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Troy Terry needs hip surgery, as Ducks release postseason injury report

Yahoo Sports

Terry missed 21 games in the regular season with an "upper-body injury" but played in all 12 playoff games, despite missing every practice and morning skate for maintenance.

Anaheim Ducks right wing Troy Terry (19) during an NHL hockey game against the Nashville Predators, Tuesday April 7, 2026 in Anaheim, Calif. ANAHEIM, Calif. – A hallmark of any Stanley Cup Playoff run is the list of injuries announced at its conclusion, as fans learn what their teams played through.

Hockey players get labelled as “warriors,” but they also get prescribed a robust offseason healing regimen. After their first playoff appearance in eight seasons came to a close in a six-game second-round defeat to Vegas last week, the Anaheim Ducks finally announced their injury list on Thursday, and while most injuries were handled, the Ducks’ most-tenured player will now have to reckon with a major lingering ailment. Troy Terry was diagnosed with a chronic hip impingement, and the 28-year-old will undergo hip surgery this offseason.

The date of the surgery and the resulting time off have not been determined yet, but The Sporting Tribune was told Terry will likely miss the start of next season. Since January, Terry had been battling what was described at the time as an “upper-body injury,” which caused the nine-year veteran to miss 21 games in two different stints on injured reserve. Terry still played in all 12 of the Ducks playoff games after being allowed “maintenance days” to skip practices and morning skates and receive treatment to be fit enough to play.

Terry scored three goals with eight assists for 11 points in those 12 playoff games. “I give a lot of credit to our medical staff and doctors,” Terry said at exit interviews last week. “Everyone’s dealing with stuff this time of year.

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