
Rookie Blueliner Alexander Nikishin Already Playing Vital Role For Carolina Hurricanes
Three games into his NHL career and that already feels like a bygone conclusion.
Sure, he was one of the most hyped up prospects in a long time, but there's a huge difference between playing in the KHL and the NHL.
But honestly, based on what we've seen so far, we should perhaps just throw away the 'going to be' part, because this hasn't just been 'playing in the NHL.'
This isn't just some random mid-January game against the Anaheim Ducks, this is the Eastern Conference Final, in do-or-die games, yet Nikishin already like an NHL regular.
The rookie defenseman has played north of 18 minutes in back-to-back games, filling in on the team's top four in the absence of Jalen Chatfield and Sean Walker.
He's looked calm, composed and just unfazed by the whole situation.
You'd never guess that he had just three North American games under his belt with no training camp nor preseason experience.
The play he made to spring Logan Stankoven for the game-winning goal in Game 4? Just ridiculous.
An absolute dart from Logan Stankoven 🎯😮💨(via @NHL)pic.twitter.com/h5BywBdntE
— BarDown (@BarDown) May 27, 2025
And just the all around defensive game he showed against the defending Stanley Cup champs has been more than impressive.
"I just like that he's not rattled and that he's just going out there and playing," said Hurricanes coach Rod Brind'Amour. "Sometimes these young kids come over and come in, even rookies, they don't realize the moment and how big it is. They're just playing hockey. Sometimes it takes a couple years to realize, 'Oh this is pretty important,' you know? He looks like he's unfazed. I don't know. I can't really tell you, but he's doing a great job for us."
It wasn't like it was an immediate fit for Nikishin either, who had to wait several weeks for the chance to make his NHL debut.
He was the first guy to jump into the lineup when Chatfield went down with injury, but in that game against the Washington Capitals, he turned the puck over multiple times and was just constantly in the wrong spots.
"His first game wasn't very positive," Brind'Amour said. "It was a little rough. But now he looked like he's played more than one game in North America."
So what gives?
Well, for one, Nikishin has had plenty of time to learn the systems since coming over to North America in April.
"[Assistant coach Tim Gleason] has worked with him daily on how we want to play," Brind'Amour said. "He knows how to play even with the language issues. He's picking it up really quickly and it's been a month now. He's been here and everyday he's going through stuff. That's really encouraging for an organization standpoint and for us trusting him."
But there's also just the fact that he's had the opportunity to get the butterflies out and now he knows that he's being counted on in an important situation.
And at the end of the day, elite players rise to the occasions.
"I was really proud of how from one game to the next, it changed," Brind'Amour said. "We have a good one there for sure."
Hindsight is 20/20, but with the way Nikishin is playing, it really makes you wonder if he could have made a difference in those first two games.
"We went to him and it was a rough first outing, but obviously he's seizing the moment right now," Brind'Amour said.
"It's a tough time of the year to come in as a rookie and play minutes like that, so it's huge," said Jaccob Slavin. "The games that they played tonight were awesome and I'd say a big congrats to Niki on his first point. That's awesome and happy for him."
Be sure to check out the Carolina Hurricanes 2025 Stanley Cup Playoffs Hub for all postseason stories!
Stay updated with the most interesting Carolina Hurricanes stories, analysis, breaking news and more! Tap the star to add us to your favorites on Google News to never miss a story.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


New York Times
34 minutes ago
- New York Times
The biggest hockey player on Earth, plus Paige Bueckers' record night
The Pulse Newsletter 📣 | This is The Athletic's daily sports newsletter. Sign up here to receive The Pulse directly in your inbox. Good morning! Pull the rug out from under your rival today. When we think of big hockey players, we think of Zdeno Chara. The 6-foot-9 former defenseman was fearsome over 24 seasons in the NHL, earning the name 'Big Z,' which almost felt too simple for his game. And yet there is a 17-year-old kid, from a hockey desert, who dwarfs Chara. I felt like I was hearing a fairytale while reading our story today on young Alexander Karmanov, who stands 7 feet tall and weighs 277 pounds. He is the biggest hockey player in the world, no hyperbole. Two nuggets that struck me: Karmanov seems like a good kid who says all the right things, which is something after the journey he's voyaged to get here. Make time for this story today. It's well worth it, for both the journey and how hard it is to find him proper equipment. Let's keep moving: Bullet fired into Chiefs building in 2024 A bullet was fired into the Chiefs practice facility in May of last year, The Athletic confirmed yesterday following a report from the Kansas City Star. Chiefs coach Andy Reid was in the building at the time, and the bullet was found lodged 15 feet from his desk. Scary stuff. See more details in our full report. Last-minute NFL deals We are exactly two weeks away from the start of the NFL season, which means teams are making final tweaks to their rosters. It brought a minor spate of transactions yesterday: We could have some more trades this week, too. Eze's about-face In drama solely reserved for European soccer, Crystal Palace attacking midfielder Eberechi Eze is now headed to Arsenal on a transfer, just hours after a deal with Tottenham Hotspur seemed finished. Then Arsenal's Kai Havertz got hurt and the Gunners swooped in. It's a coup for Arsenal and a stunning loss for Spurs. See how it went down. Advertisement More news 📫 Love The Pulse? Check out our other newsletters. We have two highlights this morning, and we must first start with Paige Bueckers' record performance last night. Look at the nifty moves first: Got 99 problems but a defender ain't one 🙂 — Dallas Wings (@DallasWings) August 21, 2025 Bueckers scored 44 points in an 81-80 Wings loss to the Sparks, tying her with Cynthia Cooper for most points in a game by a rookie, although there's some nuance that might give Bueckers the edge there — Cooper's performance came in 1997, the WNBA's inaugural season, when she was 34 years old. Hardly a rookie! But we're splitting hairs. Bueckers' performance last night was also the most points scored by any WNBA player this season, and she did it on 81 percent shooting. What? She is a shoo-in for Rookie of the Year. We also saw Fernando Tatis Jr. do this last night: FERNANDO TATIS JR. ROBS A HOME RUN AT THE WALL 🔥 🎥 @ — The Athletic (@TheAthletic) August 21, 2025 It came in a critical 8-1 win for the Padres over the Giants, putting San Diego just one game back of the Dodgers in the NL West race. Just 35 games left. Almost done: 📺 MLB: Red Sox at Yankees 7:15 p.m. ET on Fox These teams are idling beside each other like two cars unable to separate in a race. Both are a ways back of the Blue Jays in the AL East, and both cling to AL wild-card spots at the moment. Boston's offense is in shambles. New York's is finally churning again. Add in the rivalry of it all, and this is a great watch. 📺 WNBA: Mercury at Aces 10 p.m. ET on Prime Video Two of the W's best teams — including a red-hot Las Vegas, winner of eight straight — play with just a handful of games left in the regular season. Throw it on. Get tickets to games like these here. A great one from earlier this week: The 25 best stops to make on a college sports road trip. I'm gonna convince my bosses to let me do this. For work purposes, of course. See the map here. The Rugby World Cup begins today, but 34 years ago, things were different. Peter Carline takes us inside an American triumph that featured the 'Locks of Hell' and KGB agents. Great read. Advertisement I thought James Boyd's dissection of the Anthony Richardson disaster in Indianapolis was smart. Has the team fully given up on him? Nick Baumgardner ranked the best NFL rookie QB seasons in history. Yes, Jayden Daniels was that good last year. The Yankees drafted a player who admitted to drawing a swastika on a Jewish student's door in college. Why? Mike Vorkunov has a great explainer on why the sale of the Connecticut Sun has gotten so complicated. Most-clicked in the newsletter yesterday: AFC win total projections. Most-read on the website yesterday: The above story on the Yankees prospect. Spot the pattern. Connect the terms Find the hidden link between sports terms Play today's puzzle
Yahoo
2 hours ago
- Yahoo
Former Panther Joining Igor Larionov's KHL Team
Former Florida Panthers winger Rocco Grimaldi will join ex-NHL star Igor Larionov's KHL team SKA St. Petersburg. Grimaldi was a second-round pick (33rd overall) in the 2011 NHL Draft by the Panthers. After the selection, Grimaldi spent three seasons in the NCAA with the University of North Dakota. Following those three years, Grimaldi signed his entry-level contract and spent the better part of two seasons in the AHL. Grimaldi was dealt to the Colorado Avalanche the following season, concluding his Panthers tenure. He played just 27 games, scoring four goals and six points. Following his departure from Florida, Grimaldi bounced around the NHL. He went on to play in NHL games with the Avalanche and the Nashville Predators, but spent most of his time in the AHL with the Anaheim Ducks, New York Rangers, Chicago Blackhawks and Columbus Blue Jackets AHL affiliates. The 32-year-old hasn't played an NHL game since the 2021-22 season. Grimaldi was a successful AHL player, recording 192 goals and 428 points in 499 games. Skill has never been the issue for Grimaldi, but standing just 5-foot-6, 181 pounds, Grimaldi is extremely undersized for an NHL player. Internationally, Grimaldi won two gold medals for the USA at the 2010 and 2011 IIHF U-18 World Championships and another at the 2013 world juniors. He also played for the USA at the 2023 world championships, where he notched seven goals and 14 points in 10 games. Joining St. Petersburg in Russia, Grimaldi will be playing in a league that values skill more than physicality, which should benefit Grimaldi. St. Petersburg iced a star-studded lineup last year, featuring Ivan Demidov, Alexander Nikishin, Mikhail Grigorenko, Evgeny Kuznetsov, Arseni Gritsyuk, Nikita Zaitsev and Tony DeAngelo. Only Zaitsev remains, but the organization has added long-time NHL great Igor Larionov as head coach as well as North Americans Trevor Murphy, Brennan Menell and Joey Blandisi, who have some NHL experience.
Yahoo
5 hours ago
- Yahoo
This physical winger has a chance to become a valuable cog in the Edmonton Oilers Bottom-6
The Top 20 countdown of our 2025 Cult of Hockey Prospect Series continues. Again, these are the twenty young men in the system today closest to making an impact with the big club. Players only fall off the list once they: -Make the NHL -Get dealt to a different organization -Age out, or… -Drop off the map. Lets proceed… 2025 Edmonton Oilers Top Prospect Rankings #15 – David Lewandowski (Voters: David Staples, Kurt Leavins, Jim Matheson, Ira Cooper). Physical wingers with some skill and on their ELC's are like found gold in the NHL. Will David Lewandowski be that for the Oilers? Selected in this past June's draft in Round Four, #117 overall, this left-shot winger out of Schwatzinger, Germany stands 6'1 and weighs in at 177 LB. If you look at this prospect through the lens of well-known and respected draft projections, this was a shrewd pick-up by Edmonton. Elite Prospects had him ranked #77, Daily faceoff #86, Flo Hockey #69 and his consolidated ranking rang in at #94. From the outside in, that looks like a win. The eighteen-year-old will turn 19 in February. In his first season in the Western Hockey League, Lewandowski was productive, going 15-24-39 in 52 GP adding 21 PIM. He also had a goal and an assist in four playoff games. In addition, he had a goal and an assist in four games at the Hlinka Gretzky Cup. Prior to that, Lewandowski also managed to play seven games with Dusseldorf EG in the Deutsche Eishockey Liga (DEL), which is Germany's top professional league as a seventeen-year-old. He also has international experience. But that small sample playing against men as a teenager stands out more to me. Here is what the scouts say: Elite Prospects: -Lewandowski is a dominant puck protector who throws reverse hits and bulldozes contact. His shooting has been a constant threat across his career. He rips pucks off his outside leg and possesses a powerful catch-and-release shot that he leverages with higher-end precision. Even more impressive, his physical skills – puck protection, especially – are the most translatable aspects of his game. Dobber Prospects: -A smart, solid, all-around forward with a strong shot and sub-par skating, though he has a straightforward path to the NHL. A solid all-around player'. Other pluses: -Lewandowski knows where the blue paint is. He has a nose for the net and seems to relish the journey in getting there. -Consistently positive reviews for his defensive play and strong along the walls. -Those that know him say he has a high Hockey IQ and plays a mature game. Where he needs work: -Foot speed, foot speed, foot speed. If this kid can get his boots moving quicker and more efficiently, it could lead to a breakout year with the Saskatoon Blades and a brighter NHL outlook. For now, while his skating is not a liability per se, he lacks the extra gear to separate from defenders. General observations: -Good hockey DNA. David's Dad Eduard played w0 pro seasons in Europe, including the KHL, DEL and the Olympics in 2006. -There is some suggestion that this kid may not be done growing. You never really know, but an extra inch could be a real plus. -If his boots are only average, then his fitness level will be one of the keys to this kid making it or not. A big summer will be critical. -A trusted colleague of mine who saw Lewandowski a lot in person last season said to me 'Oilers got a good one, keep an eye on him'. Noted. Projection: -A fourth line NHL-er? That is what his skill set would seem to project. If we further assess him by draft pedigree, about eighteen per cent of Round Four forward picks turn into NHL players. And as I have already mentioned, if Lewandowski arrives in that position on an ELC…that would be a significant advantage. -In the meantime, he has another full year in the WHL. Could he have a ticket to Bakersfield by the fall of 2026? -0- Next up…prospect #14 from my Cult of Hockey colleague David Staples. Now on Bluesky @ Also, find me on Threads @kleavins, Twitter @KurtLeavins, Instagram at LeavinsOnHockey, and Mastodon at KurtLeavins@ This article is not AI generated. Recently, at The Cult… STAPLES: Can the Edmonton Oilers win it all with such a top-heavy lineup LEAVINS: Will this Oilers prospect dog have his Day? Bruce McCurdy, 1955-2025. Don't miss the news you need to know — add and to your bookmarks and sign up for our newsletters here.