A Record‑Setting Year in San Jose
Macklin Celebrini arrived in San Jose this NHL season, walked in, hung his coat, and quietly rewrote a chapter of franchise history. The 19‑year‑old didn’t chase Joe Thornton’s single‑season points record so much as stalk it, closing the gap shift by shift until the inevitable happened.
He had a three‑point night against Winnipeg that pushed him to 115 and past the 114 Jumbo posted back in 2006‑07. Thornton did it with the old maestro’s touch — 92 assists, a conductor’s baton. Celebrini did it with a modern edge, a balanced ledger of 45 goals and 70 assists that made the record feel less like surprise and more like progression.
What defined Celebrini’s sophomore year wasn’t just the math, though the math was loud. It was the way he carried a team still trying to remember what relevance feels like.
Every night, he played as if the Sharks were already on the other side of the rebuild, as if the standings were a clerical error that would eventually correct themselves. He didn’t float on the perimeter or wait for the game to come to him.
He dragged the puck into the blind zones, forced plays to open, and made veteran defenders look like they’d wandered into the wrong decade. The kid didn’t blink. He didn’t even look like blinking was an option.
And then there’s the company he joined — Wayne Gretzky, the only other teenager in league history to hit at least 40 goals and 70 assists in a season.
That’s not a comparison anyone in San Jose makes lightly. But Celebrini earned it the old‑fashioned way: by showing up every night, by refusing to let the grind dull his edges, by turning sophomore expectations into something closer to a new game in town.
His rookie year hinted at this version of him — 25 goals, 38 assists — but this season he stepped into the light and didn’t flinch.
The Sharks still fell short of the playoffs, and that’s the part of the story that will age differently depending on what comes next. But if you’re looking for a franchise turning point, a moment when the future stopped being theoretical and became something you could actually see, it’s this season.
Celebrini didn’t just break a record; he planted a flag. And for the first time in a long time, San Jose has a player who makes you believe the climb back up the mountain isn’t just possible — it’s underway.