Islanders hoping to carry over success from perfect three-game trip to seven-game homestand
Mathew Barzal #13, Anders Lee #27, Scott Mayfield #24, Dennis Cholowski #25 and Brock Nelson #29 of the Islanders celebrate Lee's first-period goal against the Vegas Golden Knights during their game at T-Mobile Arena on January 09, 2025 in Las Vegas. Credit: Getty Images/Ethan Miller
For the first time in three months, give or take a few days, the Islanders have created a bit of positive traction.
Three wins in a row will do that.
Now the task is to continue building on what was accomplished in Boston, Las Vegas and Utah as the Islanders begin a season-high seven-game homestand against teams that reside in a similar place in the Eastern Conference standings.
“An extended stretch like this, it’s important for us,” Scott Mayfield said after Monday morning’s practice at Northwell Health Ice Center. “[We have] games coming up here that we need to win.”
The Islanders (17-18-7, 41 points) will begin their homestand on Tuesday night against the Ottawa Senators (21-18-3, 45 points), who trail the Columbus Blue Jackets by one point for the second wild-card spot in the Eastern Conference. The Senators are coming off wins against Pittsburgh (5-0) on Saturday and Dallas (3-2) on Sunday.
The Islanders also will play John Tortorella’s Flyers (19-20-5, 43 points) twice and the Blue Jackets (20-17-6, 46 points) during this stretch.
The results of those games could go a long way toward determining whether the Islanders find themselves playing meaningful contests in April.
So yes, the head-to-head matchups with three of the nine teams trying to claim the conference’s two wild-card positions are going to be meaningful for the Islanders, a group that has the support of team president and general manager Lou Lamoriello.
“It’s tight,” Mayfield said. “You look at the standings, it’s tight. That whole middle group is right there and it’s all about putting wins together and just climbing the ladder.”
The Islanders also will be acutely aware of what’s going on around them, such as Detroit’s seven-game winning streak.
“You’re always scoreboard-watching,” Bo Horvat said. “You’re always seeing how other teams are doing, right? At the end of the day, it’s in this room. It’s about what we’re going to do, right? You can’t be focused on other teams helping out. It’s kind of what we have to do in here to win.”
Sustaining the way the Islanders played on the road trip, in which they outscored their three opponents by a combined 11-5, will be paramount.
According to NHL analytics website NaturalStatTrick.com, the Islanders yielded the third-fewest goals against, the fifth-lowest scoring chances against (65) and the sixth-fewest high-danger chances (27) in the NHL between Jan. 5-13.
“We stuck to our game plan,” Horvat said. “We’re not trying to be something we’re not. We’re not trying to out-skill teams. I think we’ve simplified our game enough where we’re making the right plays at the right time. We’re also playing well defensively.”
Notes & quotes: Defenseman Isaiah George was a full participant in the half-hour practice. The rookie had not played since Jan. 2, when he was elbowed in the head by Toronto’s Max Domi. “He looked good,” Patrick Roy said. “I don’t know if he’s going to play or not, but I’ll probably know more on Tuesday. But he looked good.” . . . Alex Romanov (upper body, day-to-day), Hudson Fasching (upper body, day-to-day), Simon Holmstrom (upper body, IR), and Semyon Varlamov (lower body, IR) did not practice.
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