Home US SportsNHL 2025-26 Season in Review: Brett Kulak

2025-26 Season in Review: Brett Kulak

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2025-26 Season in Review: Brett Kulak

Vitals

Player: Brett Kulak
Born: Jan. 6, 1994 (32 years old)
Height: 6-foot-1
Weight: 192 pounds
Hometown: Edmonton, Alberta, Canada
Shoots: Left
Draft: 2012 NHL Draft, fourth round, 14th pick (105th overall) by Calgary Flames
2025-26 Statistics (with Pittsburgh): 25 games played; one goal; six assists; seven points
Contract Status: Entering unrestricted free agency on July 1 after completion of a four-year, $11,000,000 contract

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Monthly Splits

via Yahoo!

Kulak’s best month undoubtedly was January, with all of these games coming in a Pittsburgh sweater. He had his highest amount of shots on goal, and he was rewarded with his lone goal on the season and four additional assists.

Perhaps Kulak’s best game came when he scored that one goal in a 6-3 win over the Seattle Kraken on Jan. 19. He also took home a plus-3 rating during that game.

Story of the Season

When Pittsburgh acquired defenseman Brett Kulak as part of the Tristan Jarry trade with the Edmonton Oilers in December, the team was looking for a reliable veteran who could eat minutes. The Penguins also had to take on Kulak and Stuart Skinner’s contracts to help get the deal over the line with the cap-strapped Oilers.

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Kulak ultimately provided that veteran presence in his short tenure with the Penguins.

The 32-year-old defenseman was never expected to be an offensive driver, and his numbers reflected that. Across his 2025-26 campaign, Kulak recorded one goal and 11 assists in 83 games overall.

But his value was always going to be measured more by how he helped stabilize a rather inconsistent Pittsburgh defensive corps.

A little more than two months after he was acquired by Pittsburgh, general manager Kyle Dubas flipped Kulak to the Colorado Avalanche in exchange for fellow defenseman Samuel Girard and a second-round pick in the 2028 NHL Draft.

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Regular season 5v5 advanced stats

Data via Natural Stat Trick. Ranking is out of 11 defensemen on the team who qualified by playing a minimum of 150 minutes.

Corsi For%: 48.29 (9th)
Goals For%: 50.00 (8th)
xGF%: 50.17 (8th)
Scoring Chance %: 48.06 (10th)
High Danger Scoring Chance%: 48.02 (11th)
5v5 on-ice shooting%: 9.84 (9th)
On-ice save%: 90.10 (6th)
Goals/60: 0.13
Assist/60: 0.67
Points/60: 0.8

Kulak’s underlying numbers suggest he largely provided unspectacular results in a Penguins uniform, ranking near the bottom among qualified Penguins defensemen in several possession and chance-generation metrics.

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His expected goals share was slightly above break-even at 50.17%, indicating the Penguins generated a nearly even share of quality chances with him on the ice at five-on-five.

Offensively, Kulak contributed modestly with 0.8 points per 60 minutes, but he only appeared in 25 games with the team before being traded again.

Defensively, his on-ice save percentage ranked sixth on the team, helping offset some of the weaker chance metrics.

Charts n’at

Via Advanced Hockey Stats and NHL Edge

Playing on three different teams in a single season is a unique challenge, and Kulak had some struggles with maintaining his impacts from prior seasons. Overall, as a bottom-pair defenseman, he can add to a PK and provide a decent DV defensive performance, but his offense isn’t going to add much to a team.

Hockeystats.com has a scouting report on Kulak that includes, “A terrific rush defender who uses his feet and stick to force turnovers and dump-ins at the blueline,” but the data didn’t back that up this year, besides preventing entry chances. Then again, as mentioned, it couldn’t be easy to produce consistent results while having so many different teams, coaches, teammates, and strategies thrown at him this year.

Kulak is going to stay home at the left point more often than not in the offensive zone. He is typically an active skater, using his wheels and covering a lot of ground going up and down the ice.

Skating is still a pretty good base for Kulak, even now into his 30’s. He’s no burner but is efficient and somewhat quick without having high-end speed. It’s more than good enough for his game as a positional defenseman to try and keep the play in front of him and turn on the jets when they need to be there to cover a different part of the ice.

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Highlights

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