Columbus Blue Jackets prospect defenseman Tanner Henricks is out for three months with a lower-body injury, per St. Cloud Live’s Mick Hatten. Per Hatten, Henricks’ brother Ty Henricks, a forward for Western Michigan University, delivered a body check on his younger brother, and was given a five-minute major penalty for contact with the head. Falling from the hit, Tanner reportedly suffered a lower-body injury, and “was seen in a walking boot after the game.”
Henricks is a 6’3″ defenseman who was drafted in the fourth round, 101st overall, by Columbus at the 2024 draft. The injury wipes out most of Henricks’ freshman season at St. Cloud State, one that had started off positively. Henricks had scored four points in his first six games of NCAA hockey and was getting a significant opportunity to play on the team’s power play. Now, not only will he miss a large chunk of college games, he’ll also miss the chance to represent the United States at the upcoming IIHF World Junior Championships. According to FloHockey’s Chris Peters, Henricks “was legitimately in the mix” to earn a spot on Team USA, but this injury will now cost him his chance at selection.
Other notes from the Metropolitan Division:
- Pittsburgh Penguins forward Justin Brazeau has had an exceptional start to the 2025-26 season, scoring six goals and 12 points in just 12 games. For a player who signed in Pittsburgh after a stretch where he managed just two points in 19 games for the Minnesota Wild, that extremely productive stretch is significant for his hopes of establishing himself as someone who can have a long-term NHL career, something doubly important as an undrafted player. That’s what makes his recent upper-body injury so unfortunate, and today, Penguins play-by-play voice Josh Getzoff confirmed that Brazeau’s status is unchanged: he remains out with an upper-body injury. While the Penguins’ success has largely been driven (as it has been for about two decades) by its two star centers, this injury suffered by Brazeau is nonetheless a discouraging development for the team’s hopes of maintaining its positive momentum.
 - Brazeau isn’t the only forward dealing with an injury. The team announced tonight that veteran Noel Acciari left the team’s contest against the Toronto Maple Leafs with an upper-body injury. Acciari appears to have suffered the injury on what was just his second shift of the game. While he hasn’t been a big scorer the way Brazeau has been so far this season, losing Acciari for any notable stretch of time would nonetheless pose a challenge for the Penguins. Acciari has been a key first-unit penalty killer during his time as a Penguin, leading all Pittsburgh forwards in short-handed ice time in 2024-25. Since Acciari’s arrival in Pittsburgh, the Penguins rank 14th in the NHL in penalty kill success rate, so if the veteran forward does end up missing more than just tonight’s game due to injury, first-year head coach Dan Muse will need to find a way to sustain his team’s positive momentum without a key special teams contributor.