Islander’ Bo Horvat can ‘do it all’

SUNRISE, Fla. — Connor McDavid has spent his career dealing with Bo Horvat in the Pacific Division. So the Oilers star, who is universally acclaimed as the NHL’s best, knows well what the Islanders are How the betting market reacted to Islanders’ Bo Horvat trade, who will make his debut with his new team on Monday in Philadelphia after he was acquired from the Canucks this past week.

“He’s gonna be somebody that brings it each and every night,” McDavid said. “Somebody that can play at both ends of the rink. Obviously he’s having a career year scoring goals. Defensively, he’s solid. He’s great on the kill. Obviously his faceoff numbers speak for themselves. They’re kind of getting somebody that can do it all.”

It likely won’t be clear where Horvat will slot into the Islanders’ lineup until they take pregame rushes Monday. But the educated guess is he will be taking faceoffs on the top line with Mathew Barzal, though who would slide over to play the wing is an open question.

Horvat’s 31 goals this season have already matched his career high. With his shooting percentage at an unsustainable 21.7 percent, it’s unlikely he’ll score at a 50-goal pace beyond this season if he stays with the Islanders. But they are getting a player capable of scoring at least 30 times annually — something they needed to add to their lineup badly.


Bo Horvat to the Islanders sends one of the NHL’s best scorers to Long Island.
Jasen Vinlove-USA TODAY

“I just think his confidence is there,” McDavid said. “He got off to a real good start, that helps so many different things. Obviously namely confidence. He feels good about himself, I think he feels good about his game. It just shows out there.”

Horvat skated with McDavid and the rest of the Pacific Division All-Stars on Saturday, though he wore an Islanders jersey at the skills competition Friday night. 

“We talked about it,” said Pettersson, Horvat’s former teammate with the Canucks. “Whatever happens, make sure we score one together.”

Horvat’s focus now will turn to getting acclimated with the Islanders, who will practice on Sunday before going to Philadelphia.


Connor McDavid #97 of the Edmonton Oilers competes in the Honda NHL Accuracy Shooting during the 2023 NHL All-Star Skills Competition at FLA Live Arena on February 03, 2023 in Sunrise, Florida.
McDavid commended his former Bo Horvat, his now ex-Pacific Division rival, for his play.
Mike Ehrmann/Getty Images

“[All-Star] was great, but at the same time, I wanted to get going,” Horvat said. “Enough’s enough now. Let’s start playing some games and get to know the guys. I just want to start playing hockey again.”

He has at least gotten a chance this weekend to meet Brock Nelson and Ilya Sorokin, his new Islanders teammates and fellow All-Stars.

“He’s gonna bring a huge element to our team up front, depth, scoring,” Nelson said. “He does a little bit of everything. Kills, power play, five-on-five. So he’s gonna be a huge part of our team. That’s a big move for us, a big move by Lou [Lamoriello] to kinda try to get things going.”

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Islanders’ strong finish to January changed tone going into break

Islanders coach Lane Lambert won’t be getting much rest or relaxation during his team’s eight-day break. But getting away from a hectic schedule will be a moment for him and his players to take a needed breath of fresh air. 

“We’ve played a lot of hockey, as has every team in the league, really,” Lambert said. “But we’ve had some travel through January. It’s been a tough stretch for us. It’s good to get away from the game to refresh, regenerate, spend some time with your family. Get in a frame of mind where you get reenergized coming back. And that’s just really all it is.” 

The Islanders had a woeful January but finished it off feeling good. They swept back-to-back games at home against the Red Wings and Golden Knights to put a six-game losing streak behind them. 

Brock Nelson and Ilya Sorokin will go to South Florida as the team’s two representatives at All-Star Weekend, and everyone else will get a break from a schedule that’s been unrelenting. 

“It’s pretty hard to turn it off,” Lambert said. “You do your best you possibly can to do that, and I will. But overall, there’s always something going on.” 


Barzal netted in a clutch shot against the Las Vegas Golden Knights.
Brad Penner-USA TODAY Sports

After the 2-1 win over Vegas on Saturday, in which Mathew Barzal netted the winner late in overtime, the mood in the dressing room was one of relief. The Islanders had won just twice all month going into the weekend, but now find themselves just two points behind Pittsburgh for the last wild-card spot. The Penguins do have three games in hand to add to their advantage, but the Islanders still having a chance after a 4-8-3 January is giving life to the group. 

“Think if it went the other way these last two games, this break would’ve been tough,” Barzal said. “For us to put ourselves right back in the mix, huge going into this break.” 

Adding to the optimism is that the schedule in the first week out of the break looks navigable. The Isles play four times in six nights, but three of their opponents are .500 or below in the Flyers, Canucks and Canadiens. 

That should give them a chance to make a statement, particularly with management weighing what moves to make at the March 3 trade deadline. 

If the Islanders are in a position to go for it, adding a scorer will be a must. The Isles rank 25th in per-game scoring and their power play, which is in the midst of a 3-for-64 run, is 31st in the league at 15.54 percent. 


The Islanders are in a position to either land a playoff spot or have a woeful season.
Bruce Bennett/Getty Images

Most nights, their defense and goaltending has been good enough to at least keep them in games, but in a league where speed and skill is king, it’s hard to win many games without consistently scoring more than three goals. Not so coincidentally, the Islanders scored more than three times just once in January, a 6-2 win over the Canucks early in the month. 

Lately, the goals have been coming from the second line of Anders Lee, Nelson and Kyle Palmieri, which has looked rejuvenated since Palmieri’s return to the lineup. 

“I think it bleeds into everyone,” Lambert said. “When you’re watching the line out there and they’re playing the way they’re playing, you want to follow that up. And that’s what’s happening right now. The line is playing very well. It’s leading into other players playing very well.” 

With a long vacation in front of them, the Islanders are happy to have something positive to reflect on. 

“It was an important four points for us right before the break,” Semyon Varlamov said. “It’s nice to go into the break feeling good about the team, about ourselves.”

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Why the Fisherman flopped — and now is an Islanders hit

Maybe it all would have turned out differently if the Islanders had won a playoff series. Maybe all it would have taken was just getting to the playoffs. Maybe it was all down to the disastrous record and pair of last-place finishes over the two seasons the Islanders used the infamous Fisherman as their primary logo.

Certainly the losing had at least something to do with the backlash back then.

“One of the truisms in sports is that you should rebrand when you expect that you’re gonna go in a winning direction,” Nick Hirshon, a journalism professor at William Patterson University and author of “We Want Fish Sticks,” a book that chronicles the failed rebranding, said in a phone call with Sports+.

The Islanders rebranded off a 15-28-5 lockout-shortened season in 1994-95. That was already one box they failed to check. The rest would come soon enough.

The original iteration of the Fisherman sweater, from the 1996-97 season.
NHLI via Getty Images

That is part of the reason why it might be surprising to anyone around between 1995 and 1997 that the Islanders have wholeheartedly embraced the Fisherman as their reverse retro look this season. When the NHL first introduced the retro concept in 2020, the Islanders steadfastly avoided it, instead going with a navy blue sweater that was basically the same as their regular jersey.

This time, they took the plunge, and the buzz was immediate. The sweaters quickly became ubiquitous around the UBS Arena concourse. The Isles are an organization based just outside of one of the league’s biggest media markets, but one that struggles to get attention. This got attention.

Players hailed it. So did the marketing team.

“I like the throwback stuff,” Zach Parise said in October. “I like the different looks, the different colors. Not the change, but just for a different look. It’s always neat for the fans.”

Why, though, has there been such a change in attitude about this logo, once associated with the dark days of the franchise?

Nick Hirshon’s book chronicles the disastrous rollout of the Islanders’ Fisherman logo.
We Want Fish Sticks cover

“When the Islanders first unveiled the Fisherman logo in 1995, there were lots of mistakes made,” Hirshon said. “There wasn’t a lot of research done, there were no focus groups or interviews with fans to determine whether they wanted to part from the original logo. They didn’t have a really good ambassador for the rebrand. In most of the ads at the time, they had either [general manager] Mike Milbury or [owner] John Spano, who turned out to be a con artist and had to give up the team. And they really didn’t focus as much on the team, like Ziggy Palffy, who was incredibly popular and still is with the fan base.

“I think one of the reasons is with the passage of time, a lot of the younger fans who don’t remember the Fisherman logo from its first run in 1995-1997, they just view this as a cool retro design and they don’t associate it with the losing of the 1990s or any of the other negative media attention that it received: ‘We Want Fish Sticks’ chants and all that.”

Hirshon points to how the Kings rebranded after trading for Wayne Gretzky in 1988 as what a successful effort looked like. Gretzky arrived at his introductory press conference wearing silver and black, new colors for a franchise that previously had draped itself in the same purple and gold as their co-tenants at the Los Angeles Forum.

With Gretzky, the Kings — who had made the playoffs in the two previous seasons before acquiring No. 99 — became perennial contenders, making it as far as the Stanley Cup Final in 1993. Silver and black are still the primary colors of their logo set.

“People are more receptive to something like that because the team is doing good, so ‘I guess I’ll go out and buy the new jersey and I’ll associate it with all these positive memories,’” Hirshon said. “I think it’s that, I think it’s also remembering that changing a jersey or a logo is just one step in a more comprehensive rebranding.”

The Islanders are wearing the Fisherman jersey as a reverse retro look for six games this season.
AP

The Islanders, at the time, also introduced Nyisles as their new mascot and included elements in their game presentation meant to emphasize the Fisherman brand — a foghorn as the goal horn and fog-like smoke emanating from the Nassau Coliseum scoreboard. With the team struggling, though, and Spano soon being chased out of ownership due to fraud, that all became part of the running joke that was the franchise.

A wholesale rebranding effort would not be greeted happily now. But as a nod to the past and a jersey that they’re wearing six times this season — the final two occasions are coming Saturday against the Hurricanes and Jan. 28 against Las Vegas — the Fisherman comes off as cool.

“[Fans] just see it as, “Hey, this is something that’s cool and old, it kind of fits in with the nostalgic kind of direction that a lot of sports teams have been going in the last few years,’ especially with 1990s designs,” Hirshon said. “For a lot of people like myself, they grew up in the ’90s and now we’re getting nostalgic: ‘Yeah, remember that?’ It’s now old enough that we kind of pine for it again.”

How has Pelech’s injury impacted matchups?

The Islanders’ dependable top defense pair of Ryan Pulock and Adam Pelech (right) has been broken up due to Pelech’s injury.
Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

Adam Pelech continues to skate with the team in his recovery from a head injury, but it has been a little over six weeks since the star defenseman went down against the Blues following a hit into the boards by Robert Bortuzzo.

Though the focus lately has been on the Isles’ offensive struggles, losing Pelech on the back end has caused major issues. The 2022 All-Star forms a steadfast pair with Ryan Pulock that eats up the largest bulk of minutes against opposing top lines when both are healthy. Without Pelech, Pulock has skated with whomever Pelech’s replacement has been on a given night — lately Parker Wotherspoon, though Dennis Cholowski drew in for Wotherspoon against the Bruins on Wednesday. That has been Lane Lambert’s way of protecting Wotherspoon, Cholowski or Robin Salo, all of whom have gotten a chance at that spot. But it means the Isles have needed to go with another pair — which has almost always been Scott Mayfield’s — against opposing top lines.

Steven Kaye/New York Post

A couple things to take note of here. First, the graphic dates back to Dec. 23, Wotherspoon’s debut. Second, we looked at which pair played the most, but that doesn’t mean one pair played exclusively against one line. Third, remember that on the road, the Islanders don’t have last change — and therefore don’t have as much control of matchups.

The last two caveats apply in particular to the Calgary game, the only one we looked at in which Mayfield wasn’t involved as the primary matchup against a top line. Aho and Mayfield played roughly five minutes against Nazem Kadri’s line that night and were on the ice for two goals against — Pulock and Wotherspoon just happened to be on for slightly longer, with the former being on for a goal against as well.

Still, there are some takeaways here, the biggest being that Lambert still is sheltering Noah Dobson. Against Washington on Monday night, for example, Dobson played just 3:22 total while Alex Ovechkin — Dylan Strome’s left wing — was on the ice. Mayfield and Romanov were on the ice for 11:54 and 10:04, respectively.

When Lambert and GM Lou Lamoriello talk about Dobson taking the next steps defensively, they mean being able to trust him in spots like this. Right now, he isn’t quite there yet. Neither is Aho, who was demoted off Mayfield’s left side following a series of poor performances out west.

The Islanders haven’t trusted Noah Dobson with a promotion to date.
USA TODAY Sports

So lately, the Isles have been left with Mayfield and Romanov as their de facto top pair, and the results have been mixed. Minnesota’s top line of Kirill Kaprizov, Sam Steel and Mats Zuccarello had a strong night against them, as did the Capitals’ Ovechkin-Strome line. Mayfield and Romanov did hold their own against a heavy Stars top line of Jason Robertson, Tyler Seguin and Joe Pavelski — Robertson scored, but during a rare shift against Wotherspoon and Pulock — as well as against Montreal’s top line, centered by Nick Suzuki.

That alignment has the added disadvantages of splitting up Romanov and Dobson, a well-balanced pair that the Islanders want to make work, and limiting Dobson’s five-on-five ice time, which was down 1:16 per game from last season going into Wednesday.

Still, it might be the best solution they have right now. Which only makes it all the more imperative to get Pelech back and correct the order of things.

Five hits from Bruins 4, Islanders 1

1. William Dufour struggled in his debut, turning the puck over two separate times that led to goals. But the Islanders put their 20-year-old prospect in a position to fail. Asking him to make his NHL debut on the top line against the Bruins and then nailing him to the bench after he struggled is a self-fulfilling prophecy, one that stinks of desperation.

2. Ditto for the recent deployment of Semyon Varlamov, who allowed four goals on 1.86 expected goals-against on Wednesday, per Natural Stat Trick. The NHL is a results league, and that is on Varlamov, just as Dufour’s performance is on him. But not giving Varlamov a single game on the homestand until the last and then expecting him to beat the best team in the league — in only the second game he’s played in a month — does wrong by the player.

Trying to stop the NHL’s best team in only his second game in the last month was not a winning formula for Semyon Varlamov.
Getty Images

3. When every single penny of cap space matters, keeping Simon Holmstrom on the roster to be a healthy scratch instead of sending him to AHL Bridgeport — even if only for the day — was another head-scratcher.

4. Prior to any roster moves made Thursday, the Islanders had $3.36 million in cap space and were on pace to have $6.88 million by the March 3 trade deadline. Can they afford to wait that long to make a move? It is becoming hard to see how.

5. For all the well-deserved hand-wringing over the power play, the Islanders had just five high-danger chances at five-on-five on Wednesday, per Natural Stat Trick. It was the fourth time in their last seven games they’ve been held to five or fewer high-danger chances, and during the five-game homestand, they scored a total of eight goals.

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Lost offseason now haunting Islanders, Lou Lamoriello

CALGARY, Alberta — Lou Lamoriello wasn’t exactly defiant, but on the afternoon of Aug. 22, it was at least clear he felt the narrative surrounding his team’s offseason missed the mark.

During a news conference to announce contracts for Noah Dobson and Kieffer Bellows, as well as introduce Alexander Romanov, Lamoriello spent much of his time defending the lack of moves to upgrade the roster over the summer.

“I feel very good about this hockey team,” he said.

“Sometimes some of the best transactions to make are the ones you don’t make,” he added, a few minutes later.

And in his last remarks of the day: “We would have made drastic changes last year if we didn’t feel good about the group we have and what we’re capable of doing. I say that with comfortability. I say that with confidence. I’m looking forward to getting back at it and maybe proving everybody wrong.”

Lou Lamoriello
Getty Images

After the Islanders finished off the first half of the season with a disastrous 1-3-0 road trip through the Pacific Division, it’s getting harder and harder to see them proving Lamoriello right. They are still in a playoff spot as of Saturday morning and may yet make the postseason. But a wild-card berth and a first-round playoff loss being spun as positive would only go to show how far this group has fallen in just two seasons.

The forward group Lamoriello failed to upgrade in a meaningful way over the summer still has all the same problems as last season, even with Mathew Barzal having taken a major step forward and Brock Nelson continuing to produce at a high level. Not enough skill. Not enough scoring.

That became especially clear in Friday’s 4-1 loss to the Flames, when the Islanders spent all 60 minutes searching for answers after Barzal became a late scratch. It’s not an overstatement to say it’s hard to see how they’ll survive if Barzal’s lower-body injury keeps him out for any serious period of time — that’s how important he is to the Islanders’ offense.

When the Islanders can get pucks deep, forecheck and play within coach Lane Lambert’s system, it works. But producing offense via controlled breakouts and entries has been an issue all year, and is at the heart of their struggles on the power play. Want to know why they’ve scored twice on their past 36 power plays? Because the Islanders are at their best when they are trying to get the puck back — not when they actually possess it.

Asked about that dichotomy after Thursday’s 4-2 debacle in Edmonton, Lambert said, in short, that his team didn’t forecheck enough against the Oilers, itself an admission of one-dimensionality.

“You turn the puck over and they come back at you,” he said. “You also have to manage the game well and be smart about who you’re playing. I thought we didn’t get [the puck] into areas [Friday]. Their goaltender plays the puck well. Early on, they broke the puck out a little too easily.”

A night later, it was the same issue in Calgary, and the Islanders walked away with a loss to show for it. It’s true that injuries — particularly Adam Pelech’s — have contributed to the issues, but every team suffers injuries, and the Islanders have been one of the luckier groups in the league in that category.

The injuries have exposed a lack of organizational depth more than anything else. Signing Hudson Fasching over the summer looks shrewd on Lamoriello’s part, but that is about it.

Neither Josh Bailey nor Anthony Beauvillier have stepped up in the way the Islanders need, and the two combine for $9.15 million against the salary cap. The members of the Identity Line are not going to make up for lack of scoring, and Cal Clutterbuck has struggled to stay healthy.

Ross Johnston, meanwhile, has played only as a last resort a year after signing a four-year, $4.4 million extension. Bellows hit waivers after playing one game. Aatu Raty may be a player in this league eventually, but he is still earning the trust of the staff, and if Barzal misses a few more games, the Islanders might end up using up a year of his entry-level deal to put a Band-Aid on the wound.

If they can’t string together some wins at home over the next two weeks, when six of their next seven games will be at UBS Arena, it will be a full-blown disaster. Who knows what Lamoriello will do then.

Remember, though, this season is not a referendum on the first-year head coach. It reflects directly on the general manager.

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Islanders have done ‘little things’ during win streak

A week ago, when the Islanders lost two straight games in Florida and talked positively about how they played, it was easy to be dismissive.

Now? Those losses look to have been building blocks. And if the three games that followed — successive victories over the Rangers, Carolina and Colorado — are any indication, the finished product could be pretty impressive.

“I think the more you do the little things over and over again, maybe some of the little concepts, they become a little more second nature for sure,” Islanders coach Lane Lambert said following a 5-4 comeback win over the Avalanche on Saturday night. “That’s the key is to play without speaking, so to speak, or without hesitation.”

Lambert, a first-year head coach, has implemented new concepts since taking over, mainly centering around being more aggressive. Those paid dividends on Saturday, when the Islanders kept up with the fastest team in the league, the Avalanche, never looking overwhelmed even when they were down by three goals.

That is something that could never have been said about the Islanders last season, when their lack of speed was a death knell. This season, they seem to have figured out how to counter it.

Anthony Beauvillier is hugged by teammates after scoring the game-winning goal in the Islanders’ 5-4 comeback win over the Avalanche.
Robert Sabo

“We’ve done a better job of that, no question,” Lambert said. “We’ve made a couple little adjustments and I think it’s helped our game and helped with handling speed, so to speak.”

“Just trying to gap up a little bit more,” Scott Mayfield said. “It starts with our forwards trying to get the pressure on them. We know they’re coming back so they have our back. You see the pinches here and there that probably shouldn’t have gone, but that’s learning.”

The learning curve was evident during their three-game losing streak that ran from Oct. 20 through last Sunday, and maybe that is a product of a new coach. It’s obvious from their victories over three of the better teams in the league, however, that the Islanders have taken a major step forward.

“I think we’re gelling together a little bit more,” Mayfield said. “You can see it in the last three games. The [New] Jersey effort wasn’t there. Then we get to Florida, I think we played a little bit more together, a little bit more battle, but didn’t get the result there so it’s nice to get these three results. That’s what we’ve been focusing on.

“There was a little bit of growing pain, but I think it’s coming together pretty well.”
The Islanders honored Josh Bailey with a pregame ceremony marking his 1,000th game, a milestone he reached Friday at Carolina.


The Avalanche were without forward Valeri Nichushkin (lower body) for the second straight game.

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Islanders sound off about ‘flawed’ analytics in NHL

TAMPA, Fla. — The Islanders don’t want to hear about your math equations.

Though they have acknowledged that analytics has a role in hockey, they still value the eye test and gut feelings over numbers.

“There’s will and structure to our game,” coach Lane Lambert said Thursday. “Those don’t really get analyzed by analytics. We analyze it.”

There has been recent growth in the use of numbers in hockey — every team, the Islanders included, has staffers with analytics as part of their portfolio — but compared to the other three major sports, the NHL is still far behind. That’s in part due to the nature of the game. Hockey is continuous, random and hard to break down into the sort of individual events that are easy to analyze mathematically, such as a pitch in baseball, a snap in football or a possession in basketball.

Most of the publicly available numbers in hockey (individual teams track their own data) use shots as stand-ins for possessions, a reasonable but rudimentary method of estimation. Expected-goals models, which are widely cited, can be useful, but because there is no public puck-tracking data, they fail to account for factors such as whether a shot was preceded by a pass; such shots are harder for a goaltender to stop.

Islanders forward Matt Martin (17) celebrates a goal against the Lightning on Oct. 22, 2022.
NHLI via Getty Images

“It’s everywhere nowadays so I guess you certainly see it,” Matt Martin said. “I think it can definitely be flawed as well. I think sometimes you might have a really good game defensively against someone’s top line where you lose the Corsi battle or whatever it is, but you keep them off the board and don’t give up a ton of high-danger chances. And analytically, sometimes that shows up as a very poor game where you’ll get a tap on the back from your coaching staff about how good of a job you guys did.”

The Islanders’ fourth line, which Martin is a part of, is a good test case. Because they spend a lot of ice time in the defensive zone or on the forecheck, their analytics reflect negatively on their play. But the goal of the fourth line is not necessarily to generate offense, but to leave a physical impact on the game, wear down opponents and keep them off the board.

“I think you can walk around a dressing room, someone can tell you whether they had a bad game or a good game,” Martin said. “We know as professionals. … You get matched up against Connor McDavid, you’re probably gonna lose the Corsi battle. But if you limit the amount of high-danger chances he has and keep him off the board, we take that every single night.”

Martin said there isn’t much interaction between the Islanders’ analytics staff and the players. Taran Singleton, a longtime video coach with the Devils when current Islanders general manager Lou Lamoriello was in New Jersey, is one of five staffers devoted to analytics.

“I’m not a big analytics guy,” Zach Parise said. “I just think there’s too many factors in this game that don’t get accounted for. I’ll go as far as shots on goal, cause you give yourself a chance to score. Anything past that, it’s a little difficult to measure.”

Like Martin, Parise cited factors such as the opponent as a reason analytics fall short.

Islanders forward Zach Parise shoots on Lightning goalie Brian Elliott on Oct. 22, 2022.
AP

“Are you playing against [Patrice] Bergeron and some Selke [Trophy] winners? Or are you playing against a fourth line all night?” Parise said. “Where are you starting on a faceoff? Are you starting every shift on a controlled breakout? Do you lose the draw? If you lose the draw, you might not touch the puck the entire shift.

“You don’t reset all the time and start over like a pitch [in baseball], you know what I mean? That’s just my theory. I could be wrong. I’m sure there’s value in it, but I don’t stress much about it.”

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How Islanders’ new forecheck has gotten them up to speed

Three games into Lane Lambert’s tenure as coach, the difference in how the Islanders play has not only been obvious, but has had strong positive effects.

After a training camp in which “aggressive” was the word du jour, we are seeing it in action, in every phase of the game. Yes, that means defensemen getting up on the rush — it is no coincidence that six of the team’s 13 goals have come from their blueliners. But that is not the half of it.

The biggest difference between the Islanders and the top-tier teams in the league last season was the speed at which they played. Much was made about the average age of the Islanders because they played like an old team. They broke the puck out slowly. They eschewed the rush. Watching them and then watching the Avalanche, Lightning, Flames or Oilers was like watching two different sports.

Again, it is just three games, two of them against competition the Islanders should be beating, but at least they look to be playing the same game as the contenders. That comes down to a difference in, yes, aggression. Not just on the rush, but in every phase of the game.

Where it’s been most noticeable so far is on the forecheck.

The Islanders were always a strong forechecking team under Barry Trotz, but they depended on their forwards to do much of the work. The defensemen stayed back, meaning that if the opposition got above the hash marks, more often than not they could get all the way through the neutral zone with some degree of ease.

Lambert has changed that, and now there is a significant degree of pressure at the blue line as opponents exit the zone. That might make the Islanders susceptible to more odd-man rushes if their lines can be broken — everything is a tradeoff — but it has allowed them to keep the pressure on the offensive zone in a way they simply did not a season ago.

via ESPN+

Watch Adam Pelech’s positioning here on the far wall. When the puck is played around the boards, he’s all the way at the hashes to force the Ducks’ Troy Terry to play it back behind the net. The forwards do a good job as well, but that is where the real difference is compared to last season.

The added pressure also helps once the Islanders possess the puck. With Pelech and Ryan Pulock already stationed at the blue line, Pulock becomes an easy outlet for Brock Nelson after he wins a puck battle behind the net. Consequently, the Islanders can quickly get set up in the zone and not have to worry about an entry.

“If you forecheck with three guys, if you beat the three forwards, there’s that gap between the D and forwards. The D start to back off and you’re more or less giving the other team a free exit,” Matt Martin told The Post. “Now I think we’re a little more up and together. When we forecheck hard and a puck gets rimmed around the boards, our D are coming to keep that puck in and keep it alive. And then we come back hard to cover up for them.

“You’re gonna see a lot more of that, I think, around the blue lines. A lot more [of] those 50/50 pucks that we’re trying to come up with as opposed to backing off and allowing them to exit [with] no pressure.”

Even in the neutral zone, the pressure has been much more relentless. The little things — particularly forwards getting sticks on pucks — have shown out. Here, Kyle Palmieri does just that, and it leads to a zone entry.

via ESPN+

Earlier in the game against Anaheim, it was Anthony Beauvillier who made a heads-up play with his stick coming over the boards, leading to Scott Mayfield’s goal off the rush.

via ESPN+

The aggressiveness even has shown up on the penalty kill, where Islanders forwards have been emboldened to push up the ice when the situation has called for it. That approach nearly resulted in a shorthanded goal for Casey Cizikas against the Panthers when he chased a loose puck up the ice.

via ESPN+

The Islanders needed to find a way to generate more offense with the same group of players. So far, this is the way that works. The fourth line, in particular, has looked rejuvenated after struggling through last season.

“We love it, honestly,” fourth-liner Martin said of the forechecking mentality. “It allows you to hunt and make that first guy get rid of the puck, and you know that our guys are coming to try and keep it in. It definitely, I think, leads to more opportunities, more pucks going towards the net. You don’t want to give anyone anything for free.

“So if a player’s gonna make a play off the wall, which is always a tough play, and they don’t get it out, then we got an opportunity to turn it into offense.”

Added defenseman Noah Dobson: “It’s not fun when guys are chasing pucks as a D-man. You know they’re coming hard and they’re coming at you. That’s a good part of our game. When we’re forechecking well, we get lots of chances off it.”

A bigger test is coming soon with five straight games against playoff-level competition following Thursday night’s matchup with the Devils. Right now, though, we can only judge what we’ve seen. And what we’ve seen is the Islanders adopting a new approach and running with it.

“I think it’s just aggressive everywhere at all times is what [Lambert] wants,” Martin said. “Basically you’re never giving anyone a free play, you’re never letting anyone off the hook. You wanna keep the pressure on them. You wanna make them execute.”

Problem solved

Sebastian Aho’s move to the IR has eased a roster crunch facing the Islanders, for now.
Corey Sipkin

The solution to having too many forwards coming out of training camp, it turns out, was not to send down one of the forwards, but to put a defenseman on injured reserve. By sending Sebastian Aho to IR with an upper-body injury retroactive to Oct. 8, the Islanders effectively ensured Oliver Wahlstrom, Kieffer Bellows, Ross Johnston and Nikita Soshnikov can stay on the roster without any worries.

Aho, who likely would have been a healthy scratch for games, still is practicing with the team as he works his way back from the injury. He has not spoken to reporters since going on IR, and Lambert has only spoken in generalities regarding Aho’s timeframe for returning. (The day Aho was placed on IR, he skated with the extras for 45 minutes after the rest of the team came off the ice. Make of that what you will.)

He’s already passed the minimum time to stay on injured reserve, so the Islanders can activate him if need be as long as he is healthy, a scenario that might only end up coming to pass if someone else goes on IR. If he is able to come back at the first moment the Islanders require him, though, it would be a good way of having navigated what seemed to be a real roster conundrum.

Dobson and Romanov taking steps forward

The Sharks may not have been the toughest test, but Alexander Romanov and Noah Dobson still aced their time together on the ice in a 5-2 Islanders win this week.
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As a follow-up to last week’s newsletter, when this space explored the awkward start between Dobson and Alexander Romanov as partners, it’s noteworthy that Tuesday’s 5-2 win over the Sharks was the best showing we’ve seen from the pair. In 14:40 together, per Natural Stat Trick, the Islanders outscored San Jose 3-1, had a 53.02 expected goals percentage and out-chanced their opposition, 17-6.

Lambert did not exclusively go at certain matchups with his defensive pairs, but most of Dobson’s and Romanov’s work Tuesday came against either the Sharks’ second line, led by Tomas Hertl, or their third line, led by Nick Bonino. (If you’re wondering about Logan Couture’s top line, its largest share of minutes came against Pelech and Pulock.)

The Sharks, who head to Madison Square Garden at a well-deserved 0-5, are a hapless group, so take that with a grain of salt. But it is most definitely a positive sign.

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