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Team of the future, I say.

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Kashawn Aitcheson got randomly speared during the second intermission of last nights 4-2 Colts win. Cheap play, but it’s also a reminder of how much he gets under the skin of his opponents. Barrie made them pay on the power play to start the 3rd. #Isles

Kashawn Aitcheson got randomly speared during the second intermission of last nights 4-2 Colts win. Cheap play, but it’s also a reminder of how much he gets under the skin of his opponents. Barrie made them pay on the power play to start the 3rd. #Isles

133,491 views

I expect the #Isles to call-up Victor Eklund over the next few days. I’ve seen enough, I think he’s ready for some big minutes too. Eklund and Frondell connected like this hundreds of times in the SHL, he’s just so good on the puck and has a gift for finding an open man in limited space. Let the dog loose.

I expect the #Isles to call-up Victor Eklund over the next few days. I’ve seen enough, I think he’s ready for some big minutes too. Eklund and Frondell connected like this hundreds of times in the SHL, he’s just so good on the puck and has a gift for finding an open man in limited space. Let the dog loose.

30,613 views

19 years ago today, Wade Dubielewicz’s iconic poke-check save clinched a 3–2 win over the Devils and sent the #Isles to the playoffs in one of the most memorable moments in team history.

19 years ago today, Wade Dubielewicz’s iconic poke-check save clinched a 3–2 win over the Devils and sent the #Isles to the playoffs in one of the most memorable moments in team history.

12,155 views

Would you take a chance on Patrik Laine? Islanders currently have the 30th ranked Power Play in the NHL. Montreal would likely have to retain salary and/or provide assets to make a deal happen. Would likely only cost a mid-round pick to make it happen. #Isles #GoHabsGo

Would you take a chance on Patrik Laine? Islanders currently have the 30th ranked Power Play in the NHL. Montreal would likely have to retain salary and/or provide assets to make a deal happen. Would likely only cost a mid-round pick to make it happen. #Isles #GoHabsGo

12,352 views

Videos

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How Matthew Schaefer Is Bringing Back a Position That Hockey Lost to Time In the early days of hockey, teams iced seven players, not six: a goaltender, two defensemen, three forwards, and a versatile wildcard known as the “Rover.” The Rover had no fixed territory. He roamed freely, jumping into attacks, dropping back to defend, and creating chaos wherever the puck went. By the 1910s, the NHA dropped the position to open the ice, increase speed, and reduce congestion. The NHL followed suit in its 1917-18 inaugural season, and the core role vanished from professional hockey. Over a century later, an 18-year-old rookie defenseman for the #Isles is making a compelling case that the Rover, or his version of it, is making a comeback. Schaefer plays like a forward from the blue line. He is the youngest defenseman in NHL history to reach 20 goals (22 right now), the fourth rookie blueliner to hit that mark, and will surely pass Brian Leetch’s all-time rookie defenseman goal record. The numbers are historic. The aura is revolutionary. On tape, the historical parallel is clear. Unlike standard puck-moving defensemen who activate occasionally, he consistently joins rushes as a full participant, turning 4-on-3 situations into 5-on-3 or 5-on-4 advantages at even strength. His elite four-way skating and pace let him lead or trail rushes, catching defenders flat-footed. In the offensive zone, Schaefer roams with purpose. He walks the blue line with deception, sells passes or low wrist shots, then manipulates release point and trajectory to change angles and wire shots top-shelf like an elite forward. He generates high-danger chances from the point and mid-range at an elite rate among defensemen, ranks top-10 in high-danger and mid-range shots, and leads all blueliners in penalties drawn—opponents constantly hook and trip him. Schaefer activates high and pinches aggressively, creating passing lanes and shooting options. His hockey IQ lets him read when to jump and when to recover, with risk-reward baked into his game. In an era that’s prizing speed, skill, and creativity over rigid structure, rover-like play makes sense. The game now rewards players who blur positional lines. Bobby Orr revolutionized the blue line by functioning as a fourth forward. Schaefer feels like the next evolution: a true rover in a six-player world. The position that died in the 1920s for speed has returned because the game is now fast, skilled, and tactically sophisticated enough to support it. Matthew Schaefer isn’t just scoring goals as a defenseman. He’s rewriting the positional landscape one rush at a time. The rover is back and the Islanders have him wearing #48.

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156,847 views • 3 months ago

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Matthew Schaefer is going to be a 40-goal scorer in the NHL. Did I lose you yet? No, of course not — because you know it too. We’re watching an 18-year-old rookie defenseman put up 21 goals through 69 games with the #Isles. Historic territory. But the harsh reality for the rest of the league is that his shot might be the most underrated part of his game. Schaefer’s shot toolkit plays like an elite shooting forward. The deception is next-level. He sells the pass or a low wrister, then manipulates the release point and trajectory mid-motion. Steps off the point, walks the line, changes the angle against the grain on his wrister, and picks corners that goalies are no longer set for. Excellent quick release combined with the ability to shoot through lanes or off bodies. His mid-range game stands out as one of the best among D this year and he’s generating high-quality chances from dangerous areas consistently. It’s hard not to stop and just say to yourself over and over again: He’s only 18. He’s only going to get better. He’s only 18. He’s only going to get better. He’s only 18. This isn’t just power-play fluff or lucky shooting percentage. He hasn’t scored an empty-net goal all season, either. He’s only going to get better. If he gets there, he’d be only the third defenseman in NHL history to ever score 40 goals in a season, joining Bobby Orr and Paul Coffey. As we dream of what could be, the reality is that the Islanders get to ride into their future on the back of a stolen unicorn. And one that’s only going to get.. better.

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86,341 views • 3 months ago

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Right now, Kashawn Aitcheson is dominating juniors the way a top prospect should, but as we all know, the NHL is a whole different animal. The biggest question mark for him is still his skating. He’s improved, but the feet can get a little wide in transition and his mobility will be tested. Gap control, decision making under pressure, and staying disciplined is what separates good junior D from reliable NHLers. When he finally does turn pro, he’s going to take his lumps, high PIMs in juniors have shown that. Pro hockey will force him to channel his snarl without the extra (sometimes boneheaded) penalties. With that said, I wanted to put together a realistic timeline and set tempered expectations for him over the next few seasons. 2026-27: He’s in Hamilton full time. Expect him to log big minutes on the power play, keep producing points at a solid clip (maybe the 30-45 range) and up the physicality that makes fans love him. Defensively, he’ll tighten up with pro coaching, but there will be nights where the game will look too fast and he’s going to get caught. Maybe he’ll get a couple of NHL call ups for injuries, but he’s not forcing his way into the lineup yet. Next season is all about development. 2027-28: I think he could still be splitting time between Hamilton and the #Isles, or he could earn a bottom pair role right away depending on how the blueline shakes out. By the end of this year, I’d expect him to be a regular NHL contributor. 2028-29: My expectation is that he’s now a full time NHLer logging heavy minutes, killing penalties, and giving us roughly 30-40 points, with a ton of hits and blocks. This isn’t a guy who steps in and runs the power play as a rookie, this isn’t Schaefer. No one is. Aitcheson’s path should be a patient one. The Islanders didn’t draft him to rush him, they drafted him to be a long term piece of the future. When it clicks, I think he’s going to be exactly the kind of nasty, productive defenseman we dream of. Just don’t expect it overnight. Development like this rewards patience.

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15,826 views • 2 months ago

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