Igor Shesterkin enters 2025-26 season with $92 million worth of expectations from Rangers

   

NHL: New York Rangers at Los Angeles Kings

There was a time when Igor Shesterkin was the New York Rangers’ saving grace, a Vezina Trophy winner in goal who was playing on the initial season of his first post-rookie NHL contract.

But those days are over. Shesterkin is no longer an underpaid star in goal. He’s now signed to the largest goaltending contract in NHL history, an eight-year, $92 million deal that carries an average annual value of $11.5 million. Now they need him to live up to that contract.

While Shesterkin is 100-59-15 in the three seasons since winning the Vezina, he’s had some dips and hiccups during that span — especially last season, when his won-lost record (27-29-5), goals-against average (2.86) and save percentage (.905) were all the worst of his NHL career. The Rangers can’t afford those numbers again from the NHL’s highest-paid goalie.

NHL: Pittsburgh Penguins at New York Rangers

“You’re paying him now to be that 100 percent definite, all-in belief on your goaltender,” Rangers beat writer Mollie Walker of the New York Post said on a recent episode of the DLLS Dallas Stars podcast. “He’s supposed to steal all the games for you and such — especially with a price tag like that.”

As he begins a record-setting contract with a new coach and a team that missed the playoffs last season after winning the Presidents’ Trophy in 2023-24, the pressure for Shesterkin to deliver is more apparent than ever.

Shesterkin, Rangers are searching for stability

NHL: Tampa Bay Lightning at New York Rangers

 

Shesterkin’s Vezina-winning 2021-22 season still stands as his best. He led the NHL with 34.1 goals saved above expected (GSAx) and posted a 2.07 GAA. But it seems like there has been a slow pull back.