Rangers’ Historic Scoring Drought Deepens With Third Straight Home Shutout

New York’s offense goes silent again as frustration builds at Madison Square Garden


The New York Rangers have stumbled into an unwanted corner of NHL history: they’ve now been shut out in their first three home games of the 2025–26 season, the first team ever to open a campaign that way.

On Tuesday night, the Edmonton Oilers blanked New York 2-0 at Madison Square Garden. Stuart Skinner stopped all 30 shots he faced in earning the shutout. Trent Frederic scored midway through the second, and Adam Henrique added an empty-net goal in the final minute. Rangers goaltender Igor Shesterkin made 20 saves.

The drought now spans 180 minutes of home ice time — the second-longest home scoreless streak to begin a season in NHL history, behind only the 1928–29 Pittsburgh Pirates (187:19).

What makes the start more galling: New York hasn’t been overpowered, at least not decisively. In the three home shutouts, the Rangers have outshot opponents a combined 90–74. They’ve generated chances. They’ve earned power plays. They’ve just failed to convert.

Coach Mike Sullivan insists the problem isn’t identity or effort; it’s finishing. “We’re getting a lot of chances,” J.T. Miller said. “It stinks we’re not getting rewarded. We need to stay the course.” Sullivan has said repeatedly he likes what he sees defensively and believes the offense will come.

Still, the pressure is mounting. The Garden crowd has grown restless, at times audibly urging “We want goals.” The national narrative is shifting. A season that began with hopes of stability and balance is already mired in doubt.

The Rangers head on the road for their next two games before returning to the Garden on Oct. 20. That stretch may offer a reset. But the damage of opening nights like these lasts. In Madison Square Garden, where legends loom and expectations run high, being blanked three times at home isn’t just a statistic — it’s a warning sign.

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James O'Donnell

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