But he was not at the American Airlines Center in time for practice, so a local construction company owner by the name of Casey Sherwood was the lone goalie at the team's morning skate.
Tarasov should be in Dallas by game time and, while head coach Brad Larsen said no official decision has been made, seems likely be in net for the Jackets against Dallas. Merzlikins, meanwhile, hopes to be well enough to serve as the backup, while Korpisalo has been deemed unavailable for
the 8:30 p.m. contest against the Stars
.
Should it be Tarasov between the pipes, the Blue Jackets will have to roll with the punches as the 22-year-old Russian makes his NHL debut.
"Every day it's a different thing," Larsen said. "You're out for a walk and get a few calls and the whole dynamic changes. That's what it is. If you read the papers, teams are going through it every day. That's what you deal with, and there's opportunity for other guys when you get in."
While Tarasov is yet to play in an NHL game, he's been the team's top goaltending prospect for a while. Drafted in the third round of the 2017 draft, he spent a year in Finland as a starter with Assat then returned to his home country a year ago, posting a 11-3-2 record, 2.07 GAA and .925 save percentage with Salavat Yulaev Ufa of the KHL.
He made his North American debut with six games in Cleveland a year ago, and has started nine contests with the Monsters this season. In that time, he's 5-2-2 with a 2.96 GAA and .897 save percentage. After a bit of a rough start he's been better of late, giving just one goal in three of his last four starts and posting a .926 save percentage in that span.
"He's a good goalie," Larsen said. "We've been high on him for a while and watched him and got to see him. He's done a good job down there in Cleveland. We're comfortable with him coming in if he has to play tonight. I'm sure he'll be excited if he does."
Perhaps it could be just the thing the Jackets need to break a two-game losing streak. The team has been beset by defensive breakdowns in recent games but could have a youngster to rally around in net against the red-hot Stars.
"Obviously we've had a little bit of a rough patch for our team," defenseman Zach Werenski said. "I don't think it matters who plays tonight. No matter what the situation is, it's just about playing as a team and keeping things simple."