Islanders lose in overtime to injured Blackhawks

CHICAGO — This looks a whole lot like rock bottom for the Islanders. 

The team’s four-game road trip from hell was capped off by a 4-3 overtime loss to the Blackhawks — a team that more closely resembles a band of AHL misfits with much of its lineup injured than an NHL club — on Friday night at the United Center after Seth Jones’s game-winning goal. 

That pushes the Islanders’ losing streak to four and their record since Dec. 31 to an abysmal 2-6-2.

With the Devils beating the Blue Jackets, it also dropped the Islanders to seventh place in the Metropolitan Division.

And it turns up the heat under coach Lane Lambert’s seat to a boiling point. 

Facing a Blackhawks team that played on Thursday night after getting two days to rest in the Windy City, the Islanders looked lethargic and tired.

They struggled to break the puck out of their zone and won far too few puck battles.

The Blackhawks celebrate after defeating the Islanders 4-3 in overtime at the United Center. NHLI via Getty Images

In Nashville and Winnipeg, the Islanders could at least say they played decently and lost because of freaky goals against.

But like the 5-0 loss in Minnesota, this was a total failure and an indictment of everyone on the bench and behind it. 

As for Lambert’s status, management stood behind him during a seven-game losing streak in November and the noise around his job status tamped down.

But now it has turned back up just a couple of months later, and whether it is a change behind the bench or not, the Islanders look like a team that needs to be jolted into shape as soon as possible. 

Despite not playing particularly well, the Islanders did at least appear in control of the game until late in the second period.

That was when the walls began to fall in. 

After Ilya Sorokin stoned Boris Katchouk on a breakaway, the Islanders allowed Katchouk to gather his own rebound, skate around the zone and put away a wrist shot to tie the game at one at the 18:07 mark of the second.

Kyle Palmieri chases the puck near Blackhawks goalie Petr Mrazek during the Islanders’ loss. NHLI via Getty Images

Just 1:07 later, Joey Anderson finished off a two-on-one breakaway from Colin Blackwell to send the Islanders into the dressing room for intermission stunned. 

Needing a renewed effort and a comeback more than ever in the last 20 minutes, the Islanders came up with enough to tie the game.

But not enough to win it. 

Bo Horvat cut the lead to 3-2 in short order, netting Mathew Barzal’s cross-ice feed.

Then at the 12:50 mark, Kyle Palmieri’s wraparound tied the game at three. 

Bo Horvat (14) celebrates with teammates after scoring during the Islanders’ overtime loss. NHLI via Getty Images

Come overtime, the failure to finish the game cost them when Jones’ shot from the high slot found the back of the net. 

Though one point is better than none, spinning this as a positive would be pretty hard to do. 

Save for a spell in the third period, the urgency and energy was not close to where it needed to be.

A team that was in second place and looking like a playoff lock not too long ago looked like a shell of itself and got the result to show it. 

Even early on, the Islanders looked like they might get out of Chicago with two points, but barely.

Julien Gauthier reaches for the puck against the Blachawks’ Isaak Phillips (left) during the Islandrs’ loss. NHLI via Getty Images

The Blackhawks took the game’s first eight shots as the Islanders looked abysmal in their own zone early on.

But it was the visitors’ first shot of the game — from Brock Nelson off the rush — that actually found the back of the net. 

With Nelson’s line continuing to create chances, it looked like the Islanders might have just enough to get through the game, get two points and get home. 

That proved a fanciful notion. 

The Metropolitan Division and the wild-card race alike are still tight enough that the Islanders are nowhere near out of it.

But that only matters if they can start collecting points. 

And right now, they are playing their worst hockey of the season, with low confidence and issues plaguing both ends of the ice. 

Something has to change. And soon.

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Hudson Fasching learning ‘different style’ in elevated Islanders role

CHICAGO — Hudson Fasching’s game is almost tailor-made for a bottom-six role.

He gets north.

He retrieves pucks.

He forechecks.

He’s pesky.

He plays in a straight line.

It’s a role that’s allowed Fasching to carve out a place on the Islanders’ roster and in their lineup over the past 13 months.

And now that the team’s forward lines look different with Pierre Engvall and Casey Cizikas hurt, it’s a role from which Fasching may need to deviate a bit.

For four of the past five games, including Friday night against the Blackhawks, Fasching has played up on the second line with Brock Nelson.


New York Islanders right wing Hudson Fasching carries the puck past Minnesota Wild left wing Marcus Foligno during the first period at Xcel Energy Center. USA TODAY Sports via Reuters Con

That might be the case for a little bit of time since neither Cizikas nor Engvall have resumed skating on their own.

“I try to maintain my own identify throughout the game, but yeah it’s a different style,” Fasching told The Post after the Islanders skated Friday morning at the United Center. “A lot more [offensive] zone draws, a lot more creativity. [Nelson’s] just really fast, too. I’m learning that as I go.

“Trying to find spots where he’s gonna be and find good lanes to try to help him and try to help [Kyle Palmieri]. Try to get our line contributing.”

Over 27:54 together this season heading into Friday, Fasching, Nelson and Palmieri had been on the ice for three goals against and just one goal for at five-on-five.

The silver lining, however, was that their expected goals rate sat at 68.97 percent with an 8-5 high-danger chance margin.

Ahead of Friday, Nelson had gone four straight games without a point, tying his longest streak of the season.

Combined with cold streaks for Mathew Barzal and Bo Horvat, that is a five-alarm fire for an Islanders team whose offense has suddenly gone cold.

It’s a small sample size, but the numbers point to the second line’s play having been better than the results.

The Islanders, losers of three straight prior to Friday, need to hope that is the case.


Hudson Fasching, pictured in an October game, needs to fill a top-six role for the Islanders given their injuries.
Hudson Fasching, pictured in an October game, needs to fill a top-six role for the Islanders given their injuries. Robert Sabo for the NY Post

“I think Fasch plays a simple, effective game,” Nelson said. “He’s able to hang onto some pucks. He’s strong on pucks. So for us, getting some turnovers off of that, hopefully generate some more possession time off of that. I think just try to support him, be in good spots. I don’t think he has to change his game.

“He’s effective at what he does when he’s playing hard and simple.”

Coach Lane Lambert also said he wants Fasching to keep doing what he’s been doing.

“I think that would be a mistake for him,” Lambert said. “He’s a player who plays a certain way. We want him to play a certain way, and I think that can benefit both Brock and Palms.”

The adjustment for Fasching then will come less in changing how he plays and more in what different situations than he’s used to being in will demand of him.

Engvall, remember, was in a bottom-six role for most of his time with the Maple Leafs.

He is not an especially gifted scorer, but the Islanders turned him into a key part of their second line by leveraging his speed and ability to transition the puck — allowing him to complement Nelson.

They can now survive his absence by doing something similar with Fasching.

“I try to just stay flexible with it,” Fasching said. “I’m starting to acclimate a little bit better to knowing where [Nelson’s] going to be. Neutral zone regroups and things like that where we had a couple things that were just off by a couple feet the other game [in Winnipeg]. It kind of affects the game flow, it gets a little choppier. I think we’re in a better spot now.”

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Red Wings vs. Hurricanes prediction: NHL odds, picks, bets

The Red Wings have taken January by storm.

After suffering a horrid 3-9-1 record in December, Detroit has seemingly left the bad omens in 2023, going 5-0-1 ever since.

It’s reaped some rest benefits since Sunday’s 4-1 win over a popcorn muscled Toronto team on the second leg of a back-to-back. 

Carolina has caught a pair of losses in its last four games since sewing a five-game win streak together.

The Hurricanes are 2-2 amidst their ongoing homestand ahead of Friday’s puck drop against the Wings. 

The first meeting between these two resulted in a 2-1 Carolina victory on Dec. 14.

The Canes dominated five-on-five puck possession for the entirety of the game, but goaltending kept Detroit in the action with 37 of 39 shots on goal turned aside. 


Antti Raanta of the Hurricanes makes a save during the second period against the Kings. NHLI via Getty Images

It was much of the same script in Monday’s 4-2 loss to the Kings, but some misplays in Carolina’s own end cost it three late goals before an empty net sealed the contest.

Alex Lyon has been much to thank for Detroit’s resurgence in Ville Husso’s stead.

Lyon is holding a .927 save percentage through the six-game points streak and has elevated himself to a No. 12 overall ranked 8.3 xGSA.

The weight is all on 34-year-old Antti Raanta’s shoulders in the Canes’ crease with both Frederik Anderson and Petr Kochetkov nursing their respective injuries.


Betting on the NHL?


Despite the strong structure in front of him that’s allowing the fewest shots against in the NHL, he’s been having an underwhelming year to say the least at -11 xGSA. 

The Hurricanes play persistently aggressive hockey, but their goaltending has stopped just 88 percent of shots against.

All things considered, the Red Wings can’t keep winning with weak five-on-five play.

Raanta’s wobbles aside, I’m not sure Lyon can compensate enough for the colossal disparity in 200-foot hockey here.

The play: Hurricanes -1.5 (+130, DraftKings).

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Louis Domingue has big night in Rangers’ win: ‘It felt amazing’

Louis Domingue arrived home in Hartford, unpacked and then had to repack for an immediate trip back to New York.

This is the lifestyle the veteran netminder signed up for in July 2022, but hasn’t had to live until now.

The Rangers have caught the injury bug for the first time in years and it has bit the team’s goaltending tandem of Igor Shesterkin (minor soreness) and Jonathan Quick (upper-body injury).

That was Domingue’s cue to make his first start as a Ranger on Thursday night against the Wild at Madison Square Garden, as well as his first regular-season NHL start since April 24, 2022 with the Penguins.

“It felt amazing, honestly,” Domingue said after he made 26 saves in the Rangers’ 4-1 win. “To get the support of the crowd like that was great. It’s nice to be on their side for once. Tonight was great. The team played really well in the third to get a win. It was just a matter of giving them a chance to grab the game and they did.”


Luis Domingue makes one of his 25 saves during the second period of the Rangers’ 4-1 win over the Wild.
Jason Szenes for the New York Post

The emotions Domingue felt upon hearing he would be starting for the Rangers were more so tied to having to leave his family behind in Hartford.

To Domingue, who brought 142 games of NHL experience into Thursday’s game, it’s just another NHL start.

That’s probably a best-case scenario for the Rangers, who have been spoiled by their overall goaltending since the Henrik Lundqvist era. Domingue isn’t some bright-eyed prospect who is nervous for his shot.

“Same as usual,” Domingue said of his approach. “Try to get by the first five minutes is one of my keys. From experience, when you haven’t played in the NHL for a while you need to get going, you need to adapt to the pace of play, the traffic, how heavy the guys are in front of the net. It was just a matter of me getting by the first little bit and then building on it.”

Domingue is off to a solid start in AHL Hartford, where he has posted a 3-1 record, .934 save percentage, 1.75 goals-against average and one shutout. The last NHL game he played, however, was with the Penguins in Game 6 of the first round of the 2022 playoffs against the Rangers.

“My game’s been good,” Domingue said before the game. “Year after year you try to build something to become the best version of yourself in net. I think I’m continuing to trend that way. It’s just another game.”


Dylan Garand suited up in a red, white and blue jersey for his first non-exhibition game since the Rangers drafted him in the fourth round (103rd overall) in 2020.

The Rangers have a scheduled off-day on Friday before they resume practice on Saturday at MSG Training Center in Tarrytown.

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Devils coach Andrew Brunette’s golf cart DUI arrest video emerges

New Jersey Devils associate coach Andrew Brunette appeared to walk away from his DUI tests, aggravating the police, according to body cam surveillance footage during his Feb. 1 arrest in Florida.

The footage, posted by Fox Sports 640’s Andy Slater on Tuesday, showed Brunette being pulled over while driving his golf cart — and later storming off during a series of sobriety tests.

“Alright, I’m going to call my lawyer,” the coach can be heard saying while quitting his sobriety tests — after an officer instructed him to walk with his “feet straight.”

That’s when two officers grabbed Brunette by the arms and told him not to walk away.

“You f–king fight me and you’re going to f–king regret it,” the arresting officer can be heard saying before repeatedly asking Brunette to put his hands behind his back.

“Put your hands behind your back and don’t f–king move, do you understand me?” the cop said.

Brunette was then handcuffed and detained.

“I’m just trying to go home, like a block away,” he said as the cop filled out paperwork.

(Warning: Language)

“You know I coached the Florida Panthers,” Brunette asked, adding, “You don’t care.”

The officer responded with: “No. No disrespect, but no.”

Slater was first to report the news of Brunette’s arrest for driving under the influence in Broward County, Florida.

Police said in the body cam footage that Brunette was being pulled for not stopping at two different stop signs.


New Jersey Devils associate coach and former Florida Panthers head coach Andrew Brunette during his Feb. 1, 2023 arrest in Florida, where he was charged with driving his golf cart under the influence of alcohol.
Twitter/Andy Slater

New Jersey Devils associate coach and former Florida Panthers head coach Andrew Brunette during his Feb. 1, 2023 arrest in Florida, where he was charged with driving his golf cart under the influence of alcohol.
Twitter/Andy Slater

Brunette was also charged with disobeying a stop sign or yield sign, and he was held on a $500 bond, according to the county’s arrest log.

He was taken to the Main Jail in Broward County.

The deputy observed “Brunette’s speech was slurred and that he was unsteady on his feet.”

In the arrest footage, Brunette told police that he did not have his driver’s license or information regarding the golf cart and then handed over his wife’s driver’s license.


New Jersey Devils associate coach and former Florida Panthers head coach Andrew Brunette during his Feb. 1, 2023 arrest in Florida, where he was charged with driving his golf cart under the influence of alcohol.
Twitter/Andy Slater

New Jersey Devils associate coach and former Florida Panthers head coach Andrew Brunette during his Feb. 1, 2023 arrest in Florida, where he was charged with driving his golf cart under the influence of alcohol.
Twitter/Andy Slater

He can be seen telling officers in the body cam footage that he wasn’t driving the golf cart, as his wife was sitting in the passenger’s seat.

The Devils said in a statement to The Post at the time that they “were aware of the reports” regarding Brunette and were “in the process of gathering additional information.”

In July 2022, the Devils hired Brunette as an associate coach on head coach Lindy Ruff’s staff.

New Jersey general manager Tom Fitzgerald called Brunette a “walking encyclopedia hockey-wise” and also referenced Brunette’s coaching chemistry with Ruff, according to NHL.com.


Associate coach Andrew Brunette of the New Jersey Devils directs the players during a break in action against the Florida Panthers at the FLA Live Arena on March 18, 2023 in Sunrise, Florida.
Getty Images

The Devils suffered a 5-1 loss to the Rangers in Game 1 of their first-round playoff series at the Prudential Center on Tuesday.

Game 2 is set for Thursday in New Jersey.



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Improved Filip Chytil up for key role for Rangers vs. Devils

One of the key players in the Rangers-Devils playoff series figures to be Filip Chytil, who centers the Rangers’ “Kid Line,’’ scoring 22 goals and dishing out 23 assists this season.

“He’s been very good this year and has scored some big goals,’’ said Kaapo Kakko, one of Chytil’s linemates. “He’s got good speed — especially in the D-zone. Me and ‘Laf’ [Alexis Lafreniere], we try to get the puck out and try to pass to him with his good speed in the middle we’re going to get some three-on-ones.’’

Rangers coach Gerard Gallant praised Chytil for getting “bigger and stronger’’ this year.

“You can say the same thing about his two linemates — they were young kids who got more experience, they’re playing more, they’re growing up,’’ Gallant said. “They’re not kids anymore. They’ve got more games under their belt. They’re playing games, meaningful games and it goes a long way.

“Fil’ got bigger and stronger and played a heavier game and everything else followed. He manages the puck real well. When Fil’s going his best, he’s driving that middle ice with the puck and he’s making things happen, he’s pushing back defensemen. They [that line] do a real good job down low. They manage the puck as good as anyone in the NHL in my opinion.’’


Filip Chytil has played a key role on the Rangers’ Kid Line this year.
Corey Sipkin for the NY POST

Patrick Kane, one of the Rangers’ key midseason acquisitions, hasn’t been a part of the Rangers-Devils rivalry, having spent his career playing in Chicago, but is looking forward to the intensity of the series.

Though the Rangers and Devils haven’t faced each other in the postseason since 2012, they have a spirited playoff history.

“Playing in the playoffs for so long in Chicago you kind of build those rivalries in the playoffs, like when we played Vancouver or St. Louis or Detroit,’’ Kane said. “You play against them so much it becomes a rivalry. Obviously, these two teams had playoff series in the past and there is a lot of history there with the teams being so close. So, I’m sure they will be pretty exciting games and the fans will into it.’’

Kane, who’s hoisted the Stanley Cup before, was asked what it takes to do so.

“It seems like 16 wins isn’t that many, but it’s a long journey,’’ he said. “The biggest thing I’ve found in the years that we won was that we always overcame some type of adversity. There was something along the way that caused some adversity for the team and if you were able to get through it you came out better at the other end and found ways to win the series.’’


Rangers captain Jacob Trouba left practice early on Monday to tend to a personal matter and is expected by the team to play in Game 1 on Tuesday night at the Prudential Center.

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Jimmy Vesey getting long-awaited playoff return with Rangers

Before the Rangers started practice Wednesday, ahead of their regular-season finale Thursday, Jimmy Vesey scanned the locker room and took a tally.

He thought he has played the fewest postseason games among his Rangers teammates, but he wasn’t sure.

Vesey knew his number (12) and also the number of seasons since his last appearance (five).

He knew everyone who played during the Rangers’ run to the Eastern Conference finals last season had logged 20, already more than him.

Maybe there was a chance he has played more than defenseman Niko Mikkola, Vesey thought.

But when he checked, Mikkola reminded him about his 16 with the Blues the past two seasons, and reality started to settle in.

Vesey, who will turn 30 in May, has the least postseason experience on the Rangers’ roster.

Their 21 skaters and goalies have appeared in 866 combined playoff games, but Vesey accounts for just 1.4 percent of that.

The last time he made the postseason, he was a Rangers rookie in 2016-17.


Jimmy Vesey is returning to the playoffs with the Rangers
for the NY POST

Everything was easier back then, when playoff berths seemed destined to happen regularly for the Hobey Baker Award winner fresh out of Harvard.

But then the Rangers started to rebuild at the next trade deadline, Vesey was traded to the Sabres, his career spiraled and he began thinking about if — not when — he would make the playoffs again.

That will give the first-round series that will begin next week against either the Devils or Hurricanes extra meaning.

“You certainly don’t envision yourself missing the playoffs five straight years,” Vesey told The Post. “I think everyone envisions themselves every year in the playoffs, and then when it doesn’t happen five years in a row, it’s a little depressing.

“For me, especially, the last couple of years, not knowing if I’d get a chance at it again, it’s exciting for me.”

The entire 2022-23 season, really, has generated similar emotions from Vesey. It started with a professional tryout contract — the second consecutive season he needed one to latch on with an NHL organization — before he made the Rangers and earned a contract extension in January, which provided relief because he “always wanted to be here.”


Want to catch a game? The Rangers schedule with links to buy tickets can be found here.


Vesey spent time on the first line until Vladimir Taranseko and Patrick Kane arrived at the trade deadline.

He then seamlessly slid down to the fourth unit while also becoming a key presence on the penalty kill.

When Kane missed time last week, Vesey skated with the top line again.

He has 11 goals and 14 assists entering the Rangers’ finale against the Maple Leafs on Thursday.

“I think he’s brought everything,” defenseman Ryan Lindgren told The Post. “He’s played kind of all over the lineup. He’s provided offense. He’s been incredible on the penalty kill.”


Jimmy Vesey has excelled in his role with the Rangers this season.
USA TODAY Sports via Reuters Con

But Vesey was still missing another postseason on his résumé.

It wasn’t for a lack of trying, he said.

It wasn’t for a lack of NHL experience, either.

He logged 12 playoff games with the Rangers in 2017, when they beat the Canadiens in the first round before the Senators eliminated them the next round.

The following season, at the trade deadline, the Blueshirts dealt away Rick Nash and Ryan McDonagh and changed the direction of their franchise.

There was the infamous letter to the fans from president Glen Sather and general manager Jeff Gorton.

There was the promise, in that letter, to build “our next Stanley Cup contender,” but no time frame for how long that might take.

Vesey still thought the Rangers had a good team.

But the final two years of his first stint with the Rangers didn’t lead to winning records or the postseason.

The Rangers’ second consecutive appearance in the playoffs means something to everyone, head coach Gerard Gallant said, because it’s “not easy to make the playoffs anymore” — not even with 100 points.

Lindgren added that some Rangers didn’t get their first true taste until last season, during their run to the conference finals.


Jimmy Vesey
AP

But Vesey wasn’t present for that.

He also understands how difficult it can be to reach the 16-team quest toward the pinnacle of the NHL. Last year at this time, Vesey had missed the playoffs with the Devils, and again he didn’t know what the next season would bring.

That’s why the postseason was on his mind again Wednesday morning as it crept closer to a start date.

“My rookie year, looking back, I was really just a kid,” Vesey said, “so if I could get through it then, I’m sure I’ll be fine now.”

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Islanders’ Bo Horvat shades old Canucks side

Tell us how you really feel, Bo Horvat. 

While being interviewed on MSG following the Islanders’ 4-0 win over the Flyers on Saturday night, Horvat dropped a quote that will reverberate around the city of Vancouver. 

“It’s been unbelievable,” Horvat said, asked about the Islanders’ playoff push and the fans at UBS Arena. Then came the hammer. “It’s a lot better than Vancouver. I’ll tell you that for free.” 

Horvat spent the first nine seasons of his career with the Canucks before the Islanders acquired him in late January in a trade that sent Anthony Beauvillier, Aatu Raty and a conditional 2023 first-round pick to Vancouver.

Horvat said after the deal that, as late as last summer, he envisioned himself being a Canuck for life. 

Evidently, he’s glad that never came to fruition. 

Instead, Horvat signed an eight-year, $68 million extension to stay on Long Island. 

The Canucks have been a portrait of dysfunction this year, but to hear a player who was their captain say it so plainly will sting for the franchise and its fan base. Vancouver, which is on its way to missing the playoffs, fired coach Bruce Boudreau after a drawn-out ordeal in January, and has made a series of almost comical public relations missteps. 


Bo Horvat shaded his old Canucks side.
Getty Images

Bo Horvat with the Canucks
Getty Images

Vancouver has made the playoffs just once since 2015, and that was in the NHL bubble in 2020. 

By contrast, the Islanders are chasing down a playoff berth. If they are successful, it would make 2021-22 the only season since 2017-18 in which they missed the playoffs. 


Casey Cizikas drew the biggest ovation of an otherwise uneventful third period when he returned to the game following a block on Rasmus Ristolainen that sent him down in a heap. 

After spending a few minutes testing his left leg in the tunnel — initially struggling to put weight on it — Cizikas took a twirl around the ice during a TV timeout, then played three more shifts, including one on which he drew a hooking penalty on Brendan Lemieux. 

“Well he’s a warrior,” coach Lane Lambert said. “We know that. It was a huge block at a pivotal time of the game for us. So he does what he does. And continue to do that.” 

Asked for a status update on Cizikas, Lambert avoided comment. 


Alexander Romanov, who missed a third straight game for the Islanders with an upper-body injury, has yet to begin skating on his own. Mathew Barzal remained out with a suspected knee injury and has not started skating with the team.

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Islanders’ Oliver Wahlstrom out for season with knee injury

TAMPA, Fla. — Lou Lamoriello confirmed what everybody already knew.

Oliver Wahlstrom is out for the season.

“He will not be back [this season], yes, but he will definitely be ready before the summer’s over,” Lamoriello said before the Islanders’ 5-0 loss to the Lightning.

That comes as little surprise, given that Wahlstrom last played before Christmas, and was last seen sporting crutches and a brace on his left knee.

The injury to the right winger was tough news for the Islanders at the time, since the 22-year-old had earned a regular spot in the lineup and impressed with his physicality following an up-and-down 2021-22 season.

“I just thought he was really coming along,” coach Lane Lambert said. “He adds a certain element to our hockey team that was, at that point, needed. And we’ve missed him.

“Just a matter of him getting better and getting ready for what’s to come next.”


Oliver Wahlstrom
NHLI via Getty Images

For Wahlstrom, a restricted free agent after this season, there’s little suspense over whether he’ll return to the Islanders — it’s incredibly rare for a restricted free agent to sign an offer sheet in the NHL, let alone leave — but the injury likely cost him some money as well.

The good news is that he’ll be ready for training camp, and that he should have plenty of runway to get back to full strength with nine months between the original injury and the start of the 2022-23 season.


Lamoriello had no interest in discussing his own future, seeming to take offense to a question on the subject Saturday.

“I never talk about myself,” Lamoriello said, before railing about the presupposition that the original deal he signed with the Islanders will expire at the end of the season.

It is well-known around the league and has been widely reported that the deal expires after the end of the season.


Sebastian Aho traveled with the team to Tampa and skated Saturday morning, but did not play against the Lightning.

“He pushes the puck up the ice for us, competes hard,” Lambert said. “He’s had a great season and so we look forward to getting him back when we do.”

Travis Mitchell and Aidan Fulp, whom the Islanders signed to entry-level deals on Friday out of college, also signed tryout deals allowing them to play games with AHL Bridgeport.

“We’re glad we can get them, size and strength is something that they both [have] — one’s a left shot, one’s a right shot,” Lamoriello said. “They’re both in Bridgeport right now, so they’ll get acclimated to the organization and I’m sure get in the lineup before the season’s over.”

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Islanders have been on roll since this Adam Pelech’s return

WASHINGTON — Ryan Pulock knows Adam Pelech’s game as well as anyone walking the planet, having partnered with the defenseman for much of both players’ careers, dating back to their days in AHL Bridgeport.

So when Pulock takes note of a performance, it is no passing compliment.

And Pulock took note on Monday.

“I told him after the game or [the next] morning, he was like a snake out there,” Pulock said. “He was all over the place, breaking up plays, there’s guys trying to go one-on-one with him, they basically got nowhere.”

Pelech’s 25:02 time on ice in a 5-1 win against the Devils, which coach Lane Lambert called one of the best games he’d ever seen from him, put something of an exclamation point on a fact that’s been evident since Pelech returned to the lineup over two months ago.

He just might be the most important player on this team.

The Islanders went 7-9-5 after Pelech went down with a concussion in early December, including a January nadir in which their playoff hopes nearly faded into oblivion.


Adam Pelech
NHLI via Getty Images

Since his return, they’re 16-8-4 following Wednesday’s 2-1 shootout win against the Capitals, having weathered an injury to Mathew Barzal and coming close to locking down a spot in the postseason.

“He’s obviously just a really good player for us on the back end, that’s really important,” Noah Dobson told The Post. “And then obviously when he comes back, it adds another piece to our back end, that’s really important. So it’s not that surprising. He’s a significant piece.”

That has always been the line around Pelech. But the last few months have been a case of show don’t tell.

“Seems like he’s always solid and in a good position and with a good stick,” Brock Nelson told The Post. “He’s always breaking plays up. Something that the average person might not recognize, but if you hone in and kinda iso-cam, you’d probably appreciate his game a little bit more. Especially defensively, he’s always in the way, in lanes, good sticks, breaking up potential dangerous plays.”

Pelech had just 19 points this season going into Wednesday’s game against the Capitals, five goals and 14 assists. He’s never been considered a Norris Trophy contender and last year was his only time being selected for the All-Star team.

The best ways to understand his impact are to watch him on every shift and to watch the Islanders without him. The difference is subtle but stark — an unstated element of calm settles over the Islanders when he’s in the game.

Some of that shows up in the numbers. Pelech leads the Islanders in plus-minus and has a 51.6 expected goals percentage at five-on-five, per Natural Stat Trick. Since being paired with Scott Mayfield, the two have formed the most effective duo on the Isles’ back end despite usually matching up with the opposing top line.

Much of what Pelech does, though, is intangible and irreplaceable.

“What he brings every night in different areas of the game, defensively and on the PK and whatnot, is hard to replace,” Pulock said. “When you get a player back like that, it’s good for the morale of the team. It just translates on the ice, just good leadership and a solid rock back there.”

Who knows where the Isles would be if Pelech’s injury had kept him out longer. They’re glad they don’t have to find out.

“Teams have top players for a reason and teams miss top players for a reason,” Lambert said. “He’s a huge piece of our team. When he’s in, we’re a better team.”

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