SAN JOSE - The first Sharks development camp practice on Tuesday produced an answer to a question nobody around the rink had really needed to ask until now: yes, there is a 7-foot hockey player, and the sight is every bit as wild as it sounds.
San Jose Barracuda coach John McCarthy was among the people watching new Sharks draft pick Alexander Karmanov move around the ice at SAP Center, and he didn’t need long to register just how unusual the moment was.
“No,” McCarthy said when asked whether he had ever seen a 7-foot hockey player. “That’s the first one.”
Karmanov, selected 201st overall by San Jose, was on the ice alongside Sharks legend Joe Thornton, who at 6-foot-4 earned the nickname “Jumbo Joe” during his career. Next to Karmanov, Thornton looked anything but jumbo.
The comparison was hard to miss. Karmanov stands 7-foot-1 and weighs 280 pounds, a frame so massive it could become a real weapon if the Sharks can turn it into NHL-ready hockey ability. If he ever reaches the league, he would be the tallest player to skate in the NHL.
That’s the dream. The reality is that he still has a long development road ahead, and the biggest part of that work is obvious: skating and puck handling.
McCarthy was blunt about the areas that need attention.
“Puck skills, stick skills, every skill,” McCarthy said of traits Karnamov needs to develop. “A lot of our development plans, there’s an emphasis on different areas, but a lot of them are pretty standardized.
Puck skills, using his stick defensively. Obviously physically he has the size, so just those little things that we talk about with a lot of our defensemen.”
The challenge is not just whether Karmanov can use his size, but how to use it safely. At 18 and coming from Moldova, his sheer reach and strength could make him a force, but they also create the kind of contact issues shorter players never have to think about. Even a routine shoulder check can land in the head or neck area when the opponent is built like this.
That’s part of why McCarthy pointed to technique, not brute force, as the answer.
“There’s ways that you can coach around that,” McCarthy said. “Have an active stick, and make sure you’re keeping your hands down. There’s different things you can do.”
Karmanov was not the only Sharks prospect drawing attention. Second-overall pick Ivar Stenberg stepped onto the ice for the first time since being drafted on Friday and quickly became a crowd favorite.
Children in the stands, including youth hockey players, chanted his name whenever he touched the puck. Stenberg responded with the kind of skating and skill that made him such a high pick in the first place, and it was easy to see why the buzz followed him around the rink.
“It’s been super cool,” Stenberg said. “Super fun for sure.
I’ve been dreaming of this moment my whole life, and I’m here. So yeah, it’s super fun, and I’m super happy about it.”
When asked whether he had heard kids chanting his name before, Stenberg said he had. That tracks, considering his production with Frolunda in Sweden, where he posted 33 points in 43 games last season.
Still, the usual Swedish restraint came through when he described how often that kind of scene has happened.
“Not too many times.”
If the Sharks get what they believe they have in Stenberg, there may be plenty more chants coming.
In Other News...
Mike Grier Has Earned This Summers Biggest Sharks Test
Mike Grier has already given the Sharks a reason to believe the rebuild is moving in the right direction, with his recent draft work drawing high praise and his pre-draft trade for Michael Kesselring adding another piece to the organizational picture. For a front office trying to balance patience with progress, that kind of spring momentum matters, especially with a roster that still needs more certainty around it.
Now comes the part that will define the summer. San Jose has plenty of flexibility to shop in free agency, and Grier is expected to use it to bring in veteran help and give the team a more competitive edge right away. The options in that market are still being sorted through, and the Sharks next move will say plenty about how aggressive Grier wants to be in turning all that promise into something more tangible. [Read more 🡒]
Wild Fans Have A New Reason To Watch July 1 Closely
July 1 always brings a fresh round of contract talk around the NHL, and this year the conversation reaches all the way to San Jose. Among the players eligible to start talking extensions with their current teams is Macklin Celebrini, giving Sharks fans another reason to keep an eye on the leagues calendar even as the bigger names in the story make the headlines. The group under discussion also includes Sidney Crosby, Nikita Kucherov, Quinn Hughes and Cale Makar, a reminder that the leagues next contract cycle could reshape several franchises at once.
For the Sharks, the intrigue is less about urgency than about timing and value. Celebrini is still under team control as an RFA, but the fact that he can sign his first standard NHL contract extension this summer adds a new layer to his early-career trajectory and to San Joses long-term planning. Around the league, the analysis centers on what these stars might command and how much each one matters to his clubs future, but in San Jose the focus is simpler: one more piece of evidence that the rebuild is starting to collect real stakes. [Read more 🡒]
