in

Islanders overwhelmed by Ducks as five-game win streak snapped

islanders-overwhelmed-by-ducks-as-five-game-win-streak-snapped
Islanders overwhelmed by Ducks as five-game win streak snapped

ANAHEIM, Calif. — The Islanders came back from two-goal deficits three times in a row following the Olympic break. They couldn’t make it a fourth.

Not on Wednesday night in Anaheim, where the Isles were out-physicaled and outplayed by the young and ever-impressive Ducks, falling 5-1 at the Honda Center minus Ryan Pulock to snap a five-game winning streak that spanned both sides of the three-week break.

Interestingly, the Islanders had the edge in the shot count all night long, which belied how this game truly went.

Cutter Gauthier (61) scores on David Rittich for one of his two first-period goals in the Islanders' 5-1 blowout loss to the Ducks on March 4, 2026 in Anaheim, Calif.
Cutter Gauthier (61) scores on David Rittich for one of his two first-period goals in the Islanders’ 5-1 blowout loss to the Ducks on March 4, 2026 in Anaheim, Calif. AP

The Islanders’ chances were largely on the outside, whereas Anaheim worked inside and below the hash marks, getting to the danger areas and establishing a forecheck.

“They had a lot of easy access to our zone,” Matthew Schaefer said. “I think if we ended it their and played in their D-Zone, I think it would’ve been a bit better. I think it was pretty easy for them to get in their zone.”

Pulock’s absence with an upper-body injury, which is not expected to be for long, cast a shadow over this one from the start. Matthew Schaefer did not seem to click with Scott Mayfield as Pulock’s replacement, and Patrick Roy quickly ceded to rotating through his six defensemen.

The Islanders, though, never did seem to find satisfactory answers for Anaheim’s top two lines, and in particular the trio of Chris Kreider, Leo Carlsson and Cutter Gauthier — a handful all night long.

“You could see how important [Pulock] is to our team,” Patrick Roy said. “Again, it’s always hard to lose one of your top Ds. But hey, we have to find ways to win.”



The Isles trailed 3-1 after the first, a relatively comfortable spot given their last three games, but the score stayed put through 40 minutes despite a trio of Islander power plays in the middle frame that produced next to nothing.

It took just over two minutes of play in the third for Anaheim to strike a dagger in the notion of another comeback. Ryan Poehling poked in Ryan Strome’s feed at the right post to make it 4-1, all but putting the game out of reach, just 2:11 into the third.

David Rittich, who bailed the Islanders out a handful of times early in the game, has now allowed four goals in four of his last six starts, stopping 21 of 25 in this one.

Ondrej Palat passes the puck after getting pressured by Mason McTavish during the Islanders' blowout road loss to the Ducks.
Ondrej Palat passes the puck after getting pressured by Mason McTavish during the Islanders’ blowout road loss to the Ducks. NHLI via Getty Images

The goaltender, though, was pulled with 8:34 to go in the game as Roy tried to push his team into a comeback. Instead, Frank Vatrano scored into the empty net to make it 5-1 and send the Honda Center crowd home with free chicken.

“We had lots of shots but we got to find [the goalie’s] weak spots in a way,” Schaefer said. “I think power play, too, we can have a little more shots. … I think if we had some more shots to the net, nice tips, good net presence, it would’ve helped a bit.”

The Islanders did get on the board first when Anders Lee followed his own tipped shot on a power play, but gave it right back on the penalty kill when Gauthier’s one-timer beat David Rittich at 12:56 of the period.

Gauthier struck again, this time at five-on-five, a few minutes later off Leo Carlsson’s feed on the rush, and Beckett Sennecke — the other star rookie on the ice Thursday — further extended the lead at the 18:40 mark, putting in Ian Moore’s rebound after a tip from Mason McTavish.

On the ice from Long Island

Sign up for Inside the Islanders by Ethan Sears, a weekly Sports+ exclusive.

Thank you

Struggles on breakouts are nothing new for the Islanders, but it’s rare to see a team be as physically dominant as Anaheim was Wednesday. Schaefer, missing his usual partner, never seemed to get his game going, and aside from the odd shift here and there, neither did the Islanders’ top line.

“They had one line [Carlsson’s] that was kind of hitting everything,” Cal Ritchie said. “And we struggled a bit against that line.”

Resilient as this team has been of late, a number of players said after the win over Florida on Sunday that the preference would be to not be down two goals at all.

The Isles will need to take that goal into Thursday night’s match against the Kings. They didn’t accomplish it Wednesday.

Leave a Reply

nbc-names-jason-benetti-as-its-top-play-by-play-announcer-for-mlb-coverage

NBC names Jason Benetti as its top play-by-play announcer for MLB coverage

us-will-‘bitterly-regret’-sinking-iranian-warship,-foreign-minister-warns

US will ‘bitterly regret’ sinking Iranian warship, foreign minister warns