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Columbus Wraps Up Another Strong Season, Still Chasing the Metro Crown

2025-05-26

Another year, another impressive regular season for the Columbus Blue Jackets. With a record of 49 wins, 22 losses, and 11 overtime losses, the team finished third overall in the RHL standings, trailing only the Pittsburgh Penguins and Ottawa Senators. They scored 230 goals while giving up just 195, one of the best goal differentials in the league.

The Jackets kept things close in the Metro Division but couldn’t quite catch Pittsburgh down the stretch. Columbus went 7-2-1 in their final 10 games, which would normally be enough to close some ground, but the Penguins were nearly perfect in that same span, going 8-1-1. That late-season push kept the Jackets stuck in second place, which has become a frustrating trend. For the past few seasons, Columbus has consistently been near the top of the Metro, usually going toe-to-toe with New Jersey. But this year, Pittsburgh leapfrogged both to claim the crown.

Offensively, Vincent Trocheck led the way with 34 goals and 39 assists for a team-high 73 points. Still, he finished the year at a minus-2, which raised some eyebrows given his offensive numbers. On the blue line, Quinn Hughes followed up his Norris Trophy campaign with another standout season, racking up 12 goals and 51 assists while continuing to quarterback the team’s transition game.

The Jackets made a big move in the offseason to bring in Jonathan Marchessault, hoping he’d be a top-line scoring threat. It didn’t pan out the way they envisioned. Marchessault ended the season with just 17 goals, which was only sixth-best on the team. Despite playing big minutes in scoring situations, the chemistry never really clicked.

The physical play was led once again by Andrei Svechnikov, who landed 186 hits, but Frank Vatrano was right there with him at 185. Both brought energy and grit to the lineup every night. And while he’s not known for it, Jonas Brodin dropped the gloves once, marking the team’s only fighting major all year.

In net, Cam Talbot was the workhorse. He started 65 games, picked up 39 wins, and posted a 2.32 goals-against average with a .917 save percentage. He also had five shutouts and was named the game’s first star eight times. Pyotr Kochetkov made a strong case for more starts though, finishing with a 2.28 GAA and a .921 save percentage in 17 games. The numbers suggest he might’ve deserved a bit more of the load.

Special teams were a bit of a mixed bag. The penalty kill was lights out, leading the league at 86 percent. On the flip side, the power play never really got going. Columbus finished 20th in the league on the man advantage, converting at just 19 percent. They didn’t draw many penalties either, ranking near the bottom with only 148 power play opportunities.

All in all, it was another solid campaign. The foundation is strong, and with a little more firepower and maybe a tweak or two to the goalie rotation, the Jackets could finally break through and claim that elusive Metro Division title.