Maxim Shabanov arrived on Long Island with a pretty clear promise attached to the move: opportunity.
That was the pitch the New York Islanders used to win him over last summer, and it mattered. The Russian forward had choices after back-to-back KHL seasons in which he scored 25 goals and then 23.
The Rangers were in the mix. So were the Flyers and the Utah Mammoth.
But the sense around the league was that the Islanders offered the cleanest route to real NHL minutes and a meaningful offensive role.
That bet looked promising right away. Shabanov scored in his NHL debut on opening night in Pittsburgh, a flash of the skill that made the Islanders push hard for him in the first place.
His skating popped. His hands popped.
So did the creativity that had defined his game in the KHL.
The problem was everything around that talent.
His rookie season never found much rhythm. Under Patrick Roy, Shabanov bounced in and out of the lineup and was scratched multiple times as the Islanders tried to keep their playoff chase alive. The usage never really matched the expectation, and by the end of it he had only five goals and 13 assists in 44 games.
According to beat reporter Stefen Rosner, Shabanov’s camp met with the Islanders before the 2026 NHL Trade Deadline to talk about his lack of playing time and opportunity. That conversation makes sense based on how the season played out.
The ability was there. The runway wasn’t.
The fit was always part of the question. Roy wanted a more direct, north-south style, while Shabanov’s game has long leaned toward east-west creativity, the same quality that helped him thrive in the KHL. That tension never really disappeared during the season.
Now the coaching piece has changed. Patrick Roy is gone, and Shabanov got only a brief look at Pete DeBoer before the season ended.
That small sample could wind up being the key to what happens next. If DeBoer believes he can use Shabanov effectively, the Islanders are likely to extend a qualifying offer and give it another shot.
In Other News...
Darche Just Signaled A Hard Islanders Roster Decision Is Coming
With the NHL buyout window closing on June 30, Mathieu Darche has left the door open for a roster move that could reshape the Islanders summer. The new executive has not made any decisions yet, but he signaled that the club is willing to use a buyout if it helps improve the team, a notable stance for a roster still being sorted out under new leadership.
What makes the next few days worth watching is the balance between short-term relief and longer-term consequences. Darche made clear the Islanders will keep weighing their options before the window shuts, and that means some difficult contract math is still on the table as the front office decides whether standing pat is the safer play or whether taking a hit now could create more flexibility later. [Read more 🡒]
Islanders Camp Invitees Just Added A Twist Fans Will Notice
The Islanders development camp always brings a little extra curiosity, but this years invite list carries a family wrinkle fans around Long Island will immediately notice. After the club passed on local prospect James Hagens in the 2025 NHL Draft Lottery and later watched him land with Boston, the organization has brought in two players with familiar last names, giving camp a broader look at the hockey families that have already intersected with the franchise.
Michael Hagens is part of the group, and Henry Nelson is too, adding another layer to a camp that is supposed to be about development but often doubles as a window into how the Islanders are thinking about their pipeline. Michael is set to move to Vermont in 2026-27, while Henry is heading into his final NCAA season at Notre Dame, where hell be around his brothers again, leaving the Islanders with another reminder of how tightly connected these prospects can be even when their paths are still unfolding. [Read more 🡒]
Islanders Offseason Reunion Had One Unexpected Twist Fans Will Feel
The Islanders offseason has always tended to spill beyond the rink, with current and former players often sticking close together on Long Island and showing up in the same circles after the schedule ends. A recent social media post from the Palm Tree Music Festival captured that again, with a familiar group of names from the organization enjoying the kind of reunion that says as much about the culture as any stat sheet ever could.
Among the players connected to the gathering was Oliver Wahlstrom, whose path has taken him away from the Islanders for now as he tries to find his footing elsewhere in pro hockey. His name still carries some intrigue for fans who remember him as part of the organizations recent wave, but the larger question is what comes next for a player whose future NHL involvement with New York remains unsettled. [Read more 🡒]
