The Rangers’ latest move has turned their goalie picture into a real puzzle.
By bringing in Joonas Korpisalo from the Boston Bruins on July 1, New York didn’t just add a veteran backup option for Igor Shesterkin. It may have shoved Dylan Garand, the young netminder many expected to get a crack at the No. 2 job, back toward Hartford.
Dave Maloney said he expected the Rangers to add an experienced goalie to compete with Garand, but not a move this substantial.
“I was only surprised at the financial commitment,” Maloney told Forever Blueshirts on the Rink Rap podcast. “Now, the cap is rising, the Rangers have cap space, and you’re getting a guy with experience.”
Korpisalo brings plenty of that. He’s 32, has 334 NHL games under his belt, and spent the last two seasons as Boston’s No. 2 behind Jeremy Swayman. He also comes with two years left on his deal at a $3 million cap hit.
That’s where the tension comes in for Garand, who is 24 and has spent four years in the American Hockey League. He got a real taste of the NHL late last season and made it count, going 2-0-1 with a 1.62 goals-against average and a .948 save percentage in his first three starts from March 22 through April 15.
Garand also picked up praise from coach Mike Sullivan and teammates, including Shesterkin. He was a restricted free agent with arbitration rights heading into the offseason, then signed a two-year, $1.75 million contract on June 21.
Maloney sees the upside in Garand, but he also sees the question the Rangers now have to answer.
“Does he deserve a chance at the next level, and is three games enough?,” he said. “He certainly was electric the way he played.
It was down the stretch, but I loved his style, has some panache to his game. He reminds me of Marc-Andre Fleury.
The mannerisms, he darts the corner like Fleury.
“I guess the thing is, three games down the stretch in a tossed-in-the-towel season, has he earned that chance for a 30-game backup role?”
Garand’s case is strong on paper. The 2020 fourth-round pick, No. 103 overall, played in the 2025 AHL All-Star Classic, won 20 games for Hartford that season, and finished this past year by allowing two goals or fewer in eight of his final nine starts. That came after a slow start on an awful Hartford team that finished last in the AHL standings.
Still, the Korpisalo trade changes the math. The Rangers could begin the season carrying three goalies, since they have the cap space to do it. But Garand and Korpisalo would both need to clear waivers to be sent to Hartford, which complicates everything.
The more likely setup, at least for now, is Korpisalo staying on the NHL roster on Opening Night while the Rangers hope Garand goes unclaimed and then takes on a heavy workload again in Hartford.
Maloney doesn’t sound sold on a three-goalie arrangement lasting long.
“A three goaltender rotation never works. There’s only two nets at practice,” he stated. “So, that’s going to be a bit of a tricky situation I think, how that plays out.”
The Rangers do have a recent example of why carrying multiple NHL-caliber goalies matters. The Carolina Hurricanes just won the Stanley Cup after getting contributions from three goalies this past season, with Brandon Bussi, Frederik Andersen, and Pyotr Kochetkov each starting games in the regular season.
The Rangers, though, weren’t in that kind of comfort last season when Shesterkin missed significant time with a lower-body injury. Jonathan Quick, who retired at season’s end at 40, couldn’t handle the load as the temporary starter, and Spencer Martin also struggled when called up from Hartford.
That’s why this move matters beyond the backup job. If Garand clears waivers, the Rangers suddenly have three goalies in the system who can protect them against injury at the NHL level.
Garand, for his part, made it clear after his brief NHL run that he wants no part of going back.
“I never want to go back to the American League, honestly. I'm so hungry to be here. I want to be in this league and a part of this organization.”
Now he’s got to prove it again, with Korpisalo in the mix and the Rangers’ crease suddenly crowded.
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