Injury Updates: Wild, Nikishin, Hoglander
There’s a rare three-day break in the Colorado-Minnesota series and with the Wild down a couple of games and a trio of veterans, they’re probably quite content to have the extra time. Head coach John Hynes told reporters today including Joe Smith of The Athletic (Twitter link) that they’re optimistic that defenseman Zach Bogosian will be able to return on Saturday from the lower-body injury that caused him to miss Tuesday’s contest. The news isn’t quite as good for Joel Eriksson Ek, however. Hynes relayed that the center has yet to skate since sustaining a lower-body injury of his own. However, it appears they’d be willing to put him in the lineup without a practice if he’s cleared to resume skating which hasn’t happened yet. Minnesota could certainly use Eriksson Ek back as they look to get back into the series.
Other injury news from around the NHL:
- The Hurricanes welcomed back a key part of their back end tonight against Philadelphia with the team announcing (Twitter link) that Alexander Nikishin was returning to the lineup. The rookie sustained a concussion in the final game of their opening-round series versus Ottawa and missed the first two games of this round. Nikishin had 11 goals and 22 assists in 81 games during the regular season while averaging over 18 minutes per night.
- Canucks winger Nils Hoglander was expected to play for Sweden at the upcoming World Championship. However, that’s no longer the case as their federation announced (Twitter link) that Hoglander is withdrawing from the roster due to injury and will be replaced by Red Wings winger Lucas Raymond. Injuries were the theme of the year for Hoglander, who was limited to just 38 games. He struggled considerably in those outings, notching just two goals and three assists and was undoubtedly hoping to use this tournament as a springboard to his offseason. Meanwhile, Raymond’s addition is a big one for the Swedes. He surpassed the 70-point mark for the third straight year, notching 25 goals and 51 assists in 80 games.
Penguins Assign Bill Zonnon To AHL
One of Pittsburgh’s top prospects is set to get his first taste of the pros. Their AHL affiliate in Wilkes-Barre/Scranton announced that they’ve signed forward Bill Zonnon to a tryout agreement; despite the tryout designation, he will be permitted to play for them in the playoffs.
The 19-year-old was the 22nd overall selection last June out of QMJHL Rouyn-Noranda. In his draft year, Zonnon put up 28 goals and 55 assists in 64 games for the Huskies during the regular season and added 16 points in 13 playoff contests. Rated as a late first-rounder by many scouting lists, he wound up being selected a little higher than that with the first of two selections the Penguins acquired when they traded down from the 12th selection in a swap with Philadelphia.
Over the offseason, Zonnon was moved to Blainville-Boisbriand where he endured an injury-riddled campaign. That limited him to just 35 games during the regular season where he was quite productive, notching 14 goals and 32 helpers. That performance earned him an entry-level deal with Pittsburgh which begins next season.
In the playoffs, he put up just under a point per game with 15 in 17 appearances. Now, with the Armada eliminated, he’s eligible to go to the minors and join a Wilkes-Barre/Scranton team that’s on the verge of moving on as they look to close out their series against Hershey tonight.
USA Hockey Releases Preliminary World Championship Roster
With the World Championship set to begin next week in Switzerland, rosters are starting to get put together. Today, USA Hockey revealed its preliminary roster for the event. It consists of three goalies, eight defensemen, and 14 forwards and is as follows:
Goaltenders
Drew Commesso (Blackhawks)
Devin Cooley (Flames)
Joseph Woll (Maple Leafs)
Defensemen
Will Borgen (Rangers)
Declan Carlile (Lightning)
Connor Clifton (Penguins)
Justin Faulk (Red Wings)
Wyatt Kaiser (Blackhawks)
Ryan Lindgren (Kraken)
Mason Lohrei (Bruins)
Ryan Ufko (Predators)
Forwards
Matthew Coronato (Flames)
Paul Cotter (Devils)
James Hagens (Bruins)
Isaac Howard (Oilers)
Sam Lafferty (Blackhawks)
Ryker Lee (Predators)
Ryan Leonard (Capitals)
Oliver Moore (Blackhawks)
Danny Nelson (Islanders)
Thomas Novak (Penguins)
Mathieu Olivier (Blue Jackets)
Max Plante (Red Wings)
Max Sasson (Canucks)
Matthew Tkachuk (Panthers)
As is often the case for these events, this roster has a mixture of veterans and youngsters. Up front, Tkachuk leads the way as he looks to become the first American player to become part of the Triple Gold Club (World Juniors, Olympics, and World Championship). A total of 30 players have accomplished that particular feat.
A lot of their forwards are on the younger side, however, including three who have yet to play in the pros: Plante, Nelson, and Lee. All three are still playing collegiately with Plante being this year’s recipient of the Hobey Baker Award. With Howard also on the roster, Team USA has the two most recent winners of the award.
Among their other forwards, there are a trio of players who surpassed the 40-point mark in the NHL this season: Coronato (45), Leonard (45), and Novak (42). They will likely be counted on to play similar (if not slightly larger) roles in this event.
On the back end, Lohrei is the lone returnee from last year’s Gold-winning squad and he will be looking to bounce back after being healthy scratched at times in the opening round. Faulk will be the veteran anchor of the group as the oldest player on the team and is participating in the event for the first time since 2015. Meanwhile, Carlile will be participating in his first international event.
Between the pipes, Woll and Cooley (also in his first time representing his country) will likely battle for the starting job. Woll had an injury-riddled season in Toronto while Cooley, in his first season as a full-time NHLer, was one of the top backups despite playing for a rebuilding Calgary squad. Commesso, one of four players on this team with Olympic experience, seems likely to be the third-string option.
This group, led by former Buffalo head coach Don Granato, will kick off training camp in Mannheim, Germany, and will play the Germans in their first pre-tournament game on Sunday.
Stars’ Focus Is On Re-Signing Jason Robertson
The Dallas Stars’ summer will be headlined by a difficult cap crunch. With only $11.11MM in projected cap space, Dallas must decide how to re-sign nine pending free agents. That includes star winger Jason Robertson coming off a 96-point season. Robertson’s extension will be a top priority and is something Stars general manager Jim Nill wants done sooner rather than later, he told Dallas News’ Lia Assimakopoulos. Nill added that he hopes Robertson can be a Star for the rest of his career.
Robertson played in every game of the four-year, $31MM contract he signed with Dallas in 2022. The contract spanned his break into the top echelon of NHL scorers. He had a career-year in the first season of his deal, reaching 46 goals and 109 points. That was 40 points more than he managed in the 2021-22 season, a jump that led many to wonder if the century-scoring was merely a lucky fluke. Those concerns grew louder as Robertson continued to thrive in a loaded Dallas top-six, but only reached 80 points, in each of the next two seasons.
It seemed the century mark would indeed stay out of reach, until Robertson showed his ability to chase the mark this season. He fell four points short – but did find his way onto a formidable top-line next to Wyatt Johnston and Mikko Rantanen, who ranked second and third on the Stars in scoring behind Robertson. The space that Rantanen’s addition, and Johnston’s breakout, lended Robertson helped the sharpshooter pace for 100-points for most of the season. He is near the peak of his career at 26 years old and, should he find a long-term deal in Dallas, could have at least a few more seasons of 100-point potential next to Johnston and Rantanen.
That will be the impact Dallas hopes to bring back this summer. Rantanen will offer a strong baseline for Robertson’s negotiations after signing an eight-year, $96MM contract with Dallas last year. The Stars will need to find a way to shed some cap to fit another contract of that size under their cap. Finding a way to move defenseman Ilya Lyubushkin would net the Stars $3.25MM in cap space. Lyubushkin hasn’t managed to clinch a role in the Stars’ roster over the last two seasons. He has played with five teams across his eight-year career in the NHL and could garner the interest of one of the league’s rebuilders, like the Vancouver Canucks or Chicago Blackhawks. Dallas would need to include a rich premium to move that much cap space before July 1st – but nearly any price would be worthwhile to bring back a scorer like Robertson.
The upside and reliability that Robertson has offered the Stars is invaluable. If he secures a long-term deal, Dallas will have their star-studded top-line signed through the next five years, at least. That will be incredible, year-over-year security as the team faces the retirement of veterans like Jamie Benn, Tyler Seguin, and Matt Duchene. With so much value riding on Robertson’s contract negotiations, it’s no wonder why Dallas wants it to be the first order of business.
Poll: Which Active Players Will Become An NHL GM?
The connection between NHL playing careers and front office roles has existed for nearly as long as the league itself. Some of the most highly-regarded executives – from Glen Sather in the 1980s to Jim Nill today – began their journeys with a decade-or-more in NHL lineups. Looking at the league in 2025-26, there seems to be no shortage of potential NHL executives currently putting on the pads. The question is, which of them will make it to the big chair first?
A clear top candidate would be Pittsburgh Penguins captain Sidney Crosby – the face of the NHL for much of the last 20 years. Crosby has become synonymous with North American hockey through his historical playing career, while learning from player-turned-owner and fellow all-time-great Mario Lemieux. That leadership could soon be invaluable. Crosby will face the question of if he should play on, or if now is the time to call it quits, in the second half of next season. If he wants to prolong his time on an NHL payroll beyond his time in the lineup, he could have a great chance to learn under Kyle Dubas and alongside Jason Spezza in the Penguins front office.
Another strong candidate for a GM role will be Colorado Avalanche captain Gabriel Landeskog. Former NHL GM Brian Burke recently said as much on The Sheet With Jeff Marek while speaking to how much he admires Landeskog’s professionalism. There is no doubt about the Avalanche star’s commitment to the game, most notably highlighted by his triumphant return from a severe knee injury. Landeskog played through that injury during Colorado’s run to the 2022 Stanley Cup. On the other side of his return, he continues to serve as a versatile and effective playmaker who can shine off without top-line minutes. He is currently part of a three-way tie for second on the Avalanche in playoff scoring with seven points in six games. With that kind of impact, there will be plenty of hockey ahead for the 33 year old, who is signed through the 2028-29 season. But when his career nears its end, a door to team management could quickly open.
Prior playing experience could also open the door for more European representation in front office roles. Landeskog would become the second Swedish GM in NHL history, while a player like Anze Kopitar could shoot to become the first from central Europe should he choose that path. Kopitar is hanging up his skates after the Los Angeles Kings’ exit from the 2026 Stanley Cup Playoffs. He had the third-most games played of any active NHL player this season. Every single one of those games came in a Kings’ jersey, with Kopitar captaining the team through the final 10 seasons of his career. All-time goals record holder Alex Ovechkin has also spent the entirety of his career with one team and could wield the experience needed to become the league’s first Russian GM.
Of course, playing success does not create a top exec – and many of the league’s top leaders could also have a chance. Longtime pros Jaccob Slavin, Nathan MacKinnon, Ryan O’Reilly, and Aleksander Barkov have all been recognized for their sportsmanship with the Lady Byng Memorial Trophy. The trophy was also handed out to former Avalanche GM Joe Sakic and soon-to-be-former Seattle Kraken GM Ron Francis. Its recognition of on-and-off-ice impact would stand out on any resume, especially next to the Stanley Cup precedent that MacKinnon, O’Reilly, and Barkov boast. It is also a feat managed multiple times by Kopitar, who could win the trophy again this season.
Many players around the league could put together a strong case for a managerial role. Who will do it first? Who will find another long career in the role? Vote for your choice below and use the comments to make a case for other players!
Which Active Players Will Become An NHL GM?
Examining Dallas Stars Cap Crunch
The NHL’s announcement of a record $104MM salary cap for 2026‑27 was expected to create meaningful flexibility across the league. For the Dallas Stars, though, the numbers remain tight. Per PuckPedia, Dallas is projected to enter the offseason with roughly $11.1MM in functional cap space and 19 players already under contract for their active roster. That level of roster certainty is usually an advantage, but in this case, it leaves GM Jim Nill with very little room to maneuver as he approaches the most consequential negotiation of his tenure.
With nearly $93MM already committed, the remaining cap space averages out to about $2.7MM per open roster spot. A workable number for depth pieces. However, the equation changes entirely once Jason Robertson enters the picture.
Robertson is coming off a 45‑goal, 96‑point season, and his next contract will almost certainly land among the league’s top winger comparables. His camp is believed to be targeting the Mikko Rantanen range ($12MM AAV). A deal at that level would push Dallas over the cap with only 20 players signed, forcing immediate subtractions.
Even a contract closer to the internal ceiling set by Thomas Harley’s $10.587MM AAV would leave Dallas with a less-than-viable number, roughly around $513K to fill three roster spots.
Robertson’s extension isn’t the only item complicating the Stars’ cap picture. Dallas still has several key vacancies to address starting with their team captain and unrestricted free agent, Jamie Benn. The 36-year-old’s future remains unresolved and a new contract, even at a steep discount, would cut further into the limited space available after a Robertson deal. Restricted Free Agent Mavrik Bourque (24) finished seventh on the team in points (20-21–41) in 82 games. A bridge deal could be beneficial for both parties, but even a modest number adds to the squeeze. Bourque finished the season with nine goals and 19 points in 25 games while averaging 19 minutes of ice time after the Olympic break.
The Stars could see key departures in their depth, including forward Michael Bunting (30), which leaves holes that typically require $1.5–$2MM signings. That tier of spending becomes difficult once Robertson’s contract is accounted for.
To reconcile Robertson’s expected AAV with the Stars’ current structure, Nill may need to shift from cap management to cap triage. The most straightforward path to creating space would involve moving a veteran contract. Defenseman Esa Lindell ($5.8MM) stands out as one of the more viable trade candidates, while Ilya Lyubushkin could also be a trade target as well. Moving one of those deals would push Dallas’ available space into the $15–17MM range, giving enough to sign Robertson and complete the roster without resorting to minimum‑salary patchwork.
Dallas has already secured the core of its roster, including long‑term commitments to defenseman Miro Heiskanen and forward Roope Hintz. But that stability has created what amounts to a 19‑man cap trap. The Stars can keep their group intact, but only if they clear meaningful money before finalizing Robertson’s extension.
Without the necessary moves and shedding of salary, the idea and ability to retain their most productive forward becomes mathematically impossible under the current structure.
The Oilers Are Stuck In A Cycle Self-Correction
It’s no secret that the Edmonton Oilers are in win-now mode, and that mode has shifted to pure desperation as they enter the final two years of superstar captain Connor McDavid’s current contract. It’s completely understandable that the Oilers have spent years sacrificing future assets to win now, given the window they are in with the best player in the world on their roster. However, that desperation to win now has led Oilers management to make aggressive moves, many of which have been disasters. Their desperation has often forced them into awful trades or signings, sometimes to undo ill-advised moves or simply because they thought they had to fix a roster hole. This line of thinking has painted the Oilers into the corner they currently find themselves in, out of the playoffs in the first round, with an unhappy superstar and a fanbase left shaking their heads.
Edmonton has repeatedly paid a premium to plug holes in the lineup or to undo prior mistakes in player acquisition. This has been especially true for the Oilers’ depth, defensive reliability, and secondary scoring, where they’ve either ignored the problem or acquired players who created a hole. From the outside, it feels as though Edmonton is constantly chasing fixes, reacting to structural roster issues rather than building a roster with any semblance of a long-term plan. As mentioned, the Oilers sacrificed future assets to win now, but they’ve also repeatedly spent additional assets to fix the holes their prior aggressive moves often created. This type of thinking is often called the sunk cost fallacy, in which someone doubles down on a bad decision because too much has already been invested.
There are few better examples of Edmonton’s reactionary thinking than the Jason Dickinson trade with the Chicago Blackhawks prior to this year’s NHL Trade Deadline. The Oilers released a video of the team’s management group discussing the potential trade for Dickinson. Although the clips were just 2 minutes, they painted a picture of a management group with a relatively shallow, short-sighted understanding of the trade they were trying to make. Effectively, Oilers general manager Stan Bowman was trying to plug a hole on his roster that he thought he’d filled at last year’s trade deadline with the trade for Trent Frederic, only to see Frederic implode this season after signing an eight-year extension last summer. Simply put, the trade felt like damage control stemming from previous poor decisions with Frederic and the free-agent signing of Andrew Mangiapane, who was included in the Dickinson trade as a salary dump after a poor showing in Edmonton.
Mangiapane is a clear example of Edmonton’s mismanagement and inability to find the right pieces for the right roles. Signed to a two-year, $7.2MM deal, the Oilers hoped that playing alongside their skilled players would reignite the offensive side of Mangiapane’s game; however, that did not happen, and he was traded to the Chicago Blackhawks less than one year into the deal.
As good an example as Mangiapane is, there is no better example than goaltender Tristan Jarry. Jarry was acquired from the Pittsburgh Penguins in December, when the Oilers were in desperate need of better goaltending. The trade came less than three months after Bowman had stated that he “Liked where Stuart Skinner’s game was.” Bowman’s comments came on the heels of a summer with no movement in the Oilers’ crease, despite it being a clear area of weakness.
Skinner began the season with the Oilers, going 11-8-4 with an .891 SV% and a 2.83 GAA. At the time of the trade, Skinner was ranked 32nd in Goals Saved Above Expected, while Jarry was 22nd. Edmonton hoped that moving Skinner for Jarry would be a massive upgrade and even included defenseman Brett Kulak and a second-round pick.
The trade was a colossal disaster for the Oilers, as Jarry reverted to his recent form, going 9-6-2 in 19 games with Edmonton, posting an .857 SV% and a 3.86 GAA. Jarry wasn’t just bad in Edmonton; he was among the worst netminders in the league after the trade.
Had Edmonton management simply addressed the issue last summer, they likely would have avoided a trade for Jarry, which will have repercussions for years, as Jarry has two years left on his contract, a deal that is effectively buyout-proof.
The Oilers’ asset recycling continued with the Jarry trade and has become an alarming trend for a team that is shutting its own contention window with each passing season. The Oilers had a clear need to upgrade their roster construction last summer, particularly their goaltending and defense. Instead, they prioritized adding toughness, veterans, and depth scoring, and the results this past season speak for themselves.
The team clearly (and correctly) has a mandate to win now because of the presence of McDavid and Leon Draisaitl, but that urgency has distorted management’s decision-making, prompting panic move after panic move in hopes of catching lightning in a bottle. Management often overvalues urgency and undervalues patience, particularly in player development and salary-cap management.
A persistent narrative in Oilers fandom is that the team is one piece away, but for a team that constantly patches holes mid-season, that logic seems flawed and generally indicates poor organizational planning. You could certainly point to trades and moves in a vacuum and say they worked, but when you zoom out and look at the broader picture, a pattern starts to emerge.
The pattern is that the Oilers have rarely built forward and have spent most of the McDavid/Draisaitl era trying to escape the consequences of their past bets. If the Oilers want to finally bring a Stanley Cup back to Northern Alberta, some hard conversations need to be had among management to break this cycle.
Dallas Stars Issue Several Injury Updates
There’s no question that the Dallas Stars were severely impacted by injuries throughout the 2025-26 season. The Stars had the fourth-most injuries of any team this season, behind the Florida Panthers, Vegas Golden Knights, and New York Islanders. In today’s end-of-season media availability, the General Manager Jim Nill revealed a laundry list (via Lia Assimakopoulos of The Dallas Morning News) of specific injury information the Stars dealt with throughout the regular season and postseason.
Nill disclosed new injuries or details regarding 18 players on the roster, from the preseason to the present. Some injuries were already known, such as Tyler Seguin‘s ACL tear, Jamie Benn‘s collapsed lung, and Miro Heiskanen‘s torn oblique, but several others were also mentioned.
The biggest news is that star forward Mikko Rantanen suffered a torn MCL in the Olympics. Missing more than a month of action, Rantanen dropped from a 1.27 P/G average before the international tournament to a 0.80 upon his return. His point production went up mildly during the playoffs, but it was clear that Rantanen wasn’t his usual self.
Nill admitted that Rantanen came back as quickly as he could, which likely hurt his recovery process. Fortunately, the Stars aren’t expecting that he’ll need surgery this summer.
Both players that Dallas acquired at the trade deadline were also dealing with injuries. Nill alerted that both Michael Bunting and Tyler Myers were dealing with groin injuries in the regular season. That could be a key reason as to why neither player transitioned well to the team after being acquired by the Stars.
He also offered injury updates on those on the team who suffered longer-term injuries throughout the 2025-26 campaign. Matt Duchene was dealing with a concussion earlier in the season that cost him most of October and all of November.
Roope Hintz, who became ill at the Olympics, suffered a double hamstring tear in his first game back on March 6th. Unfortunately, as he was attempting to make another comeback, Hintz reaggravated the same injury. In a similar vein, Radek Faksa, who was also injured in the Olympics, apparently suffered a concussion. Additionally, while he was recovering from concussion symptoms, Faksa was stepped on by a skate and had a serious laceration in his foot that cut some ligaments. There’s a chance he’ll need surgery again this offseason.
Further down the forward corps, Nill shared that Oskar Back lost 10 games in October due to a wrist injury, Nathan Bastian broke his finger toward the end of the regular season, Adam Erne sprained his MCL in December, Arttu Hyry suffered a high ankle sprain in the playoffs, and Sam Steel endured a groin injury during the regular season.
On defense, the most notable news was the injury specifics to Thomas Harley and Lian Bichsel earlier in the season. According to Nill, Bichsel fractured his leg and ankle in late November, costing him nearly a third of the regular season. Nill added that Bichsel suffered a shoulder sprain in the playoffs, but that isn’t expected to have any long-term consequences.
Meanwhile, Harley, who lost 12 games of the regular season, suffered a broken foot in November. Nils Lundkvist, who hasn’t played since getting a facial laceration against the Minnesota Wild, was also suffering from concussion symptoms from the same play. Additionally, Nill shared that Lundkvist fractured his leg and ankle earlier in the year, costing him 30 games. Lastly, Nill told the media that depth defenseman Ilya Lyubushkin had a shoulder injury throughout the regular season.
Dallas has reached a point where losing Game 7 of the Stanley Cup Final in overtime is considered a disappointing year. Still, given the overwhelming amount of injuries the same faced during the regular season and playoffs, it’s impressive that the Stars managed to win 50 games this season and finish third in the league standings. They’ll want to emphasize rest and recovery for their players this offseason and look to get back for the 2026-27 campaign as a healthy group.
Photo courtesy of Perry Nelson-Imagn Images.
Utah Mammoth Sign Borikov to Three-Year Entry-Level Contract
The Utah Mammoth have signed forward Yegor Borikov to a three‑year entry‑level contract, the team announced today. The deal begins in 2026–27, bringing the 2025 fourth‑round pick officially into the organization after a strong season overseas.
Borikov, 20, is coming off his most productive year in the KHL, recording 16 goals and 14 assists for 30 points in 59 games with Dinamo Minsk. All three totals marked new career highs. He also finished among the team’s leaders in several categories, including four game‑winning goals and 78 hits, the latter ranking second on the roster. In the Gagarin Cup Playoffs, he added two goals in seven games before joining Metallurg Zhlobin on loan for the Belarusian Extraleague postseason. There, he posted eight points in four games, helping the club capture another league title.
Across 167 career KHL games, Borikov has produced 63 points (33G–30A) with a +24 rating. In the postseason, Borikov has totaled nine goals and 10 points in 18 games, including a standout 2025 postseason in which his seven goals tied Evgeny Kuznetsov’s record for the most scored in a single KHL playoff run by a player age 20 or younger.
Before turning pro, the Zhlobin native developed through the Belarusian junior system, including a 24‑point season with Dinamo‑Shinnik Bobruysk in the MHL and multiple championship runs with Metallurg Zhlobin.
Borikov was selected 110th overall in the 2025 NHL Draft.
Rasmus Dahlin, Cale Makar, Zach Werenski Named Norris Trophy Finalists
As part of revealing the finalists for major league awards, the NHL announced the Norris Trophy finalists today. According to a league announcement, Rasmus Dahlin of the Buffalo Sabres, Cale Makar of the Colorado Avalanche, and Zach Werenski of the Columbus Blue Jackets are the three finalists to be named the “defense player who demonstrates throughout the season the greatest all-around ability in the position.”
Although he’s earned multiple votes over the last three years, this is the first time that Dahlin, 26, has been named a finalist for the Norris Trophy. Throughout the first four years of his career, there were several questions regarding Dahlin, particularly if he was the top defenseman that the Sabres believed he would be when they drafted him.
Over the last four years, he has proven he is everything Buffalo hoped he would be, if not more. Since the beginning of the 2022-23 campaign, Dahlin has scored 71 goals and 274 points in 379 games, topping out with a 19-goal, 74-point performance this season. Additionally, he’s averaged nearly 25 minutes a night over that stretch, showing he can play in every situation comfortably. He’s physical, he blocks shots, he puts a ton of them on net, and he has captained the Sabres to the playoffs for the first time in 14 years.
Unlike Dahlin, Makar’s name has become synonymous with the Norris Trophy throughout his career. Throughout his career, Makar has been a finalist for the Norris Trophy six times, winning the award twice. Even when he wasn’t a finalist during his rookie campaign, he still finished top-10 in voting.
Still, it’s fair to argue that Makar took a step back offensively this season. After posting back-to-back 90-point campaigns in the 2023-24 and 2024-25 seasons, Makar dropped back to 20 goals and 79 points this season. Regardless, he sustained more than a point per game on average, blocked over 100 shots, finished with a +32 rating, and was the top defenseman on the top team in the league.
Meanwhile, Werenski finished as a Norris Trophy finalist for the second year in a row, at the very least. The Gross Pointe, MI native finished 22 goals and 81 points in 75 games, averaging over 26 minutes of ice time per night. Although he doesn’t block as many shots as Dahlin or Makar, and didn’t have a double-digit rating, Weresnki played in every situation and led the Blue Jackets in scoring by a 14-point margin, which is extremely uncommon for a defenseman.
Unfortunately, given that each of the finalists’ all-around game, it’s a toss-up who will ultimately come away with the award this season.
Although it’s difficult to argue either Dahlin, Makar, or Werenski out of being a finalist, there are a few other defensemen who easily could have found their way into the top three. Evan Bouchard of the Edmonton Oilers, who finished as the highest-scoring defenseman this season with 21 goals and 95 points in 82 games, has a case, as does Lane Hutson of the Montreal Canadiens, who finished with 12 goals and 78 points in 82 games, with a +36 rating.
