
There is a specific kind of silence that falls over Madison Square Garden when the franchise player goes down. That silence was deafening on Monday night when New York Rangers goaltender Igor Shesterkin collapsed to the ice and didn’t get back up.
Midway through the first period against the Utah Mammoth, the scene every Rangers fan dreads played out in real-time. In what initially looked like a routine sequence, Shesterkin attempted to adjust his positioning to avoid Mammoth forward JJ Peterka near the crease. There was no collision. Peterka didn’t run him. Instead, Shesterkin’s left skate seemed to catch the ice, causing his leg to bend awkwardly underneath him.
Igor Shesterkin, the 2022 Vezina Trophy winner, remained face-down on the ice in visible pain. When he finally rose, he couldn’t put any weight on his left leg. He had to be helped off the ice by a trainer and defenseman Vladislav Gavrikov, disappearing down the tunnel and leaving the Rangers’ faithful fearing the worst.
#NYR goaltender Igor Shesterkin leaves game with left leg injury vs Utah, helped off the ice by Gavrikov and a trainer. Jonathan Quick enters. pic.twitter.com/pEhDznU6P4
— NHL News (@PuckReportNHL) January 6, 2026
Veteran backup Jonathan Quick immediately stepped in to replace him, but the mood in the building had shifted. Non-contact injuries are often the ones that keep training staff up at night, and the visual of Igor Shesterkin unable to skate off under his own power suggests this might not be a simple day-to-day issue.
You cannot overstate Igor Shesterkin’s value to this roster. He is currently in the first season of a historic eight-year, $92 million contract— a deal that made him the highest-paid goaltender in NHL history. He has earned every penny, carrying a 17-12-4 record with a .912 save percentage this season. He is the backbone of the Rangers’ defensive strategy.
While the team has not yet released a specific timeline confirming exactly how long he will be out, the nature of the exit suggests he will undergo significant evaluation. If Shesterkin misses extended time, the pressure shifts entirely to Quick and the defensive core to keep the season stabilized.
For now, New York waits. The hope is that the awkward bend looked worse than the actual damage, but until the medical reports come back, the Rangers are staring down a potential stretch without their MVP between the pipes.
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