Rangers’ Mika Zibanejad hardly recognizable as struggles become hard to ignore
For all the layers to this peculiar Rangers season, which has them looking from the outside in on the playoff picture with 32 games to go, the cascading effect of Mika Zibanejadâs dropoff has been at the forefront.Â
The worst of it may be behind the Swedish center, now that he and the Blueshirts as a whole have stabilized a bit.Â
There simply has been no semblance, however, of the Zibanejad who served as the Rangers No. 1 center entering the season.Â
âCreating chances, being on the attack and I think being good defensively â all the things that everyone expected from me,â Zibanejad told The Post of what it looks like to him when heâs at his best. âThat doesnât happen, and then you guys talk about it and you ask me about this and that. All the things that you guys are expecting, I think thatâs kind of been things that I feel have been showing more now.Â
âBut also for my own sake, I think itâs just what Iâm expecting out of myself. Not just expecting, but what I know I can do. Itâs been better.âÂ
Zibanejad has been an offensively streaky player for most of his 14-year NHL career, but this has been ongoing through a 50-game body of work.
Thereâs something off on both sides of his game, though even more noticeably on defense because itâs always been a strength of his.Â
This month saw Zibanejad score three goals and dish five assists to tie Sam Carrick for the fourth-most points on the team, as the Rangers went 8-3-3.
Heâs scored two five-on-five goals and been on for three to go along with a 56-percent mark on faceoffs.Â
The eye test takes into account energy and body language, and Zibanejadâs results still raise concern.Â
Itâs evident in the way the 31-year-old comes in on a breakaway. Heâs generated 11 this season, according to the MSG broadcast Tuesday night, and has only scored on one.Â
His current 8.2 shooting percentage is the lowest heâs had since his second season in the league with Ottawa in 2012-13.
And after finishing with 52-58 percent of his power-play shot attempts landing on net in the last five seasons, Zibanejad is at 42.67 percent in 2024-25, per numbers provided by Natural Stat Trick.Â
The one-timer with the man advantage hasnât been there for Zibanejad in what feels like two years.
Penalty kill units and goalies are ready for it every time. Heâs missed the net a ton, and struggled to win puck battles along the boards.Â
Only 12 of his 29 points have come during five-on-five play, while Zibanejad has scored just three power-play goals.Â
If the season ended Thursday, Zibanejad would finish at a career-worst minus-25, which would only rival his second Rangers season in 2017-18 (minus-23).Â
âI donât think the outside noise will ever be as loud as the [self] critique of my own game,â he said. âThe reason why a lot of us â all of us â are here is weâve been our biggest critics. Not just saying that you have to be negative about yourself every time something bad happens, but itâs like understanding, âWhen should I dig in? When should I work harder? When should I cut myself some slack and be like hey, youâve done a good job the result is maybe not there?â âÂ
The notion that Zibanejad doesnât care is unfair. A slump does not equate to a playerâs dedication level.Â
There is no shame, however, in being realistic about a situation.Â
The Rangers need Zibanejad, who has a no-move clause in his contract extension that has six years remaining at an annual $8.5 million cap charge, but the version thatâs going to uplift the rest of the team.Â
Peter Laviolette has resisted sitting Zibanejad, even though the Rangers head coach benched Chris Kreider for a Dec. 23 game with hope that it would jump start the teamâs longest-tenured player.Â
âWhen things donât go well, youâre always trying to look for an answer,â Zibanejad said. âEveryone is asking, why is that happening, why is this happening. Itâs not like itâs the first time in the history of a professional career that I havenât played well. Itâs not the first time, it happens. Do I want it to happen? No. But Iâm trying to work. The month of January has been about being resilient, working and trusting myself and not doubting what Iâm capable of doing â and just play. Obviously, when the team plays better as well, itâs easier when you win games, itâs easier.Â
âThe energy gets back to a higher level. The fun is more often. Just playing my game and, again, playing like I know I can.â
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