In a jaw-dropping twist that has shaken the NHL to its core, Cale Makar of the Colorado Avalanche has officially been crowned the greatest defenseman of all time. The shocking mid-August 2025 announcement from NHL Network has sent fans, analysts, and even former legends into an uproar — and for good reason.

Fresh off a record-breaking 2024–25 season, Makar delivered numbers that defy belief: 30 goals, 62 assists, and 92 points in 80 games, placing him not only atop all defensemen but among the NHL’s top 10 scorers overall. For a blueliner, this isn’t just rare — it’s historic.
His trophy case is filling faster than anyone imagined. At just 26, Makar captured his second Norris Trophy, joining the likes of Bobby Orr and Paul Coffey as one of the few to dominate so young. His 39 power-play points led all defensemen, while a +35 rating proved he’s as deadly in his own zone as he is in the offensive end.
Analysts say Makar is redefining the position itself — a hybrid of elegance, speed, and pure dominance. His career average of 1.19 points per game over 344 NHL appearances puts him in territory once thought untouchable. “He’s not just a defenseman,” one commentator declared, “he’s hockey’s evolution in real time.”
Fans are electrified, rivals are terrified, and the upcoming 2025–26 season is already being framed as the “Makar Era.” For Colorado, this is more than a superstar — it’s a dynasty cornerstone. For hockey history, it’s the rewriting of what it means to be great.
The question now isn’t whether Cale Makar is the greatest defenseman ever. The question is: how far can he go before he’s remembered as one of the greatest players in NHL history, period?