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Four NHL players who can cement their Hall of Fame cases at Winter Olympics
Canada forward Mark Stone | Winslow Townson-Imagn Images

Four NHL players who can cement their Hall of Fame cases at Winter Olympics

For the first time in 12 years, NHL players are playing in the Winter Olympics. 

Once upon a time, the Olympics served as a stage for cementing legacies. There's little doubt that Pitsburgh's Sidney Crosby will one day be enshrined in the Hockey Hall of Fame, but his "Golden Goal" at the 2010 Vancouver Olympics added a layer to his legacy.

Meanwhile, former New York Rangers goaltender Henrik Lundqvist has never won a Stanley Cup, but he backstopped an underdog Team Sweden to a gold medal at the 2006 Winter Games in Turin, Italy — long considered a major selling point in his Hall of Fame case.

Who could use the Olympics to cement their legacy in 2026? Here are four players with a chance to beef up their Hall of Fame resumes:

Winger Mark Stone, Canada (Vegas Golden Knights)

Stone’s path — from long-shot sixth-round pick with skating concerns to legitimate NHL player in Ottawa to point-per-game Selke candidate and Stanley Cup–winning captain of the Vegas Golden Knights — is already impressive. 

At 33, he’s still likely a season away from cracking the NHL’s top 250 in career points, but his playoff production already places him in the company of Hall of Famers. A gold-medal performance in 2026 would essentially check every remaining Hockey Hall of Fame box — provided his troublesome back allows him to play long enough to pad the counting stats.

Goalie Juuse Saros, Finland (Nashville Predators)

Saros is only 30 and already has 223 career wins. He has a legitimate chance at winning 350 NHL games in his career, which would put him squarely in the conversation. The issue, though, is Saros has no major individual hardware and has never started in the Stanley Cup Finals. A Hall of Fame legacy for Saros might have to be built on what he does with an undermanned Finland team missing its best player (Alex Barkov).

Center Sebastian Aho, Finland (Carolina Hurricanes)

Carolina's top center is still just 28 and already closing in on 700 career points. As long as he's healthy enough to play, Aho should get into the 1000- to 1,100-point range. This is precisely the spot where Hockey Hall of Fame voters will be looking at his other credentials (45 of 47 eligible players with more than 1,200 points are in the Hall of Fame).

Aho lacks major hardware and has never appeared in the Stanley Cup Finals. He's playing a major role for the Finns and would be a major reason why they medal in this one. 

Winger William Nylander, Sweden (Toronto Maple Leafs)

Nylander shares a lot in common with Aho. He’s a top-line player who will log heavy minutes for a team widely viewed as a medal favorite. At 29, he still has plenty of runway to approach the near-lock 1,200-point threshold. He has averaged a 90-point pace per 82 games over the past five seasons. If that continues, he may not need a signature Olympic performance. 

Realistically, he’s likely to finish somewhere between 1,000 and 1,200 career points. However, he has never won major individual hardware, and he’s never advanced past the second round of the playoffs. An Olympic breakthrough could tip the scales when his Hall of Fame case is debated in the years ahead.

The men's group stage opened Wednesday.

Alex Wiederspiel

Alex Wiederspiel is a digital reporter, play-by-play broadcaster, radio show host and podcast host in West Virginia covering high school athletics, Division II college athletics, and some West Virginia University athletics. He's an avid follower of all things hockey and football with a soft spot for prospects -- the future stars of the league. When not consuming sports, Alex is usually doing something related to Star Wars, Lord of the Rings, or watching movies for his movie podcast, The Movie Spiel

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