Here Are All The Black NHL Players In 2026 - Page 2
What once was considered a sport not for Black people is steadily growing into one with a growing influence amongst the community.
Share the post
Share this link via
Or copy link

UPDATE — Monday, April 20, 2026, 3:30 p.m. EST:
With the Stanley Cup Playoffs officially here, hockey has entered that time of year where every shift feels heavier, every hit lands harder, and every goal means a little more. The 2026 postseason began on April 18, with first-round action already underway, which makes this the perfect time to look at the Black players helping shape the sport right now.
When people talk about the sports Black athletes have historically dominated, basketball and football usually lead the conversation. Hockey has long sat outside of that mix, largely because of the cost, culture, and lack of access tied to the game for generations. But that story has been changing for a while now, and every season the NHL gets a little more reflective of the talent and influence that’s always existed in Black communities.
A big part of that change traces back to Willie O’Ree, who broke the NHL’s color barrier in 1958 and opened the door for everybody who came after him. Since then, players like Grant Fuhr and Jarome Iginla showed that Black talent in hockey was never supposed to be a footnote. They proved Black players could be stars, franchise pieces, champions, and culture-shifters in a league that did not always make space for them.
Love 93.9 WKYS? Get more! Join the 93.9 WKYS Newsletter
We care about your data. See our privacy policy.
Today, the influence of those pioneers is clearer than ever. Guys like Quinton Byfield and K’Andre Miller are among the most exciting young talents in the league. Byfield became the highest-drafted Black player in NHL history when he went second overall in the 2020 NHL Draft, and he’s now a cornerstone for the Los Angeles Kings. Veterans like Seth Jones, Evander Kane, Anthony Duclair, and Ryan Reaves are established names who’ve carved out real legacies in the league. That kind of exposure simply didn’t exist a few decades ago.
Now that playoff hockey is here, that visibility hits a bit different. This is the part of the season where casual fans lock in, where stars become household names, and where young players can turn one hot stretch into a career-defining moment. So while the NHL still has work to do when it comes to inclusion and representation, the growing presence of Black players across the league remains one of the sport’s most important signs of progress.
With that said, here’s an updated look at the Black NHL players active during the 2025-26 season — and a little more on what each one brings to the ice.
BLACK NHL PLAYERS ACTIVE IN THE 2025-26 SEASON
Forwards
Quinton Byfield – Los Angeles Kings
Byfield continues to look like one of the brightest young stars Black hockey has produced in years. The former No. 2 overall pick has size, speed, and smooth hands that make him a problem in transition, and he’s grown into the kind of forward who can change a game without needing to dominate the puck every second. He feels like the type of player the league can market for the next decade.
Evander Kane – Vancouver Canucks
Kane has long been one of the league’s most recognizable Black players, and his game still carries that same edge. He plays with power, throws his weight around, scores greasy goals and never really blends into the background. Love him or hate him, he’s the kind of veteran winger who brings energy and real presence whenever he’s on the ice.
Anthony Duclair – New York Islanders
Duclair has made a career out of being one of the fastest skaters in the league, and that speed still jumps off the screen. He’s the kind of winger who can stretch a defense, create offense in a flash, and make life difficult on the rush. When he’s rolling, he gives his team instant juice.
Ryan Reaves – San Jose Sharks
Reaves’ role has always been clear, but that doesn’t make it any less valuable. He brings toughness, intimidation, leadership, and the kind of old school physicality that can wake up an entire bench. Even beyond the hits and fights, he’s become one of the league’s most visible veteran personalities.
Dakota Joshua – Toronto Maple Leafs
Joshua is the kind of forward every team needs more of in big games. He plays with size, gets to the dirty areas, works the boards hard, and brings a straight-line physical style that wears defenses down. He may not always get top billing, but his impact usually shows up in the little things that winning teams need.
Keegan Kolesar – Vegas Golden Knights
Kolesar is built for the grind of NHL hockey. He plays a rugged, honest games, finishes checks, and gives Vegas dependable depth with a physical edge. He’s one of those players who makes life annoying for opponents for an entire shift, and coaches love that kind of consistency.
Givani Smith – Carolina Hurricanes
Smith brings bite to every lineup he cracks. He’s a hard-nosed winger who plays with emotion, isn’t afraid of contact, and can tilt momentum just by bringing a little chaos to a period. He’s the kind of players whose energy can lift a room even when the stat sheet doesn’t scream his name.
Andre Lee – Los Angeles Kings Prospect
Lee still feels more like. along-term project than a finished product, but the frame and tools are easy to see. Big forwards who can move, pressure defenders, and develop a strong net-front game always have a chance, and his upside makes him worth keeping an eye on. He’s part of the next wave trying to break through.
Mathieu Joseph – St. Louis Blues
Joseph’s wheels have always been his calling card. He’s a quick, disruptive winger who can pressure puck carriers, help on the penalty kill, and turn defensive stop into transition chances. His pace alone makes him useful, but his motor is what keeps him in the mix.
Jordan Greenway – Buffalo Sabres
Greenway is a load to deal with because of how much ice he takes up and how physical he can be along the walls. He brings a power-forward feel, using his size to protect pucks, wear down defenders, and create space for teammates. In a league full of finesse, his style still matters.
Akil Thomas – St. Louis Blues Prospect
Thomas is one of those players people have been waiting to see get a bigger opportunity. He has skill, creativity, and the kind of offensive instincts that can pop when he’s confident. If he sticks, he could become the type of depth scorer who gives a team more than people initially expect.
Bokondji Imama – Pittsburgh Penguins
Imama brings an edge that immediately stands out. He plays with force, embraces the physical side of the game, and makes sure opponents know he’s out there. Every roster needs players who can bring a little fearlessness, and that’s been his lane.
Defensemen
Darnell Nurse – Edmonton Oilers
Nurse has been one of the NHL’s most prominent Black defensemen for years now, and he still carries major responsibility. He’s a minutes-eater with size, mobility, and a physical streak, capable of handling heavy assignments while still contributing offensively. When people talk about Black excellence on the blue line, his name has to come up.
K’Andre Miller – Carolina Hurricanes

Miller looks like the modern NHL defenseman in a lot of ways. He’s long, athletic, smooth in open ice, and comfortable defending speed while still jumping into the play. His ceiling has always been high because he can affect games with both his reach and his skating, and he continues to feel like a cornerstone-type talent.
Seth Jones – Florida Panthers

Jones has spent years being viewed as one of the league’s premier all-around defensemen, and that reputation did not come from nowhere. He has the size, poise, and offensive ability to control big minutes, and when he’s locked in, he makes the game look calmer than it really is. He’s one of the most accomplished Black defensemen of his generation.
Caleb Jones – Pittsburgh Penguins
Jordan Harris – Boston Bruins

Harris is the kind of young defenseman coaches trust because his game is composed. He skates well, makes smart reads, and doesn’t force a bunch of unnecessary chaos into his shifts. There’s value in defenders who can quietly do their job, and Harris keeps showing he can be that type.
Jalen Chatfield – Carolina Hurricanes

Chatfield has turned himself into one of those defenders people appreciate more the longer they watch him. He brings mobility, competitiveness, and a no-frills approach that fits on a team trying to win. He may not always get the loudest praise, but his reliability and toughness make him easy to respect.
Isaak Phillips – Winnipeg Jets Prospect

Philips still feels like a player with room to grow, but the foundation is there. He has the size teams look for on defense, and if his all-around game continues to sharpen, he could become a valuable depth piece who sticks for the long haul. Sometimes development on the blue line takes time, and he’s still in that process.
Pierre-Olivier Joseph – Vancouver Canucks
Joseph’s game has always leaned on mobility and puck movement. He’s at his best when he can keep the play flowing, use his skating to escape pressure, and help move the puck cleanly out of his own end. Thjere’s a modern rhythm to his game that gives him value in today’s NHL.
Jayden Struble – Montreal Canadiens
Struble brings a sturdy, competitive style that pops because he doesn’t shy away from contact. He looks comfortable in physical play, defends hard, and plays with the kind of edge that can keep him around for a long time. He’s still developing, but the defensive bckbone is easy to spot.
Isaiah George – New York Islanders
George represents another younger name worth tracking as the pipeline grows. He’s part of a generation of Black defensemen coming up with more opportunity and more visibility than players before them had. Even being in the conversation matters, because that kind of representation keeps widening the door.
Goaltenders
Jet Greaves – Columbus Blue Jackets
Greaves rounds out the list as goalie with intriguing upside and a name hockey fans have become more familiar with over time. Goalies always develop on their own timeline, but his presence alone matters in a position where Black representation has historically been ever rarer. Any time a Black goalie is pushing for more NHL opportunity, it deserves real attention.
If playoff hockey always brings out the sport at its most intense, it also brings out its biggest spotlight. And as the game keeps growing, these players are helping make sure that spotlight reflects more of the people who love it, play it, and deserve to see themselves in it.
RELATED: Trae Young’s Top 10 NBA Moments
Here Are All The Black NHL Players In 2026 - Page 2 was originally published on cassiuslife.com
