Mathieu Darche says the New York Islanders shouldn’t be expected to swing big this summer, and on the surface, the logic tracks. The cap situation is tight.
The roster has been spoken for. Major turnover was never going to be easy.
But there’s another layer to this story, one Darche doesn’t really step into when he explains why the Islanders don’t have much room to maneuver: he’s been one of the people helping build the very roster structure he’s now pointing to.
“Like we've mentioned before, I don't expect any significant, significant changes,” Darche said after the NHL Draft. “There's not going to be four players out and four players in because the reality, like I've mentioned since last year, I think for two years we had a lot of guys signed.”
That part is true. The Islanders were not heading into this offseason with a clean cap sheet or a pile of expiring deals. Flexibility was always going to be limited.
Darche was also right when he said the in-season trades didn’t technically pile on more contracts.
“The trades we made last year, we didn't add any contracts,” he said.
Technically, sure. But the broader picture tells a different story.
The Islanders brought in Brayden Schenn, who still has two years left on his contract. They added Ondrej Palat, who effectively replaced Maxim Tsyplakov.
Jonathan Drouin came in after the Schenn deal. Darche also signed Drouin, extended Jean-Gabriel Pageau, and gave Alexander Romanov a long-term extension.
None of those moves looks reckless on its own. Taken together, though, they say plenty about the direction the organization chose: keep the current group intact and try to stay in the window, rather than open things up for more future flexibility.
That matters because the Islanders don’t look like a clear Stanley Cup contender going into next season, and the Metropolitan Division has only gotten tougher around them. In that light, the roster squeeze isn’t just an unfortunate byproduct of circumstance. It’s at least partly the result of the decisions made over the past year.
Still, Darche left himself some room to work if the right move appears.
“My job, I'll be on the phone tonight, I'll be on the phone all day the next few days,” he said. “If there's an opportunity to improve the team, I will do it.”
Maybe that chance comes. Maybe it doesn’t.
But if the Islanders are again chasing a lottery spot instead of a playoff berth next spring, the bigger question won’t be why Darche didn’t make major changes this summer. It’ll be whether he should have made more space to make them.
In Other News...
Islanders Camp Invitees Just Added A Twist Fans Will Notice
The Islanders Development Camp has a familiar family-thread feel to it this summer, with a pair of invitees adding a little extra intrigue around a franchise that already knows plenty about the Hagens and Nelson names. New Yorks draft decision in 2025, when it took Matthew Schaefer and passed on local prospect James Hagens, still lingers in the background, and now the camp roster is offering a reminder that the Islanders ties to that part of the hockey map are not going away anytime soon.
Michael Hagens and Henry Nelson both arrive with their own credentials and their own paths ahead, making them more than just interesting surname matches for Islanders fans to track. Michael is planning to continue his career at Vermont in 2026-27, while Henry is heading into his final NCAA season at Notre Dame, where the family connection only deepens the story around a group of players whose last names already mean something around this organization. [Read more 🡒]
Islanders Fans Wont Like Where This Marc Gatcomb Situation Is Heading
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Even with that kind of utility, the Islanders are moving on from the next step in the process. Gatcomb will not receive a qualifying offer before the deadline, which sets him up to become an unrestricted free agent when the market opens Wednesday, a decision that leaves one of the club's more hard-working depth pieces headed toward a difficult and uncertain next stop. [Read more 🡒]
Islanders Just Created A New Question Around A Young Winger
The Islanders offseason roster churn has already started to create a familiar kind of uncertainty around young forwards, and Max Shabanov is now part of that conversation. After arriving last summer with some buzz, he got into 44 games and finished with 18 points, enough to keep him on the radar but not enough to make his next step feel straightforward.
Marc Gatcomb, Matt Maggio, Tristan Lennox and Ruslan Iskhakov also were not given qualifying offers, but Shabanov is the name worth watching because there is still a narrow window for something to get done before free agency opens. If he does reach the market as expected, the Islanders will have to decide whether to make a run at keeping him or watch a young winger they just brought in move on, possibly to another team that was chasing him only a year ago. [Read more 🡒]
