Major NHL 19 Ratings Update Now Available

NHL 19 Ratings Refresh

With the NHL All-Star break come and gone, EA Sports is doing a major player rating refresh in NHL 19. Unlike Madden, which changes player ratings weekly, NHL 19 was waiting for a break in the action to take a look at where a player’s original rating was and where it should be.

NHL 19 Ratings Update

The ratings refresh won’t affect every player in the game, but it will effect every mode outside of Hockey Ultimate Team. In the update, 80 plus skaters and 16 goalies saw a rating increase while 70 plus skaters and 10 goalies saw a rating decrease.

You can view the full list of rating changes here.

EA has highlighted the big changes like Calgary Flames defenseman and potential Norris Trophy candidate Mark Giordano going from an 86 to an 88 or Toronto Maple Leafs winger William Nylander going from an 85 down to an 84.

The largest jump was Anaheim’s, Max Jones, getting a +5 rating increase from 67 to 72 and Calgary’s, Oliver Kylington, jumping from a 70 to a 75 (+5).

The roster should download immediately upon booting up the game, but if it does not you can download it by:

  1. Go to “Roster” in the NHL 19 main menu.
  2. Select “Active Rosters” in the roster section.
  3. Select the most recent update under EA Sports NHL Official Rosters while categorizing by date and time.

A Little Too Late?

While the rating refresh is a nice touch to NHL 19, it doesn’t change the fact that team and player ratings in NHL 19 were a mess when the game launched.

“The biggest issue with NHL 19 is that there isn’t a larger disparity with ratings. Every team is rated relatively close to one another. If I asked you to give a rating to the Arizona Coyotes and Tampa Bay Lightning, I would guess that your Tampa rating is in the 90s and Arizona’s rating is in the high-70s to low-80s. Instead, Arizona is rated 91 while Tampa is rated 93. Not much of a difference when you look at two vastly different rosters.”

The hope is that with NHL 20, the EA Sports team will take a serious look at where they have players and teams rated that accurately reflects the NHL landscape. Not every team is going to be a 90 plus rated team. EA should look to reflect that if they’re trying to create a hockey sim experience.


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