TARRYTOWN, N.Y. — Past the midway point of the NHL season, confidence is not in high supply for the New York Rangers, losers of four in a row and seven of their past eight games since returning from the holiday break.
''We're definitely a little bit of a fragile group right now,'' defenseman Braden Schneider said. ''The guys know we're a good team. We believe that we have the ability to win games, and guys still believe in here that we're good. We've just got to make sure that we're not letting the small things that happen in a game get to us.''
Small things are digging a big hole for the Rangers as they look to make up ground in a competitive Eastern Conference with all 16 teams separated by just 15 points in the standings going into play Tuesday night. They're last in points percentage with a record of 20-21-6 and are running out of time to become legitimate playoff contenders before it's too late.
''It's not fun to lose,'' said center Mika Zibanejad, who has scored six goals in five games and leads the team with 18. "We're trying to look for answers, trying to find answers. Maybe it doesn't look it at times, I understand that, but we're trying to do everything we can to try to get a win.''
Coach Mike Sullivan after his team's most recent loss Monday night at home to Seattle said, ''The answers are inside our locker room'' and tried to push that message before practice Tuesday. A two-time Stanley Cup champion from his time with Pittsburgh, Sullivan is preaching positivity at arguably the toughest point of his first season on the job.
''We've got to bring an unwavering level of enthusiasm to what we do every day if we're going to ultimately pull ourselves out of this,'' Sullivan said. ''We're not going to dwell on anything. We're not going to get overwhelmed by circumstance or the noise.''
The noise is that the March 6 trade deadline is less than two months away, with a lengthy pause in February for the Olympics in between. Winger Artemi Panarin, New York's leading scorer every season since signing as a free agent in 2019, does not have a contract beyond June 30, turns 35 on Oct. 31 and could be the first big-money player out the door.
With 14 games remaining before the deadline, it's an uphill climb to push general manager Chris Drury into buying or standing pat rather than selling and beginning the process of retooling an aging roster.