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Brayden McNabb finally reveals how serious his injury really is

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David St-Jean
June 7, 2026  (8:40)
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Brayden McNabb finally reveals how serious his injury really is
Photo credit: Screenshot

Brayden McNabb woke up Saturday morning with a face full of stitches, thought he could play, and then went out and logged 35:47 on the blue line as the Vegas Knights beat Carolina 5-4 in overtime to take a 2-1 series lead in the Stanley Cup Final.

Elliotte Friedman reported after the game that McNabb had taken somewhere in the 20-to-30-stitch range and would not yet disclose the specific injuries.

He woke up, felt good enough, and suited up. Then played more than any forward in the building.

That's a different kind of tough.

"McNabb:
*Said number of stitches in the 20s-30s
*Woke up this morning, felt goodthought he could play
*Thanked fans for the ovation upon his pre-game introduction
*Would not disclose the specific injuries yet

What a performance, played 35:47."

-Elliotte Friedman

McNabb's night was not just about endurance. He finished with 2 assists and a +3 rating in a game that went to overtime, against a Carolina team that clawed back from deficits all night.

Think of it like a long-distance runner who shows up to a race with a broken nail and wins by a mile. The gap between McNabb's toughness and the story being told about him is almost absurd.

The 35-year-old defenseman has quietly become one of the most important pieces of this Vegas run. Coming into last night, he had 9 points in 18 playoff games with a +13 rating. Two more assists puts him at 11 points and a +16 this postseason.

McNabb's quiet playoff run is impossible to ignore now

That +16 does not happen by accident. It happens when a guy eats the hard minutes, eats the hard matchups, and stays on the right side of every possession battle.

Vegas head coach John Tortorella has been leaning on him hard all spring. Tortorella does not give 35-plus minutes to players he doesn't trust completely.

Mitch Marner was the star of the night with 3 goals and 10 shots on goal, and Shea Theodore logged 39:09 and had the game-winning goal. The offense gets the headlines.

But McNabb bled for this one. Literally.

Game 4 goes Tuesday night back in Vegas. The Knights are one win closer to a second Stanley Cup, and their most battle-worn defender is already talking about being fine enough to play again.

Rod Brind'Amour's Hurricanes have to win or go down 3-1. The pressure shifts entirely to Carolina's bench now.

Whether McNabb's body holds up for another 35-minute night is the question nobody in that locker room is answering publicly yet.