Ryan Warsofsky reflects on his second season as head coach of the San Jose Sharks, noting significant improvement with 39 wins. He emphasizes the importance of team culture and communication while expressing pride in his players' growth despite not reaching their ultimate goals.
Key points
Ryan Warsofsky is the youngest active NHL coach at age 38.
The Sharks improved from 20 wins to 39 this season.
Warsofsky emphasizes the importance of team culture and communication.
Macklin Celebrini exceeded expectations this season.
Warsofsky expressed pride in his players' growth despite not reaching their goals.
San Jose SharksChicago BlackhawksMacklin CelebriniTy Dellandrea
Apr 06, 2026; San Jose, CA, USA; during San Jose Sharks vs Chicago Blackhawks at SAP Center. Photo: Sport Shots / Dean Tait
Apr 06, 2026; San Jose, CA, USA; during San Jose Sharks vs Chicago Blackhawks at SAP Center. Photo: Sport Shots / Dean Tait
Ryan Warsofsky officially has two full NHL seasons under his belt as head coach, although heās still the youngest active NHL coach at age 38.
And this season, he got a chance to coach the San Jose Sharks to a lot more wins, and a lot more tight losses. The Sharks went from 20 wins to 39, earning 34 more points along the way.
He says heās learned a lot this year.
āI learned a lot about relationships and people and how tight this league is ā how hard it is to continue to win in it and be consistent in winning,ā Warsofsky said. āAnd as soon as you think you have it figured out, it smacks you in the face a little bit. Iāll look back and weāll review the season, and do a lot of auditing of myself and and try to get a little better.ā
In particular, he said heās grown when it comes to communication with the referees, calming down in certain moments. Also?
āSometimes you donāt realize what the players have gone through, or you keep beating them up,ā Warsofsky said. āDo you need to spin it a little bit more positive? Or is today a day where you can be a little bit more negative, in a sense, but more so teaching and the way your tone is and your voice is? Just thinking about those scenarios as the season goes on.ā
Warsofsky spoke about surprise players, what heāll remember, being emotional about the end of the season, and more.
**On the family energy of this yearās San Jose Sharksā¦**
I think itās the only way you can really win at the end of the day, is you got to have that family feel and everyoneās welcome. We have a lot of players and people from a lot of different backgrounds, different countries, different cultures, raised by single parents, only child, four brothers and sisters, and everyoneās brought up a little bit differently. Youāve got to welcome everyone and make everyone feel very important, and everyone is important. So for me itās a big step in creating a culture, and thatās how you have to win. Everyoneās got to feel important and valued and has got to have a voice, and play for one another, and believe in one another. That all bleeds into all that. So itās just a big belief of my philosophy.
**On ās yearā¦**
I donāt think anyone had those expectations, but he certainly exceeded them, and he did a hell of a job this year, individually and helping our group and dragging guys into it. Thatās who he is as a player, and heās just going to get better and better. It felt like every time we thought he had a ceiling, he blew the ceiling right off. I had a good meeting with Mack in training camp, and I knew that was he was on a mission. I will say that. There was a look on his face that he was ready to go. He had put the preparation and the work in in the summer, and he got more and more comfortable as the season went on it seemed.
**On positive surprises from his lineupā¦**
, before he got injured, was a big surprise for us, solidifying that 3C there, right shot center had a really good year. comes up, another guy has a really good year. , reinvented his game, thought he was great down the stretch for our group. I thought , the last month, really came alive in the way he needs to play as an inside presence. .
I could go through every single player, and I donāt mean to disrespect anyone I donāt. I think thereās been a lot of guys, a lot of growth. , for him to experience that, I thought it was so awesome for him. Heās been through a lot. played really good hockey for us. Sherwoodās been a great addition. Again, I could go up and down our lineup. has come a long way. ās came a long way. So lot of growth within our group.
**On being emotional after the final game of the seasonā¦**
It was a lot of things, it was season being over, talking to media 15 minutes after it. Iām with these guys more than Iām with my family. I hate getting emotional, but you put a lot into it, and then faces change and team changes. Mack is special. Willās special. William Eklund. Theyāre all special. You build a lot of relationships with these players throughout the year, and we did a lot of special things, and a lot of laughter, a lot of arguments, a lot of discussion, a lot of video sessions, a lot of individual meetings. You go through a lot.
It was a great group. They were coachable. They cared for one another, and thatās what itās all about. They played for one another, and yeah, we came short, but I think they should be damn proud of what they did. I donāt know why I get emotional about it, but it was a fun, fun year that probably not a lot of people expected. No one thought weād have 39 wins. So I give a lot of credit to those guys of just continue to push, whether we challenged them, they answered it. And I know we fell short, but I donāt want them to be defined by that.
**On what Sam Dickinson needs to work on to become a top-four defensemanā¦**
Heās going to have a big summer. A lot of it comes down to conditioning and being in condition. Itās a lot for a 19-year-old kid to come in the National Hockey League and play those types of minutes and this type of season. So weāll start there, and then just some things that we need to continue to improve on ā scanning, seeing the whole ice, seeing the second layer coming at you. As a defenseman you got to be able to end those plays and see it, close on it quicker. Thereās still, obviously, weāve seen the junior offense, but we get to see the NHL offense, and that doesnāt mean he has to be 120-point guy in the NHL, but thereās more offense that we can untap there.
**On what happier moments heāll remember from this seasonā¦**
In the other night I think it was 6-1 with about three minutes left, and there was a lot of joy in the bench, a lot of laughter. We were disappointed, obviously, we werenātĀ in the playoffs, but we were finishing the season on a high note. There was a sense of relief, but it was the guysā probably the last time we were all together. To be honest with you I didnāt really have a pre-scout meeting we usually have. Just went into the group and said, āWe got to compete extremely hard tonight. We got to play for one another like we have all year.ā And we know what the ā thatās no disrespect to Winnipeg ā but we were just in that type of situation, back to back. So we went out there and we did that.
I think it was Will and Mack, said āI donāt think we need any more pre-scouts.ā And we had a good chuckle about it and a good laugh. And those are the memories that Iāll take home with me. Those are the little things in the grind of the season and the stress and the ups and downs, you think you win and youāre relieved, you lose and you think the worldās coming to an end. So thereās a lot that goes into it, but those are the moments and those relationships are what you cherish.
**On how William Eklund improved in the final month of the seasonā¦**
I love the way he ended the season, played on the inside, got under teamās skin, was dominating in the offensive zone with puck possession. That line was really good for us. I thought he finished the season the right way.
**How can the Sharks minimize goals and chances againstā¦**
First thing Iāll dive into is we got to keep the puck out of our net, thatās for sure. Weāll look back, and weāll look at all the goals against, and weāll look at whether thatās penalty kill, short handed goals, any situation. Weāll look at it, and weāll make some changes that need to be made, but that will be step number one is keeping the puck out of our net. Step number two is our mindset to start the season needs to be, āWeāre going out there to win games and get going.ā
**On how motivating this season is for the San Jose Sharks going forward, compared to recent seasonsā¦**
Definitely more motivating. Itās a lot more fun playing down the stretch that type of hockey, and playing in those types of games. Obviously, at home was a big game, and we go down 3-0. We did claw back, but that will be a game that weāll look at as probably a measuring stick, in a sense, of when weāre in that situation again, how we need to start that game on time.
**On ās yearā¦**
Obviously had a really good year. No one probably predicted 21 goals. Did a lot of good things. Was our first guy over the boards on our penalty kill, good stick. Got another guy, I think can continue to get stronger. Heāll get more comfortable, play him up and down our lineup, but more of a guy that was slated as a checking line forward and moved up at times. We will see where the ceiling is.
**On his plans for the offseasonā¦**
Stay here in San Jose for a little while. Itāll be nice, my kids are in school, so that would be good to hang with my family. My sonās in baseball right now, and I love baseball, so itās nice to ā the baseball field is my therapy, so I can get away a little bit. So Iāll spend some time with family and do a little traveling, and then head back east and see some more family, and then before you know it, Iāll be seeing your guysā faces all over again.
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Q&A
How many wins did the San Jose Sharks achieve this season under Ryan Warsofsky?
The San Jose Sharks achieved 39 wins this season under head coach Ryan Warsofsky.
What did Ryan Warsofsky learn during his second season coaching the Sharks?
Ryan Warsofsky learned about the importance of relationships, communication, and the challenges of consistency in winning.
Who were some standout players for the Sharks this season?
Standout players included Macklin Celebrini, Ty Dellandrea, and Barclay Goodrow, all of whom made significant contributions.
What is Ryan Warsofsky's coaching philosophy for the Sharks?
Warsofsky's coaching philosophy emphasizes creating a family-like culture where every player feels valued and important.
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