Nathan Gaucher Faces A Big Ducks Question This Season

With impressive growth in his third professional season, Nathan Gaucher edges closer to securing a full-time NHL role with the Anaheim Ducks.

Nathan Gaucher’s season ended with a little bit of everything: a career year in San Diego, a brief NHL look, and a reminder that the Anaheim Ducks prospect is still very much a work in progress.

The Ducks’ 2022 first-round pick, taken 22nd overall, spent most of the year with the AHL’s San Diego Gulls, where he logged 62 games and posted 15 goals and 29 points - both career highs. It wasn’t a smooth ride from the jump.

Gaucher opened the season injured, and by the time he got back into the lineup at the end of October, Tim Washe had already claimed the Gulls’ third-line center job. Gaucher slid onto the fourth line and stayed there for much of the early stretch before Washe’s January recall to Anaheim opened things back up.

From there, Gaucher moved into the third-line center role for much of the rest of the season, though he was back on the fourth line late as San Diego leaned on strong center depth to close out the year.

The early numbers didn’t exactly jump off the page. Through his first 22 games, Gaucher had just one goal and three points.

But once the ice time started to come with Washe gone, the offense followed. He put up eight points in 14 games in January, then added six more in nine games in February.

The surge built toward the biggest moment of his season: his first career hat trick, which came in late March against Calgary. Anaheim called him up just a few days later.

After returning to San Diego in April, Gaucher finished with three goals in five games. He also skated in both of the Gulls’ playoff games and didn’t record a point while working as the team’s fourth-line center. When the dust settled, he was tied for eighth on the Gulls in points and tied for sixth in goals.

Gaucher also got his first taste of the NHL. He appeared in three games with the Ducks and was held scoreless, starting with his debut against San Jose, where he played just over seven minutes.

He then logged more than nine minutes against St. Louis and nearly eight against Calgary.

Across those three games, he finished with two shots, a minus-1 rating, a little bit of penalty-kill time, and no power-play time.

From a development standpoint, the season checked important boxes. Last summer, the bar was simple: stay healthy and play more than 60 games, then show more offense than he did in his sophomore year.

He did both. After the injury issues that slowed him in 2024-2025 and a rough opening to this season, Gaucher settled in, stayed on the ice, and hit 62 games.

And with career highs in goals and points, he clearly cleared the offensive benchmark too.

Now the conversation shifts from debut to permanence. With three NHL games already on his résumé, the question isn’t when Gaucher gets there - it’s when he sticks.

Anaheim’s center group is crowded with Mikael Granlund, Ryan Poehling, Leo Carlsson, and Washe, so a full-time spot doesn’t look immediate. A callup role this season seems more likely, though a strong year and a changing Ducks roster could put him in position to spend all of the 2027-2028 season in Anaheim.

One wrinkle: Gaucher will need to clear waivers to move from the NHL back to the AHL this coming season, which could affect where he ends up spending most of the year.

The expectations for this season are straightforward. More games with the Ducks.

A shot at his first NHL point, if it comes. If he’s mostly in the AHL, a push toward 20 goals and 40 points.

And, above all, a full healthy season.

Gaucher has one year left on his entry-level contract, and after the way he finished this season - plus the fact that he made his NHL debut - the odds of Anaheim keeping him around look a lot better than they did a year ago. He still has to back it up, but if he does, a one- or two-year two-way extension feels like the likely path.

In Other News...

Leo Carlsson Just Became Part Of The NHL's Biggest Cap Debate

The NHLs rising salary cap is already changing the way teams talk about star power, and Leo Carlsson has become one of the latest examples. His five-year, $18 million extension with the Ducks, completed through an offer sheet from Philadelphia, fits into a market where big-money deals are getting easier to justify and harder to avoid, especially as other players keep pushing the ceiling higher.

For Anaheim, it is another reminder that retaining young talent in this climate is no small task. Around the league, Montreal has taken a different route under Kent Hughes, leaning on disciplined long-term contracts and keeping several core pieces signed well into the next decade, which leaves the Canadiens with the kind of flexibility many clubs can only chase after the fact. [Read more 🡒]

Ducks Cap Crunch Could Cost Them More Than Fans Feared

The Ducks offseason math has started to spill into the trade market, and it is making life harder for a Vancouver front office that already has a narrow path to work with. The Canucks are operating with a limited pool of winger options, thanks in part to free-agent alternatives and no-movement clauses, while also weighing whether a bigger swing around Elias Pettersson could be the kind of move that changes the shape of their roster.

What makes the Ducks relevant in all of this is the kind of player Vancouver is said to be chasing: younger pieces under 25 who do not come with trade protection. Anaheim and Vancouver have already had trade conversations, but the Ducks budget picture and the Canucks asking-price discipline have kept things from moving quickly, which is exactly the sort of setup that can turn a simple cap-clearing idea into a much more complicated negotiation. [Read more 🡒]