Macklin Celebrini Is Already Taking the NHL by Storm—Just Ask Lindy Ruff
You know you've made it when the boss on the other bench—a seasoned coach with nearly two decades of experience—stops everything to sing your praises. That's exactly what happened Tuesday night when the San Jose Sharks rolled into Buffalo. After watching his Sabres hang tough but ultimately fall to the Sharks, head coach Lindy Ruff didn't dwell on tactics. He went straight to the kid wearing teal. Macklin Celebrini.
Ruff, a man not given to hyperbole, dropped a three-word verdict that echoed through KeyBank Center: "He's a stud." And honestly? That about sums it up. The 19-year-old rookie didn't just fill the stat sheet—he controlled the pace, made seasoned defensemen look silly, and showed why San Jose's rebuild suddenly has a pulse. Ruff later added, "You see it maybe once a decade. The way he reads the ice, the compete level—it's special." Coming from a guy who's coached legends like Mike Modano and Jamie Benn, that's weight you can't fake.
The Kid Is a Box-Office Draw
Celebrini's impact isn't just showing up in highlight reels; it's shifting merchandise. Walk into any Sharks fan cave these days and you'll find the place littered with his gear. The Bleacher Creatures San Jose Sharks Macklin Celebrini 8" Kuricha Plush is officially the must-have for the little ones—spotted a fan on the big screen squeezing one like it was a game-winning goal. And the adults aren't any better. That Men's Fanatics Macklin Celebrini Black San Jose Sharks Authentic Stack Name & Number Tri-Blend Pullover Hoodie? Sold out online in three hours flat last week. Even the little touches, like the Major League Socks Macklin Celebrini edition, are popping up in the stands. The kid's got his own apparel empire now.
- On-ice dominance: Leads all rookies in points per game and just notched his third multi-point week.
- Jersey watch: Sharks pro shop says Celebrini nameplates now account for 40% of all custom orders.
- Buzzer-beater buzz: His last-second goal against the Kings broke the franchise record for youngest player with an OT winner.
Already a Superstar in the Making
Flip through the upcoming Hockey Superstars 2025-2026 annual—you know, the glossy coffee-table book kids leave out for their dads—and there he is, front and centre. Publishers aren't stupid; they know Celebrini is the next cover boy. His blend of skill, swagger, and two‑way reliability hasn't been this electric since a young Sidney Crosby started terrorising the league. You hear scouts say it quietly: "He's got that it factor."
But what's really turning heads is the poise. Late in the Buffalo game, with the Sharks nursing a one‑goal lead, Celebrini absorbed a clean hit from Owen Power, popped up, and immediately backchecked to break up a 2-on-1. That's the stuff that doesn't make the scoresheet but makes coaches like Ruff mutter under their breath. "I've been doing this too long," Ruff said afterward, shaking his head. "You just know when a kid's got it. He's got it."
The Sharks' Future Is Now
San Jose has been wandering in the desert since the Thornton‑Marleau era faded. But Celebrini isn't just a mirage—he's an oasis. Every night, the Tank fills up with fans rocking his gear, from the plush dolls to the stacked hoodies to those crazy patterned socks. They're not just buying merchandise; they're buying belief. And if Lindy Ruff—who's forgotten more about hockey than most of us will ever know—is already anointing him, you'd better believe this kid is the real deal. The NHL just got its next superstar. His name is Macklin Celebrini.