The U.S. Olympic men’s hockey team loses veteran right-shot defenseman Seth Jones to a collarbone injury and immediately pivots to Anaheim’s Jackson LaCombe, flipping the blue-line balance and betting on last spring’s world-championship chemistry.
Less than seven months after Seth Jones helped the Florida Panthers end their franchise’s 30-year Cup drought, the 30-year-old defenseman will watch Team USA’s Olympic chase from home. USA Hockey confirmed the collarbone injury sustained in the Winter Classic outdoor loss to the Rangers has not healed enough for contact, forcing the first roster change since the 25-man group was unveiled in December.
The Domino Effect: Jones’ Absence Tilts the U.S. Pairing Matrix
Jones was penciled in as the top right-handed option alongside 4 Nations holdover Jaccob Slavin. His exit strips the Americans of:
- A 6-foot-4, 215-pound penalty-kill anchor who logs 24 minutes a night in the NHL
- The only U.S. defenseman with Olympic experience from 2022 Beijing
- A right-shot quarterback to balance five lefties already named
Coach John Hynes must now decide whether to slide Brock Faber or Charlie McAvoy onto their off-hand side or overload the left side and shelter shifts through matchup zoning.
Jackson LaCombe: From Bubble to Blue-Line in 48 Hours
Jackson LaCombe was eating breakfast in Anaheim when his agent called. By dinner he was booking a flight to Colorado Springs. The 2024 world champion (team-best +9 rating) fits three immediate needs:
- Fresh legs—he hasn’t missed a game this season and ranks third among Ducks blueliners in expected goals share
- Familiarity—eight of his 4 Nations teammates return, including roommate Troy Terry
- Special-teams utility—LaCombe’s 1-3-1 top-unit look in Anaheim mirrors assistant coach Brett Larson’s Olympic scheme
Balance Sheet: Six Lefties, Two Righties, One Big Gamble
The revised roster gives the U.S. a 6-2 handedness split—the most lopsided of any medal contender. While Canada and Sweden carry four righty shooters, the Americans will rely on Faber and McAvoy to anchor 40-plus minutes a night. The gamble: puck-retrieval efficiency on wider international ice where boards reverse quicker and left-hand passes can ring around into transition chances against.
Calendar Pressure: Six Weeks to Mesh
Team USA opens group play vs. Latvia on Feb. 12. The lone pre-tournament tune-up is a Feb. 8 exhibition vs. Switzerland in Basel—leaving Hynes one dress rehearsal to iron out pairings. History says that’s enough: the 2014 U.S. team swapped Paul Martin for Justin Faulk two weeks before Sochi and still reached the semis. But the 2026 bracket is front-loaded with Finland and Sweden in consecutive nights, meaning LaCombe’s chemistry with Matt Boldy and Connor Bedard on the second wave could decide seeding.
What It Means for Panthers, Ducks
Jones will stay in South Florida for rehab, allowing Florida to stash him on LTIR and bank $5.4 M in cap relief ahead of the March 3 trade deadline. Anaheim, meanwhile, loses its minutes leader at 22:47 per game but gains Olympic cachet that could accelerate LaCombe’s next contract talks—he’s RFA this summer with arbitration rights.
Bottom Line
Losing a bona-fide No. 1 defenseman seven weeks before gold-medal day is never ideal, yet the U.S. braintrust opted for continuity over desperation. By promoting LaCombe, they keep the locker-room vibe intact, protect special-teams rhythm, and inject 25-year-old speed into a roster already built on forecheck pressure. If Faber and McAvoy stay healthy, the gamble looks shrewd; if either falters, the imbalance becomes the storyline that defines the tournament.
Keep it locked on onlytrustedinfo.com for instant line projections, shift charts, and medal-round scenarios as Team USA chases its first Olympic gold since the 1980 Miracle on Ice.