saves: TBL 32 | TOR 32
  • Saves %: TBL 94.12 | TOR 88.89
  • Penalties: TBL 2 | TOR 4
  • PIM: TBL 4 | TOR 8

Dallas Stars 4-1 Seattle Kraken

Dallas dictated tempo with sustained offensive zone time and consistent shot pressure. Seattle faced extended defensive shifts and could not offset the efficiency gap.

Team Stats

  • Shots on Goal: DAL 32 | SEA 19
  • Shots off Target: DAL 18 | SEA 16
  • Shooting %: DAL 12.50 | SEA 5.26
  • Blocked Shots: DAL 12 | SEA 11
  • Goalkeeper Saves: DAL 18 | SEA 28
  • Saves %: DAL 94.74 | SEA 87.50
  • Penalties: DAL 6 | SEA 5
  • PIM: DAL 15 | SEA 13

Utah Mammoth 2-4 Colorado Avalanche

Utah generated respectable volume, but Colorado capitalized with a sharp 16 percent shooting rate. Efficient transition sequences and clinical finishing separated the game.

Team Stats

  • Shots on Goal: UTA 32 | COL 25
  • Shots off Target: UTA 15 | COL 14
  • Shooting %: UTA 6.25 | COL 16.00
  • Blocked Shots: UTA 17 | COL 14
  • Goalkeeper Saves: UTA 21 | COL 30
  • Saves %: UTA 84.00 | COL 93.75
  • Penalties: UTA 3 | COL 5
  • PIM: UTA 6 | COL 10

Los Angeles Kings 4-6 Vegas Golden Knights

Vegas converted at an elite rate and exploited defensive gaps in transition. Despite LA’s blocked shot commitment, finishing efficiency and open-ice execution favored the Golden Knights.

Team Stats

  • Shots on Goal: LAK 19 | VGK 25
  • Shots off Target: LAK 12 | VGK 23
  • Shooting %: LAK 21.05 | VGK 24.00
  • Blocked Shots: LAK 22 | VGK 14
  • Goalkeeper Saves: LAK 19 | VGK 15
  • Saves %: LAK 79.17 | VGK 78.95
  • Penalties: LAK 4 | VGK 2
  • PIM: LAK 19 | VGK 7

Vancouver Canucks 2-3 Winnipeg Jets (OT)

Winnipeg controlled shot suppression with a heavy block count and capitalized in overtime. Vancouver remained competitive but lacked the final efficiency push.

Team Stats

  • Shots on Goal: VAN 22 | WPG 27
  • Shots off Target: VAN 13 | WPG 23
  • Shooting %: VAN 9.09 | WPG 11.11
  • Blocked Shots: VAN 7 | WPG 21
  • Goalkeeper Saves: VAN 24 | WPG 20
  • Saves %: VAN 88.89 | WPG 90.91
  • Penalties: VAN 3 | WPG 1
  • PIM: VAN 6 | WPG 2

Anaheim Ducks 6-5 Edmonton Oilers

A high-event contest with elite finishing on both sides. Anaheim’s slight edge in shooting percentage and opportunistic conversion in key moments tilted the result.

Team Stats

  • Shots on Goal: ANA 29 | EDM 27
  • Shots off Target: ANA 12 | EDM 21
  • Shooting %: ANA 20.69 | EDM 18.52
  • Blocked Shots: ANA 11 | EDM 14
  • Goalkeeper Saves: ANA 22 | EDM 23
  • Saves %: ANA 81.48 | EDM 79.31
  • Penalties: ANA 2 | EDM 5
  • PIM: ANA 4 | EDM 10

Coach Mark Comment

The recurring theme across this slate is finishing efficiency versus territorial control. Utah, Los Angeles, and New Jersey each generated respectable volume but were punished by superior shooting rates against. That gap often reflects interior access, screen quality, and the speed of puck movement through the slot rather than raw shot count alone.

Colorado and Dallas demonstrate structured transition hockey. Efficient breakouts, controlled neutral-zone spacing, and layered forecheck pressure limit defensive exposure and convert possession into higher-quality looks. That structure tends to travel well over multiple games, especially when paired with stable goaltending percentages above 93 percent.

The high-event matchup in Anaheim shows how volatility increases when both teams trade rush chances and defensive layers thin out. When saves percentages drop below the mid-80s, game state swings become amplified, and discipline and line matching gain even more importance late. Over a longer sample, teams that combine moderate shot control with consistent interior defense usually stabilize results faster than those relying purely on offensive bursts.


Q&A: Understanding NHL Daily Recaps

1) What should I look at first in a recap?
Start with the final score, then review shots on goal and shooting percentage to see whether efficiency or volume drove the result.

2) Why can a team win despite being outshot?
Higher-quality chances, elite goaltending, and game-state management often outweigh pure shot totals.

3) What does shooting percentage indicate in one game?
It reflects finishing efficiency but should always be viewed alongside shot location and rebound control context.

4) How important is saves percentage in short samples?
It signals goaltending efficiency for that game, but trends become clearer over a five to ten game window.

5) What do high blocked shot totals tell me?
They can show defensive commitment, but they may also indicate extended defensive-zone time.

6) How do overtime results affect interpretation?
Three-on-three structure emphasizes speed, spacing, and puck management more than full-strength systems.

7) How can I use recaps to identify trends?
Track repeated patterns in shot share, finishing rate, penalties, and goaltending efficiency across multiple games.


NHL SHORT NEWS | Feb 25

NHL SHORT NEWS | Feb 25

IHM NHL SHORT NEWS

After Olympics: Injuries, Trade, Key Returns | February 25, 2026

Date: 25 February 2026
By IceHockeyMan Newsroom

The NHL returns to full focus after the Olympic break. Here are the key items that actually move teams.

Barkov Recovery Update for Panthers

Aleksander Barkov said he is “really happy” with his recovery from knee surgery and is hoping to be available for the playoffs. He also made a donation of more than $1 million to a children’s hospital.

Why it matters: Florida’s playoff ceiling changes dramatically if Barkov is truly tracking for a postseason return.

Trade: Girard to Penguins, Kulak to Avalanche

Samuel Girard was traded from the Avalanche to the Penguins in exchange for Brett Kulak. Pittsburgh also received a second-round pick in the 2028 NHL Draft.

Why it matters: This is a direct blue-line identity swap. Pittsburgh add a mobile puck-moving defender, Colorado add a steadier defensive piece for heavy minutes.

Rantanen Timeline for Stars

Mikko Rantanen is expected back before the end of the regular season after a lower-body injury suffered at the Olympics. Separate reporting indicates he could miss at least two weeks.

Why it matters: Dallas must protect points now. Their top-end scoring structure changes without him, especially on the power play.

Status Report Quick Hits

Auston Matthews is expected to play Wednesday. John Carlson is listed as questionable.

Why it matters: For contenders, one missing top player can reshape matchups and special teams immediately.

Game Availability Notes

Jack Eichel is expected to miss Wednesday. Noah Hanifin will not play Wednesday. Brayden Point is expected in the lineup Wednesday. Kirill Marchenko is expected to play Thursday.

Why it matters: Post-Olympic scheduling is tight. Short absences create real volatility in daily results.

Coach Mark Comment

After the Olympics, teams often look sharp for one game and messy for the next. Travel load, reintegrating stars, and defensive pairing rhythm decide who stabilizes first.

IceHockeyMan Newsroom