
Adam Fox said a lot with what he didn’t say — and the onus falls on Rangers to fix things
NY Post
There’s no reason to dissect the Rangers’ loss out of the Olympic break. It unfolded much like many others have in this adrift 2025-26 season.
When the team’s No. 1 defenseman gives a noncommittal answer on his future in the aftermath of said loss, however, that is worth analyzing. Perspective on this campaign has shifted from the here and now to what comes next, and Adam Fox offered some insight into his mindset in his first comments since the release of the Letter 2.0.
“I’m just trying to focus on this year right now and play each game,” Fox said when asked if he wants to stay in New York through a retool. “That’s really all I can do right now. … That’s a conversation for when we’re done playing.”
This was not a ringing endorsement from a player who, once upon a time, began the process of moving heaven and earth to play for his childhood team as an 18-year-old at Harvard.

The deal that brought Aidan Thompson to the Rangers didn’t create the ripple effects that the Artemi Panarin trade did because of who departed the organization. That was only Derrick Pouliot, a 32-year-old defenseman more than two years removed from his last NHL game. It didn’t create the waves like one for, say, Vincent Trocheck, would have because of current NHL players or draft capital the Blueshirts received in return, either.












