The Rangers won’t need much time to settle into the 2026-27 season. The schedule drops them into a stretch packed with storylines right away: an opener in Boston, a handful of emotional reunions, and a run of games that could matter a lot more by spring than they do in September.
With the NHL unveiling the full 84-game slate on Thursday, there are already 10 dates that jump off the page for Rangers fans.
The first one comes Sept. 29 at Boston, where the Rangers open the season at TD Garden in the first regular-season September game in team history. It’s a clean way to measure the reshaped roster, with newcomers Pavel Dorofeyev, Sean Durzi, Marcus Pettersson and Oliver Bjorkstrand all set for their first look in blue.
The opponent only adds to the edge. Boston was the site of the Rangers’ worst loss last season, a 10-2 drubbing on Jan. 10, and the night also brings an Original Six backdrop, Will Borgen’s Bruins debut after a trade, and the possibility of Joonas Korpisalo seeing his former team.
The home schedule starts Oct. 1 against Tampa Bay, and that’s no soft landing. The Lightning have reached the Stanley Cup Playoffs nine straight seasons and still lean on two of the league’s biggest names in Nikita Kucherov, last season’s Hart Trophy winner, and Andrei Vasilevskiy, who won the Vezina Trophy last season.
Tampa Bay comes to Madison Square Garden twice early, with the second visit set for Oct. 13.
A few nights later, on Oct. 4, the Garden gets its first return visit from Vincent Trocheck, now with the Utah Mammoth after being traded on July 1. Trocheck spent four seasons in New York and became one of the most popular players on the roster, showing up in just about every memorable Rangers moment along the way.
His first game back should come with the full treatment: a tribute video and a standing ovation. Sean Durzi, the main piece the Rangers got back in that deal, will also be facing his former team for the first time.
Nov. 22 brings another reunion, this time with Carolina and K’Andre Miller. The former Rangers defenseman will be back at MSG as a Stanley Cup champion after helping the Hurricanes win it all in June.
Miller has never been shy about the reaction he gets from some Rangers fans, either, saying, “I had a lot of people count me out. … I can’t wait for them to see my ring.”
Carolina returns to the Garden again eight days later, giving the Rangers a pair of chances to see where they stand against one of the NHL’s top teams.
December turns into rivalry month with New Jersey. The Rangers and Devils meet three times in the same month, just as they did last season, only this time the games land in December instead of March.
The first and third are at MSG on Dec. 7 and Dec. 22, with the middle matchup at Prudential Center on Dec. 15.
These two have plenty of history to draw from - the 2023 playoff series, the 2024 line brawl, and the Shesterkin-Markstrom gloves-off moment from last season among them.
Then comes a California trip that reads like a reunion tour. On Jan. 9, the Rangers open a three-game swing against Jacob Trouba and the Sharks.
After that, they head to Los Angeles for Artemi Panarin and Mats Zuccarello, then finish the trip against Chris Kreider and the Ducks. Kreider’s 326 goals in New York rank third in franchise history, which makes that final stop especially notable.
In four nights, Rangers fans will see four major names from the recent past on the other bench.
The Metropolitan rivalry keeps rolling in February. On Feb. 12, the Islanders visit MSG for the third meeting between the teams this season, with a rematch coming six days later at UBS Arena.
The Rangers and Islanders have split the last two season series in opposite directions - New York swept in 2024, then the Islanders took all four meetings last season. Rangers fans also still haven’t seen their team beat Calder Trophy-winning defenseman Matthew Schaeffer.
Late February brings Washington and a home-and-home set that should have some bite. The Rangers and Capitals start at Capital One Arena before the rematch at the Garden on Feb.
- Alex Ovechkin, the NHL’s all-time goal-scoring leader, has 46 goals against the Rangers among his 929 career goals entering his 22nd season.
There’s also recent bad blood to keep in mind after Tom Wilson’s heavy hit on Noah Laba on Dec. 31, followed by a goal later in the same shift and some chirping with Vladislav Gavrikov after a scrum. The Rangers answered last season with an 8-1 win that badly damaged Washington’s playoff hopes, and this year’s group should bring more pushback with Durzi, Marcus Pettersson and a healthy Matt Rempe all in the mix.
The final date on the list is April 6, when Pittsburgh comes to MSG as part of the Rangers’ season-ending three-game homestand. It could matter for both sides.
Sidney Crosby and the Penguins snapped a three-year playoff drought last season, while the Rangers are trying to avoid missing the postseason in three straight years. Mike Sullivan would probably love nothing more than making the playoffs and then eliminating the team he coached for 10 years before arriving in New York last season.
Crosby’s contract runs through this season, but he has said he plans to keep playing. The same may also be true for Evgeni Malkin, who turns 40 at the end of this month, and 39-year-old defenseman Kris Letang, the other longtime core pieces from Pittsburgh’s three championships under Sullivan.
In Other News...
J.T. Miller Is Suddenly Carrying The Rangers Biggest Season Question
J.T. Millers first season wearing the captains letter for the Rangers was supposed to steady the middle of the lineup, but injuries and a dip in production made it a far bumpier ride than anyone in the organization wanted. Even so, the offseason has only sharpened the focus on him, because the Rangers are trying to sort out a new look up front while counting on Miller to look more like the player they envisioned when they brought him in.
The changes around him matter just as much. New winger options Pavel Dorofeyev and Oliver Bjorkstrand could give Miller a different kind of support to start the season, and the Rangers are also leaning on a younger center to absorb some of the pressure down the middle. After two rough seasons, Millers ability to drive play and finish chances may end up shaping how quickly this team can get back on track. [Read more 🡒]
Rangers Suddenly Have An Igor Shesterkin Conversation Nobody Expected
The goaltending picture behind Igor Shesterkin has become a little more interesting than the Rangers probably expected when camp talk turned to the backup spot. With Joonas Korpisalo now in the mix and Dylan Garand also pushing for the job, New York suddenly has a real competition on its hands for the role that sits just one step behind the starter.
For Shesterkin, the issue is not whether he remains the No. 1 option, but how much pressure a deeper goalie room can create around him as the season approaches. Mike Sullivan will sort out the backup decision during training camp and preseason games, giving the Rangers a short runway to see which option fits best before the games start to count. [Read more 🡒]
Rangers Are Chasing Win Now With A Pipeline Fans Can't Ignore
The Rangers spent the offseason acting like a team that believes its window is open now, and Chris Drury made that clear by moving first-round picks to bring in Pavel Dorofeyev and Marcus Pettersson. It was the kind of all-in maneuver that can sharpen a roster quickly, but it also comes with the familiar cost of thinning out the future while trying to solve the present. With James Dolan stepping away from day-to-day involvement and Quentin Dolan taking on a larger leadership role, the organization is also adjusting around the edges as it tries to balance urgency with long-term planning.
That tension is why the prospect conversation matters so much. Liam Greentree, Jacob Battaglia and Cole Beaudoin are all being watched as part of the next wave, but each comes with real questions about how much NHL impact they can actually provide. None of them looks like a clean top-six answer, and the skating concerns around the group only sharpen the concern that the Rangers may be leaning hard on the current roster while the pipeline remains more promise than certainty. [Read more 🡒]
