Strive for 95 (points) – December update for the Kraken

by | Dec 2, 2025 | 7 comments

Welcome to the December edition of Strive for 95. The Seattle Kraken did what was needed in November and remain on pace for 95 points. The Kraken sit in the second wild card spot and have played only 24 games, tied for the fewest in the NHL with two other teams.

Seattle is on a short break and will not play again until Thursday. At that point, they will have played the fewest games of any NHL team. Having games in hand is a good thing, especially when you are already in a playoff position. All stats and standings are based on the month of November and current as of Nov. 30 unless otherwise stated.

I feel like I say it every month, but this was another roller coaster of a stretch.

November recap

The month started well with three points in the first two games. Then San Jose handed Seattle its worst loss of the season, a 6-1 defeat. Joey Daccord was pulled in that game and was placed on injured reserve days later, though the injury was believed to have happened during practice. With Philipp Grubauer and Matt Murray set to split the net, Kraken fans held their breath expecting a slide. That never came. Grubauer and Murray combined for six starts and earned nine points. Watching the Kraken stay competitive regardless of who is in net was a huge confidence boost. Grubauer finished the month with a .917 save percentage, while Murray posted a .939.

Murray was injured in the second matchup against San Jose, though, just as Daccord returned from IR. Spirits were still high, and Seattle earned five points on a four-game road swing. That is where the Kraken’s lack of scoring caught up with them as they dropped the final two games of the month in regulation to Dallas and Edmonton.

Over the last six games, Seattle scored only nine goals and was shut out twice. One shutout came against the New York Islanders on the second leg of a back-to-back. Miraculously, Daccord also recorded a shutout, sending the game to a shootout. Seattle fell 1-0, but it snapped a streak of 15 straight regulation losses in the second leg of back-to-back games. Their previous point in a second game of a back-to-back came on Mar. 21, 2024, in an overtime loss to Arizona.

Seattle posted a 6-5-3 record for 15 points in 14 games, two points under their November target. They were two points over target in October, so the overall pace remains on track for 95.

Updated tiers

As of Nov. 30, every NHL team is within striking distance of a playoff spot. Nashville sits last in the league but is only seven points out. The East is even tighter, with all teams within five points of a spot. Both the Playoff Bound and Tanker tiers were reduced to five and four teams, reflecting how tightly packed the standings have become.

Bolded teams are teams the Kraken play this month. ‘x2’ indicates the Kraken face that team twice. Up and down arrows show teams that moved between tiers.

Notes on tier movement

Atlantic Division: Tampa Bay jumped to the Playoff Bound tier after an 11-3 month and is currently on a seven-game win streak. Boston moved up after a 9-5 month that lifted them to second in the division, though they have played 27 games, and others hold games in hand. Florida and Toronto dropped from the Playoff Bound tier, with both teams four points out of a playoff spot and hovering around .500.

Metropolitan Division: Washington was the only change. The Capitals went 9-4-2 and won seven of their last eight. The push only moved them to third in the division, which is solid but not enough to justify a Playoff Bound spot with three teams right behind them and Philadelphia and Pittsburgh each holding two games in hand. Another strong month could move them back up, but for now the standings are too tight.

Central Division: Shame, shame, shame. I got it wrong last month, so this division needed a reset. Dallas, second overall in the NHL, moved back to the Playoff Bound tier. Utah fell back to earth with a 4-8-3 month and now sits one spot out of a playoff position. Minnesota rebelled against their Tankers label by going 11-1-2 and rose to the very top of the Bubble tier. Winnipeg fell to the Bubble tier with eight losses in November and arthroscopic knee surgery for Connor Hellebuyck that will sideline him four to six weeks. St. Louis moved up to the Bubble tier after earning points in 11 of 15 games. They are 0-7 in overtime and shootout games, which should even out at some point. Their negative 23 goal differential is second worst in the league, but 10 of their last 11 games in November have been one-goal contests.

Pacific Division: Anaheim leads the division with 31 points. Los Angeles has the same point total but trails in regulation wins. That is the lowest point total to lead any division, so both remain in the Bubble tier. Vegas went 5-4-5 and dropped to third, removing them from the Playoff Bound tier. With no clear front-runner, the Playoff Bound tier remains empty. San Jose continued to surprise with a 9-5-1 month and moved up to the Bubble tier.

Overtime games

A key reason for the tight standings is the surge in overtime games. Through Nov. 30, 27.9 percent of games have required overtime.

Over the last eight full seasons, the average was 22.1 percent. This season’s rate is a 5.8 percent increase. Sound Of Hockey’s John Barr found this is the highest percentage since overtime was reintroduced 42 years ago.

December breakdown

December offers Seattle its most favorable travel schedule. The Kraken will travel 5,302 miles, all within the Western Conference. Their longest trip is a four-game swing, with three of those games in California, which minimizes travel. With 13 games scheduled, the average travel per game is 408 miles, the lowest of any month. April has the fewest travel miles, but that is mainly because the Kraken play only nine games that month.

The Kraken have two sets of back-to-back games to close the month as they try to snap their 17-game losing streak in the second leg. Both back ends come against Pacific Division opponents, giving Seattle a chance to gain ground while preventing others from doing the same. In total, the Kraken play 10 Western Conference teams in December, making this a pivotal month.

Playoff Bound tier

Colorado visits Seattle for the first of three meetings. The Avalanche have been dominant with just one regulation loss all season. The target for this game is one point.

Bubble tier

With the standings extremely tight, 23 teams fall into this tier and only eight points separate them. Minnesota leads this group with 33 points. St. Louis, Florida, and Toronto sit at 25. Seattle has nine games against Bubble teams. They face eight Bubble tier opponents this month: Detroit, Philadelphia, Minnesota, Utah, Anaheim, Edmonton, San Jose, and two against Los Angeles. The target for these games is 11 points.

Tanker tier

Seattle has three games against Tanker tier teams: Buffalo and Vancouver at home, and Calgary on the road. The target is four points.

Target win percentages

With the increase in Bubble-tier teams, the target point percentages were adjusted to keep Seattle on pace for 95 points. The overall target for the month of December is 16 points.

Wrapping up

Seattle’s next game is Thursday, Dec. 4, in a rematch with Edmonton. With five teams within two points of the Kraken, they could find themselves outside the playoff picture by puck drop. They will still hold two to four games in hand over every Western Conference team, giving them a chance to climb back quickly while flying under the radar a bit.

Seattle ended the month with a shutout loss to Edmonton, but November was a solid month overall. With four days off before their next game, you can imagine the team will focus on two areas: improving special teams, which went 0-for-6 on the power play and 0-for-2 on the penalty kill, and generating more scoring chances.

The Kraken have proved they can shut teams down, allowing just 2.63 goals per game, which ranks fifth in the NHL. If they can pair that steady defensive play with a bit more scoring, they will stay on pace for 95 points. Comment below on where you think the offensive spark will come from.

Blaiz Grubic

Blaiz Grubic is a contributor at Sound Of Hockey. A passionate hockey fan and player for over 30 years, Blaiz grew up in the Pacific Northwest and is an alumni of Washington State University (Go Cougs!). When he’s not playing, watching, or writing about hockey, he enjoys quality time with his wife and daughter or getting out on a golf course for a quick round. Follow @blaizg on BlueSky or X.

7 Comments

  1. Seattle G

    Great analysis, thank you.

    What I am hearing you say…TIME FOR A REBUILD!!! WOOHOO!!! It would be better to eat sh*t for the next 10 years than have players like Montour, Kakko, Dunn, Evans, Stephenson, McCann, etc etc. I don’t think we should even protect Shane, Matty and Catton. None of them are SCORING! We could get someone REALLY GOOD!

    JUST KIDDING! 🙂 I love this team!! GO KRAKEN!!! I did mean the part about great analysis…

    Reply
    • Nino

      I think Bob Dillan wrote a song about you Seattle G 😂 guess which one. 😆

      Reply
  2. Daryl W

    Such a good article Blaiz. As the month winds down I look forward to it each time and the timing couldn’t be better for this one.

    Go Kraken!!!
    Win!!!

    Reply
  3. NataLukas

    The offensive spark needs to come from everyone, top to bottom. Mush needs to shoot more, heck everyone needs to shoot and get to the front of the net.

    Reply
    • Nino

      There has been an effort to get more pucks on the ice the last three games or so and our scoring has actually dropped off, similar to how things went during the famous “shoot the fucking puck” rant last season which proceeded our worst losing streak of the year if I recall.

      Our shots on goal have increased recently but scoring has gone the other direction. What we need is a different offensive system, we give the defense way too much time to get set. Our offensive system relies heavily on safe board plays and safe zone entries. Our system is why we’re not scoring goals, it’s not because we aren’t shooting the puck. We need better offensive chances.

      Reply
    • Daryl W

      To Nino’s point…

      These are small sample sizes; nonetheless, I think they are illustrative. If you divide the Kraken’s 24 games into three eight game buckets by shots on goal:

      No.1
      239 SOG = 29.875 SOG/G
      21 G = 8.78 SH%

      No.2
      191 SOG = 23.875 SOG/G
      18 G = 9.42 SH%

      No.3
      155 SOG = 19.375 SOG/G
      20 G = 12.90 SH%

      When they shoot more, they don’t score more. The extra shot volume is not leading to more goals. They definitely need to score more and I can’t say how they accomplish that, but Hakstol and Bylsma both went down the volume path and it didn’t work. It doesn’t seem to be working this season either.

      Reply
  4. Steve

    The disparity in number of games played is why I never even look at points this time of year. I couldn’t care less. I only care about points percentage. That gives a much clearer picture of how the team is doing and where they may project to end up (not accounting for things like strength of schedule, which is also not super relevant at this point in the season).

    Just because NHL.com’s default standings sorting shows you in or out of playoff position, it doesn’t mean you are, or that you project to be if all continues at the same pace.

    Reply

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