Former Blackhawks Executive Al MacIsaac Is Waiting For His Second Chance

The man who was one of several people who helped transform the Chicago Blackhawks from a bottom-feeder into a dynasty is ready to return to the NHL. 

Al MacIsaac just needs someone to give him a chance. Or rather, a second chance. 

It’s been 16 months since the former Blackhawks executive, along with Stan Bowman and Joel Quenneville, was reinstated by the NHL. But while Bowman and Quenneville are back working in the league, MacIsaac remains out of a job.

“I’ve talked to a lot of teams within the league,” MacIsaac said in a phone interview from his home in Virginia Beach, Va. “The teams that are talking to me realize that I’m ready. There’s nothing holding me back, except the right opportunity with the right team.”

Bowman was hired by the Edmonton Oilers a mere three weeks after being reinstated by the league on July 1, 2024. In his first season in Edmonton, Bowman guided the Oilers back to the Stanley Cup final, where they lost to the Florida Panthers. Quenneville waited a full year after being reinstated by the league before getting hired by the Anaheim Ducks. Since then, the Quenneville-coached Ducks have become one of the hottest teams in the NHL. 

“I’m not surprised,” MacIsaac said of the successes of his former Blackhawks colleagues. “It’s been great to see. When Stan got his opportunity to go back to Edmonton, he went in with obviously a pretty solid roster, but you’ve got to give credit where credit is due. To go to the Stanley Cup final two years in a row is very difficult. And he was able to play a part in that success. 

“Coming into Anaheim, I just think Joel slid right into that role and instantly had the respect of his players. He just has a calm approach, and he does things that players appreciate. It’s a skill to have that.” 

In a lot of ways, the successes that Bowman and Quenneville are having these days is a continuation of the success they had alongside MacIsaac in Chicago. 

From 2010 to 2015, the Blackhawks won three Stanley Cups and 15 playoff rounds. MacIsaac was there for it all. Initially hired in 2000 as GM of the AHL team, he, along with coach Trent Yawney, oversaw the development of Hall of Fame defenseman Duncan Keith and so many others who were instrumental to those three championships. MacIsaac wore many different hats in his two decades with the organization. 

Eventually, he worked his way up to senior vice-president of hockey operations, where he worked side-by-side with Bowman and reported to then-president John McDonough.  

“It was pretty unique, actually,” said MacIsaac. “I made sure that all the miscellaneous things that can bog down a GM in his day, that I was going to take off his plate. It was a  behind-the-scenes role. It’s not always glamorous, but you’re doing a lot of the heavy lifting. In the roles that I’ve had, you don’t get a lot of credit. I have championship rings  that I’m proud of. That’s all the credit that I need.” 

In a salary cap era, what those Blackhawks teams were able to accomplish on the ice was pretty special.

“We were the first team to run into a cap crunch in 2010,” said MacIsaac. “In 2013, we rebuilt and added pieces and won again. And in 2015, after losing some players, we won again. It’s hard to do. I like to think it is a dynasty.” 

Despite all the success in those years, the 2010 season was marred by allegations that then-player Kyle Beach was sexually assaulted by the team’s video coach. An independent investigation in 2021 found that Bowman, Quenneville and MacIsaac, as well as McDonough, didn’t do enough to prevent the assault from occurring or handle the allegations in a timely and appropriate manner.

In the four years since then, MacIsaac has reflected on what he could have done differently, while also trying to pave a path forward. He spent time at home with his wife and three daughters. And for a couple of years, he volunteered stocking shelves at a local food bank. It’s his way, he said, of trying to make amends for a moment in his career that still carries a weight of regret.

“I had an opportunity to do a lot of things in my community that were really important to me to give back to the community in some ways,”  said MacIsaac, who said he and Beach have spoken a number of times. "I know it doesn’t do justice for Kyle, but it does help others. And I was trying to give back to the community to help others in the way that I wish I could have helped Kyle.” 

In his career, MacIsaac has been part of seven championship teams in four different leagues. He won a Memorial Cup as a player in 1986, won both as a player (1992) and then as a GM (1998) in the ECHL, a Calder Cup in the AHL (1993) and three Stanley Cups (2010, 2013 and 2015) with Chicago. 

“I started at the bottom as a general manager at 25 years old in the ECHL. I’ve ridden the bus for 16 years,” said MacIsaac, who in 2014 was inducted into the ECHL Hall of Fame. “And I have achieved the ultimate success of winning the Stanley Cup.”

Now, MacIsaac just wants to get back to what he loves. Like Bowman and Quenneville, he is just looking for the right opportunity.

“I’ve talked to a lot of teams in the league,” said MacIsaac. “I know I have the skill sets where I can come into any organization in any number of roles. But I’d love to come back in the same role, obviously, as a senior executive. I want to basically do a similar role, where I’m working alongside the general manager, and the president or ownership to build a Stanley Cup-winning team.

“I’ve been fortunate to be a part of three Cups and anyone who’s been a part of one will tell you they want another. You want to win again.”

NHL Waivers: Flames Claim Beecher, Tomasino Hits The Wire

The Calgary Flames claimed forward Johnny Beecher off NHL waivers from the Boston Bruinsaccording to Sportsnet's Elliotte Friedman.

In addition, Friedman reported thatPittsburgh Penguins forward Philip Tomasino and Philadelphia Flyers defenseman Maxence Guenette were placed on waivers.

With Beecher being a 2019 first-round pick carrying a cheap $900,000 cap hit, it is not necessarily surprising that he was claimed. It is no secret the Flames need help on offense, sitting last in the NHL with 2.10 goals-for per game.

In six games this season with the Bruins, 24-year-old Beecher scored one goal and had a minus-1 rating. Last season, he had three goals and 11 points in 78 games.

Tomasino could very well generate some interest on waivers, as he is also a 2019 first-round pick and is still just 24 years old.

While he has recorded just one assist in nine games this season with the Penguins, he also had 11 goals and 23 points in 50 games for them last season after being acquired from the Nashville Predators. He also had 20 points in 41 games for Nashville in 2023-24.

Teams looking for help on offense could consider taking a chance on Tomasino with a low-risk waiver claim. This is especially so when noting that he has an affordable $1.75-million cap hit. 

As for Guenette, he was just acquired by the Flyers from the Ottawa Senators on Monday in exchange for defenseman Dennis Gilbert. He has yet to play a game this season, as he was an RFA before signing a one-year, $775,000 contract with the Flyers following the trade.

Guenette has recorded zero points and a minus-2 rating in eight career NHL games, with his last NHL appearance being during the 2023-24 season with Ottawa.


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Canadiens Send Defender Back To AHL

Marc Del Gaizo (© Eric Bolte-Imagn Images)

The Montreal Canadiens have announced that defenseman Marc Del Gaizo has been reassigned to their American Hockey League (AHL) affiliate, the Laval Rocket. 

Del Gaizo was called up to the Canadiens' NHL roster ahead of their Nov. 17 contest against the Columbus Blue Jackets, but did not play. Now, he is heading right back to Laval after being scratched for the Canadiens' matchup against the Blue Jackets. 

This is not the first time that Del Gaizo has been called up by the Canadiens to serve as an extra defenseman and then sent right back down. The 26-year-old blueliner is also still looking to make his regular-season debut with the Original Six club.

Del Gaizo will now be looking to make an impact after being sent back down to Laval. The Basking Ridge, New Jersey native has played in 11 games this season with Laval, where he has posted four assists, six penalty minutes, and a plus-4 rating. 

Del Gaizo signed with the Canadiens this off-season, ending his time with the Nashville Predators. In 55 games with Nashville over two seasons, he posted two goals, 10 assists, 12 points, 23 penalty minutes, and a minus-1 rating.

Mets releasing right-hander Frankie Montas

The Mets are moving on from right-hander Frankie Montas.

According to SNY MLB Insider Andy Martino, the Mets are releasing Montas after one season with the club.

The move allows them to add outfield prospect Nick Morabito to the 40-man roster, thus protecting him from the upcoming Rule 5 draft. Teams have until Tuesday at 6 p.m. to protect players from the Rule 5 draft, which will take place on Dec. 10. 

The veteran Montas, who exercised his $17 million option for the 2026 season, is expected to miss the entire season following elbow surgery.

Montas’ one-year tenure in Queens proved to be disastrous. After signing a two-year, $34 million contract early last offseason, Montas’ season got off to a delayed start following a lat strain at the start of spring training. He finally made his debut in late June, but was largely ineffective when he was able to pitch, posting a 6.28 ERA and 1.603 WHIP in nine appearances, including two out of the bullpen.

Morabito, a second-round pick of the Mets in 2022, spent the entire 2025 season with Double-A Binghamton, posting a .733 OPS with six home runs and 59 RBI. He was also excellent in the Arizona Fall League, slashing .362/.450/.464 with 16 stolen bases in 17 games. 

The No. 13 overall prospect in the Mets’ system, Morabito profiles as a center fielder at the major league level. 

England call up Noah Caluori for Argentina Test after triple injury blow

  • Lawrence, George and Roebuck all ruled out

  • Arundell, Pollock and Daly among wing options

England have been hit by a triple injury blow before their final autumn Test with Ollie ­Lawrence, Jamie George and Tom Roebuck all ruled out of the game against Argentina on Sunday. The 19‑year-old uncapped wing Noah Caluori has been called into the squad and could profit from ­Roebuck’s absence.

All three injured players started the 33-19 win against the All Blacks on Saturday, forcing Steve Borthwick into a significant reshuffle as his side targets an 11th successive victory and a clean sweep of four November Tests for the first time since Eddie Jones’s first autumn in charge in 2016.

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GAME DAY Preview: Calgary Flames @ Chicago Blackhawks (Nov. 18)

Calgary Flames centre Yegor Sharangovich (17) scores a goal past Chicago Blackhawks goaltender Petr Mrazek (34) during their game at the United Center in Chicago (Source: Kamil Krzaczynski-Imagn Images)

The first game of away back-to-backs, the Calgary Flames (5-12-3) face the Chicago Blackhawks (9-5-4).

The Flames came up short in their last game, registering their second shootout loss in as many games they've taken to the shooting competition since winning the first one on opening night.

Their next opponents will be the six-time Stanley Cup champions who shut them out in their last encounter on Nov. 8 in Southern Alberta courtesy of a four-point night by Connor Bedard.

And this team has been going hot since.

Their Points Percentage (.833) and Goals For/Game (3.67) are both ranked fifth and Goals Against/Game (2.33) is ranked slightly below at 12th.

Both their power plays and penalty kill percentages are 50 and 100 (perfect!) respectively, and each is ranked number 1 in the league in their department.

A good thing for Calgary is that they broke the slump and finally got a power play goal in the month of November. However, it did come off a once-in-a-blue moon opportunity of a 6v4 so the long-term issues of the man-advantage still need to be addressed.

Another good thing is the Flames offence put up 11 or more high-danger scoring chances in back-to-back games for the first time this season. So, it's clear that they have a plan in place on how to put up quality shots now and not rely on their usual schtick of "puck luck". That should light a fire and inspire hope that the streak continues into Tuesday evening.

There was a trend on the penalty-kill that ended last game, apart from the one mentioned in the last preview that the game against San Jose was the first bout where Calgary registered a regulation win while going on the penalty-kill more than once and not giving up a PP goal.

The other trend that broke was even though the Flames were on the PK just once in this game like those other three regulation games they won (vs Flyers, vs Rangers, vs Blue Jackets), in this one, not only did they give up the goal on said penalty kill, but also lost the game. 

So, it seems even giving up one penalty is too costly.

We will add that Calgary's defence has been stout. Since Nov. 8, their Goals Against/Game (2.00) is tied with three other teams for fifth.

Dustin Wolf is confirmed to be the goalie for the Flames. This will be his fourth consecutive start and in those last three games, he has had a combined save percentage of 0.915.

Chicago is expected to turn to the goalie services of Arvid Soderblom. He is relatively unproven compared to the more regular Spencer Knight, although his save percentage of .913 is tied for eighth amongst goalies with an on-ice time of at least 270 minutes. Should the Blackhawks want to go with Knight, he is obviously the go-to option as his save percentage of .924 is tied for third in that list.

Bottom Line

Bedard has been hot. In his past 10 games, he has scored eight goals and 18 points, so Calgary needs to keep a special eye on him. Not that they need to be told twice...

The power play and penalty kill are both number one for Chicago in the span mentioned so best not give the Blackhawks the opportunity of the man-advantage aka play disciplined hockey.

When Calgary finds themselves on the power play, hopefully they are prepared for it.

The Flames need to continue the trend of having 11 or more high-danger scoring chances like they did in both their previous games. "Puck Luck" doesn't cut it in the NHL.

A good game from Wolf is always helpful.

Blackhawks Vs Flames: Projected Lineup, How To Watch, & More Ahead Of Game 19

The Chicago Blackhawks, following a big win over the Toronto Maple Leafs on Hockey Night in Canada at the United Center, will host the Calgary Flames on Tuesday night. 

Chicago’s win over Toronto was the kind that shows that they are never out of a game, even when the odds are stacked against them. They’ll be looking to carry this momentum into their second tilt of the season with the Flames.

Colton Dach Scores Late; Blackhawks Win 3-2 Over Maple LeafsColton Dach Scores Late; Blackhawks Win 3-2 Over Maple LeafsThe Chicago Blackhawks defeated the Toronto Maple Leafs thanks to a third-period comeback.

The last date with Calgary came up in Alberta, and it was a physical affair. There were a handful of fights, some big-time hits, and a little bit of animosity following Frank Nazar’s injury. Whether there will be a response to that kind of game this time around remains to be seen.

Scouting Calgary 

At 5-12-3, the Calgary Flames enter this match with the worst record in the National Hockey League. Their 13 points, which are about where the Blackhawks were at this time last year, rank dead last. Being the 32nd-place team is never ideal in November, but that’s where the Flames find themselves after decent expectations coming into the year. 

Last year, the Flames came in with lousy expectations, and they overachieved. A big reason for that was their rookie goaltender, Dustin Wolf. So far this year, however, Wolf has been dealing with the sophomore slump. 

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The Calgary Flames, despite their place in the standings, have players who can beat you. For one, Wolf can still find ways to stonewall his opponents. He has it in him, despite it being a bad year up to this point. It can become a good year starting now. He will be the man in the net for the Flames in this one. 

Nazem Kadri, Jonathan Huberdeau, and Blake Coleman, amongst others, can all burn you up front with their puck skill. On defense, guys like Rasmus Anderson and MacKenzie Weegar can make plays from the back end. Some of these guys are playing with the hopes of being moved at the deadline, so the motivation to produce is there. 

Projected Blackhawks Lines, Defense Pairs, and Starting Goalie

So far this season, Connor Bedard and Frank Nazar have really stepped up offensively. They have been the two best forwards, while all of their wings have played up to expectations to help them create. 

It is encouraging to see guys like Ryan Greene and Oliver Moore push for more ice time and expanded roles, when their spots on the team at any point this season were not guaranteed at the start of camp. 

On defense, you have options who can all play up and down the lineup. Artyom Levshunov, who took a seat as a healthy scratch earlier this year, has been amazing lately. The Blackhawks are hoping that tactic works on Sam Rinzel, as he sat in the last game against Toronto. 

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Jason Dickinson practiced and was the fourth-line center on Monday, but he is not ready to come back into the lineup. He doesn’t want to return until he knows for a fact that he’s 100 percent healthy and won’t aggravate his injury. Dickinson, despite feeling good, feels like he owes it to his teammates to operate like that. 

Tyler Bertuzzi, who was absent from practice on Monday, is a game-time decision. However, it seems he is trending towards missing another game, as he was not on the ice during the morning skate. He was hot at the time of his injury, so you know he and the team feel this issue came at the worst possible time. 

Nick Foligno, who broke his hand and will miss four weeks because of a blocked shot, was placed on injured reserve, retroactive to November 15th. 

Jeff Blashill Reveals Bad Injury Update On Nick FolignoJeff Blashill Reveals Bad Injury Update On Nick FolignoChicago Blackhawks head coach Jeff Blashill revealed negative news on captain Nick Foligno. "A big loss in a lot of ways": Jeff Blashill Reflects On Nick Foligno's Upcoming Absence"A big loss in a lot of ways": Jeff Blashill Reflects On Nick Foligno's Upcoming AbsenceThe Chicago Blackhawks are going to be without their captain, Nick Foligno, for a handful of weeks. He will be missed.

If Bertuzzi does, in fact, miss the game, defenseman Sam Rinzel will draw back in, and the team will go 11/7 again. The Blackhawks have mostly gone with that strategy this year, and it may continue against the Flames. 

Arvid Söderblom is going to get the start in goal tonight for the Blackhawks. He has been a solid backup this season and will look to continue that on Tuesday night against the Flames. 

How To Watch

For those in Chicago looking to catch the game on television, it can be found on CHSN. It can be streamed elsewhere in the United States on ESPN+. In Calgary, Sportsnet West is the place to find the game. It can also be streamed in Canada on Sportsnet+. The puck is scheduled to drop a little after 7:30 PM CT. 

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Former Penguins Defenseman Hits Big Milestone

Jeff Petry (© Charles LeClaire-Imagn Images)

Former Pittsburgh Penguins defenseman Jeff Petry has hit a notable new milestone, as he played in his 1,000th career NHL game during the Florida Panthers' Nov. 17 matchup against the Vancouver Canucks. 

Hitting the 1,000-game mark in the NHL is a big accomplishment, and Petry can now officially say he has done just that. 

Petry is currently in his 16th NHL season, with this being his first with the Panthers. The former Penguins blueliner signed a one-year, $775,000 contract with the Panthers this off-season after spending the two previous seasons with the Detroit Red Wings. 

Petry spent the 2022-23 season with the Penguins, where he recorded five goals, 26 assists, 31 points, 111 blocks, 190 hits, and a plus-2 rating in 61 games. This would be his only season with the Penguins.

In 1,000 career NHL games split between the Edmonton Oilers, Montreal Canadiens, Penguins, Red Wings, and Panthers, Petry has recorded 96 goals, 294 assists, 390 points, 1,577 blocks, and 2,042 hits. 

What we learned as Warriors' bench falters in streak-snapping loss vs. Magic

What we learned as Warriors' bench falters in streak-snapping loss vs. Magic originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

For the first night of a back-to-back to close out a six-game road trip, the Warriors traveled their full squad to Orlando.

But the Warriors were outplayed and couldn’t get past the young and rising Orlando Magic in a 121-113 loss Tuesday at the Kia Center. The loss snapped the Warriors’ three-game win streak, falling to 9-7 on the 2025-26 NBA season and 4-7 on the road. 

Steph Curry and Jimmy Butler did all they could. The two combined for 67 points on 56.4-percent shooting from the field (22 of 39), with Curry scoring a game-high 34 points and Butler right behind him at 33. Draymond Green (12 points) was the lone other Warrior to reach double figures. 

That’s half as many as the six Magic players to get to double figures. All of their starters scored 13 or more points, and Anthony Black gave them 21 off the bench. The Warriors as a team scored 22 bench points.

Whenever they wanted, the Magic easily scored at the rim. The Magic scored 64 points in the paint to wipe off their ugly 7-of-31 shooting behind the 3-point line (22.6 percent).

The Warriors now are 1-7 when losing the turnover battle, and 8-0 when winning it this season.

Here are three takeaways from the Warriors’ loss in Orlando.

Steph’s Love For Orlando

Wearing Reebok Shaqnosis into the arena and a pair of Nike Air Penny 2 Le Sprite during pregame warmups, Curry paid homage to two Orlando legends. Curry then reminded the Magic how much he enjoys shooting the ball inside their gym once the game began. 

It almost has been 10 years since Curry scored 51 points and made 10 3-pointers against the Magic in Orlando while setting a new record of 128 straight games with at least one made three. This past season, in his one trip to Orlando, Curry dropped 56 points and made 12 threes. So yes, Steph enjoys shooting down the street from the Magic Kingdom. 

Curry in the first quarter scored nine points and made two threes, even coming back in for the final few seconds to splash a triple nearly from halfcourt. Jalen Suggs is one of the better defenders in the game. But Curry was toying with him at times, maybe making fun of him along the way, too. He already was up to 22 points on 7-of-10 shooting at halftime, going 5 of 7 from deep. 

Though it wasn’t another 22 points, Curry did score 12 in the second half. Curry came into Tuesday with a 49.8 3-point percentage for his career in Orlando, his best of any road arena, and then shot 46.7 percent (7 of 15) in his one game there this season.

Too Easy

Unless it was right around the rim, the Magic went ice-cold in the second quarter. They took just 16 shots and only made six. They took seven threes, and missed six of them. So, how did the Magic still outscore the Warriors by three points in the second quarter? 

Free throws.

The Warriors were whistled for nine fouls in the quarter, four more than the Magic, and they paid the price. The Magic were a perfect 18 of 18 on free throws in a quarter where they led by as much as 15 points. For context, the Warriors entering Tuesday were allowing 22.1 free throws per game, the second-fewest in the league. 

Free throws, fastbreaks and getting downhill. The Magic never were going to be a threat from downtown. Yet the rest of the court was too easy for them to score from. The Warriors were outscored by five points at the free-throw line, 14 from fastbreak points and 18 in the paint.

Needing Better Buddy

“Put your hands up!” Butler yelled at Buddy Hield as he walked to the free-throw line.

Butler then said to Hield’s response, “I’m never passing you the ball again.” 

“Don’t be like that,” Hield said back.

The two are teammates and great friends. Social media can see it as another funny moment between Butler and Hield. The truth is, the Warriors need more out of Hield. 

And Butler was right. He was hit with a turnover when Hield ran through the paint, yet didn’t expect a pass from Butler that became an errant giveaway. Those are the mental lapses that can crush the Warriors, and they’re only heightened when Hield isn’t playing his best.

Hield played eight-plus minutes in the first half and was scoreless as a minus-10. Seconds into his first stint of the third quarter, Hield caught himself in mid-air and passed the ball to Magic guard Anthony Black for a horrible turnover. He finished as a minus-5 with two points in 15 minutes. 

In the season opener, Hield scored 17 points and made five 3-pointers. He hasn’t reached that point totals since, and has made multiple threes in just four other games.

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Flyers Send Defender To AHL On Conditioning Loan

Adam Ginning (© Eric Canha-Imagn Images)

The Philadelphia Flyers have assigned defenseman Adam Ginning to their American Hockey League (AHL) affiliate, the Lehigh Valley Phantoms, on a conditioning loan. 

Ginning has played in six games this season with the Flyers, where he has recorded zero points, four hits, five blocks, and an even plus/minus rating. The left-shot defenseman's last appearance with the Flyers was on Oct. 25 against the New York Islanders, where he had 12:07 of ice time. 

Now, after being sent down to Lehigh Valley on this conditioning loan, Ginning will have the opportunity to get back into some game action. He will be aiming to impress during it, as it could open the door for him to get called back up to the Flyers' roster. 

Ginning has appeared in 195 career AHL games, all with the Phantoms, where he has posted seven goals, 44 assists, 51 points, 216 penalty minutes, and a plus-17 rating. It will be interesting to see how much he can build on these career AHL stats with the Phantoms during his conditioning loan from here. 

Patrick Roy Elevates Shabanov To Barzal Line As Islanders Prepare For Stars

After missing 12 games with an upper-body injury, Maxim Shabanov returned to the New York Islanders' lineup on Sunday night. Despite a 4-1 loss to the Colorado Avalanche, the first-year NHL player looked strong playing on the fourth line before earning shifts in the top six later on in the game. 

"I thought he played well," Islanders head coach Patrick Roy said following the game in Denver. "With the type of injury he had, upper body injury, you're curious to see how someone's going to react to contact because you don't really get hit in the practices. So I thought he didn't shy away from any of that."

The Impact Maxim Shabanov Had On Calum Ritchie In Return To Islanders' LineupThe Impact Maxim Shabanov Had On Calum Ritchie In Return To Islanders' LineupShabanov's offensive spark ignites Ritchie's game. Discover how their reunion revitalized the Islanders' potent fourth line.

Because of how he looked, Roy will be starting him alongside Mathew Barzal and Jonathan Drouin on Tuesday night against the Dallas Stars

Simon Holmstrom, who had been playing in that right-wing spot alongside Barzal, did not skate on Thursday morning and is a game-time decision due to illness, per the team. 

If he can't play, it will be Maxim Tsyplakov drawing back into the lineup, likely skating alongside Casey Cizikas and Calum Ritchie on the club's fourth line.

Puck drop between the Islanders and the Stars comes your way at 8 PM ET on MSGSN2.