
Dylan Guenther’s first 40-goal season reflects not just his elite shot, but a maturing, more complete offensive game that has made him one of the NHL’s rising stars.
Despite falling at home to the Carolina Hurricanes on Saturday afternoon, Utah Mammoth forward Dylan Guenther reached a significant personal milestone, recording 40 goals in a season for the first time in his NHL career.
A Scorer Evolves Beyond The One-Timer
There’s long been little doubt about Guenther’s ability to score. His release—quick, deceptive, and lethal—has made him one of the league’s most natural finishers, particularly on the one-timer that has become his calling card. But this season has been about more than just that signature shot. It’s been about growth, adaptation, and proving he can beat opponents in more ways than one.
After bursting onto the scene last year and catching defenders off guard with his scoring instincts, Guenther entered this season with a different challenge: expectation. Opposing teams adjusted. They studied his tendencies, closed his shooting lanes, and forced him into less comfortable areas of the ice. For a young scorer, that moment—when the league pushes back—often defines what comes next.
Guenther embraced it.
During preseason media availability, he spoke candidly about the need to evolve his offensive game. It wasn’t enough to rely on perimeter shooting or wait for opportunities to open up. Instead, he focused on playing through traffic, holding onto pucks in tight spaces, and generating offense from the hard areas near the crease.
That commitment has clearly paid off.
Rather than becoming predictable, Guenther has diversified his scoring profile. He’s found ways to produce off the rush, in net-front scrambles, and through extended offensive-zone possessions. The result is a more complete offensive threat—one that defenses can no longer key in on so easily.
“I wanted to get forty,” Guenther said earlier this season. It wasn’t a vague aspiration; it was a concrete benchmark. For a player who has always identified as a goal scorer, reaching that number carried personal meaning. Now that he’s there, it represents both validation and a stepping stone.
Head coach André Tourigny has been quick to highlight what’s happening beyond the scoresheet. For Tourigny, Guenther’s rise is just as much about professionalism as it is about talent.
There’s a clear distinction, he’s noted, between players who can survive in the NHL and those who truly excel. Guenther is beginning to separate himself by embracing the daily habits required at the highest level—his preparation, conditioning, and attention to detail away from the rink all feeding into his on-ice success.
That maturation hasn’t gone unnoticed in the locker room either. Teammate Sean Durzi pointed to the evolution in Guenther’s already elite shot, noting that even a strength of his game continues to improve.
At just 23 years old, Guenther’s 40-goal season feels less like a peak and more like an introduction. He’s already producing alongside some of the league’s most dangerous scorers, including Steven Stamkos, Alex DeBrincat, Matt Boldy, and Nikita Kucherov—and doing so at an age where many players are still finding their footing.
If this season has shown anything, it’s that Guenther is far from one-dimensional. He’s a scorer who has learned to adapt, a young player who has embraced the grind of becoming a complete professional, and a cornerstone talent for a Utah team still defining its identity.
Forty goals may have been the target. The way he got there suggests it won’t be the last time he reaches it.



