J.T. Miller Is Suddenly Carrying The Rangers Biggest Season Question

As the New York Rangers look to rebound this season, J.T. Miller's resurgence as a leader on the ice is pivotal to their playoff hopes.

The Rangers can talk all they want about offseason changes, but the season still runs through J.T. Miller.

That’s the reality in New York heading into 2026-27. Miller is the captain, the top center, and the player the Rangers need to rebound after a rough first year wearing the “C.” If he doesn’t get back to the level the club expects, the path back to the playoffs gets a lot steeper.

Last season never really gave Miller a clean runway. He was named captain before the start of the Rangers’ 100th season, a choice that raised eyebrows because of his long history of emotional swings and the drama in Vancouver that eventually sent him back to New York.

The idea was simple enough: lead the Rangers back to being competitive. Instead, the season spiraled, and New York finished last in the Eastern Conference before landing the fifth overall pick in the 2026 NHL Draft.

Miller’s own year was hit hard almost immediately. He was injured in training camp, missed all preseason games, and was thought to be a candidate to miss the start of the season.

He pushed to play anyway, but the injury lingered in his performance early on, and other injuries piled up as the year went on. In 68 games, he finished with 17 goals and 53 points.

That’s not a disaster on paper, but it’s well below the 70-80 point level he’s expected to provide, and that drop-off mattered in a big way for a team that needed more from its captain.

The center situation around him is thinner now, too. The Rangers entered last season with Miller, Mika Zibanejad, and Vincent Trocheck as a solid trio down the middle.

Zibanejad delivered a strong year, but Trocheck was also slowed by injuries. Once the team shifted into a retool, it became obvious Trocheck was likely on the move, and on July 1 he was traded to the Utah Mammoth.

That leaves a gap the Rangers still haven’t filled this offseason.

For now, the expectation appears to be that Noah Laba will be asked to handle the third-line center job in just his second season as a pro. Laba has some of the same traits Trocheck brought, especially in skating and defensive work, but that’s still a heavy lift for a 22-year-old.

It only makes Miller’s importance grow. New York no longer has Trocheck sitting there as a safety net if Miller misses time or struggles again.

The Rangers also may be asking Miller to help bring along some new faces. If the team keeps the Zibanejad-Alexis Lafreniere-Gabe Perreault line together, Miller is set to open the season with two different linemates.

Pavel Dorofeyev arrived in a trade with the Vegas Golden Knights, and Oliver Bjorkstrand was signed as a free agent on July 1. Dorofeyev brings elite goal scoring, something the Rangers lacked last season, while Miller’s game leans more toward playmaking.

If that pairing clicks, it could become one of the team’s most dangerous combinations.

Bjorkstrand is another player who could benefit from Miller’s setup ability. He didn’t quite fit with the Tampa Bay Lightning over the last two seasons, but he has scored 20 or more goals five times in his career.

If the Rangers don’t make any more moves, he should get a top-six look with Miller feeding him pucks. That puts even more on Miller’s plate, not just as a producer but as the guy responsible for helping new teammates settle in and adapt to Mike Sullivan’s system.

That’s the job now. Miller is no longer just a talented center with a reputation for intensity.

He’s the captain of an Original Six franchise in one of the sport’s biggest markets, and the Rangers need him to look like the player they believe he can be. After a season that fell short in almost every way, there isn’t much margin left.

If Miller bounces back, the Rangers have a chance to move forward. If he doesn’t, they’re going to feel it everywhere.

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