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Oilers Face Elimination - Can Edmonton Respond Again? | IHM

Oilers Face Elimination - Can Edmonton Respond Again? | IHM

Oilers Face Elimination - Pressure Returns to Edmonton

Date: April 28, 2026
By IceHockeyMan Newsroom

The Edmonton Oilers are back in a situation they know very well - but that does not make it easier.

Trailing 3-1 in the series against Anaheim, Edmonton enters Game 5 facing elimination. The narrative is familiar: experienced playoff team, elite talent, high expectations. But the reality is different this time.


⚠️ ELIMINATION MODE - NO MARGIN LEFT

At this stage, the game simplifies brutally:

  • No unnecessary penalties
  • No slow starts
  • No wasted offensive chances

Every mistake now directly translates into momentum for Anaheim.

IHM Signal:
Elimination games are not won by brilliance. They are won by discipline.


🔥 EXPERIENCE VS MOMENTUM

Edmonton has played more playoff hockey than almost any team in recent years. That should be an advantage.

But Anaheim is playing without pressure, and that is often more dangerous.

  • Ducks are younger and freer
  • Oilers are more experienced but more tense
  • Momentum is currently on Anaheim’s side

IHM Insight:
Experience only matters if it translates into execution under pressure.


🧠 MCDAVID FACTOR - NOT FULL STRENGTH

Connor McDavid is still producing, but he is clearly not at full mobility after his ankle issue.

That changes everything:

  • Less explosive zone entries
  • More reliance on positioning than speed
  • Possible role adjustments, including penalty kill usage

Edmonton must now adapt around him instead of relying entirely on him.

IHM Signal:
When your best player is limited, your system must compensate immediately.


⚔️ SPECIAL TEAMS - SERIES DECIDER

This is currently the biggest gap between the teams.

  • Ducks power play: 6 goals on 12 opportunities
  • Oilers power play: 3 goals on 10 opportunities

But the real issue is timing.

Edmonton has taken penalties at the worst possible moments - often right after building momentum or taking a lead.

IHM Insight:
Bad penalties are not just mistakes. They are momentum killers.


🔄 ANAHEIM - BUILT ON COMEBACK ENERGY

The Ducks have shown a clear pattern in this series:

  • They do not panic when trailing
  • They increase physical pressure late in games
  • They capitalize on opponent mistakes

Game 4 was the perfect example - down 2-0, they came back and won in overtime.

That is not luck. That is belief combined with timing.


📊 WHAT EDMONTON MUST FIX

To survive Game 5, the Oilers need immediate adjustments:

  • Cleaner defensive-zone exits
  • Fewer penalties
  • More depth scoring beyond top line
  • Better control after taking the lead

IHM Projection:
If Edmonton allows Anaheim to hang in the game late again, the series will end.


🧠 Coach Mark Comment

This is the real test for Edmonton. They have experience, but experience does not win games by itself. Discipline wins games. Anaheim is playing free and confident. Edmonton must control the game early, or the pressure will take over again.


🔥 Fan Pulse

Do Oilers have one more comeback run left, or is this where the season ends?


❓ Q&A: Oilers vs Ducks Game 5

Why is Game 5 critical?
Because Edmonton faces elimination and must win to stay alive.

What is the biggest problem for Oilers?
Penalties and inconsistent defensive execution.

Is McDavid fully healthy?
No, his mobility appears limited, affecting his role.

Why are Ducks dangerous?
They play without pressure and capitalize on mistakes.

What decides the game?
Discipline, special teams and early momentum.


Penguins Force Game 6 After Game 5 Win | IHM

Penguins Force Game 6 After Game 5 Win | IHM

Penguins Force Game 6 as Crosby and Letang Keep Pittsburgh Alive

Date: April 27, 2026
By IceHockeyMan Newsroom

The Pittsburgh Penguins were almost finished after three games. Now the series feels completely different.

Pittsburgh defeated Philadelphia 3-2 in Game 5, winning a second straight elimination game and forcing the series back to the Flyers’ building. Philadelphia still leads 3-2, but the psychological balance has clearly changed.


🔥 LETANG DELIVERS AGAIN

Kris Letang scored the go-ahead goal for the second straight game, giving Pittsburgh another decisive playoff moment from the blue line.

The goal itself was ugly, chaotic and playoff-perfect. A point shot, traffic, deflections, end-board bounce, goalie contact and the puck crossing the line.

IHM Signal:
At this stage of a series, clean goals become rare. Traffic, pressure and repeat shots decide games.


🧠 CROSBY CONTROLS THE SERIES TEMPO

Sidney Crosby did not need to score to dominate the game. His two assists reflected something more important than production: control.

  • He managed possession under pressure
  • He supported faster transition decisions
  • He created cleaner attacking rhythm for Pittsburgh
  • He helped the Penguins escape the slow, grinding style that hurt them early in the series

When Crosby controls pace, Pittsburgh looks like a different team.

IHM Insight:
Elite playoff players do not always win with highlight plays. They win by changing how the game is played.


⚡ PENGUINS FOUND THEIR SPEED AGAIN

The biggest difference in Games 4 and 5 has been pace.

Earlier in the series, Pittsburgh was dragged into slower, heavier sequences where Philadelphia could control body position and contact. Now the Penguins are playing faster through the neutral zone and making cleaner decisions with the puck.

  • Quicker first passes
  • Shorter support routes
  • More direct attacks after turnovers
  • Less hesitation entering the offensive zone

IHM Signal:
Pittsburgh’s comeback only exists because the team stopped playing Philadelphia’s preferred tempo.


🥅 SILOVS GIVES PITTSBURGH STABILITY

Arturs Silovs did not face overwhelming volume, but he provided the calm structure Pittsburgh needed.

That matters because elimination hockey is not only about save totals. It is about whether the goalie allows the bench to stay composed.

Silovs gave Pittsburgh a stable base, and that allowed the skaters to play with more confidence in front of him.


⚠️ FLYERS NOW FEEL CLOSING PRESSURE

Philadelphia remains in the better position, but the mood has shifted.

The Flyers are still one win away from advancing, yet they are no longer controlling the series emotionally. Two straight losses have changed the pressure profile.

  • Young players are now facing heavier decisions
  • Veterans must slow the game down emotionally
  • Game 6 becomes a test of closing ability

The Flyers had moments in Game 5, including goals from Alex Bump and Travis Sanheim, but the start was too passive and Pittsburgh punished it.

IHM Insight:
A 3-0 lead gives comfort. A 3-2 lead after two losses creates doubt.


🌟 BUMP’S PLAYOFF DEBUT SIGNAL

Alex Bump scoring in his playoff debut is still a strong positive for Philadelphia.

The Flyers may have lost, but getting young-player production in a pressure game matters. Bump showed direct attacking instinct and willingness to challenge defenders one-on-one.

That type of confidence can matter in Game 6 if Philadelphia needs an energy shift.


📊 GAME 6 OUTLOOK

The series now returns to Philadelphia, but it does not return in the same emotional state.

For Pittsburgh:

  • Keep pace high
  • Let Crosby and Letang control rhythm
  • Avoid early penalties
  • Force Philadelphia to defend while nervous

For Philadelphia:

  • Start faster
  • Shorten shifts
  • Win board battles early
  • Stop letting Pittsburgh build speed through the middle

IHM Projection:
If Pittsburgh scores first in Game 6, the pressure on Philadelphia could become massive.


🧠 Coach Mark Comment

This is exactly how a series changes. Pittsburgh did not suddenly become a different team. They returned to their own pace. The Flyers still lead, but now they must close with pressure on their shoulders. That is the hardest win in a series. Crosby and Letang understand that moment. The question is whether Philadelphia can reset before Game 6.


🔥 Fan Pulse

Can Pittsburgh complete the comeback, or will Philadelphia close the series at home?


❓ Q&A: Penguins vs Flyers Game 5

Why was Game 5 so important?
Because Pittsburgh won a second straight elimination game and changed the series pressure.

Who was the key player for Pittsburgh?
Sidney Crosby controlled the tempo, while Kris Letang delivered the go-ahead goal.

Why is Philadelphia under pressure now?
Because the Flyers have lost two straight chances to close the series.

What changed for Pittsburgh?
The Penguins played faster, cleaner and more connected through the neutral zone.

What decides Game 6?
The first goal, early pace and whether Philadelphia can control pressure at home.


NHL Projected Lineups Apr 28 2026 | IHM

NHL Projected Lineups Apr 28 2026 | IHM

NHL Projected Lineups – Game Day April 28, 2026

Date: April 27, 2026
By IceHockeyMan Newsroom

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

Matchup: Pittsburgh Penguins vs Philadelphia Flyers

Faceoff: 01:00 CET

Pittsburgh Penguins – Projected lineup

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

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

Goalies
Arturs Silovs – Confirmed
Stuart Skinner

Power Play 1
Sidney Crosby – Rickard Rakell – Evgeni Malkin
Bryan Rust – Erik Karlsson

Power Play 2
Ben Kindel – Egor Chinakhov – Anthony Mantha
Thomas Novak – Kris Letang

Injured: P. Kettles (OUT), Filip Hallander (IR), Caleb Jones (IR)

IHM Lineup Note:
Pittsburgh keeps Silovs confirmed in goal, which gives the Penguins a clear crease plan before puck drop. The veteran power-play structure remains the key tactical weapon: Crosby, Malkin, Rakell, Rust, Karlsson and Letang still give Pittsburgh elite puck control, deception and playoff experience when the game slows into special-teams situations.

IHM Tactical Signals:
Forecheck Signal: Pittsburgh must create more connected pressure instead of relying only on veteran puck skill.
Transition Signal: Karlsson and Letang remain the main breakout engines and must move the puck before Philadelphia’s speed closes lanes.
Blue Line Signal: The Penguins have offensive quality on the back end, but defensive spacing must stay compact against Flyers rush pressure.
Goalie Stability Signal: Silovs confirmed creates continuity and gives Pittsburgh a defined response structure.
X-Factor Signal: Crosby and Malkin must turn offensive-zone control into real slot pressure, not just perimeter possession.

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
Travis Sanheim – Rasmus Ristolainen
Cam York – Jamie Drysdale
Nick Seeler – Alex Bump

Goalies
Dan Vladar – Expected
Samuel Ersson

Power Play 1
Christian Dvorak – Travis Konecny – Owen Tippett
Alex Bump – Rasmus Ristolainen

Power Play 2
Trevor Zegras – Tyson Foerster – Porter Martone
Noah Cates – Jamie Drysdale

Injured: Emil Andrae (DTD), Nikita Grebenkin (OUT), Ty Murchison (OUT), Rodrigo Abols (IR)

IHM Lineup Note:
Philadelphia continues to carry a strong speed-and-pressure identity, with Vladar expected in goal and a power-play look that spreads shooting and playmaking across two units. The Andrae day-to-day note matters because the Flyers lose some blue-line flexibility if he cannot play, but their forward structure remains dangerous through Konecny, Tippett, Zegras, Foerster, Martone and Michkov.

IHM Tactical Signals:
Forecheck Signal: Philadelphia should keep attacking Pittsburgh’s defense with speed, pressure and quick weak-side support.
Transition Signal: Zegras, Tippett and Michkov remain the main open-ice acceleration threats.
Blue Line Signal: Drysdale and Ristolainen must manage puck movement carefully, especially if Andrae is unavailable.
Goalie Stability Signal: Vladar expected gives the Flyers a stable but still pressure-tested crease plan.
X-Factor Signal: Philadelphia can keep tilting the series if its speed forces Pittsburgh’s veteran core into defensive recovery shifts.

IHM Match Pressure Index:
Offensive Pressure: Even
Transition Edge: Flyers slight edge
Defensive Stability: Penguins slight edge
Goaltending Edge: Even
Game Control Projection: Philadelphia projects to create more pace and pressure through speed, while Pittsburgh’s best route is slowing the game into veteran puck control, power-play execution and Silovs-driven stability.

Matchup: Utah Mammoth vs Vegas Golden Knights

Faceoff: 03:30 CET

Utah Mammoth – Projected lineup

Forwards
Clayton Keller – Logan Cooley – Dylan Guenther
Kailer Yamamoto – Nick Schmaltz – Lawson Crouse
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 – Expected
Vitek Vanecek

Power Play 1
Logan Cooley – Clayton Keller – Dylan Guenther
Mikhail Sergachev – Nick Schmaltz

Power Play 2
Alexander Kerfoot – JJ Peterka – Lawson Crouse
Michael Carcone – MacKenzie Weegar

Injured: Barrett Hayton (OUT)

IHM Lineup Note:
Utah still has enough pace and skill to challenge Vegas, especially through Cooley, Keller, Guenther, Sergachev and Weegar. The Mammoth need a cleaner special-teams game and more direct pressure from their top unit because Vegas will not give them many easy second chances in a structured playoff environment.

IHM Tactical Signals:
Forecheck Signal: Utah must pressure earlier and force Vegas defensemen into quicker puck decisions.
Transition Signal: Cooley and Keller remain the main speed triggers and must attack before Vegas sets its layers.
Blue Line Signal: Sergachev and Weegar give Utah enough puck-moving quality to support controlled entries and power-play rotation.
Goalie Stability Signal: Vejmelka expected gives Utah a workable crease base, but the workload must stay manageable.
X-Factor Signal: Utah needs to turn this into a pace-driven game instead of letting Vegas dominate wall battles and half-ice structure.

Vegas Golden Knights – Projected lineup

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

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

Goalies
Carter Hart – Confirmed
Adin Hill

Power Play 1
Jack Eichel – Pavel Dorofeyev – Mark Stone
Ivan Barbashev – Shea Theodore

Power Play 2
Tomas Hertl – Brett Howden – Mitch Marner
Rasmus Andersson – Noah Hanifin

Injured: William Karlsson (IR-LT), Alex Pietrangelo (IR-LT)

IHM Lineup Note:
Vegas has Carter Hart confirmed and still owns the more mature playoff control profile. Even without Karlsson and Pietrangelo, the Golden Knights have elite game-management pieces across both power-play units, with Eichel, Stone, Marner, Hertl, Theodore, Hanifin and Andersson giving them multiple ways to sustain pressure.

IHM Tactical Signals:
Forecheck Signal: Vegas can pressure Utah with weight, wall control and disciplined second-man support.
Transition Signal: Eichel and Marner remain elite controlled-entry options who can slow the game and create cleaner looks.
Blue Line Signal: Theodore, Andersson and Hanifin give Vegas strong puck movement despite Pietrangelo being unavailable.
Goalie Stability Signal: Hart confirmed gives Vegas a clear crease edge in preparation and game-state control.
X-Factor Signal: Vegas can win this matchup by forcing Utah into repeated defensive-zone shifts and limiting rush chances.

IHM Match Pressure Index:
Offensive Pressure: Golden Knights edge
Transition Edge: Golden Knights slight edge
Defensive Stability: Golden Knights edge
Goaltending Edge: Golden Knights slight edge
Game Control Projection: Vegas projects to control the more repeatable playoff details through structure, power-play depth and confirmed goaltending, while Utah needs speed, cleaner exits and a strong Vejmelka performance to destabilize the game.

Q&A: Projected Lineups and Starting Goalies

What are NHL projected lineups?
Projected lineups are expected player combinations, goalie plans and special-teams units based on the latest team information before puck drop.

Are these NHL projected lineups final?
They are highly useful but not guaranteed. Coaches can still make changes after warmups, injury updates or game-time decisions.

Why are projected goalies important?
Goalies directly influence game control, confidence, defensive structure and matchup risk.

What is the difference between expected and confirmed goalies?
Expected means the goalie is likely to start. Confirmed means the team or a reliable lineup source has confirmed the starter.

Why are power play units included?
Power play units reveal offensive hierarchy, puck-touch priority and which players are trusted in high-leverage situations.

Why do injuries matter so much in playoff lineups?
A missing top defenseman, center or goalie can change the entire tactical balance of a playoff game.

How should readers analyze projected lineups?
Focus on center depth, top-four defense quality, goalie status, injuries and whether the team’s normal identity is still intact.

Can special teams decide playoff games?
Yes. In tight playoff games, one power-play goal or one failed penalty kill can decide the outcome.

Why does IHM add tactical signals?
Because player names alone do not explain how the lineup may function under real game pressure.

What is the IHM Match Pressure Index?
It is a quick tactical summary of offensive pressure, transition edge, defensive stability, goaltending edge and projected game control.

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

What should readers watch after publication?
Late goalie changes, injury updates, scratches and any power-play adjustments that shift the tactical balance.

NHL Projected Lineups Apr 26 2026 | IHM

NHL Projected Lineups Apr 26 2026 | IHM

NHL Projected Lineups – Game Day April 26, 2026

Date: April 26, 2026
By IceHockeyMan Newsroom

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

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
Zachary Bolduc – Oliver Kapanen – Kirby Dach
Jake Evans – Phillip Danault – Josh Anderson

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

Goalies
Jakub Dobes – Expected
Jacob Fowler

Power Play 1
Nick Suzuki – Cole Caufield – Ivan Demidov
Juraj Slafkovsky – Lane Hutson

Power Play 2
Kirby Dach – Alex Newhook – Zachary Bolduc
Mike Matheson – Alexandre Texier

Injured: Noah Dobson (OUT), Patrik Laine (IR)

IHM Lineup Note:
Montreal continues to trust its young offensive core, but the power play adjustment is important. Demidov moving into a central PP1 role gives the Canadiens more creativity, deception and shot-pass threat around Suzuki and Caufield. Hutson remains the key blue-line activator, while Dobson’s absence still lowers the defensive control ceiling.

IHM Tactical Signals:
Forecheck Signal: Montreal should keep attacking Tampa’s depth defense and force rushed decisions below the goal line.
Transition Signal: Suzuki remains the main controlled-entry driver, with Demidov adding a higher-skill second layer.
Blue Line Signal: Hutson gives Montreal elite creativity, but the Canadiens must protect against counterattacks behind him.
Goalie Stability Signal: Dobes is expected and must stay calm against Tampa’s elite finishing pressure.
X-Factor Signal: Montreal’s PP1 can change the game if Demidov and Hutson create east-west movement before Tampa’s penalty kill sets its box.

Tampa Bay Lightning – Projected lineup

Forwards
Gage Goncalves – Brayden Point – Nikita Kucherov
Brandon Hagel – Anthony Cirelli – Jake Guentzel
Zemgus Girgensons – Yanni Gourde – Nick Paul
Corey Perry – Dominic James – Scott Sabourin

Defense
J.J. Moser – Darren Raddysh
Ryan McDonagh – Erik Cernak
Declan Carlile – Emil Lilleberg

Goalies
Andrei Vasilevskiy – Expected
Jonas Johansson

Power Play 1
Brayden Point – Brandon Hagel – Jake Guentzel
Nikita Kucherov – Darren Raddysh

Power Play 2
Dominic James – Gage Goncalves – Corey Perry
J.J. Moser – Nick Paul

Injured: Charle-Edouard D’Astous (OUT), Pontus Holmberg (OUT), Victor Hedman (IR-LT)

IHM Lineup Note:
Tampa Bay still has the more proven playoff core, but the absence of Hedman remains a major structural issue. Kucherov is now even more important as the primary offensive brain, while Raddysh must carry more power-play and breakout responsibility. Vasilevskiy expected in goal gives the Lightning the strongest stabilizing element in the matchup.

IHM Tactical Signals:
Forecheck Signal: Tampa must pressure Montreal’s young puck movers early and force turnovers before the Canadiens can build speed.
Transition Signal: Point and Kucherov remain the most dangerous pace manipulators for the Lightning.
Blue Line Signal: Without Hedman, Tampa’s blue-line structure is more functional than dominant.
Goalie Stability Signal: Vasilevskiy gives Tampa a clear playoff goaltending advantage.
X-Factor Signal: Tampa’s PP1 must punish Montreal’s mistakes because five-on-five control is no longer automatic in this series.

IHM Match Pressure Index:
Offensive Pressure: Lightning slight edge
Transition Edge: Even
Defensive Stability: Even
Goaltending Edge: Lightning edge
Game Control Projection: Tampa projects to own the calmer playoff structure through Vasilevskiy and veteran execution, but Montreal’s young PP1 and transition speed can make this game dangerous if the Lightning lose puck discipline.

Matchup: Anaheim Ducks vs Edmonton Oilers

Faceoff: 03:30 CET

Anaheim Ducks – Projected lineup

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

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

Goalies
Lukas Dostal – Expected
Ville Husso

Power Play 1
Leo Carlsson – Troy Terry – Cutter Gauthier
Jackson LaCombe – Mason McTavish

Power Play 2
Mikael Granlund – Alex Killorn – Beckett Sennecke
Chris Kreider – Jacob Trouba

Injured: Radko Gudas (DTD), Ross Johnston (DTD), Jansen Harkins (OUT), Petr Mrazek (IR)

IHM Lineup Note:
Anaheim’s structure remains dangerous because the Ducks are not trying to out-skill Edmonton shift for shift. They are trying to slow the Oilers, protect the middle, and attack through balanced power-play looks. Dostal expected in goal keeps Anaheim’s upset path alive, while Gudas being day to day affects defensive edge and net-front bite.

IHM Tactical Signals:
Forecheck Signal: Anaheim must pressure with discipline and avoid giving McDavid clean counterattack lanes.
Transition Signal: Carlsson, Terry and Gauthier are the main speed and skill connectors.
Blue Line Signal: LaCombe and Carlson remain important for puck movement, while Gudas’ status affects defensive heaviness.
Goalie Stability Signal: Dostal expected gives Anaheim a credible playoff crease profile.
X-Factor Signal: Anaheim must keep the game structured and force Edmonton’s stars into low-percentage perimeter possessions.

Edmonton Oilers – Projected lineup

Forwards
Matthew Savoie – Connor McDavid – Zach Hyman
Vasily Podkolzin – Leon Draisaitl – Kasperi Kapanen
Ryan Nugent-Hopkins – Jason Dickinson – Jack Roslovic
Colton Dach – Curtis Lazar – Trent Frederic

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

Goalies
Tristan Jarry – Expected
Connor Ingram

Power Play 1
Leon Draisaitl – Ryan Nugent-Hopkins – Zach Hyman
Connor McDavid – Evan Bouchard

Power Play 2
Matt Savoie – Vasily Podkolzin – Jack Roslovic
Mattias Ekholm – Jake Walman

Injured: Jason Dickinson (DTD), Adam Henrique (OUT), Max Jones (OUT), Mattias Janmark (IR-LT)

IHM Lineup Note:
Edmonton still has the highest offensive ceiling in this matchup, but the goalie switch to Jarry expected adds a fresh tactical layer. The Oilers’ power play remains loaded with McDavid, Draisaitl, Hyman, Nugent-Hopkins and Bouchard, but execution must improve. If the puck movement stays slow or Anaheim blocks the middle, Edmonton’s elite talent can still be forced into frustration.

IHM Tactical Signals:
Forecheck Signal: Edmonton must retrieve more pucks below the goal line instead of depending only on rush creation.
Transition Signal: McDavid remains the central pace engine, and the Oilers need him attacking downhill with speed.
Blue Line Signal: Bouchard and Ekholm are critical for clean exits, PP control and controlled offensive-zone resets.
Goalie Stability Signal: Jarry expected creates a new crease variable, but also gives Edmonton a chance to reset emotionally.
X-Factor Signal: Edmonton’s PP1 must become decisive, because special teams are the clearest path to breaking Anaheim’s structure.

IHM Match Pressure Index:
Offensive Pressure: Oilers edge
Transition Edge: Oilers clear edge
Defensive Stability: Ducks slight edge
Goaltending Edge: Ducks slight edge
Game Control Projection: Edmonton projects to own the higher ceiling through McDavid, Draisaitl and the power play, but Anaheim can keep controlling the emotional rhythm if Dostal holds and the Ducks continue closing central ice.

Q&A: Projected Lineups and Starting Goalies

What are NHL projected lineups?
Projected lineups are expected player combinations, goalie plans and special-teams units based on the latest team information before puck drop.

Are these NHL projected lineups final?
They are highly useful but not guaranteed. Coaches can still make changes after warmups, injury updates or game-time decisions.

Why are projected goalies important?
Goalies directly influence game control, confidence, defensive structure and matchup risk.

What is the difference between expected and confirmed goalies?
Expected means the goalie is likely to start. Confirmed means the team or a reliable lineup source has confirmed the starter.

Why are power play units included?
Power play units reveal offensive hierarchy, puck-touch priority and which players are trusted in high-leverage situations.

Why do injuries matter so much in playoff lineups?
A missing top defenseman, center or goalie can change the entire tactical balance of a playoff game.

How should readers analyze projected lineups?
Focus on center depth, top-four defense quality, goalie status, injuries and whether the team’s normal identity is still intact.

Can special teams decide playoff games?
Yes. In tight playoff games, one power-play goal or one failed penalty kill can decide the outcome.

Why does IHM add tactical signals?
Because player names alone do not explain how the lineup may function under real game pressure.

What is the IHM Match Pressure Index?
It is a quick tactical summary of offensive pressure, transition edge, defensive stability, goaltending edge and projected game control.

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

What should readers watch after publication?
Late goalie changes, injury updates, scratches and any power-play adjustments that shift the tactical balance.

NHL SHORT ICE - Sweep, OT Drama, Pressure Builds | IHM

NHL SHORT ICE - Sweep, OT Drama, Pressure Builds | IHM

NHL SHORT ICE - Sweep, OT Drama, Pressure Builds | April 26, 2026

Date: April 26, 2026
By IceHockeyMan Newsroom

Want to stay on top of everything happening in the NHL without wasting time on long articles? IHM NHL SHORT ICE delivers the most important updates, key moments and real playoff signals in one structured format.

The playoffs are now clearly dividing teams into two categories: those in control and those fighting to survive. The difference is no longer skill - it is execution under pressure.


🚨 TOP STORY - HURRICANES COMPLETE SWEEP

Carolina eliminates Ottawa with a clean 4-0 series. Not a lucky run - a controlled one.

This is what defines it:

  • Stable structure across all games
  • Ability to close under pressure
  • Consistent scoring and defensive balance

IHM Signal:
Sweep teams are often the most dangerous entering Round 2.

👉 Full breakdown: Hurricanes sweep Senators


🔥 CLUTCH MOMENT - BOLDY CHANGES THE SERIES

Matt Boldy scores with seconds left in OT and flips the entire Wild vs Stars matchup to 2-2.

Now:

  • Dallas loses control of the series
  • Minnesota gains full belief
  • Momentum becomes unstable

IHM Insight:
Game 4 OT goals are often the real start of a new series.

👉 Full breakdown: Boldy OT winner


⚔️ SERIES ALIVE - PENGUINS RESPOND

Pittsburgh avoids elimination and keeps the Flyers series alive.

Key factor:

  • Veteran execution (Crosby impact)
  • Composure in elimination scenario

IHM Signal:
Experienced teams become most dangerous when their backs are against the wall.

👉 Full breakdown: Penguins stay alive


📊 OTHER KEY RESULTS & SIGNALS

🟢 Oilers vs Ducks:
Edmonton enters a familiar pressure situation trailing in the series. This is where they’ve historically responded - but margin for error is shrinking.

🟢 Golden Knights:
Tortorella demands “arrogance” from his team after back-to-back losses. Clear sign the team lost identity control.

🟢 Avalanche:
Lehkonen continues to prove elite playoff value - not flashy, but extremely reliable in structure.

🟢 Canadiens vs Lightning:
Montreal leads despite weak production from top line - dangerous sign if they finally click.

🟢 Penguins vs Flyers:
Series shifting from physical dominance to experience vs pressure battle.


⚠️ ELIMINATION & PRESSURE ZONE

Several teams are now entering the critical phase:

  • Oilers → must respond immediately
  • Golden Knights → risk losing control of series
  • Stars → momentum slipping
  • Flyers → pressure to close series increases

IHM Insight:
Game 4-5 stretch is where contenders separate from pretenders.


🥅 GOALIE & STRUCTURE WATCH

At this stage:

  • Goaltending consistency becomes critical
  • Special teams start deciding games
  • Defensive structure under fatigue becomes key factor

📈 TRENDING SIGNALS

  • Sweeps → teams with full control emerging early
  • Overtime → deciding series momentum swings
  • Veterans → dominating elimination games
  • Pressure → exposing weaker structured teams

🧠 Coach Mark Comment

Now we see the real playoff picture. Carolina looks like a complete team. Minnesota changed their series with one moment. Pittsburgh reminded everyone that experience matters. The biggest difference now is not tactics - it is which teams stay composed when everything speeds up.


🔥 Fan Pulse

Which team looks most dangerous right now: Hurricanes, Wild, or Penguins?


❓ Q&A: NHL Playoff Signals

Why is a sweep important?
Because it shows full control and gives momentum into the next round.

Why are OT goals so critical?
They completely shift series momentum.

What defines strong playoff teams now?
Stability under pressure and execution in key moments.

Which teams are in danger?
Teams losing structure and momentum simultaneously.

What should fans watch next?
Game 4-5 responses and momentum swings.


Penguins Stay Alive - Crosby Leads Game 4 Response | IHM

Penguins Stay Alive - Crosby Leads Game 4 Response | IHM

Penguins Stay Alive - Crosby Ignites Series Response

Date: April 26, 2026
By IceHockeyMan Newsroom

When a playoff series reaches elimination stage, identity becomes everything.

Pittsburgh finally looked like itself - and that was enough to extend the series with a 4-2 win over Philadelphia. The score matters, but the bigger story is how the Penguins changed their game under pressure.


🔥 CROSBY - CONTROL, NOT CHAOS

Sidney Crosby did not just score. He dictated the tempo of the game.

Key impact areas:

  • Faceoff control → immediate possession
  • Spatial awareness → creating shooting lanes
  • Playmaking under pressure

His goal came off a clean set play - simple, fast, and perfectly executed.

IHM Signal:
Elite players don’t force playoff games - they control them.


⚔️ PENGUINS FINALLY PLAYED THEIR GAME

For the first time in the series, Pittsburgh looked structured and composed.

What changed:

  • Cleaner puck management
  • Better support in transition
  • More physical presence around the net

Rakell’s goal is the perfect example - not pretty, but exactly what wins playoff games.

IHM Insight:
Playoff scoring is built on second efforts, not highlight plays.


🥅 SILOVS - STABILITY UNDER PRESSURE

Arturs Silovs stepped in and gave Pittsburgh exactly what it needed:

  • Calm presence in net
  • Key saves at momentum points
  • No panic under pressure

That alone changed the defensive confidence of the team.


⚠️ FLYERS - LOST CONTROL EARLY

Philadelphia still leads the series, but Game 4 exposed a problem:

  • Slow start
  • Lack of puck control early
  • Reaction instead of dictation

They improved later in the game, but playoff hockey punishes slow starts.

IHM Signal:
You cannot “grow into the game” in elimination scenarios.


📊 SERIES STATUS - 3-1, BUT SHIFTING

The Flyers still hold control, but momentum has changed direction.

Pittsburgh:

  • Confidence restored
  • Identity back
  • Pressure reduced

Philadelphia:

  • Still leading
  • But now must close under pressure

IHM Insight:
Game 4 wins in elimination scenarios often change the psychological balance of a series.


🧠 GAME 5 - TRUE PRESSURE TEST

Now everything shifts to Pittsburgh.

Key questions:

  • Can Penguins sustain structure?
  • Will Flyers respond immediately?
  • Who controls first 10 minutes?

IHM Projection:
If Pittsburgh wins Game 5, this becomes a completely different series.


🧠 Coach Mark Comment

This was not just about saving the season. It was about rediscovering identity. Pittsburgh played simple, structured hockey, and that is why they won. Philadelphia is still in control, but now they have to prove they can close. That is always the hardest part of a series.


🔥 Fan Pulse

Can Penguins actually come back from 3-1, or was this just a one-game response?


❓ Q&A: Penguins vs Flyers Game 4

Why was this win important?
Because it keeps the series alive and restores confidence.

What changed for Pittsburgh?
They returned to structured hockey.

What is Flyers’ main issue?
Slow starts and loss of early control.

Who was the key player?
Crosby - for tempo control and execution.

What decides Game 5?
Which team controls momentum from the start.


Boldy Strikes Late in OT - Wild Reset Series vs Stars | IHM

Boldy Strikes Late in OT - Wild Reset Series vs Stars | IHM

Boldy Strikes Late in OT - Wild Reset the Series

Date: April 26, 2026
By IceHockeyMan Newsroom

This was not just an overtime goal. This was a series reset.

With 29 seconds left in overtime, Matt Boldy delivered the moment that completely changed the trajectory of the Wild vs Stars matchup. What was slipping away for Minnesota is now a balanced, high-pressure best-of-three.


🔥 BOLDY’S GOAL - PURE PLAYOFF HOCKEY

The winning play was not complicated - and that is exactly why it worked.

Point shot, traffic, deflection. No hesitation.

This is where playoff hockey lives:

  • Net-front presence
  • Second-layer positioning
  • Reaction speed over skill moves

IHM Signal:
Late playoff goals are almost always scored within one stick-length of the crease.


⚠️ TWO DISALLOWED GOALS - BUT NO BREAKDOWN

Minnesota had already experienced frustration in this game:

  • Boldy’s earlier OT attempt waved off (kicking motion)
  • Eriksson Ek goal disallowed for interference

In many cases, this breaks a team mentally.

It did not.

IHM Insight:
Teams that win playoff series are the ones that don’t react emotionally to officiating swings.


🧱 WALLSTEDT - FOUNDATION OF THE WIN

Jesper Wallstedt was not just solid - he was the reason Minnesota stayed alive long enough to win.

  • 43 saves total
  • Critical stops under sustained pressure
  • Calm rebound control

Without that performance, there is no overtime moment.


⚔️ DALLAS - STRONG, BUT MISSED THE KILL SHOT

Dallas did many things right:

  • Power play efficiency (2-for-2)
  • Structured offensive play
  • Consistent pressure across periods

But they failed in one key area:

Closing the game.

Allowing Minnesota to tie late in the third opened the door - and in playoffs, that is often enough.

IHM Signal:
If you don’t close games in playoffs, momentum will flip against you fast.


🎯 FABER - QUIET X-FACTOR

Brock Faber continues to be one of the most underrated influences in the series.

  • Goal + assist
  • Puck movement from the blue line
  • Transition stability

Defensemen like this don’t dominate headlines - but they control games.


📊 SERIES NOW - 2-2, BUT NOT EQUAL

The series is tied, but the momentum is not neutral.

Minnesota:

  • Emotional boost
  • Confidence after late win
  • Belief reinforced

Dallas:

  • Lost control of series
  • Must reset quickly
  • Facing pressure in Game 5

IHM Insight:
The team that wins Game 4 in overtime often controls the next phase of the series.


🧠 WHAT DECIDES GAME 5

Now it becomes a best-of-three with a completely different dynamic.

Key factors:

  • Can Dallas respond after emotional loss?
  • Will Minnesota keep attacking the net aggressively?
  • Which team controls the first period?

IHM Projection:
Game 5 becomes the true pivot of the series.


🧠 Coach Mark Comment

This is exactly how playoff series change. Minnesota didn’t win because they were better for 60 minutes. They won because they stayed in the game long enough and executed one moment. Dallas is still a strong team, but now they are under pressure. In hockey, that is often the biggest difference.


🔥 Fan Pulse

After this OT win, who has the real edge now - Wild or Stars?


❓ Q&A: Wild vs Stars Game 4

Why was Boldy’s goal so important?
Because it completely shifted momentum and tied the series.

What was the key factor in the win?
Goaltending and persistence after disallowed goals.

Did Dallas play poorly?
No, but they failed to close the game.

What is the biggest trend in this series?
Net-front battles deciding scoring chances.

Who has the advantage now?
Slight edge to Minnesota due to momentum swing.


Hurricanes Sweep Senators - Carolina Sends Statement | IHM

Hurricanes Sweep Senators - Carolina Sends Statement | IHM

Hurricanes Sweep Senators - Carolina Sends a Clear Playoff Signal

Date: April 26, 2026
By IceHockeyMan Newsroom

This was not just a series win. This was control from start to finish.

Carolina closes the series 4-0 against Ottawa, and the most important detail is not the sweep itself - it is how it happened. The Hurricanes never lost control of the game flow across all four matchups.


🚨 GAME 4 - WHERE DISCIPLINE DECIDED EVERYTHING

Logan Stankoven’s power-play goal in the third period was the turning point, but it came from a much deeper foundation - discipline and structure.

Carolina stayed composed under pressure and capitalized at the exact moment Ottawa needed to respond.

IHM Signal:
Playoff games are decided not by chances, but by who executes when it matters most.


🔥 STANKOVEN - THE SERIES DIFFERENCE

One goal in every game. That is not luck - that is impact.

Stankoven brought:

  • Consistent scoring pressure
  • Net-front presence
  • Timing in key moments

He became the type of player every playoff team needs - not just productive, but reliable when the game tightens.

IHM Insight:
Series are often decided by secondary stars stepping into primary roles.


🎯 SPECIAL TEAMS - COMPLETE DOMINATION

The biggest gap between the teams was not even strength play - it was special teams.

  • Carolina power play delivered when needed
  • Ottawa power play collapsed (1-for-21 in series)

This alone explains the sweep.

IHM Signal:
If your power play fails in playoffs, your season ends quickly.


🧱 CAROLINA STRUCTURE - THE REAL STORY

Carolina did not overwhelm Ottawa with offense. It controlled the game through structure:

  • Strong defensive spacing
  • Shot blocking discipline
  • Controlled puck exits

Ottawa rarely found clean space, and when it did, Andersen shut the door.


🥅 ANDERSEN - QUIET BUT CRITICAL

Frederik Andersen delivered one of the most important performances of the series.

Not flashy, but consistent:

  • Stable positioning
  • Key saves in momentum moments
  • Confidence for the entire defensive unit

IHM Insight:
Elite playoff goalies don’t need highlight saves - they remove chaos from the game.


⚠️ OTTAWA - CLOSE BUT NOT READY

The Senators were not dominated in skill. They were beaten in execution.

Positives:

  • Competitive effort
  • Physical engagement
  • Moments of offensive pressure

But key problems:

  • Special teams failure
  • Inability to finish chances
  • Lack of control in critical moments

IHM Signal:
Close games don’t matter if you cannot convert them into wins.


📊 WHAT THIS MEANS FOR ROUND 2

Carolina now enters the next round with:

  • Maximum confidence
  • Clear identity
  • System stability

They will face either Philadelphia or Pittsburgh - both teams currently dealing with instability.

IHM Projection:
Carolina enters Round 2 as one of the most complete teams in the playoffs.


🧠 Coach Mark Comment

This is a perfect example of playoff hockey done right. Carolina did not try to outplay Ottawa with talent. They controlled structure, managed emotions and executed better in key moments. Ottawa is improving, but they are not yet at the level where they can win these types of series. Carolina is ready for a deeper run.


🔥 Fan Pulse

Are the Hurricanes now a real Stanley Cup contender after this sweep?


❓ Q&A: Hurricanes vs Senators Series

Why was this sweep important?
Because Carolina controlled every game and never lost structure.

What decided the series?
Special teams and execution in key moments.

Who was the key player?
Logan Stankoven for consistent scoring impact.

Did Ottawa play poorly?
No, but they failed in critical situations.

What is next for Carolina?
A strong position entering Round 2 with full momentum.


NHL Projected Lineups Apr 25 2026 | IHM

NHL Projected Lineups Apr 25 2026 | IHM

NHL Projected Lineups – Game Day April 25, 2026

Date: April 25, 2026
By IceHockeyMan Newsroom

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

Matchup: Boston Bruins vs Buffalo Sabres

Faceoff: 20:00 CET

Boston Bruins – Projected lineup

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

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

Goalies
Jeremy Swayman – Expected
Joonas Korpisalo

Power Play 1
Pavel Zacha – Morgan Geekie – David Pastrnak
Viktor Arvidsson – Charlie McAvoy

Power Play 2
Elias Lindholm – Casey Mittelstadt – Lukas Reichel
Hampus Lindholm – Fraser Minten

Injured: D. Locmelis (OUT)

IHM Lineup Note:
Boston enters this game needing a response, and the Bruins still have the tools to turn the series into a heavier, more structured battle. Swayman expected in goal gives them stability, while Pastrnak, McAvoy, Lindholm and Zacha remain the key pieces if Boston wants to slow Buffalo’s speed and win the middle of the ice.

IHM Tactical Signals:
Forecheck Signal: Boston must increase wall pressure and force Buffalo’s puck movers into slower exits.
Transition Signal: Pastrnak remains the most dangerous release option, but Boston needs more support through the neutral zone.
Blue Line Signal: McAvoy is the main defensive organizer and must control the matchup against Thompson and Tuch.
Goalie Stability Signal: Swayman expected gives Boston a strong playoff base.
X-Factor Signal: Boston’s power play must create more direct shot traffic instead of letting Buffalo defend comfortably.

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 – Josh Dunne – Beck Malenstyn

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

Goalies
Alex Lyon – Expected
Ukko-Pekka Luukkonen

Power Play 1
Tage Thompson – Jason Zucker – Alex Tuch
Rasmus Dahlin – Noah Ostlund

Power Play 2
Ryan McLeod – Zach Benson – Josh Doan
Bowen Byram – Jack Quinn

Injured: Josh Norris (DTD), Sam Carrick (OUT), Justin Danforth (IR), Jiri Kulich (IR)

IHM Lineup Note:
Buffalo comes in with momentum and a clear identity: speed from the back end, quick offensive-zone recovery, and confident goaltending from Lyon if he gets the crease again. The Norris day-to-day note matters, but the Sabres still have enough pace and power-play variety to keep Boston under pressure.

IHM Tactical Signals:
Forecheck Signal: Buffalo can pressure Boston through speed, second-man support and quick puck recovery.
Transition Signal: Dahlin, Power and Byram give Buffalo a strong breakout and controlled-entry platform.
Blue Line Signal: Buffalo’s defense remains more dynamic in puck movement than Boston’s group.
Goalie Stability Signal: Lyon expected gives Buffalo confidence after his strong Game 3 performance.
X-Factor Signal: Thompson and Tuch must keep forcing Boston’s defense to defend through screens and inside pressure.

IHM Match Pressure Index:
Offensive Pressure: Sabres slight edge
Transition Edge: Sabres edge
Defensive Stability: Bruins slight edge
Goaltending Edge: Even to Bruins slight edge
Game Control Projection: Buffalo projects to create more speed-driven pressure, while Boston needs to slow the game into a structured, physical playoff battle to regain control.

Matchup: Los Angeles Kings vs Colorado Avalanche

Faceoff: 22:30 CET

Los Angeles Kings – Projected lineup

Forwards
Artemi Panarin – Anze Kopitar – Adrian Kempe
Trevor Moore – Quinton Byfield – Alex Laferriere
Joel Armia – Scott Laughton – Andrei Kuzmenko
Mathieu Joseph – Samuel Helenius – Jeff Malott

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

Goalies
Anton Forsberg – Expected
Darcy Kuemper

Power Play 1
Anze Kopitar – Artemi Panarin – Alex Laferriere
Adrian Kempe – Brandt Clarke

Power Play 2
Quinton Byfield – Trevor Moore – Andrei Kuzmenko
Scott Laughton – Drew Doughty

Injured: Kevin Fiala (IR)

IHM Lineup Note:
Los Angeles is facing elimination-level pressure and still needs a major offensive correction. The Kings have enough names to respond, but their problem in this series has been converting possession into dangerous interior chances. Forsberg expected gives clarity in goal, but the real issue is whether Los Angeles can create more than isolated attacks.

IHM Tactical Signals:
Forecheck Signal: Kings must force longer Colorado retrievals and stop giving the Avalanche clean first passes.
Transition Signal: Panarin, Kempe and Byfield are the main players who can change pace quickly.
Blue Line Signal: Doughty and Clarke are essential to creating cleaner power-play movement and offensive-zone support.
Goalie Stability Signal: Forsberg expected means Los Angeles has a defined crease plan, but he may face high-quality looks.
X-Factor Signal: Without Fiala, the Kings need more finishing from Kempe, Panarin and the second unit.

Colorado Avalanche – Projected lineup

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

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

Goalies
Scott Wedgewood – Expected
Mackenzie Blackwood

Power Play 1
Nathan MacKinnon – Gabriel Landeskog – Martin Necas
Nazem Kadri – Cale Makar

Power Play 2
Valeri Nichushkin – Artturi Lehkonen – Nicolas Roy
Devon Toews – Sam Malinski

Injured: Josh Manson (DTD)

IHM Lineup Note:
Colorado enters with a sweep opportunity and still looks like the cleaner, faster and more layered team. MacKinnon and Makar remain the core engines, while Wedgewood expected in goal gives the Avalanche continuity. The only notable question is Manson’s day-to-day status, but Colorado’s overall control profile remains strong.

IHM Tactical Signals:
Forecheck Signal: Colorado can pressure Los Angeles through immediate second-touch recovery and speed below the dots.
Transition Signal: MacKinnon and Makar continue to dominate the pace and entry battle.
Blue Line Signal: Makar, Toews and Malinski give Colorado superior puck movement and offensive-zone extension.
Goalie Stability Signal: Wedgewood expected gives Colorado calm and continuity after strong previous starts.
X-Factor Signal: Colorado can end the series if it keeps forcing the Kings into rush defense and low-percentage clears.

IHM Match Pressure Index:
Offensive Pressure: Avalanche edge
Transition Edge: Avalanche clear edge
Defensive Stability: Avalanche slight edge
Goaltending Edge: Even
Game Control Projection: Colorado projects to control the more dangerous phases through speed, puck movement and blue-line activation, while Los Angeles needs its best offensive performance of the series to avoid elimination pressure becoming final.

Matchup: Philadelphia Flyers vs Pittsburgh Penguins

Faceoff: 02:00 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
Travis Sanheim – Rasmus Ristolainen
Cam York – Jamie Drysdale
Nick Seeler – Oliver Bonk

Goalies
Dan Vladar – Confirmed
Samuel Ersson

Power Play 1
Trevor Zegras – Tyson Foerster – Porter Martone
Noah Cates – Jamie Drysdale

Power Play 2
Christian Dvorak – Travis Konecny – Owen Tippett
Matvei Michkov – Rasmus Ristolainen

Injured: Emil Andrae (OUT), Nikita Grebenkin (OUT), Ty Murchison (OUT), Rodrigo Abols (IR)

IHM Lineup Note:
Philadelphia has Vladar confirmed and continues to carry a dangerous blend of speed, youth and pressure. With Andrae out, the third pair loses some puck movement, but the Flyers still have strong attacking pieces across both power-play groups. Zegras, Konecny, Tippett, Martone and Michkov remain the main offensive pressure points.

IHM Tactical Signals:
Forecheck Signal: Philadelphia should continue using speed and aggressive support to force Pittsburgh into rushed exits.
Transition Signal: Zegras and Michkov are the creativity triggers, while Tippett gives direct attacking speed.
Blue Line Signal: Drysdale becomes more important on power-play movement with Andrae out.
Goalie Stability Signal: Vladar confirmed gives Philadelphia a clear crease structure before puck drop.
X-Factor Signal: The Flyers can keep controlling the series if they turn their speed into repeat offensive-zone pressure.

Pittsburgh Penguins – Projected lineup

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

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

Goalies
Arturs Silovs – Confirmed
Stuart Skinner

Power Play 1
Sidney Crosby – Rickard Rakell – Evgeni Malkin
Bryan Rust – Erik Karlsson

Power Play 2
Ben Kindel – Anthony Mantha – Egor Chinakhov
Thomas Novak – Kris Letang

Injured: P. Kettles (OUT), Filip Hallander (IR), Caleb Jones (IR)

IHM Lineup Note:
Pittsburgh makes a significant crease adjustment with Silovs confirmed. The Penguins still have elite veteran power-play brains through Crosby, Malkin, Karlsson, Letang and Rust, but the question is whether they can generate enough controlled offense at five-on-five against Philadelphia’s pace.

IHM Tactical Signals:
Forecheck Signal: Pittsburgh needs a more connected first layer to slow Philadelphia’s young transition game.
Transition Signal: Karlsson and Letang remain the main breakout and power-play distribution engines.
Blue Line Signal: Pittsburgh’s defense can move the puck, but it must avoid getting stretched by Flyers speed.
Goalie Stability Signal: Silovs confirmed adds a new variable and could reset the matchup energy.
X-Factor Signal: Crosby and Malkin must turn power-play time into real scoreboard pressure.

IHM Match Pressure Index:
Offensive Pressure: Even
Transition Edge: Flyers slight edge
Defensive Stability: Penguins slight edge
Goaltending Edge: Even
Game Control Projection: Philadelphia projects to keep stressing Pittsburgh through speed and pressure, while the Penguins need Silovs, special teams and veteran puck control to pull the game back into their preferred rhythm.

Q&A: Projected Lineups and Starting Goalies

What are NHL projected lineups?
Projected lineups are expected player combinations, goalie plans and special-teams units based on the latest team information before puck drop.

Are these NHL projected lineups final?
They are highly useful but not guaranteed. Coaches can still make changes after warmups, injury updates or game-time decisions.

Why are projected goalies important?
Goalies directly influence game control, confidence, defensive structure and matchup risk.

What is the difference between expected and confirmed goalies?
Expected means the goalie is likely to start. Confirmed means the team or a reliable lineup source has confirmed the starter.

Why are power play units included?
Power play units reveal offensive hierarchy, puck-touch priority and which players are trusted in high-leverage situations.

Why do injuries matter so much in playoff lineups?
A missing top defenseman, center or goalie can change the entire tactical balance of a playoff game.

How should readers analyze projected lineups?
Focus on center depth, top-four defense quality, goalie status, injuries and whether the team’s normal identity is still intact.

Can special teams decide playoff games?
Yes. In tight playoff games, one power-play goal or one failed penalty kill can decide the outcome.

Why does IHM add tactical signals?
Because player names alone do not explain how the lineup may function under real game pressure.

What is the IHM Match Pressure Index?
It is a quick tactical summary of offensive pressure, transition edge, defensive stability, goaltending edge and projected game control.

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

What should readers watch after publication?
Late goalie changes, injury updates, scratches and any power-play adjustments that shift the tactical balance.

NHL Projected Lineups Apr 25 2026 | IHM

NHL Projected Lineups Apr 25 2026 | IHM

NHL Projected Lineups – Game Day April 25, 2026

Date: April 24, 2026
By IceHockeyMan Newsroom

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

Matchup: Tampa Bay Lightning vs Montreal Canadiens

Faceoff: 01:00 CET

Tampa Bay Lightning – Projected lineup

Power Play 1
Brayden Point – Brandon Hagel – Jake Guentzel
Nikita Kucherov – Darren Raddysh

Power Play 2
Anthony Cirelli – Gage Goncalves – Nick Paul
J.J. Moser – Corey Perry

Goalies
Andrei Vasilevskiy – Expected

Injured: Charle-Edouard D’Astous (OUT), Pontus Holmberg (OUT), Victor Hedman (IR-LT)

IHM Lineup Note:
Tampa Bay still has elite playoff weapons through Point, Kucherov, Hagel and Guentzel, but the absence of Hedman remains the biggest structural issue. Without Hedman, the Lightning lose some of their normal blue-line calm, breakout precision and special-teams control. Vasilevskiy is expected, which keeps Tampa’s overall floor high.

IHM Tactical Signals:
Forecheck Signal: Tampa should attack Montreal’s young defense with heavier early pressure and quick puck recovery.
Transition Signal: Point and Kucherov remain the most dangerous pace manipulators in this matchup.
Blue Line Signal: Raddysh and Moser must carry more offensive and breakout responsibility without Hedman.
Goalie Stability Signal: Vasilevskiy gives Tampa the clearest goaltending advantage on this matchup card.
X-Factor Signal: Tampa’s power play must become sharper because Montreal has already shown it can survive five-on-five pressure.

Montreal Canadiens – Projected lineup

Power Play 1
Nick Suzuki – Cole Caufield – Juraj Slafkovsky
Ivan Demidov – Lane Hutson

Power Play 2
Alex Newhook – Zachary Bolduc – Kirby Dach
Mike Matheson – Alexandre Texier

Goalies
Jakub Dobes – Expected

Injured: Noah Dobson (OUT), Patrik Laine (IR)

IHM Lineup Note:
Montreal continues to lean on its young offensive core. Suzuki, Caufield, Slafkovsky, Demidov and Hutson give the Canadiens creativity, deception and speed, especially on the power play. The question remains defensive stability, particularly with Dobson unavailable and Tampa’s top players capable of punishing small mistakes quickly.

IHM Tactical Signals:
Forecheck Signal: Montreal should continue pressing Tampa’s depth defense and force rushed decisions below the goal line.
Transition Signal: Suzuki remains the central pace and decision hub for controlled entries.
Blue Line Signal: Hutson adds creativity, but the Canadiens must manage risk behind his offensive instincts.
Goalie Stability Signal: Dobes is expected and must handle pressure cleanly against Tampa’s elite finishing group.
X-Factor Signal: Montreal’s young skill must stay aggressive without giving Tampa easy counterattack chances.

IHM Match Pressure Index:
Offensive Pressure: Lightning edge
Transition Edge: Lightning slight edge
Defensive Stability: Even
Goaltending Edge: Lightning edge
Game Control Projection: Tampa projects to push with more urgency and special-teams pressure, but Montreal has enough speed and confidence to punish mistakes if the Lightning lose structure.

Matchup: Utah Mammoth vs Vegas Golden Knights

Faceoff: 03:30 CET

Utah Mammoth – Projected lineup

Power Play 1
Logan Cooley – Clayton Keller – Dylan Guenther
Mikhail Sergachev – Nick Schmaltz

Power Play 2
Alex Kerfoot – JJ Peterka – Michael Carcone
Lawson Crouse – MacKenzie Weegar

Goalies
Karel Vejmelka – Expected

Injured: Barrett Hayton (OUT)

IHM Lineup Note:
Utah has enough skill to make this game uncomfortable, especially through Cooley, Keller, Guenther, Sergachev and Weegar. The problem is consistency. Against Vegas, the Mammoth cannot rely only on flashes of transition. They need sustained pressure, cleaner exits and stronger defensive-zone discipline.

IHM Tactical Signals:
Forecheck Signal: Utah must pressure Vegas earlier and prevent the Golden Knights from walking out cleanly.
Transition Signal: Cooley and Keller are the main pace creators and must attack before Vegas sets its layers.
Blue Line Signal: Sergachev and Weegar give Utah enough quality to move the puck under pressure.
Goalie Stability Signal: Vejmelka is expected and will need to handle net-front traffic calmly.
X-Factor Signal: Utah needs a faster game script, because slow half-ice hockey favors Vegas.

Vegas Golden Knights – Projected lineup

Power Play 1
Mitch Marner – Tomas Hertl – Pavel Dorofeyev
Jack Eichel – Mark Stone

Power Play 2
Brett Howden – Ivan Barbashev – Colton Sissons
Shea Theodore – Rasmus Andersson

Goalies
Carter Hart – Confirmed

Injured: William Karlsson (IR-LT), Alex Pietrangelo (IR-LT)

IHM Lineup Note:
Vegas has Carter Hart confirmed and still looks like the more mature playoff team. Even without Karlsson and Pietrangelo, the Golden Knights have enough structure, size and puck control through Eichel, Marner, Stone, Hertl, Theodore and Andersson to dictate long stretches.

IHM Tactical Signals:
Forecheck Signal: Vegas can pressure with weight and timing while staying above the puck defensively.
Transition Signal: Eichel and Marner provide elite controlled-entry quality and delay-game creativity.
Blue Line Signal: Losing Pietrangelo matters, but Theodore and Andersson still give Vegas strong puck movement.
Goalie Stability Signal: Hart confirmed gives Vegas clear crease control before puck drop.
X-Factor Signal: Vegas can win this game by turning Utah’s speed into wall battles and repeated defensive-zone shifts.

IHM Match Pressure Index:
Offensive Pressure: Golden Knights edge
Transition Edge: Golden Knights slight edge
Defensive Stability: Golden Knights edge
Goaltending Edge: Golden Knights slight edge
Game Control Projection: Vegas projects to control the more repeatable playoff details, while Utah needs speed, special-teams execution and a strong Vejmelka performance to make the game unstable.

Matchup: Anaheim Ducks vs Edmonton Oilers

Faceoff: 04:00 CET

Anaheim Ducks – Projected lineup

Power Play 1
Mikael Granlund – Mason McTavish – Cutter Gauthier
Jackson LaCombe – Beckett Sennecke

Power Play 2
Leo Carlsson – Alex Killorn – Troy Terry
Chris Kreider – John Carlson

Goalies
Lukas Dostal – Expected

Injured: Radko Gudas (OUT), Jansen Harkins (OUT), Ross Johnston (OUT), Petr Mrazek (IR)

IHM Lineup Note:
Anaheim continues to present a difficult structural matchup for Edmonton. The Ducks are not built around one superstar, but their power play units show balance and variety. Granlund, McTavish, Gauthier, Carlsson, Terry, Kreider and Carlson give Anaheim multiple ways to create pressure if Edmonton becomes careless with the puck.

IHM Tactical Signals:
Forecheck Signal: Anaheim must keep pressure controlled and avoid giving McDavid free transition lanes.
Transition Signal: Carlsson and Terry are the main open-ice connectors for the Ducks.
Blue Line Signal: Gudas being out removes defensive bite, making LaCombe and Carlson more important.
Goalie Stability Signal: Dostal is expected and gives Anaheim a credible chance if he tracks through traffic well.
X-Factor Signal: Anaheim needs disciplined layers and fast puck support to continue frustrating Edmonton’s stars.

Edmonton Oilers – Projected lineup

Power Play 1
Leon Draisaitl – Ryan Nugent-Hopkins – Zach Hyman
Connor McDavid – Evan Bouchard

Power Play 2
Vasily Podkolzin – Matt Savoie – Jack Roslovic
Mattias Ekholm – Jake Walman

Goalies
Connor Ingram – Expected

Injured: Jason Dickinson (DTD), Adam Henrique (OUT), Max Jones (OUT), Mattias Janmark (IR-LT)

IHM Lineup Note:
Edmonton still has the highest offensive ceiling on this slate because McDavid, Draisaitl, Hyman, Nugent-Hopkins and Bouchard remain a devastating top power-play core. The issue is execution. If Anaheim keeps the middle closed and Edmonton’s puck movement stays slow, the Oilers’ elite talent can still be forced into frustration.

IHM Tactical Signals:
Forecheck Signal: Edmonton must increase puck retrieval pressure instead of relying only on rush chances.
Transition Signal: McDavid remains the central pace engine and must attack with speed through the middle lane.
Blue Line Signal: Bouchard and Ekholm are critical to clean exits and power-play structure.
Goalie Stability Signal: Ingram is expected and must provide calm behind a team that may open the game up.
X-Factor Signal: Edmonton’s power play has to become dangerous immediately, because special teams can flip this series.

IHM Match Pressure Index:
Offensive Pressure: Oilers edge
Transition Edge: Oilers clear edge
Defensive Stability: Ducks slight edge
Goaltending Edge: Ducks slight edge
Game Control Projection: Edmonton projects to own the higher ceiling through star power and special teams, but Anaheim can control the emotional rhythm if it keeps the Oilers outside and limits central speed.

Matchup: Ottawa Senators vs Carolina Hurricanes

Faceoff: 21:00 CET

Ottawa Senators – Projected lineup

Power Play 1
Tim Stutzle – Brady Tkachuk – Drake Batherson
Jordan Spence – Claude Giroux

Power Play 2
Shane Pinto – Warren Foegele – Fabian Zetterlund
Thomas Chabot – Dylan Cozens

Goalies
Linus Ullmark – Expected

Injured: Jake Sanderson (OUT), Artem Zub (OUT), Nick Jensen (IR)

IHM Lineup Note:
Ottawa enters this matchup under heavy structural pressure. The loss of Sanderson and Zub removes two important defensive-zone stabilizers, which makes every breakout more difficult against Carolina’s layered forecheck. Ullmark becomes the central survival piece because the Senators may spend long stretches defending inside their own zone.

IHM Tactical Signals:
Forecheck Signal: Ottawa must create pressure through Tkachuk and Batherson but cannot afford uncontrolled risk.
Transition Signal: Stutzle becomes the main exit and entry driver with Sanderson unavailable.
Blue Line Signal: The absence of Sanderson and Zub weakens Ottawa’s puck-moving and defensive-zone recovery structure.
Goalie Stability Signal: Ullmark gives Ottawa its strongest chance to keep the game alive under pressure.
X-Factor Signal: Ottawa’s power play must produce because five-on-five creation is becoming harder against Carolina.

Carolina Hurricanes – Projected lineup

Power Play 1
Taylor Hall – Nikolaj Ehlers – Seth Jarvis
Andrei Svechnikov – Shayne Gostisbehere

Power Play 2
Logan Stankoven – Jordan Staal – Jackson Blake
Alexander Nikishin – Sebastian Aho

Goalies
Frederik Andersen – Expected

Injured: None

IHM Lineup Note:
Carolina comes in with complete system confidence and no injury disruption. The Hurricanes continue to win this series through repetition, forecheck pressure, clean reloads, and disciplined defensive layers. Their power play units also show strong depth, with dangerous names spread across both groups rather than loaded into one predictable unit.

IHM Tactical Signals:
Forecheck Signal: Carolina’s pressure structure remains the strongest tactical weapon in this matchup.
Transition Signal: Hall, Ehlers, Aho and Jarvis give the Hurricanes multiple speed and entry options.
Blue Line Signal: Gostisbehere and Nikishin create offensive activation while the team structure protects behind them.
Goalie Stability Signal: Andersen gives Carolina reliable playoff calm behind an already strong system.
X-Factor Signal: Carolina can turn Ottawa’s injured blue line into repeated long defensive-zone shifts.

IHM Match Pressure Index:
Offensive Pressure: Hurricanes edge
Transition Edge: Hurricanes edge
Defensive Stability: Hurricanes clear edge
Goaltending Edge: Senators slight edge
Game Control Projection: Carolina projects to control the rhythm through forecheck pressure and defensive depth, while Ottawa needs Ullmark, special teams and a more direct offensive approach to avoid elimination-level pressure.

Matchup: Minnesota Wild vs Dallas Stars

Faceoff: 23:30 CET

Minnesota Wild – Projected lineup

Power Play 1
Joel Eriksson Ek – Kirill Kaprizov – Matt Boldy
Quinn Hughes – Vladimir Tarasenko

Power Play 2
Ryan Hartman – Marcus Johansson – Bobby Brink
Brock Faber – Jared Spurgeon

Goalies
Jesper Wallstedt – Expected

Injured: Mats Zuccarello (DTD), Charlie Stramel (OUT), Yakov Trenin (OUT)

IHM Lineup Note:
Minnesota still has a dangerous top-end structure through Kaprizov, Boldy, Eriksson Ek and Hughes, but the injury notes around Zuccarello and Trenin affect the balance of the lineup. The Wild remain dangerous in transition, but they need more sustained offensive-zone pressure if they want to keep Dallas from controlling the pace through Heiskanen and Oettinger.

IHM Tactical Signals:
Forecheck Signal: Minnesota can pressure well, but missing Trenin lowers some physical depth impact.
Transition Signal: Kaprizov and Hughes remain the main pace-changing weapons.
Blue Line Signal: Hughes, Faber and Spurgeon give Minnesota strong puck-moving intelligence.
Goalie Stability Signal: Wallstedt is expected, which adds a younger, less proven playoff crease layer.
X-Factor Signal: Minnesota needs Kaprizov and Boldy to generate high-danger looks quickly before Dallas settles into structure.

Dallas Stars – Projected lineup

Power Play 1
Wyatt Johnston – Jason Robertson – Mikko Rantanen
Matt Duchene – Miro Heiskanen

Power Play 2
Mavrik Bourque – Justin Hryckowian – Jamie Benn
Thomas Harley – Esa Lindell

Goalies
Jake Oettinger – Expected

Injured: Nathan Bastian (OUT), Roope Hintz (OUT), Tyler Seguin (IR-LT)

IHM Lineup Note:
Dallas still misses important forward pieces, but the structure remains dangerous because Heiskanen, Robertson, Rantanen, Duchene and Johnston give the Stars elite power-play and transition potential. Oettinger expected in net gives Dallas the stronger playoff goaltending profile in this matchup.

IHM Tactical Signals:
Forecheck Signal: Dallas must force Minnesota into longer defensive-zone possessions and reduce rush exchanges.
Transition Signal: Heiskanen is the central driver of clean exits and controlled entries.
Blue Line Signal: Heiskanen and Harley give Dallas strong offensive-zone support from the back end.
Goalie Stability Signal: Oettinger provides the more established playoff stability compared with Wallstedt.
X-Factor Signal: Dallas needs its power play to punish Minnesota’s penalty structure and change the series rhythm.

IHM Match Pressure Index:
Offensive Pressure: Stars slight edge
Transition Edge: Wild slight edge
Defensive Stability: Stars edge
Goaltending Edge: Stars edge
Game Control Projection: Dallas projects to have the cleaner playoff control profile through Heiskanen and Oettinger, while Minnesota needs elite execution from Kaprizov, Hughes and Boldy to tilt the game through speed.

Q&A: Projected Lineups and Starting Goalies

What are NHL projected lineups?
Projected lineups are expected player combinations, goalie plans and special-teams units based on the latest team information before puck drop.

Are these NHL projected lineups final?
They are highly useful but not guaranteed. Coaches can still make changes after warmups, injury updates or game-time decisions.

Why are projected goalies important?
Goalies directly influence game control, confidence, defensive structure and matchup risk.

What is the difference between expected and confirmed goalies?
Expected means the goalie is likely to start. Confirmed means the team or a reliable lineup source has confirmed the starter.

Why are power play units included?
Power play units reveal offensive hierarchy, puck-touch priority and which players are trusted in high-leverage situations.

Why do injuries matter so much in playoff lineups?
A missing top defenseman, center or goalie can change the entire tactical balance of a playoff game.

How should readers analyze projected lineups?
Focus on center depth, top-four defense quality, goalie status, injuries and whether the team’s normal identity is still intact.

Can special teams decide playoff games?
Yes. In tight playoff games, one power-play goal or one failed penalty kill can decide the outcome.

Why does IHM add tactical signals?
Because player names alone do not explain how the lineup may function under real game pressure.

What is the IHM Match Pressure Index?
It is a quick tactical summary of offensive pressure, transition edge, defensive stability, goaltending edge and projected game control.

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

What should readers watch after publication?
Late goalie changes, injury updates, scratches and any power-play adjustments that shift the tactical balance.