When a team goes from being firmly in a playoff position to effectively playing itself out of the conversation, one might expect the mood at a late-season practice—with eight games left, a four-point deficit, and four teams to leapfrog to return to the postseason picture—to be fairly drab. That’s not what we saw Friday, though. From the way Seattle Kraken players were acting on the ice, you’d think they were on a 10-game winning streak with their ticket punched. Players were hooting and hollering, ribbing each other, excessively celebrating goals, and even [gasp] smiling.
Now, this isn’t exactly a new thing. You always hear some chatter on the ice when the team skates together, regardless of the situation, but considering the circumstances the Kraken have put themselves in now, it was nonetheless a surprisingly chipper mood at Kraken Community Iceplex.
In a way, the positive energy of the skate was by design.
“It was important for us to get on the ice as a group,” coach Lane Lambert said. “Reality is what it is, but what is your perception of reality? We’re four points out of the playoffs. Clearly, if we had won seven of our last eight games, and we’re in the exact same position as we are right now, there would be a different mood. But we’d be in the exact same position we are now. So it’s our mental mindset and our perception, and [let’s] move forward. Past is past, and we have an opportunity moving forward here. That’s all we can think about, and that’s all the players were thinking about today… I thought it was a good day for them.”
Forward Jaden Schwartz echoed Lambert’s sentiment. “You don’t want to be so tight where you lose a game, you come in the next day and you’re down. You’ve got to get back up. We’ve got a lot of games in a short amount of days here, so you’ve got to turn the page quickly… be excited, and enjoy the days and the opportunity that we have.”
Players-only meeting
So with how things have spiraled since the Olympic break—the Kraken are 5-11-2 and have fallen from third in the Pacific Division to having the sixth-best odds in the NHL Draft Lottery—just where could this positivity be coming from?
Well, the Kraken players held a brief closed-door, players-only meeting in the dressing room immediately following their miserable 6-2 loss to the Utah Mammoth on Thursday. That conversation may have sparked some improved perspectives and outlooks when the team returned to practice Friday.
“We’ve got eight games left, and we know where we’re at, so let’s put it all out there,” defenseman Vince Dunn said. “And that’s kind of been the mentality that we’ve had since the break, is to put it all out there. But we’ve really put ourselves in an interesting spot right now with somehow still a chance to make the playoffs.”
**Editor’s note: Dunn put emphasis on “still,” as if to indicate that even he is as shocked as the rest of us that this team has not been mathematically eliminated from contention at this point, considering its extended poor performance. Ok, back to Dunn.
“So keep that at the front of your mind, rather than the back of your mind. Let’s not be like, ‘Oh, we might make the playoffs.’ It’s kind of, ‘Play like we are in the playoffs,’ right? Like, it’s all more of a mentality right now.”
Continuing to dissect what has gone wrong, Dunn confirmed that the players feel what many of us see when watching the Kraken play.
“We just get a little deflated when goals are happening. And this wasn’t discussed in the locker room [Thursday], but I look back on games like the Columbus game, it’s a puck off a foot, and then it’s like bouncing everywhere, and then it goes in the net, and that’s the first goal against. Look at the Edmonton game, it’s a puck… off someone’s head. And then last game, it’s a forward trying his best to block a shot, and it’s off his hip. Those are the first goals you give up in a game, and all the guys are trying to do the right thing. So if you’re that guy, maybe you need to be the teammate beside him and be like, ‘Hey man, you did your best. Let’s go out and maybe try to score one, or let’s go out the next shift and really put some pressure on and not get deflated.’”
Indeed, watching the Kraken play against Utah, you could feel the tying goal coming in the second period. Jacob Melanson appeared to make it 3-1, but it was negated after a successful goalie interference challenge, and from then on, it felt like only a matter of time before Utah flipped the script from what was almost 3-1 Seattle to 2-2—and after that, a matter of time before Utah took the lead and grabbed hold of the game.
We’ve seen this from this club on many occasions over its five years of existence, including earlier this season when the Kraken went 1-9-1 in 11 games between Nov. 23 and Dec. 18 before getting hot and winning eight of their next nine. They seemed to settle the fragility in the stretch before the break, too, rolling with the punches and minimizing the damage of letdowns in games. But now, it’s like if any little thing doesn’t go their way, they collapse.
These conversations being had by the players are great, although they will almost surely end up being too little, too late. Still, it was refreshing to hear that the players are aware of their situation and their shortcomings as a team, that they care, and that they are not giving up.
Jaden Schwartz feeling good after “scary incident”
We chatted with Schwartz for the first time since he was inadvertently kicked in the face by Nick Cousins in a 7-4 loss to the Ottawa Senators on March 7. Considering how badly that could have gone if that skate swung in just a slightly different direction, fans should be very thankful that Schwartz is back after just three weeks and appears no worse for wear.
Wow. Scary one there.
— Sound Of Hockey (@sound_hockey) March 8, 2026
Eeli Tolvanen laid a huge hit on Nick Cousins, and Cousins' skate came up and clipped Jaden Schwartz in the face.
Schwartz was down for a while, bleeding on the ice, but he went down the tunnel on his own power. #SeaKraken pic.twitter.com/QyeBYgi5eN
“I’m feeling better, for sure,” Schwartz said. “It was a tough couple of weeks, but then I kind of turned the corner and was able to start training a little bit, and [I’ve had] a couple games now to get the legs under me. But the head’s feeling pretty good, so still feeling more and more comfortable as we go here.”
Schwartz said he didn’t remember too much about what happened on the play and that he had to watch it the next day to see exactly what had occurred.
“It could have been a lot worse,” Schwartz said. “It was obviously unlucky, but lucky at the same time that something more serious didn’t happen.”
Bobby McMann settling in
Forward Bobby McMann has been a revelation since he was acquired in a last-second, deadline-beating trade with the Toronto Maple Leafs on March 6. Since joining Seattle, he’s racked up eight goals and four assists in 10 games and scored again against the Mammoth to give Seattle a 2-0 lead.
It’s no secret McMann is on an expiring contract, and with the way he’s performed down the stretch, you’d have to think the Kraken will want to keep him around. So, we figured it wouldn’t hurt to at least find out how McMann is settling in and if he’s so far enjoying his time in the Pacific Northwest, despite all the losing the team has been doing.
“So far, it’s been great,” McMann said. “The guys have been great, the organization’s been great, management’s been helpful and making sure I get everything I need. And not that there’s anything that I’ve really asked for, but they’ve just been making sure that everything is all good with me, with the transition, which is always super helpful, just to know that you have those resources. And then guys have been super helpful trying to help me figure out where to go in the city and figure out where to go eat, stuff like that. That’s all been nice.”
McMann recognized immediately that the Seattle market is quite different from hockey-mad Toronto, where the Maple Leafs are the center of attention all day, every day. And he does seem to appreciate the opportunity to help build a hockey culture in this still relatively new market.
“I think that that’s special, and that’s fun, and that’s been really enjoyable to kind of see and feel the energy of the crowd and feel the energy of this city becoming a new hockey city. It’s been a lot of fun, and I’m excited to continue to be a part of that.”
That last part, though… “Continue to be part of that,” you say?
Other odds and ends
Lambert implied some big changes could be coming to the power play in the near future. After the loss Thursday, he mentioned that they can’t keep running the same guys out there—even though they’re mostly veterans that the coaching staff trusts—if they continue to come up empty. He cited the fact that even zone entries, an area that the power play has excelled in throughout much of the season, have dried up.
“[We’ll] change personnel completely and see where that takes us.”
Speaking of changing personnel, Lambert also implied that Eeli Tolvanen, who has been playing on the fourth line most recently with Oscar Fisker Mølgaard and Jacob Melanson, could find himself on a new line Saturday when the Chicago Blackhawks visit Climate Pledge Arena. We would not be surprised to see even more of a shakeup as Seattle looks to find the offense that has been so elusive.
Shane Wright continued to skate in a red jersey Friday, so don’t expect him back in the lineup on Saturday.



You have a difficult job, trying muster up some enthusiasm for such a tepid roster.
I always find these closed-door meetings to be odd. Like, did the players not care enough before? Was the captain not calling out loafers?
St. Louis is leading in their game tonight. If they win, then the Kraken would be in a top 5 draft position.
Instead of trying to earn points towards a playoff spot they won’t reach, it would be better to lose out. Maybe sit any difference makers and play youth. Call up people like Firkus, Nelson, and Kokko to see if they have any NHL careers in them.
Going the other way, that you send Catton to the AHL. From what I understand, he can play there as soon as Spokane is eliminated from the playoffs. They are only one loss away, so it would be optimal to give Catton some AHL reps.
“Lambert implied some big changes could be coming to the power play” good! who would have guessed that the top line plus Stephenson wouldnt be great.
Nick Saban had a term for the tendency to collapse at a single negative event: “catastrophe syndrome.” Getting over it requires a full cultural shift toward excellent performance over outcome. But that great attitude shift by everyone involved… from the owner down to the fans… only prevents the mental collapse. The actual winning requires equal talent to your competition.
Word is Wright is on the way out – which will be good for him – wishing him the best wherever he lands next season… and nabbing McKenna (could happen) would be a game changer – so slump imho has been a good thing for a team that has no business getting to the playoffs.
I feel very hopeful still. There is a 4-way tie for draft lottery slots 5-8. I’m optimistic we can finish with the 5th best position.
Of course, if they would have made a few trades at the deadline with their load of expiring contracts, they would probably already have that position (or better) locked up and have several additional very high-level draft picks in pocket.
If the team is draft and develop, which takes a LONG time starting from scratch, they should have committed to that window instead of this half assed method which has hurt their draft slotting every year. Getting more chances at that top pick is so important, so much of the game is built on having a star that can put the puck in the net.
I believe their method has ensured more years of mediocrity.
We are now down to a 4% chance of making the playoffs. Reading this article Darren I was actually a little pissed that they wouldn’t be taking this more seriously. Then I realized it that maybe the meeting was about accepting that they are done and it’s time to just go out and have fun playing hockey. Don’t worry about the points just have fun?
I was actually thinking about it and I feel like you could make a very solid argument that this is actually the worst Kraken team since the inaugural season. Think about how bad the pacific is this season.
We had 76 points last season in our second worst season playing a very unstructured system and also in more competitive pacific division. The kraken play vs pacific division teams around 32% of their games. We are currently sitting at 75 points with a handful of games to go, are we really any better than last season regardless if we finish with a few more points. When you factor in a very improved Grubauer I feel our actual team in front of our goaltender and coaching is worse than last season and we are actually about as bad as we have ever been. Is it all on coaching I wonder because I don’t feel like we are worse on paper then last season?
I certainly think this LL experiment has been a complete failure and obviously our front office is in shambles with a spiraling team within their control. I wonder what numbers ownership is looking at and how they are evaluating the krakens staff.
Well put. Not buying out Grubauer was the signal that not much was going to change (ironically, given his improvement). He’s the only one who’s improved under the Lambert system. The offensive abilities have been strangled, the poor handling of the youngsters a tragic waste and too high a price to get a better year out of your backup goalie.
Reupping Eberle is a bad signal going forward unless management is completely blown out. Can’t see a McKenna or Stenberg helping this mess if they get lucky in the draft, either