Wһy Sаm Cаrrісk mаy not be 4tһ lіne fіxture for Rаngers

   

The New York Rangers will have a new fourth-line center in 2024-25 after the San Jose Sharks claimed Barclay Goodrow off of waivers. To start the season at least, it seems that void will be filled by Sam Carrick, who signed with the Blueshirts in free agency on a three-year deal after splitting the past season with the Anaheim Ducks and Edmonton Oilers.

Carrick’s $1 million cap hit is far more digestible than the $3.6 million that Goodrow was making annually. With the Rangers needing all the salary relief they can get, dumping their alternate captain was a no-brainer, even despite his postseason success. But that doesn’t mean Carrick is necessarily the perfect long-term solution to center New York’s fourth line.

NHL: Stanley Cup Playoffs-Edmonton Oilers at Vancouver Canucks

In fact, the analytics raise valid concerns about dressing Carrick when the postseason rolls around.

Of course, there’s no way around the fact that Goodrow had a poor regular season in 2023-24, and the analytics agree. He ranked in the sixth percentile overall and had a negative goals-above-replacement value (GAR) at both even-strength offense and even-strength defense (per Evolving Hockey).

In fact, Goodrow’s even-strength defense took a massive nosedive after his departure from the Tampa Bay Lightning in 2021 and he never once posted a positive even-strength defensive rating in his three seasons with the Rangers.

However, he was an instrumental piece of the penalty kill, leading the top shorthanded unit on the League’s third-best penalty kill in 2023-24. Goodrow ranked seventh out of 824 skaters with 3.0 GAR shorthanded, placing him in the 99th percentile of all NHL players (per Evolving Hockey’s GAR tables).

On the other hand, shorthanded defense is Carrick’s worst metric, ranking 795th in GAR and 801st in xGAR on the penalty kill. That places him in the bottom three percent of all NHL skaters.

Carrick’s an upgrade at even strength over Goodrow, at least based on GAR, and actually ranked above average at even-strength defense. But it doesn’t appear he’ll be the perfect replacement for a Rangers’ penalty kill that took a massive leap this season, though he did score two shorthanded goals last season with the Ducks.

Perhaps Carrick will see less PK time than Goodrow and a younger player, such as Alexis Lafreniere or Filip Chytil, will be worked into the mix. If Jonny Brodzinski is in the lineup, he might get a look on the PK too. And Matt Rempe has said it’s a goal of his to one day be a regular on the PK unit.

Maybe some of Carrick’s poor metrics has to do with the team he played on, since he spent 61 games last season with the Ducks, who wound up with the third-worst record in the NHL. After totaling -6.8 GAR in Anaheim, Carrick produced positive metrics across the board in Edmonton and finished with 2.8 GAR in his 16 regular-season games with the Oilers.