SAN JOSE — San Jose Sharks center Ty Dellandrea, out for nearly three months with a lower-body injury, is now considered day-to-day, perhaps opening the possibility that he could be available to play at some point during the team’s long homestand.

Dellandrea was injured during the Sharks’ home game against the Columbus Blue Jackets on Jan. 6. Dellandrea had been considered week-to-week, but has now skated with the group for several days without any restrictions.

Including the Sharks’ home date against the St. Louis Blues on Monday, Dellandrea has missed the last 30 games with the injury.

Before his injury, Dellandrea was the Sharks third line center, a role that has since been assumed by rookie Michael Misa. Dellandrea had been one of the Sharks’ faceoff leaders and top penalty killers, and what role he would play upon his return is unclear.

Dellandrea, recently signed to a two-year contract extension, had 11 points in 42 games this season before his injury. Misa had 16 points in 34 games this season before Monday.

Starting with Wednesday’s home game against the Anaheim Ducks, the Sharks play 10 times in 16 days, including games on back-to-back days three times.

The homestand, which will go a long way in determining whether the Sharks make the playoffs, continues with games against the Toronto Maple Leafs on Thursday, the Nashville Predators on Saturday, the Chicago Blackhawks next Monday, and the Edmonton Oilers on April 8.

The Sharks entered Monday in 12th place in the Western Conference with 73 points, four points back of the Predators for the second wild card spot.

ASKAROV UPDATE

Sharks goalie Yaroslav Askarov, who sustained an upper-body injury in the second period of last Thursday’s game in St. Louis, will start Monday’s home game against the Blues. Askarov was unavailable for the Sharks’ game in Columbus on Sunday, leading the Sharks to recall Laurent Brossoit from the Barracuda. Brossoit was loaned back to the Sharks’ AHL affiliate on Monday afternoon.

WARSOFSKY ON TORTORELLA

Warsofsky said he was surprised to see the Vegas Golden Knights fire Bruce Cassidy as their coach on Sunday night and replace him with John Tortorella.

Cassidy helped guide the Golden Knights to the Stanley Cup in 2023, but the team has underachieved this season and entered Monday in third place in the Pacific Division with a 32-26-16 record, including a 5-10-2 mark since the Olympic break.

Cassidy was the club’s longest-tenured coach, with a record of 178-99-43 over four seasons. Tortorella coached the Tampa Bay Lightning to the Cup in 2004 and has a career record of 770-648-37.

“It’s a great game, it’s a (crappy) business. So, I feel for (Cassidy),” said Warsofsky, whose younger brother, David, played for Cassidy in the AHL in Providence from 2010 to 2014.

“A really good coach, Stanley Cup winner, did a lot for (the Boston Bruins). Obviously, knowing Torts, I’m sure he’s excited. He might have ridden a horse out there. He’ll do a great job. But, you feel for the other side of it as well, more than anything, because I think (Cassidy) is a fabulous coach.”

Warsofsky first met Tortorella in 2022, as Warsofsky’s time as the head coach of the AHL’s Chicago Wolves was ending. The two then had a more in-depth chat a few weeks later about an opening on Tortorella’s staff in Philadelphia, and life and family, at the NHL Draft in Montreal, roughly a month before Warsofsky officially joined the Sharks as an assistant coach on David Quinn’s staff.

The Sharks and Golden Knights do not play each other again this regular season. San Jose had 11 games left before Monday, and Vegas had eight.

“I know (Tortorella) is probably excited about this opportunity,” Warsofsky said.

REAVES UPDATE

Winger Ryan Reaves, considered week-to-week with an unspecified hand injury, watched the Sharks’ morning skate from the team’s bench on Monday. Several Sharks players have credited Reaves for his leadership role on the team this season.

“He wanted to come on the bench and be part of it, so that’s good,” Warsofsky said of Reaves. “He’s going to be around.”

Reaves injured his left hand in a fight with Philadelphia’s Garrett Wilson on March 21. Warsofsky said it was too soon to say whether Reaves will be available to play again before the regular season ends on April 16 in Winnipeg, Reaves’ hometown.