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Tahoe 2025-26 Season in Review

Team analytics, player leaders, offensive production, and goaltending performance from the 2025–26 ECHL season.

Team Performance Snapshot

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Key Insights

  • Tahoe featured one of the league’s most explosive offensive groups. Multiple forwards clustered well above 45 points, with strong goal totals across the top six, indicating balanced scoring depth rather than reliance on a single player.

  • Devon Paliani was the premier finisher on the roster. His combination of elite goal scoring and high assist production placed him near the goals-equal-assists trend line, showing a complete offensive profile.

  • Trent Swick and Casey Bailley provided strong complementary scoring. Both combined high assist totals with significant goal production, helping drive one of the more dangerous transition attacks in the ECHL.

  • Kevin Wall stood out as a pure playmaker. His assist-heavy profile and lower relative goal total suggest he operated primarily as a setup forward creating opportunities for teammates.

  • The blue line contributed limited offense outside of Mike O’Leary. O’Leary was the only defenseman with substantial production, while the remainder of the defensive corps clustered near the bottom of the scoring chart.

  • Tahoe’s forward depth appeared to be the team’s defining strength. With several forwards producing at near top-line levels simultaneously, the Knight Monsters likely generated offense through sustained pressure across multiple lines rather than one dominant trio.

Team Season in Review Dashboard

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Key Insights

  • Tahoe combined elite offense with below-average defensive results. The Knight Monsters sat well to the right on the team identity map with one of the league’s strongest goals-per-game rates, but also allowed goals at a higher-than-average rate.

  • Devon Paliani anchored a deep offensive core. His 65-point season and strong goal production made him the focal point of one of the ECHL’s most productive forward groups.

  • Tahoe’s scoring depth was exceptional. Kevin Wall, Casey Bailley, Sloan Stanick, Trent Swick, and Luke Adam all produced at high offensive levels, giving the team multiple dangerous scoring lines.

  • Several top scorers posted strong positive plus/minus ratings. Kevin Wall and Sloan Stanick paired offensive production with strong on-ice results, suggesting Tahoe’s top line controlled play consistently at even strength.

  • Goaltending was solid despite the team’s aggressive style. Cameron Whitehead handled the heaviest workload while maintaining a save percentage above 92%, helping stabilize a team that often played high-event hockey.

  • Tahoe appeared built around pace and offense-first hockey. The combination of elite scoring depth, strong individual point totals, and weaker defensive metrics suggests the Knight Monsters often relied on outscoring opponents rather than suppressing chances.

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