Sharks Fans Already Have Two Big Reasons To Watch Ivar Stenberg

Ivar Stenberg is quickly adapting to new challenges, demonstrating growth both on and off the ice as he transitions to the NHL's faster-paced environment.

Ivar Stenberg wasted little time making an impression at his first day of development camp, and San Jose Barracuda head coach John McCarthy liked what he saw.

“You can tell that he’s played against men before, sees the ice well, processes well,” McCarthy said.

McCarthy also believes the 2026 San Jose Sharks’ No. 2 pick should adapt smoothly to the NHL game, even after coming from the SHL’s bigger surface. The pace, he said, is the main adjustment, but Stenberg handled the day’s small-area work without any trouble.

“Things happen faster, obviously, on the smaller ice, right? The pressure’s on top of you quicker, so everything has to be dialed up.

But we played a small area game today, 2-on-2, and he did fine, I don’t foresee any issues,” McCarthy said. “I thought the [small area] game, he separated himself pretty well.”

Stenberg, for his part, sounded thrilled just to be there, especially with kids chanting his name on Tuesday.

“Yeah, it’s been super-cool, super-fun for sure. Dreaming of this moment my whole life, and I’m here. Super-fun and super-happy about it.

Sometimes, not too many times. But yeah, super-nice.”

He also kept things pretty light when asked about his personality off the ice. On Swedish death metal, he had a quick answer.

“No, I don’t…House, maybe.”

And on whether bowling will be a strength during the camp’s bonding activity:

“No, I don’t think so.”

When the conversation turned to childhood Sharks memories, Stenberg pointed straight to one name.

“Erik Karlsson, for sure, when he got traded here, that’s the biggest one.”

As for his goals during camp, he said he wants to soak up as much as he can before heading home.

“Try to learn as much as possible. See everything here. Try to learn as much I can, go home with the information.

I don’t know yet. We’ll see what happens.”

Stenberg also made clear where he stands on the smaller rink debate.

“I like it more. Things happen faster, and things happen more often.”

And when the social media chatter popped up around his height after his Draft day photo with Ryan Lin, he didn’t seem interested in making a big deal out of it.

“I saw that, but I don’t know how I was standing.”

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