Adam Fox
D #23 New York Rangers Trade value: 9/10

Adam Fox

Born Feb 17, 1998
Birthplace Jericho, New York, United States
Nationality American
Height 5'11"
Weight 188 lbs
Shoots L
Draft 2016 Round 3, Pick 66 - CGY

Contract

AAV $9.50M
Cap Hit $9.50M
Term 2022 – 2029
Clauses Full No-Movement Clause (through 2026-27). 16-team No-Trade List (2027-28, 2028-29).
Status Signed

Scouting Report

Skating6/10
Shooting7/10
Hockey IQ10/10
Physicality4/10
Defense7/10

✓ Strengths

Power Play Quarterback: Best Puck-Holder at the Point — Fox's hockey IQ is the foundation of everything he does. He doesn't beat you with speed or a cannon from the point — he beats you by knowing where the puck is going before you do. His 5v5 expected-goals-for percentage has been above 55% in each of the last three seasons, and his power-play quarterback work has driven the Rangers' top-10 unit since 2021. He holds pucks at the blue line just long enough to draw two penalty killers, then threads passes through lanes that shouldn't exist. He's the best power-play defenseman in the NHL not named Cale Makar — and some nights, it's not clear who's better. D-Zone Exits and Neutral Zone Reads — Fox turns defense into offense faster than almost anyone at his position. His first pass out of the D-zone is consistently tape-to-tape — clean outlets through the neutral zone that start rushes before the forecheck can set up. In 2025-26, his Corsi-for percentage of 57.16 at 5v5 means the Rangers control shot attempts nearly 60% of the time when he's on the ice. He doesn't do this with his feet. He does it with his eyes — reading pressure, pivoting away from the first forechecker, and delivering the puck with timing that turns D-zone retrievals into odd-man rushes. 0.86 Points Per Game From the Blue Line — 69 goals and 342 assists for 411 points in 478 career games. That's 0.86 points per game — a rate that, among active defensemen with 400-plus games, trails only Cale Makar. Three consecutive 70-plus point seasons from 2021-22 through 2023-24. He generates offense at even strength and on the power play with equal efficiency, and his 17-goal campaign in 2023-24 proved he can score when he decides to pull the trigger instead of looking pass-first. Defensive Zone: From Draft-Day Liability to Legit — The scouting reports from Fox's draft year flagged his own-zone play as a liability. Six NHL seasons later, he's quietly become one of the league's most reliable two-way defensemen. His goals-against per 60 at 5v5 dropped to 1.64 in 2025-26, and his pairing with Vladislav Gavrikov posted a 60.12 GF% over 450 minutes together. He won't flatten you along the boards, but his stick positioning, gap control, and ability to angle forwards wide of the net have gone from a weakness to a genuine strength. Playoff Track Record: 0.85 PPG in 46 Games — 39 points in 46 career playoff games — 0.85 points per game, nearly identical to his regular-season rate. His 21 points in 20 games during the 2022 playoff run was the best postseason by a Rangers defenseman since Leetch in 1994. He played the entire 2024 ECF with a knee injury from a Round 1 hit and still produced 12 points in 16 games. Jon Cooper called him "shifty and extremely deceptive." Fox raises his level when the stakes go up. The faster tempo suits how he processes the ice.

✗ Weaknesses

Lateral Quickness and First-Step Burst — Fox's skating has never been elite by NHL superstar standards. His first few strides lack the explosive burst that separates a Cale Makar or Quinn Hughes, and faster forwards can beat him wide in transition. He compensates with anticipation and positioning — he's usually in the right spot before the play develops — but in one-on-one footraces against top-end speed, he loses more than he wins. The 2026 Olympic snub was at least partly about this: when Team USA chose between Fox and defensemen who could match international-pace skating, they picked legs over processing speed. Net-Front Coverage and Board Battles — At 5'11" and 188 pounds, Fox is undersized for an NHL defenseman. He doesn't win box-outs against power forwards in the crease, he can't clear the crease with authority, and his net-front defense relies entirely on stick work rather than body positioning. His blocked shots and hits numbers have consistently ranked in the bottom third among top-pairing defensemen. He's a stick defender, not a body defender — and there are playoff series where intelligence alone isn't enough to contain a heavy forecheck. Won't Shoot When He Should — Fox has one of the more accurate wrist shots among NHL defensemen, but he uses it less than he should. His career shooting percentage sits around 6.5%, and he's never topped 17 goals in a season despite playing 24-plus minutes per night. He sees the pass first, always — which makes him an elite playmaker but also makes him predictable. Penalty kills cheat toward his passing lanes because they know he'd rather set up a one-timer than fire it himself. A defenseman with his release and accuracy should be putting 200-plus shots on net every season. He doesn't come close.

Playing Style

A cerebral, pass-first defenseman who quarterbacks the game from the blue line with elite hockey IQ and vision. Fox controls play through anticipation rather than athleticism — reading breakouts two passes ahead, threading seams on the power play, and generating offense at 0.86 points per game, a rate only Cale Makar can match among active defensemen. The rare Norris Trophy winner who turned draft-day concerns about his skating and size into strengths through pure intelligence and competitive drive.

Trade Value Analysis

Adam Fox is a 28-year-old Norris Trophy winner on a $9.5 million contract with three years remaining — fair value for a top-five defenseman in the NHL, which means the acquiring team gets a bargain, not an overpay. If Fox waives his NMC this summer, the return would be franchise-altering: a top-five pick or elite young player, multiple first-round picks, and a roster piece going back. The complication is the Rangers calling this a "retool, not a rebuild," which means Fox is supposed to be the player they build around. But Fox hasn't publicly committed to staying, and the Rangers have missed the playoffs two straight years. If he asks out, every general manager in the league picks up the phone. Only his NMC — and his own decision — keeps the rating at 9 instead of 10.

Career & Biography

Adam Fox — At a Glance

  • 2025-26 Status: Injury-shortened season — 42 points in 47 games between upper-body and lower-body injuries. Rangers missed the playoffs for a second straight year.
  • Contract: 7 years, $66.5M ($9.5M AAV through 2028-29), full NMC through 2026-27, then 16-team NTC. No trade happens without his approval.
  • Career Numbers: 69 goals, 411 points in 478 games. Norris Trophy (2021), three All-Star selections, 39 points in 46 career playoff games.
  • Playstyle: Pass-first quarterback with elite hockey IQ. Controls transitions, runs the power play, and produces 0.86 points per game — second only to Cale Makar among active defensemen.

The Section 55 Kid Calgary Let Slip to Round Three

Adam Fox grew up in Jericho, New York — a Long Island suburb where the closest thing to hockey culture was his parents' Rangers season tickets in Section 55 of Madison Square Garden. Bruce and Tammy Fox held those seats from 1972 to 2009, which means Adam spent his childhood watching Brian Leetch work the blue line, the last Rangers blueliner worth building a defense around. That detail matters. You can draw a direct line from those seats to the player Fox became.

Before Harvard, before the Norris Trophy, Fox played roller hockey on a basement rink his father built in Jericho. He moved through the Long Island Gulls youth program, then to the U.S. National Team Development Program in Plymouth, Michigan, where he set the USNTDP career record for assists by a defenseman — 86 in two seasons — and the single-season record with 59 in 2015-16. The Calgary Flames still let him fall to the third round, 66th overall, in the 2016 Draft.

Fox chose Harvard over the OHL, and what he did over three college seasons was something else. As a freshman, he led all NCAA defensemen in assists (34) and points (40), helping Harvard win its first Beanpot since 1993 and reach its first Frozen Four since 1994. By his junior year he was the top-scoring player in the entire country — not just among defensemen — with 48 points in 33 games, breaking Mark Fusco's 1983 school record for points by a Harvard blueliner. Three consecutive NCAA First All-American selections. Three ECAC First All-Star nods. I've watched hundreds of college prospects develop over the years. Fox at Harvard was in a different category.

Norris at 23, Three 70-Point Seasons, Two ECF Runs

The path to New York required a detour through two franchises that never got to use him. Calgary drafted Fox, traded his rights to Carolina in June 2018, and Carolina shipped them to the Rangers in April 2019 for two second-round picks. Fox signed his entry-level deal two days later. The kid who grew up watching Leetch from Section 55 was going to play on the same ice.

His rookie year produced 42 points in 70 games — the fifth Rangers rookie defenseman to ever hit 40. Solid, not spectacular. Then came the shortened 2020-21 season, and something clicked. Fox put up 47 points in 55 games, led all NHL defensemen in assists, and won the Norris Trophy at 23 years old. He became only the second player in league history to win it before his third season, joining Bobby Orr. Brian Leetch presented the trophy at the ceremony. You can't make that up.

From 2021-22 through 2023-24, I'd argue Fox was the most complete defenseman in the NHL not named Cale Makar. Three consecutive 70-plus point seasons. A plus-30 in 2021-22. Twenty-one points in 20 playoff games during the 2022 run to the Eastern Conference Finals, where Tampa Bay coach Jon Cooper called him "shifty and extremely deceptive — you have to defend him differently than other guys." The 2024 run back to the ECF produced another 12 points in 16 games, this time with Fox playing through a knee injury sustained in Round 1 from a hit by Washington's Nick Jensen. The Rangers lost both series, but Fox was never the reason why.

His 2024-25 season was actually one of his best by process metrics — a career-best 55.7 expected-goals percentage — despite the Rangers missing the playoffs entirely. Pinning that collapse on the guy generating 61 points while driving possession at an elite rate misses the point. Fox was the last thing wrong with that team.

2025-26: Two Injuries, an Olympic Snub, and the Big Question

The 2025-26 season has been defined by absences. Fox suffered an upper-body injury on November 29 — a shoulder-to-shoulder hit from Tampa Bay's Brandon Hagel — and missed 14 games. He returned for three games in late December, then went back on LTIR with a lower-body injury in January. In the 13 straight games both Fox and Igor Shesterkin missed, the Rangers went 2-11-0 and allowed 4.62 goals per game. That stretch buried their season.

Fox's numbers through 47 games — 6 goals, 36 assists, 42 points — project to roughly 73 points over a full season, right in line with his career standard. His 5v5 metrics remain elite: a 62.83 goals-for percentage, 57.16 Corsi, and 59.72 expected-goals-for percentage. But the injuries that have sidelined star players league-wide this season hit the Rangers at exactly the wrong time. The 2026 Olympic snub only added salt — Fox was left off Team USA's roster after going pointless in four games at the 2025 Four Nations Face-Off, where he was on ice for Connor McDavid's overtime winner. He called it "disappointing." An understatement, to say the least.

Now the biggest question in New York hockey isn't about goaltending or front-office strategy. It's about whether Adam Fox wants to stay. Asked directly about his future, Fox told reporters he'd "address it with the organization in the offseason." His full NMC runs through 2026-27, meaning he controls his destiny entirely. The $9.5 million cap hit with three years remaining makes him either the cornerstone of the next competitive window or the centerpiece of the biggest trade in franchise history. My read on this: Fox doesn't want to leave New York — but he also doesn't want to waste his prime watching rebuilds from the press box.

The Tim Green Fight: Fox Beyond the Rink

Fox married Tate Rose Green — a Harvard lacrosse player he met during his college years — on July 7, 2024 in New York. Their daughter, Greer Rose, was born in March 2025. But the family connection that matters most off the ice is his father-in-law: Tim Green, a former NFL linebacker diagnosed with ALS in 2016. Fox donates $1,023 for every goal and $523 for every assist to Tackle ALS. He bought a suite at Madison Square Garden to host ALS-affected families at Rangers home games and won the Rod Gilbert "Mr. Ranger" Award in 2024 for his community contributions.

The kid whose dad built a basement roller rink in Jericho grew up to become the best Jewish hockey player in the NHL, a Norris Trophy winner before his 24th birthday, and — depending on what happens this summer — either the foundation of the Rangers' next competitive window or the biggest trade chip in the franchise's modern history.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is Adam Fox's contract?

Fox signed a seven-year, $66.5 million contract with the Rangers in November 2021, carrying a $9.5 million AAV through 2028-29. The deal includes a full no-movement clause through 2026-27 that shifts to a 16-team no-trade list for the final two years. That NMC gives Fox complete control over any trade — the Rangers literally cannot move him without his written consent.

Will Adam Fox be traded by the Rangers?

It depends entirely on Fox. His full NMC means the Rangers can't move him without consent. After missing the playoffs for a second straight year, Fox told reporters he'd address it with the organization in the offseason. GM Chris Drury insists on a retool, not a rebuild, which implies Fox stays. But if Fox decides he wants to compete for a Cup elsewhere, the trade return would be franchise-defining for both teams.

How many points does Adam Fox have in his career?

Through the 2025-26 season, Fox has 411 career points — 69 goals and 342 assists — in 478 regular-season games, plus 39 points in 46 playoff games. He reached the 400-point milestone during the 2025-26 campaign. His 0.86 points-per-game rate ranks second among active defensemen with 400-plus games, trailing only Colorado's Cale Makar.

Has Adam Fox won the Norris Trophy?

Yes. Fox won the Norris Trophy in 2021 as the NHL's best defenseman, becoming only the second player in league history to win before his third season — joining Bobby Orr. He was a finalist again in 2023. Brian Leetch, the last Rangers defenseman to win the award, presented the trophy at the ceremony. Fox has been selected to three All-Star Games and named to the NHL First All-Star Team in 2022.

Why wasn't Adam Fox on Team USA at the 2026 Olympics?

Fox was left off the U.S. roster for the Milano Cortina Olympics despite playing in the 2025 Four Nations Face-Off. He went pointless in four games at that tournament and was on ice for Connor McDavid's overtime winner in the championship. Fox called the snub disappointing, saying his play was worthy of selection. GM Bill Guerin cited defensive depth as the reason, denying that the McDavid goal was a deciding factor.

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