A familiar face in teal is absent for this evening’s action, as Sharks center Alexander Wennberg is out with an upper-body injury per the team.
The veteran had yet to miss a contest on the campaign, where he has put up 43 points in 64 games. After bouncing around for a bit, Wennberg has found a home in San Jose, playing a large role and getting power play time. He’s averaging the highest usage of his career at age 31, also with his best point totals since 2016-17, back when the Swede was looking like a rising star in Columbus.
With Igor Chernyshov also out to injury after being hospitalized, Philipp Kurashev and Pavol Regenda fill out the Sharks’ third line in Ottawa, the team needing to stockpile points to hold onto Wild Card berth.
Elsewhere across the league:
- Also regarding San Jose, goaltender Laurent Brossoit is making his Sharks debut, shared by the team in their lineup announcement. The soon to be 33-year-old has impressively worked his way back into the NHL for the first time since April 2024 as a Winnipeg Jet. To help paint the picture of how long it has been, Brossoit turned away two shots from retired forward Zach Parise in that contest. Since then, the veteran spent the last two years in the AHL, after a standout free agent deal with Chicago didn’t materialize due to knee issues, and subsequently being brought in by the Sharks after not playing a single game as a Blackhawk. Brossoit has played very well in the AHL this year, posting a .915 save percentage and 2.48 goals-against-average, dominating with 11 wins in 14 games. The performance earned a call up two days ago with Yaroslav Askarov sidelined.
- Newly acquired Capitals forward David Kampf’s debut with the team will be further delayed. Head coach Spencer Carbery told reporters, including Tarik El-Bashir of Monumental Sports Network, that he has returned to Vancouver to be with his wife who is expecting a child shortly. Kampf is also dealing with continued visa issues, missing the Caps’ last several games, and hasn’t appeared since March 4 as a Canuck. Brought in at the deadline for a sixth-round pick, the 31-year-old will be eager to return soon and build his stock going into free agency this summer, where the center market will be sparse. Washington is unlikely to make the playoffs, but the Czech native could make a case to stick around as Nic Dowd’s replacement. Playing on the league’s worst team in the Canucks did a number on Kampf’s point totals and plus/minus, but he still has a respectable 49.8% corsi for at five-on-five, an improvement over his last three seasons with Toronto.
