New York Post

Special teams still Isles’ big weakness

- By ETHAN SEARS

If the Islanders lose in the first round to Carolina for the second straight season, the likely culprit will be special teams.

There was a major hint of encouragem­ent in that department for the Islanders on Monday night, when the penalty kill was 3-for-3 against a Devils power play that had its number in the first three meetings between the teams this season. The power play got off an 0-for-12 hump thanks to Kyle Palmieri’s first-period tip-in. But the season-long picture paints a stark issue for the Islanders outside of five-on-five.

If you add up penalty-kill and power-play success rate into one number, the Islanders are 30th in the NHL in overall special teams success at 45.945 percent. The next-worst team to have clinched an Eastern Conference playoff berth going into Tuesday was the Maple Leafs at 50.335 percent.

And the Hurricanes, who rank second on the power play and first on the penalty kill, just happen to lead the league with a 56.69 success rate across both units.

The Islanders’ penalty kill — their biggest problem for much of the year — has become less overt of an issue lately, but that’s mostly because they’ve taken fewer penalties.

And the power play, which is currently missing Noah Dobson with an upper-body injury, has gone just 3-for-33 dating back to March 23.

“Our power play got one, our PK was really good,” coach Patrick Roy said after the 4-1 win over New Jersey. “So maybe we’re gonna talk about something else.”

➤ Defenseman Marshall Warren signed a two-year, entry-level deal with the Islanders starting in 2024-25, the team announced. A native of Laurel Hollow, N.Y., Warren played four seasons at Boston College and was the team’s captain before transferri­ng to Michigan for a fifth year.

ISLES NOTES

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