The NHL regular season ends in a little more than three weeks, and there will be a lot of new faces if the current standings hold up.

Two of those teams – the Buffalo Sabres and Anaheim Ducks – are leading their divisions despite a combined drought of 21 seasons. They met on Sunday, March 22, with the Ducks prevailing 6-5 in overtime.

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Another six teams, as of the morning of Monday, March 23, were in a playoff position despite missing the postseason last season: Pittsburgh, Columbus, Boston, New York Islanders, Utah and Nashville.

In the meantime, the two-time defending Stanley Cup champion Florida Panthers are currently sitting below the playoff line, as are 2024-25 division winners Winnipeg, Washington and Toronto. The other four 2024-25 playoff teams who could miss out this season: New Jersey, Ottawa, Los Angeles and St. Louis.

Plenty of time remains and only two teams have clinched spots so far.

Here are the latest USA TODAY NHL power rankings:

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NHL physicality: Players fight, deliver big hits

Feb. 28: Referee Cody Beach stops the fight between the Washington Capitals’ Connor McMichael and Montreal Canadiens’ Kaiden Guhle (21) during the third period at the Bell Centre.

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NHL physicality: Players fight, deliver big hits

Feb. 28: Referee Cody Beach stops the fight between the Washington Capitals’ Connor McMichael and Montreal Canadiens’ Kaiden Guhle (21) during the third period at the Bell Centre.

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NHL physicality: Players fight, deliver big hits

Feb. 28: The Ottawa Senators’ Brady Tkachuk (7) battles along the boards with the Toronto Maple Leafs’ Brandon Carlo in the second period at Scotiabank Arena.

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NHL physicality: Players fight, deliver big hits

Feb. 28: The Nashville Predators’ Filip Forsberg hits the boards alongside the Dallas Stars’ Nils Lundkvist during the third period at the American Airlines Center.

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NHL physicality: Players fight, deliver big hits

Feb. 5: The Florida Panthers’ Matthew Tkachuk (left) and Tampa Bay Lightning’s Victor Hedman fight during the second period at Benchmark International Arena.

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NHL physicality: Players fight, deliver big hits

Feb. 4: The St. Louis Blues’ Brayden Schenn fights with the Dallas Stars’ Justin Hryckowian during the second period at the American Airlines Center.

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NHL physicality: Players fight, deliver big hits

Feb. 1: Tampa Bay Lightning goaltender Andrei Vasilevskiy and Boston Bruins goaltender Jeremy Swayman fight during the second period of the 2026 Stadium Series game at Raymond James Stadium.

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NHL physicality: Players fight, deliver big hits

Jan. 29: St. Louis Blues defenseman Tyler Tucker (left) fights Florida Panthers left wing A.J. Greer during the second period at Enterprise Center.

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NHL physicality: Players fight, deliver big hits

Jan. 27: Vancouver Canucks forward Evander Kane (91) fights with San Jose Sharks defenseman Timothy Liljegren during the second period at Rogers Arena.

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NHL physicality: Players fight, deliver big hits

Jan. 19: San Jose Sharks goalie Alex Nedeljkovic (left) fights Florida Panthers goalie Sergei Bobrovsky during the third period at Amerant Bank Arena.

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NHL physicality: Players fight, deliver big hits

Jan. 15: Chicago Blackhawks defenseman Connor Murphy (5) fights with Calgary Flames left wing Joel Farabee (86) during the second period at United Center.

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NHL physicality: Players fight, deliver big hits

Jan. 15: Boston Bruins center Alex Steeves (21) and Seattle Kraken center Ryan Winterton (26) fight during the third period at TD Garden.

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NHL physicality: Players fight, deliver big hits

Jan 10: Carolina Hurricanes defenseman Jaccob Slavin (74) checks Seattle Kraken right wing Kaapo Kakko (84) during the first period at Lenovo Center.

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NHL physicality: Players fight, deliver big hits

Dec. 30: Toronto Maple Leafs left wing Matthew Knies (23) fights with New Jersey Devils center Nico Hischier (13) during the third period at Scotiabank Arena.

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NHL physicality: Players fight, deliver big hits

Dec. 20: Philadelphia Flyers left wing Nicolas Deslauriers (44) and New York Rangers left wing Brennan Othmann (78) are separated by officials and teammates after a fight during the second period at Madison Square Garden.

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NHL physicality: Players fight, deliver big hits

Dec 8: Toronto Maple Leafs forward Dakota Joshua (81) and Tampa Bay Lightning defenseman Maxwell Crozier (24) fight during the third period at Scotiabank Arena.

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NHL physicality: Players fight, deliver big hits

Dec. 4: Pittsburgh Penguins left wing Bokondji Imama (14) and Tampa Bay Lightning center Curtis Douglas (42) fight in the first period at Benchmark International Arena.

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NHL physicality: Players fight, deliver big hits

Dec. 1: New Jersey Devils defenseman Jonas Siegenthaler (71) and Columbus Blue Jackets center Adam Fantilli (19) fight during the second period at Prudential Center.

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NHL physicality: Players fight, deliver big hits

Nov. 28: New Jersey Devils right wing Stefan Noesen (11) and Buffalo Sabres center Tage Thompson (72) fight during the first period at KeyBank Center.

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NHL physicality: Players fight, deliver big hits

Nov. 28: Philadelphia Flyers right wing Garnet Hathaway (19) checks New York Islanders center Casey Cizikas (53) during the second period at UBS Arena.

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NHL physicality: Players fight, deliver big hits

Nov. 28: Winnipeg Jets center Jonathan Toews (19) checks Carolina Hurricanes center Justin Robidas (46) during the first period at Lenovo Center.

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NHL physicality: Players fight, deliver big hits

Nov 24: Members of the New Jersey Devils and the Detroit Red Wings fight at the end of the third period at Prudential Center.

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NHL physicality: Players fight, deliver big hits

Nov. 22: Florida Panthers left wing A.J. Greer (10) and Edmonton Oilers center Trent Frederic (10) fight during the first period at Amerant Bank Arena.

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NHL physicality: Players fight, deliver big hits

Utah Mammoth center Jack McBain (22) and Vegas Golden Knights right wing Keegan Kolesar (55) fight during the third period at Delta Center.

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NHL physicality: Players fight, deliver big hits

Nov. 16: The New York Rangers and Detroit Red Wings engage in a major scrum after their game at Madison Square Garden.

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NHL physicality: Players fight, deliver big hits

Nov. 6: Carolina Hurricanes center Jordan Staal (11) fights Minnesota Wild center Tyler Pitlick (19) after his hit injured Carolina’s Jalen Chatfield.

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NHL physicality: Players fight, deliver big hits

Nov. 6: Los Angeles Kings right wing Corey Perry (10) and Florida Panthers left wing A.J. Greer (10) fight during the third period at Crypto.com Arena.

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NHL physicality: Players fight, deliver big hits

Nov. 6: Buffalo Sabres center Josh Dunne (44) and St. Louis Blues defenseman Tyler Tucker (75) fight during the first period at KeyBank Center.

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NHL physicality: Players fight, deliver big hits

Nov 4: New York Islanders and Boston Bruins players get in a scrum after Islanders defenseman Matthew Schaefer (48) was roughed by Bruins defenseman Nikita Zadorov (91) during the second period.

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NHL physicality: Players fight, deliver big hits

Nov. 1: Columbus Blue Jackets right wing Mathieu Olivier (24) fights St. Louis Blues defenseman Tyler Tucker (75) in the first period at Nationwide Arena.

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NHL physicality: Players fight, deliver big hits

Nov 1: Columbus Blue Jackets defenseman Ivan Provorov (9) hits St. Louis Blues right wing Jordan Kyrou (25) along the boards in the third period at Nationwide Arena.

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NHL physicality: Players fight, deliver big hits

Nov. 1: Washington Capitals right wing Tom Wilson (43) and Buffalo Sabres left wing Jordan Greenway (12) fight during the first period at KeyBank Center.

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NHL physicality: Players fight, deliver big hits

Oct. 24: Calgary Flames right wing Adam Klapka (43) and Winnipeg Jets defenseman Logan Stanley (64) fight in the first period at Canada Life Centre.

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NHL physicality: Players fight, deliver big hits

Oct. 23: Boston Bruins left wing Tanner Jeannot (84) fights with Anaheim Ducks left wing Ross Johnston (44) during the second period at TD Garden.

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NHL physicality: Players fight, deliver big hits

Oct. 21: Anaheim Ducks right wing Frank Vatrano (77) and Nashville Predators defenseman Adam Wilsby (83) fight during the third period at Bridgestone Arena.

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NHL physicality: Players fight, deliver big hits

Oct. 18: Florida Panthers left wing Brad Marchand (63) is held back by a linesman after scuffling with Buffalo Sabres defenseman Rasmus Dahlin. Marchand is holding Dahlin’s helmet and later pulled off the straps in the penalty box.

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NHL physicality: Players fight, deliver big hits

Oct. 18: Tampa Bay Lightning center Curtis Douglas (42) and Columbus Blue Jackets center Mathieu Olivier (24) fight during the first period at Nationwide Arena.

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NHL physicality: Players fight, deliver big hits

Oct. 16: Vegas Golden Knights defenseman Kaedan Korczak (6) checks Boston Bruins center Michael Eyssimont (81) during the first period at T-Mobile Arena.

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NHL physicality: Players fight, deliver big hits

Oct 14: Dallas Stars defenseman Lian Bichsel (6) checks Minnesota Wild center Yakov Trenin (13) during the first period at the American Airlines Center.

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NHL physicality: Players fight, deliver big hits

Oct. 11: Calgary Flames left wing Ryan Lomberg (70) and St. Louis Blues defenseman Tyler Tucker (75) fight during the second period at Scotiabank Saddledome.

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NHL physicality: Players fight, deliver big hits

Oct. 11: Pittsburgh Penguins defenseman Kris Letang (58) checks New York Rangers left wing Artemi Panarin (10) during the first period at PPG Paints Arena.

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NHL physicality: Players fight, deliver big hits

Oct. 11: Los Angeles Kings left wing Jeff Malott (39) and Winnipeg Jets defenseman Luke Schenn (5) fight during the first period at Canada Life Centre.

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NHL physicality: Players fight, deliver big hits

Oct. 9: Vegas Golden Knights center Tomas Hertl (48) checks San Jose Sharks center Philipp Kurashev (96) at center ice during the third period at SAP Center.

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NHL physicality: Players fight, deliver big hits

Oct. 9: Tampa Bay Lightning defenseman Darren Raddysh (43) and Ottawa Senators left wing Kurtis MacDermid (23) fight during the first period at Benchmark International Arena.

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NHL physicality: Players fight, deliver big hits

Oct. 9: Carolina Hurricanes left wing Jordan Martinook (48) checks New Jersey Devils center Nico Hischier (13) during the third period at Lenovo Center.

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NHL physicality: Players fight, deliver big hits

Oct. 9: Buffalo Sabres defenseman Rasmus Dahlin (26) checks New York Rangers left wing Artemi Panarin (10) as he goes after a loose puck during the second period at KeyBank Center.

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NHL physicality: Players fight, deliver big hits

Oct 7: Los Angeles Kings left wing Jeff Malott (39) points to Colorado Avalanche left wing Gabriel Landeskog (92) after he finished fighting Josh Manson during the first period at Crypto.com Arena.

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NHL physicality: Players fight, deliver big hits

Oct. 7: Chicago’s Nick Foligno fights with Florida’s A.J. Greer during the first period at Amerant Bank Arena.

NHL power rankings

Statistics are through March 22. Numbers in parentheses indicate changes from the previous power rankings two weeks ago:

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1. Colorado Avalanche (0)

Captain Gabriel Landeskog scored in his March 22 return from a two-week absence. He needed surgery after being hit by a teammate’s slap shot in the lower body and also missed time this season before the Olympics with broken ribs.

2. Dallas Stars (0)

The Stars joined the Avalanche in clinching a playoff spot. They missed a chance to clinch outright when they lost to the Golden Knights in regulation but a Kings loss later on March 22 extended their playoff streak to five seasons. Dallas has lost in the conference finals the last three seasons.

3. Carolina Hurricanes (+1)

Goaltender Brandon Bussi has given up three or more goals in five of his six starts after the Olympics. His save percentages have been below .900 in those six games.

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4. Buffalo Sabres (+1)

The Sabres, who lost three of four games heading into the Olympics, have gone 12-1-1 since. Their surge began after they changed general managers in December. Sitting atop the Atlantic Division standings, they’re in position to end their NHL-record 14-season playoff drought.

5. Minnesota Wild (-2)

The Minnesota hockey community is mourning the death of Jessi Pierce, who covered the Wild for 10 years as a reporter for NHL.com. She, her three children and the family dog died on March 21 in a fire at their home.

6. Tampa Bay Lightning (0)

Nikita Kucherov moved past Edmonton’s Connor McDavid for the NHL scoring lead as they played head to head. Kucherov had four points in the game to McDavid’s one. On one sequence, McDavid was checked hard on a scoring attempt and Kucherov scored a short-handed goal.

7. Montreal Canadiens (+1)

Cole Caufield had his first career five-point game and linemates Nick Suzuki and Juraj Slafkovsky each had four points in a 7-3 win against the Islanders.

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8. Boston Bruins (+3)

Charlie McAvoy had three assists as the Bruins beat the Red Wings on March 21 to hold onto the first wild-card spot in the Eastern Conference.

9. Pittsburgh Penguins (-2)

Sidney Crosby is back from his Olympic injury and Evgeni Malkin has returned from his five-game suspension. The Penguins went 2-3 with both out and 1-1-1 with both back.

10. Columbus Blue Jackets (+3)

The Blue Jackets’ 1-0 loss to the Islanders ended a 12-game point streak. Their 18-3-4 run since Rick Bowness was named coach has pushed the team into a playoff position.

11. New York Islanders (-1)

Ilya Sorokin, who was pulled in a loss to the Canadiens, rebounded the next game with a shutout of the Blue Jackets as the Islanders moved back into a playoff position.

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12. Anaheim Ducks (0)

The Ducks lead the Pacific Division, putting them in position to end a seven-year playoff drought. The highest they finished in that time was sixth in the division. They haven’t won a division title since 2017.

13. Utah Mammoth (+1)

The Mammoth, by virtue of holding the first wild-card spot in the West, would play teams from the weaker Pacific Division in the first two rounds, a better prospect than going through Colorado, Dallas or Minnesota.

14. Detroit Red Wings (-5)

Andrew Copp is back from an injury and captain Dylan Larkin is a game-time decision for March 24. The Red Wings have gone 3-4-2 in their last nine games to fall out of a playoff position.

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15. Ottawa Senators (0)

The Senators are getting back their forfeited first-round pick but it will be at the end of the round at No. 32. They can’t trade or transfer the pick and were fined $1 million Canadian for failing to inform the Golden Knights, when they traded Evgenii Dadonov in 2021, about the specifics of his no-trade protection. The Golden Knights’ later trade of Dadonov to the Ducks was invalidated because Anaheim was on his no-trade list. If the Senators finish out of the playoffs and win one of the two draft lotteries, the lottery will be conducted again.

16. Philadelphia Flyers (+2)

The Flyers have won five of their last six games to pull within five points of a playoff spot. Four of their next seven games are against teams ahead of them in the Eastern Conference standings.

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17. Washington Capitals (+4)

Alex Ovechkin scored his 1,000th career goal (combined regular season and playoffs) on March 22 on his typical one-timer from the left faceoff circle. Only Wayne Gretzky (1,016) has more. Ovechkin is in the final year of his contract and hasn’t indicated his plans beyond this season.

18. Vegas Golden Knights (-2)

The Golden Knights have only five wins in 14 games since the Olympics, but a March 22 victory against the Stars moved them into second place in the Pacific Division. They would have home-ice advantage in the first round if they finish in that spot.

19. Edmonton Oilers (-2)

The Oilers have made two announcements about their stretch drive. Leon Draisaitl is expected to miss the rest of the regular season and Connor Ingram will be the No. 1 goaltender ahead of Tristan Jarry.

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20. Nashville Predators (+7)

Despite being a seller at the trade deadline, the Predators have won four in a row and moved into the second wild-card spot.

21. New Jersey Devils (+2)

Jack Hughes, who scored the golden goal at the Olympics, has points in 10 of his 12 games since returning. That includes a hat trick and an assist against the Rangers and two three-point games.

22. Los Angeles Kings (+2)

Anze Kopitar passed Hall of Famer Marcel Dionne to become the Kings’ all-time leading scorer. His career numbers are 451 goals and 1,311 points, all with the Kings. He has announced plans to retire after the season.

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23. San Jose Sharks (-4)

Forward Ryan Reaves appeared to dislocate his finger in a fight against the Flyers’ Garrett Wilson on March 21. Before heading to the penalty box, he skated to the bench to have a trainer snap it back in place. Reaves went to the dressing room, skated one more shift then spent the rest of the game on the bench.

24. Seattle Kraken (-4)

The Kraken have gone 4-9 since the Olympics to drop from third place in the Pacific Division to four points out of a playoff spot. They have given up four or more goals seven times in that stretch.

25. Florida Panthers (-3)

The Panthers, already missing several key players because of injury, have lost fourth-line forward A.J. Greer to a suspension. He is sitting out three games for boarding the Flames’ Connor Zary.

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26. Winnipeg Jets (0)

The Jets, sitting five points out of a playoff spot, could become the second consecutive team to go from winning the Presidents’ Trophy to missing the postseason the following season. The Rangers did it last season.

27. Toronto Maple Leafs (-2)

Goalie Anthony Stolarz was taken to the hospital and later released after being hit by a puck in the throat during warmups. It was his second hospital trip in less than a year because of a game-related injury. He left a 2025 playoff game shortly after a collision in the crease.

28. St. Louis Blues (0)

Forward Robert Thomas has 13 points in 10 games this month since returning from an injury. He had been mentioned in trade rumors but told reporters that he had never been asked to waive his no-trade clause.

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29. Calgary Flames (0)

Forward Ryan Strome had six points in nine games, including a March 22 overtime goal, since arriving from the Ducks at the trade deadline. He had nine points in 33 games with Anaheim this season and is averaging nearly five more minutes a game in Calgary.

30. New York Rangers (+1)

Forward Mika Zibanejad is scheduled to play in his 1,000th career NHL game on March 23. He’s facing the Senators, his original NHL team. Zibanejad enters the game on a roll with 11 points in his last eight games.

31. Chicago Blackhawks (-1)

Prospect Anton Frondell is expected to play for the Blackhawks this week with his season over in Sweden. The center, drafted No. 3 overall by Chicago in 2025, helped Sweden win its first world junior championship gold medal since 2012. Coach Jeff Blashill told reporters that based on Frondell’s level of play, he’ll probably throw him into the fire rather than ease him in.

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32. Vancouver Canucks (0)

The Canucks are the first team to be officially eliminated from 2026 playoff contention. With only 50 points this season, they almost certainly will finish with the best draft lottery odds.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: NHL power rankings: Potential playoff field filled with new faces