Bobby Cowan’s draft day came with a pretty ordinary backdrop: laundry in a Kalamazoo apartment.
That’s where the 20-year-old was when the New York Islanders called to tell him he’d been taken in the seventh round of the 2026 NHL Draft, 205th overall. The moment hit fast, and Cowan said it felt as surreal as it sounds.
“I was alone in my apartment in Kalamazoo, but it was a pretty surreal moment.” Cowan said. “I was doing my laundry when I got the call.”
For Cowan, the call carried extra weight because he had gone undrafted before putting himself back into the draft pool. He admitted he tried not to get ahead of himself after that earlier snub, even though he kept chasing the same goal.
“It was surreal,” Cowan said. “I kind of expected it, but I kept going undrafted, so I really didn’t have my hopes too high. Then when it actually happened, I didn’t really know how to react… My phone was blowing up from all my friends and family, so it was a lot of fun.”
Cowan earned his shot with a strong freshman season at Western Michigan University. In 39 NCAA games, he put up 24 points with five goals and 19 assists, and he finished as the top-scoring rookie in the league.
He describes himself as a player who can finish and create, and he knows exactly what he wants his game to look like.
“I like to say I’m a goal scorer who can also make plays, I see the ice really well, and I’ll always work my hardest,” Cowan said, adding that he models his game after Carolina’s Logan Stankoven.
Even though he’s new to the Islanders, Cowan won’t be walking into a completely unfamiliar room. He already knows Sam Laurila and Lincoln Kuehne from facing them in college, and he also has a built-in connection to captain Anders Lee. Both are from Edina, MN, with Lee at Edina High School from 2007-09 and Cowan there from 2021-2023.
That link runs deeper than just the hometown. Lee, now in his 14th NHL season, made time to skate with the Edina High team over winter break this past season, and for Cowan, that was a moment he won’t forget.
“Edina is known for hockey, so it was a big deal to him growing up that Edina produced a player like Anders Lee,” Cowan said. “He skated with us over winter break, so when I see him next, it’ll be pretty cool.”
Lee’s path also gives Cowan a blueprint. The Islanders captain was a sixth-round pick in the 2009 NHL Draft, 152nd overall, and carved out a long NHL career from there. Cowan said he watched that rise from close range and sees value in being drafted by the same team.
“I watched him grow up, go through the program, college, and stuff like that,” Cowan said. “Then, obviously, being drafted to the same team is pretty cool.”
As development camp gets going, Cowan’s focus is simple: learn, listen and absorb as much as he can. He’ll also be sharing the experience with roommate Artyom Matyuk, the Islanders’ 2026 sixth-round pick.
“I really want to just get to learn the program, learn to meet everyone, and really take it all in the first year,” Cowan said.
In Other News...
Former Islanders Trade Piece Takes Another Brutal Turn
Jonathan Drouins latest stop has gone off the rails quickly. The veteran forward, who was dealt by the Islanders at the trade deadline, managed just a modest return in St. Louis before the Blues decided to move on, a sharp turn for a player still carrying a hefty cap hit and one more year left on his deal.
For the Islanders, it is another reminder of how unsettled the trade market can look once the dust settles. Drouin left Long Island after finishing with 3 goals and 18 assists in 55 games, and now his new team is confronting the same inconsistent production that followed him through the season, leaving his next landing spot and the larger ripple effect of the move still hanging. [Read more 🡒]
Ducks Suddenly Look Poised To Land The Veteran Help Fans Want
The Islanders offseason picture is already getting clearer, and not in the way fans might have hoped. Anders Lee has let the club know that term will matter most in his next contract, a sign that this process could take some time even as New York tries to keep one of its most recognizable veterans in the fold. Around the league, teams are lining up on familiar names too, with the Ducks linked to Radko Gudas and A.J. Greer and other veteran free agents drawing attention as July approaches.
For the Islanders, Lees situation is the one to watch because it speaks directly to how this roster will be built for the next few years. The market is expected to be active, and while New York would obviously prefer to settle things sooner rather than later, the longer the forward evaluates his options, the more this becomes a story about balancing loyalty, role and contract length in a market where help for contenders is at a premium. [Read more 🡒]
