• Loading stock data...
Thursday, December 4, 2025

Macklin Celebrini and the Sharks Rookies Have Brought Good Vibes to a Bad Season

The arrival of the 18-year-old star has breathed new life into the struggling NHL franchise. San Jose’s record is poor, but the vibes are immaculate.

Dec 27, 2024; San Jose, California, USA; San Jose Sharks center Macklin Celebrini (71) skates during warm ups before their game against the Vegas Golden Knights at SAP Center at San Jose
Eakin Howard/Imagn Images
Mar 5, 2024; Cleveland, Ohio, USA; Cleveland natives and NFL players Travis, right, and Jason Kelce celebrate after the Cleveland Cavaliers beat the Boston Celtics during the second half at Rocket Mortgage FieldHouse.
Exclusive

Spotify’s Top 10 Sports Podcasts and Audiobooks of 2025

Three of the top 10 sports audiobooks are about running.
Read Now
December 3, 2025 |

The biggest victory in the past year for the San Jose Sharks hasn’t been on the ice. On May 7, 2024, the franchise won the NHL draft lottery after finishing its 2023–2024 season with the worst record in the league: 19-54-9. The run was dismal, but from that moment, spirits were incongruously high.

“The vibes around the franchise—that’s the word we’ve always used—just fundamentally changed,” Sharks president Jonathan Becher tells Front Office Sports. “Everything felt different.”

Macklin Celebrini flipped the switch.

San Jose has struggled since missing the playoffs only once between 2004 and 2019, a run that included an appearance in the 2016 Stanley Cup Final. Last season marked the third-fewest wins in franchise history. This season, the Sharks again sit in last place among the league’s 32 teams, and on March 16 were the first to be eliminated from the postseason. But rookie Celebrini, the league’s youngest active player, has ushered in hope for a fan base that needed something to cling to. 

On June 28—just a couple of weeks after Celebrini’s 18th birthday—about 10,000 people gathered at the SAP Center to watch the Canadian-born forward become a Shark following one season at Boston University, where he was the youngest athlete to ever win the Hobey Baker Award for best college player. The Sharks, says Becher, expected a couple of thousand attendees max.

First-pick Celebrini already had ties to the Bay Area: His father, Rick, is VP of player health and performance with the Golden State Warriors; Celebrini also played for the Sharks’ U-14 AAA squad during the 2019–2020 season.

Jersey inquiries started pouring in the day after the draft. “He was still a college player, wasn’t a pro yet and wouldn’t be for a while,” says Becher. “We can’t sell his jersey. So, we’re like, ‘We can’t answer that. We’re still negotiating with the league. … We’ll call you back when we sort it out.”

Meredith Williams/San Jose Sharks

Celebrini made an indelible mark on San Jose well before he even stepped into the locker room, and is already delivering as hoped: Despite missing about a month with an injury, the 18-year-old is top-two in a tight race to win the Calder Memorial Trophy, awarded to the league’s top rookie.

But he is only one piece of the 2024–2025 rookie puzzle that’s transformed the organization. “Macklin is the tip of the spear for us. This has been a youth campaign that’s been fueled by lots of rookies,” Becher says. “I don’t know if Macklin by himself would have nearly as much impact if we didn’t also have Will Smith as a rookie and Shakir Mukhamadullin and Collin Graf.” 

Together, the cadre has been the spiritual antidote to the grim on-ice outcomes. 

“For the season we’re having—obviously not the success that we want and the results that we want. But for the most part, we were able to keep a good vibe, a good feeling in the locker room,” Celebrini tells FOS. “It’s not the end of the world. We understand the position we’re in.”

With one of the youngest rosters in the NHL, San Jose believes “the future is teal.” While they’re waiting, the Sharks are having an enormous amount of fun—and proving not all losing is created equal.


At the vibes factory, “Willmack” has become the best-producing line.

Celebrini has made fast friends with 20-year-old center Smith, who played at rival Hockey East powerhouse Boston College. (“I hated playing against them,” Celebrini says of Smith as well as Graf, alum of the ECAC’s Quinnipiac; both were Hobey Baker finalists alongside Celebrini in 2024.) Celebrini and Smith—the fourth pick in the 2023 NHL draft who has delivered one of the best rookie performances since mid-January—are in many ways like any attached-at-the-hip Gen Zers posting videos on the internet. 

But they also happen to be really, really good at hockey—and really, really good for their franchise. Willmack has pushed the Sharks discourse beyond its fans-only echo chamber and into an otherworldly parasocial dimension. 

“People see these two kids, see our content with them, or [see] people talking about them and then get pulled into our universe,” says Laurel Young, the Sharks’ digital content coordinator, who works on the team’s social media presence. “For such an awful team these two are having the best time ever,” wrote one commenter on a Willmack TikTok.

“I didn’t think we would get along this well, and I think we just kind of rely on each other for different things throughout the year, with different pressures and expectations,” Celebrini tells FOS. He’s not sure why people have latched onto their friendship. “I think we’re just trying to have fun. We’re just trying to enjoy it.”

San Jose Sharks
San Jose Sharks

Every tracked social metric is pacing ahead of last season, despite San Jose’s identical standings position, according to Sharks data provided to FOS. Engagement ranks top five in the NHL since the start of the season.

The SAP Center is hardly at capacity, but Becher believes there’s a connection between the spike in audience and the sales for individual games. “We have more lookie-loos showing up to games this year than we ever had before, and I have to mostly attribute that to Mack,” he says.

Along with the highest season-ticket renewals since 2016, San Jose is also on pace to set a franchise record for number of individual game tickets sold and subsequent revenue. 

Half were purchases from people who hadn’t bought within the past seven years, and the audience was more diverse than ever. “For our database purposes, they’re brand new,” he says, “and that shows the Macklin-plus-rookie effect that we’re reaching audiences that we’ve never reached before. … It’s been surprisingly easy for us to market this as a youth movement and for us to be hugely embraced.”


Within the Sharks circle, Celebrini is often mentioned in the same breath as franchise icon Joe Thornton, who played for San Jose from 2005 to 2020 and remains its boldest personality. Celebrini currently lives with Thornton and his family. 

But it’s nearly impossible not to also draw wider comparisons to Connor Bedard, 2023’s first pick in the NHL entry draft, who took home last season’s Calder Trophy. Despite the Blackhawks’ abysmal 2023–2024 run—Chicago had the second-worst record after the Sharks—Bedard’s arrival was met with uncharacteristic fanfare and coverage.

In contrast, for as much buzz as Celebrini has generated locally, it’s not the same story across North America. West Coast puck-drop times are tough for visibility, and Becher belives fatigue around Bedard’s trumpeting has muted Celebrini’s volume, too. But Pete Blackburn, co-creator and host of the What Chaos! podcast, also says San Jose’s players aren’t under the same spotlight as Chicago’s. As one of the most important U.S. markets, Chicago has thrust unique pressure on Bedard to carry the slumping franchise. 

San Jose Sharks
Neville E. Guard/Imagn Images

Celebrini’s quieter entrance has an upside, Blackburn says: “Celebrini has been given more runway and wiggle room in San Jose than Bedard has been given in Chicago, where he’s always under the microscope. The vibes that are in San Jose right now, despite the team being so bad, are night and day with the Bedard situation.”

The gravitational pull from characters such as Celebrini can be good news for the NHL itself, which is increasingly leaning on its youngest stars as it turns its eyes to Gen Z and even Gen Alpha for growth.

“The league would be wise to lean in to that and to allow not only [Celebrini] but all of these players … to showcase that personality while also showcasing that they’re among the best hockey players in the world,” says Blackburn. “One player is not going to change everything for a team, but especially if you’re trying to grow the game, you need players that people can relate to and latch on to. I think players sell the game just about more than anything.”

Celebrini knows carrying a torch for the NHL will be part of his role. “I don’t think it’s a burden,” he says. “I think it’s just something that I understand just kind of comes with the territory and the business of where I’m at.”


There’s young blood in the water in San Jose, but the arrival of these rookies is hardly a “snap-of-the-finger fix,” says Blackburn. 

“We talk a lot about the vibes and the goofiness of how much fun they’re having there. The thing that I think about is, how do you build around what they have right now in the early stages?” he says. “They all jell. They seem like they really, really like each other. And you know that it’s not going to work this year, but it definitely feels like the start of something.”

For now, the energy is a good foundation—and the team is currently positioned for another early pick in the 2025 draft to add to its youth core. “With the excitement around our rookies and our team and what we’re building,” Celebrini says, “we’re just looking forward to what can be.”

Linkedin
Whatsapp
Copy Link
Link Copied
Link Copied

What to Read

Dec 2, 2025; Las Vegas, Nevada, USA; Vegas Golden Knights goaltender Carter Hart (79) makes a save against the Chicago Blackhawks during an overtime period at T-Mobile Arena

ESPN Knocked for Coverage of Carter Hart’s NHL Return

The game broadcast didn’t mention the reason for Hart’s two-year hockey absence.
Nov 15, 2025; Raleigh, North Carolina, USA; Carolina Hurricanes defenseman Shayne Gostisbehere (4) celebrates with teammates after scoring a goal against the New York Rangers during the second period at Lenovo Center.

Dundon in Talks to Sell Hurricanes Stake to Fund Blazers Buy

A deal could reportedly value the NHL team at $2 billion.
Cowboys

Chiefs-Cowboys Thanksgiving Ratings Shatter NFL Regular-Season Record

The game broke the previous record by 15 million viewers.
Aug 24, 2024; Bronx, New York, USA; Former New York Yankees pitcher David Cone at Yankee Stadium.

With ESPN’s New Game Schedule, David Cone Could Leave the Network

Cone’s schedule might be incompatible with his duties at the YES Network.

Featured Today

Big League Wiffle Ball

Celebrity-Backed Wiffle Ball Has Big-League Aspirations

Big League Wiffle Ball team owners include Kevin Costner and David Adelman.
November 24, 2025

How NBA Arena Experiences Went Ultra-Luxe

For the most connected guests, the game has become a secondary attraction.
Nov 23, 2025; Inglewood, California, USA; Los Angeles Rams quarterback Matthew Stafford (9) throws a pass against the Tampa Bay Buccaneers during the fourth quarter at SoFi Stadium.
November 24, 2025

Stafford, Rams Rise From the Pack to Super Bowl Contention

The NFL team now has the top odds to win Super Bowl LX.
Nov 16, 2025; Orlando, Florida, USA; NJ/NY Gotham FC celebrate after scoring during extra time against Orlando Pride at Inter&Co Stadium
November 22, 2025

The NWSL Is Growing at Breakneck Pace. Can It Keep Surging?

While the league surges, it also must survive two major challenges.

Calls for Change Grow Louder for Steelers’ Tomlin. His Next Move?

The NFL’s longest-tenured coach is facing heightened scrutiny.
Waverly took on Mt. Healthy in varsity football action at Waverly High School on October 25, 2024, in Waverly, Ohio.
November 27, 2025

High Schools Walk Legal Tightrope Using Trademarked Pro Logos

Borrowing a college or pro team’s mark can be a risk.
Jalen Williams
December 2, 2025

The Thunder Are 20–1. Their Future Is Even Brighter

OKC has the league’s best record and a war chest of picks.
Sponsored

How HOKA is Reimagining the NIL Relationship

On Location is redefining the Olympic experience by creating lasting connections beyond the Games.
Jul 9, 2025; East Rutherford, New Jersey, USA; Real Madrid CF defender Eder Militao (3) in action with Paris Saint-Germain midfielder Warren Zaire-Emery (33) during a semifinal match of the 2025 FIFA Club World Cup at MetLife Stadium.
November 26, 2025

Real Madrid Stake Sale Could Prove It’s World’s Most Valuable Franchise

“They’d be number one,” multiclub owner John Textor tells Front Office Sports.
Nov 24, 2025; San Diego, California, USA; Minnesota United forward Kelvin Yeboah (9) heads the ball against San Diego FC defender Jeppe Tverskov (6) during the first half at Snapdragon Stadium.
November 25, 2025

San Diego FC Isn’t Performing Like an Expansion Team 

The club averaged 28,064 per game in attendance at home.
Oct 8, 2025; Bronx, New York, USA; New York Yankees left fielder Cody Bellinger (35) runs off the field after ending the first inning with a sliding catch against the Toronto Blue Jays during game four of the ALDS round for the 2025 MLB playoffs at Yankee Stadium.
November 25, 2025

Steinbrenner: No Set Budget Yet for Yankees in 2026

The high-spending club faces numerous questions heading into next season.
Nov 23, 2025; Cincinnati, Ohio, USA; Inter Miami CF forward Lionel Messi (10) dribbles against FC Cincinnati in the second half at TQL Stadium.
November 24, 2025

In Top Form, Messi Takes Inter Miami to Conference Finals

Inter Miami is reaching unprecedented heights in its history.