The wait is over—the season officially begins Thursday as the Seattle Kraken host the Anaheim Ducks on home ice. Offseason additions Mason Marchment, Ryan Lindgren, and Freddy Gaudreau will make their debuts, while new head coach Lane Lambert steps behind the bench for the first time. Goaltender Matt Murray is on the roster but likely won’t get the start on Opening Night.
National media hasn’t been kind to the Kraken heading into the season, so we wanted to take some time to talk about what gets the Sound Of Hockey crew excited for what’s ahead. Many outlets have Anaheim projected to leapfrog Seattle in the standings, making Thursday a good chance for the Kraken to send a message that they’re better than last year’s results suggest.
In preparation for puck drop, our own John Barr, Curtis Isacke, Blaiz Grubic, and Darren Brown got together to discuss a few hot topics.
What’s your biggest reason for optimism heading into this Kraken season?
Curtis: The renewed focus and urgency brought by the new coaching staff, and Lane Lambert in particular, has me feeling optimistic. The new Kraken bench boss is dialed in on the details at every practice, seemingly hanging on the correct execution of every support pass or close out. Lambert is quite calm and reflective in an interview setting, but when he’s on the ice the zeal of a drill sergeant is evident.
One could imagine his hard-charging approach wearing on a team if maintained throughout the year, but Lambert is setting the standard early, and I expect he’ll calibrate his approach as the season progresses. A fast start is imperative with the difficult opening stretch the team is facing. Lambert has me hopeful that the details will be dialed in from puck drop, and that could be the difference.
Darren: Well, hope springs eternal when a new season is on the horizon, “why not us?,” and a variety of other new-season cliches. But seriously… The front office thought the Kraken were going to be better last season, and with good reason after a couple splashy offseason signings. I also think the 2025-26 on-paper roster is–when fully healthy–better and more competitive this season than last.
So, if last season’s expected improvement actually comes to fruition now, AND the more recent tweaks to the roster help push the group forward even more, then I could get my head around a huge jump in the standings this season. I do remain cautious in my optimism, though, because I think a lot of things have to go right for this team to really compete for a playoff spot.
John: I’ve been beating this drum all summer, but the Kraken finished last season with a minus-11 goal differential. For context, teams sitting between even and plus-five in that stat make the playoffs about half the time. With a new coaching staff that seems locked in on structure and details, I think we’ll see fewer goals against—and maybe a swing into the positive. On top of that, I really like the complementary pieces the front office added over the offseason.
Blaiz: The kids are coming. It’s exciting to see Berkly Catton, Jani Nyman, and Ryan Winterton make the roster to open the season. Heading into the franchise’s fifth year, the Kraken have developed three NHL players from their own draft classes—Matty Beniers, Shane Wright, and Ryker Evans. This season doubles that total to six drafted players on the roster, including Evans, who starts on injured reserve.
The three youngsters may not stay the entire season, but each earned their spot in training camp. It’ll be great to see them get regular-season NHL ice time.



Who’s the player you think will surprise people with their performance this season and why?
Darren: How about Eeli Tolvanen? He quietly had a really impressive 23-goal campaign last year with limited power-play opportunities. If he gets more usage on the flank with the manpower advantage, I could see him sniffing around the 30-goal mark this year and commanding a big-time pay raise on his contract for next season, whether that be with the Kraken or elsewhere.
John: I’m not sure I have a clear pick for a surprise player, but let’s just say… backup goaltending. Call it blind optimism, or maybe something I just want to will into the universe. I don’t want to read too much into it, but both Matt Murray and Philipp Grubauer looked solid in their preseason games. Plus, Lambert’s defensive structure should give the backups some extra support.
Blaiz: I’m expecting big things from Shane Wright. For a while now, I’ve said Wright will eventually take over as the Kraken’s top-scoring center, and I believe this is the year. After a slow start in 2024-25, with two points (one goal, one assist) in 18 games, he was healthy scratched was sent down to Coachella Valley to find his game(shame, shame, shame). When he returned, he produced 42 points in his final 61 games, averaging 2.83 points per 60 minutes. To put that in perspective, Jared McCann led the team in that category at 2.59. I can easily see a scenario where Wright not only leads all Kraken centers in scoring but challenges for the team lead overall.
A bonus player I’ll mention is Jaden Schwartz, who led the Kraken in goals last season and has looked sharp throughout the preseason. He’s never hit the 30-goal mark in his career, but that milestone feels within reach this year.
Curtis: I’ll say Freddy Gaudreau. The least-heralded of this season’s offseason acquisitions, he should quietly make an impact from the bottom of the lineup scoring goals, killing penalties, and, perhaps most importantly of all, shepherding along some of Seattle’s young talent.
Kraken assistant general manager Alex Mandrycky told us at Sound Of Hockey Fest that Gaudreau topped the team’s internal board for a fourth-line center acquisition because he could bring more of a scoring element to that role, while also being solid defensively. The team has found most of its success historically when rolling four lines capable of scoring and, with Gaudreau, the team hopes to return to that identity.
Gaudreau’s presence also allows the team to deploy a younger player in a fourth-line role—be it Catton or Nyman—but still with an offensively capable linemate. It may not show up in the box score all the time, but I’d wager fans will look back on Gaudreau’s first season in Seattle pleased with the addition.

With a 10-game opening stretch that includes six on the road and five against 2024 playoff teams, what would you consider a successful first month for the Kraken beyond wins and losses?
John: With two significant injuries—Kaapo Kakko and Ryker Evans—likely sidelining them for the full 10-game stretch, I’d call it a success if the Kraken can grab 12 of a possible 20 points. Beyond that, I just want to see them compete every night. We’ll see plenty of backup goaltending during this run, so let’s add “solid play from the backups” to the list of success criteria.
Darren: To John’s point, I think the Kakko injury could be fairly crushing, especially considering the impact he had on Beniers after joining Seattle last season. So between the brutal early schedule and that critical absence, I’m looking for a .500 record coming out of this stretch. Anything over that is gravy and at least keeps Seattle in the conversation long enough to get hot in November and beyond.
Blaiz: With a six-game road trip early in the season, this is the perfect opportunity for the team to come together and focus on the defensive structure that Lambert keeps emphasizing. I’d love to see them finish with a winning record, but for me, success in the first month is about process. Are they defending as a five-man unit? Are they limiting high-danger chances? And are the backup goaltenders giving the team enough confidence to stay committed to their system in front of them?
Curtis: Setting aside the record, I think we need to see the team’s highly drafted young players start to assert themselves as the core players for the lines around them. There was no mistaking the Yanni Gourde line when he was out there, and I’d like to see that from Beniers, Wright, and (hopefully, optimistically) Catton.
For Beniers, that likely means a hard-working, responsible unit that is locked in on the details. For Wright, that means a group that trades on skilled plays in the most dangerous areas of the ice. As for Catton, of course, it starts with getting the ice time; then I want to see a pressure identity that forces defenses onto their heels and creates space all over the rink.
Which offseason addition (player, coach, prospect or system tweak) will make the biggest difference?
Blaiz: I’m going with the obvious one—the addition of head coach Lane Lambert. There’s been a lot of talk about structure, and I believe that will dramatically help a team with a growing young core and no true superstar talent. Lambert wasn’t shy about moving players around in preseason to get the type of play he wanted. He expects his team to play within his system, and if you’re not playing your role, you’ll move down the lineup. That kind of message is straightforward and easy to follow, which creates accountability and consistency up and down the lineup.
Darren: Would you call yourself a Laniac, Blaiz?
Blaiz: No, I’m on the Lane Train.
Curtis: Yes! Lane Train! I think Mason Marchment could be a very valuable complement to Chandler Stephenson in the top nine. The two have been attached at the hip while Stephenson has been on the ice this preseason, and it makes sense to me.
Marchment is comfortable working net front or even below the goal line in both the offensive and defensive zones. This frees Stephenson to operate more in space and from the exterior where he can dice up opposing defenses with his skating and precision passes.
Even through the neutral zone in preseason, Marchment’s presence driving the center lane allowed Stephenson several clean zone entries on the left wing that got the offense set up. He could be revelatory for Stephenson in the same way Kakko was for Beniers last season. (On that note, we have to hope Kakko returns as soon as possible. If Beniers’ line struggles in the interim, Marchment could help Beniers in much the same way I’ve described above.)
Darren: I agree wholeheartedly with Curtis. Thanks for cooking that up.
John: We’ve already mentioned him, but I’m really excited about Gaudreau. The Kraken haven’t had a right-shot center on the penalty kill in the past few seasons, and having him available for strong-side face-offs in the defensive zone should be a nice boost. That could improve the penalty kill, cut down on goals against, and ultimately help that goal differential I talked about above. It’s a subtle but smart move that fills a real need. Oh, and Gaudreau’s over 50 percent in shootouts, which doesn’t hurt either.

Let’s jump in the DeLorean and race forward to April. The Kraken have made the playoffs. What went right to get them there?
Curtis: If the Kraken are in the playoff mix, it is because the defensive identity that carried them through the Hakstol era has returned, Joey Daccord continues to prove his doubters wrong, the backup goaltending has stabilized, and the team has won a lot of 3-2 or 2-1 games.
Darren: After Ryker Evans and Kaapo Kakko return from injury right on their expected return dates, the Kraken will have stayed almost completely healthy throughout the rest of the season. While the team arguably has more depth now than last season, it also cannot withstand absences from key players, especially being that it will rely heavily on young players like Jani Nyman, Ryan Winterton, and (perhaps) Berkly Catton. The injury bug that bit early and often during training camp will have been held at bay.
John: Stinginess. The Kraken ranked 24th in goals against last season, allowing 262. If they’re going to seriously compete for a playoff spot, that number has to come down—and if it does, it’ll be a sign that the players have fully bought into Lane Lambert’s systems.
Blaiz: I think it’s a combination of everything I’ve mentioned. The players have bought into Lane Lambert’s system, the backup goaltending has stabilized, Shane Wright has taken a step forward, and the young core is contributing. Just as important, the Kraken are starting games ready to go from puck drop—something that hurt them last year.
With 13 back-to-back games on the schedule, one more than a season ago when they went 0-12 in the second leg, the Kraken need to battle through those situations and find ways to win. Spotting the league 13 games isn’t a recipe for success. If they can stay structured, get timely saves, and maintain energy throughout those stretches, that’s what gets them to April hockey.



Go Kraken!!!
I’m glad I’m not the only one eating the cheese on optimism from the coaching change. John pointed it out, the -11 goal differential stuck with me over the offseason. The team was more talented last year than where they finished in the standings. Bad discipline, inconsistency, and never winning a back to back are all things that can improve with a coaching change and more internal structure. While there wasn’t a real splash move on the roster this off-season they made incremental improvements, and I think the talent ceiling is higher than its ever been if they can unlock it and fire on all cylinders.
Excited for hockey to be back, and ready to have my heart broken again.
Go Kraken!!!
Go out and shock the pessimistic Debbie Downers this season!
The beauty of a new season is that the old one is gone. No need to go back there! There’s a new coach and there are some new players. ALL of the players are a few months older with another season under their skates. Let’s enjoy the new optimism of today and bitch about the other shit later when if/it actually happens. Let’s go KRAKEN!
For me, I am on the Lane/Shane Train. The scary part for me is onjuries. We some already that will effect the blance and as we go along and there are more, We may have to rely on goaltending all the way. Congrats to Joey on his ASU HOF