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Shane Pinto’s Extension Could Reach More Than $7MM AAV

September 24, 2025 at 8:30 am CDT | by Brennan McClain 4 Comments

Throughout the summer months, there’s been mild speculation regarding a contract extension between the Ottawa Senators and forward Shane Pinto. To this point, General Manager Steve Staios and Pinto have gone as far as to say that both sides have had positive conversations, though nothing has materialized yet. Still, if an extension is agreed upon throughout the 2025-26 season, many could be surprised by the price.

In a recent segment on TSN 1200 Ottawa, insider Frankie Corrado suggested that Pinto’s price tag begins at $7MM per season and may increase from there. That undoubtedly indicates that the two sides are prioritizing a long-term commitment, although it’s well above projections. According to AFP Analytics, Pinto is expected to command a $5.9MM salary on a long-term deal and $4.5MM if they pivot toward a bridge deal.

The minimum salary of $7MM, as Corrado suggests, would nearly double Pinto’s current salary of $3.75MM and would make Pinto the fourth-highest paid forward on the team. This may come as a surprise, considering Pinto has yet to register more than 40 points in a given season, though this could become the new norm as the upper ceiling of the salary cap increases.

Before the start of the 2023-24 season, when Pinto first signed his two-year, $7.5MM contract with the Senators, his cap hit represented 4.26% of Ottawa’s salary cap availability. Assuming Pinto signs a long-term extension at $7MM per season, his cap hit would only represent 6.16% of the Senators’ available cap total by the second year of the deal, and continue to decrease from there.

Still, it’s an objectively high dollar amount for a player whose earning power will hinge greatly on his performance this season. Outside of missing half of the 2023-24 campaign for violating the NHL’s Sports Wagering rules, Pinto has been a relatively productive secondary scorer for Ottawa, registering 50 goals and 99 points in his last 193 contests. In his lone playoff run with the Senators last season, he recorded one goal and two points in six games, averaging 19:53 of ice time.

Pinto possesses a defensive quality in his game that is often overlooked because of his goal-scoring ability. Throughout the past two years, he’s achieved a success rate in the faceoff dot higher than 50.0% in more than 1,300 draws, and an on-ice save percentage at even strength higher than 91.0%.

Regardless, although he’s eligible for arbitration next summer, Pinto isn’t eligible for unrestricted free agency until after the 2027-28 season, giving him and the Senators plenty of time to work something out. Still, given that it’s the last year a team can sign a rostered player to an eight-year extension, time is running out for Ottawa to potentially retain Pinto through his age-33 season, the prime years of his career.

Newsstand| Ottawa Senators Shane Pinto

4 comments

Snapshots: Connor Extension, Knoblauch, Huska, Leskovar

September 23, 2025 at 8:00 pm CDT | by Ethan Hetu Leave a Comment

With so many headlines devoted to the looming unrestricted free agency of Minnesota Wild superstar Kirill Kaprizov, it can be easy to forget that another one of the game’s most lethal scoring wingers is also set to hit free agency next summer: Kyle Connor. Connor’s $7.14MM AAV deal expires at the end of the season, and Winnipeg Jets owner Mark Chipman commented on the player’s contract status in an interview with RG Media’s James Murphy. While he acknowledged that he’s not directly involved in the negotiations, Chipman said that he does not envision Connor leaving Winnipeg. He added that he expects a contract to be agreed upon “sooner rather than later.”

AFP Analytics currently projects Connor’s next deal to be worth nearly $12MM annually, which would make him the highest-paid player in Winnipeg. Given how well he’s played thus far in his NHL career, it’d be hard to argue Connor isn’t worth $12MM annually (or more), especially since reports indicate Kaprizov could make as much as $16MM AAV on his next contract, if not more. Kaprizov is a superior player to Connor, of course, but Connor isn’t extraordinarily far behind. Connor led the Jets in scoring with 97 points last season, and he added 17 points in just 13 playoff games. He’s the offensive engine behind one of the league’s top regular-season juggernauts, and it’s crucial for the Jets’ competitive hopes that they find a way to retain his services beyond 2025-26.

Some other notes from around the NHL:

  • Insider Darren Dreger reported on TSN’s Insider Trading segment that Edmonton Oilers head coach Kris Knoblauch and Calgary Flames head coach Ryan Huska are both entering the final season of their current contracts, and while neither coach has a firm extension offer on the table, both coaches are names to watch entering 2025-26. Knoblauch has been nothing but a success in Edmonton, and although a Stanley Cup championship remains elusive, he’s still widely respected for guiding the team to back-to-back Western Conference titles. Huska hasn’t had the same level of success as Knoblauch, though he also doesn’t get to dress Connor McDavid and Leon Draisaitl in his lineup on a nightly basis. While the third-year coach didn’t reach the playoffs in either of his first two seasons on the job, he oversaw a stellar rookie campaign from netminder Dustin Wolf and improved the team’s performance in 2024-25 compared to where it was in 2023-24.
  • The Athletic’s Michael Russo and Joe Smith reported today that Minnesota Wild defenseman Stevie Leskovar injured his wrist during a training camp scrimmage, and as a result the start to his season with the team’s AHL affiliate, the Iowa Wild, will be delayed as he recovers. The 21-year-old 2024 sixth-round pick signed an entry-level contract in March of this year and is set to begin his first professional campaign whenever he’s healthy once again. The 6’3, 216-pound blueliner was an alternate captain for the OHL’s Brampton Steelheads last season and got a taste of pro action late in the year, playing in Iowa’s April 19th loss to the Grand Rapids Griffins.

Calgary Flames| Edmonton Oilers| Minnesota Wild| Snapshots| Winnipeg Jets Kris Knoblauch| Kyle Connor| Ryan Huska| Stevie Leskovar

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Injury Notes: Blackwood, Jensen, Garland, Aitcheson

September 23, 2025 at 7:00 pm CDT | by Ethan Hetu 1 Comment

Colorado Avalanche head coach Jared Bednar told reporters today, including The Denver Gazette’s Evan Rawal, that starting goalie Mackenzie Blackwood is currently progressing in his recovery from a lower-body injury but is questionable to play in the team’s season opener October 7th in Los Angeles. Blackwood is firmly entrenched as the Avalanche starter, a status the team confirmed last December when they signed him to a five-year, $5.25MM contract extension.

Blackwood played well to begin his time in Colorado, posting a .913 save percentage in 37 games, and an .892 in a tough seven-game first-round series loss to the Dallas Stars. Should Blackwood’s injury linger into the regular season, veteran Scott Wedgewood would slot in as the Avalanche’s starting goalie. Interestingly, if Blackwood misses the game in Los Angeles, this would become the second consecutive season in which Wedgewood has gotten the chance to start a season-opener due to injury – he played in the Nashville Predators’ 2024-25 opener due to an injury to starter Juuse Saros. Wedgewood, who is a pending UFA with a $1.5MM cap hit, posted a .917 save percentage in 19 games for the Avalanche after a mid-season trade.

Other injury updates from across the NHL:

  • TSN’s Claire Hanna relayed word from Ottawa Senators defenseman Nick Jensen today that Jensen is currently without a firm return timeline regarding his hip injury. Jensen said he feels he’d probably be able to handle playing if the season started tomorrow, but since he hasn’t tested himself in a game-like situation this preseason, it’s difficult to tell for sure. Jensen added that when it comes to his recovery, he’s looking to balance getting back as soon as possible with being able to “hit the ground running.” Jensen has a spot on the Senators’ second defensive pairing waiting for him whenever he is healthy, as the 35-year-old pending UFA is set to resume his pairing with Thomas Chabot.
  • Vancouver Canucks head coach Adam Foote told the media today (including Rink Wide Vancouver’s Jeff Paterson) that winger Conor Garland will not play in the club’s preseason game tomorrow as he manages a minor injury. Foote clarified that the absence is more about maintaining Garland’s health in advance of the regular season than it is about recovery from anything serious, so it does not appear this preseason absence will in any way impact Garland’s readiness for the team’s season opener. The tenacious Garland is an integral middle-six piece for the Canucks and is coming off of a 19-goal, 50-point season.
  • New York Islanders 2025 first-round pick Kashawn Aitcheson had a bit of an injury scare in the club’s first preseason game, but it appears he’s now fully healthy. Aitcheson dressed for the team’s preseason game tonight against the New Jersey Devils, meaning he has another chance to impress Islanders brass before he is, in all likelihood, reassigned to his junior team. The third of the Islanders’ trio of 2025 first-rounders, Aitcheson is a rangy two-way blueliner who was recently ranked as the club’s No. 4 prospect by EliteProspects.

Colorado Avalanche| Injury| New York Islanders| Ottawa Senators| Vancouver Canucks Conor Garland| Kashawn Aitcheson| MacKenzie Blackwood| Nick Jensen

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Rasmus Andersson, Calgary Flames Could Revisit Extension Talks

September 23, 2025 at 5:45 pm CDT | by Ethan Hetu 6 Comments

Calgary Flames defenseman Rasmus Andersson was one of the most talked-about players this past summer due to the persistent trade rumors surrounding him. Andersson was nearly dealt to the Vegas Golden Knights before the trade fell through, and in August Andersson’s teammates openly acknowledged that he was a near-certainty to be traded.

But today, Pierre LeBrun reported on TSN’s Insider Trading that it is not a guarantee that the Flames trade Andersson, rather than sign the pending UFA to a contract extension.

According to LeBrun, neither the Flames nor Andersson “want to totally close the door on maybe having extension talks again at some point this year.” LeBrun’s reporting indicates that it’s the Flames’ preference to see how the early part of their 2025-26 season unfolds before revisiting contract talks. For Andersson’s part, LeBrun reported that the player might be swayed to re-sign in Calgary “if there was an eight-year offer on the table,” but also added that he does not believe the Flames are “ready to go there” at this stage.

LeBrun concluded by saying that a trade remains the most likely outcome regardless of this new development.

This news changes the tone surrounding Andersson in a notable way, as it had previously appeared as though he was as close to a lock to be traded as one can get in the NHL.

But with a high-stakes unrestricted free agency looming, one that represents what is likely to be Andersson’s best chance at a long-term, extremely lucrative contract, it appears Andersson and his camp (led by 4Sports Hockey’s Claude Lemieux) don’t want to completely close the door on a potential bidder for Andersson’s services.

The soon-to-be-29-year-old Swedish blueliner has a very real chance at being the top defenseman available in next summer’s UFA market. Andersson is a true top-pairing right-handed defenseman, something that would make him a rare, highly sought-after player on a free agent market. Andersson averaged 24 minutes of ice time per night in 2024-25, including the most penalty-kill ice time of any Flames player.

Andersson is a highly competitive blueliner who plays with an edge, and he matches his ability to weather difficult defensive assignments with a solid level of offensive ability. He scored a career-high 50 points in 2021-22 and while his scoring numbers have steadily climbed down since that season (49 points in 2022-23, 39 in 2023-24, and 31 in 2024-25) he remains an all-around force and one of head coach Ryan Huska’s most trusted contributors.

The Flames’ alternate captain is the kind of player nearly every NHL team would like to add to its lineup, though his future free agent case is not without its risks. Andersson is set to play out the vast majority of his next contract in his 30s, and while he’s still a capable offensive contributor, his steady decline in production in recent years could give some teams pause. It could be fair to question whether the team that signs Andersson, due to the multiple seasons of 40-plus points on his resume, will ultimately end up paying for a level of production Andersson is no longer able to provide.

Accordingly, despite major factors set to act in Andersson’s favor next summer (such as the rarity of top-pairing right-handed defensemen on the open market) it would be understandable for Andersson to give serious thought to signing an eight-year extension in Calgary during the season should the club offer one.

At this stage, though, such speculation remains premature. As LeBrun reported, even with the revival of the slight prospect that Andersson re-signs in Calgary, the overwhelmingly likely scenario is that he is eventually traded. But until that happens, it appears Flames fans will be able to hold onto hope that their team’s longest-tenured defenseman may yet stay in Calgary.

Photos courtesy of Sergei Belski-USA TODAY Sports

Calgary Flames Rasmus Andersson

6 comments

Devils, Luke Hughes “Still A Ways Apart” In Contract Talks

September 23, 2025 at 5:10 pm CDT | by Ethan Hetu 7 Comments

As the New Jersey Devils continue their training camp and play through their slate of preseason games, they do so without a notable name: Luke Hughes. Hughes remains a restricted free agent without a contract for this upcoming season, and today The Athletic’s Pierre LeBrun reported that Hughes’ camp and the Devils remain “a ways apart” in their contract talks. LeBrun added that the two sides talked Monday and negotiations remain “amicable.” But while the two sides have agreed to pursue a long-term contract extension, the parties have not been able to agree on an AAV for that potential deal.

Devils GM Tom Fitzgerald had previously expressed optimism that the looming presence of the start of training camp would help move talks along and eventually lead to a signed contract, but that did not end up happening. It does appear, based on LeBrun’s reporting, that there has been some progress at least. Previous reports indicated that the Devils were looking to sign Hughes to a contract of either a two or eight-year term, whereas Hughes had his sights set on a five-year term that would walk him right to unrestricted free agent status. But according to LeBrun, the term of the contract is no longer the sticking point of the negotiation – it’s the value of the deal.

Hughes, 22, has had an exceptional start to his NHL career with two consecutive seasons of exemplary point production for a young defenseman. The 2021 fourth-overall pick had a 47-point rookie season, after which he finished third in Calder Trophy voting and with a spot on the league’s All-Rookie team. Hughes scored 44 points in 71 games in his second year in the NHL, and looks every bit like a future star offensive defenseman.

His defensive contributions are not as highly regarded, but he did lead all Devils defensemen in time-on-ice per game as a rookie (21:28) indicating coaches do have some genuine level of trust in his play, even if he’s not a true shutdown force.

The combination of Hughes’ young age and his already very strong NHL resume naturally means he’s likely looking to secure a significant financial commitment on any long-term deal, especially given how the salary cap is set to rise in coming seasons.

While there has been no firm reporting that this is the case, it’s possible Hughes and his representation (Pat Brisson of CAA) are approaching these deals with a heightened level of caution because of the long-term deal Luke’s brother Jack Hughes signed with New Jersey after his own. In late 2021, Hughes signed an eight-year deal carrying an $8MM AAV, and for much of that contract Hughes’ on-ice value has certainly exceeded that cap hit. It would be entirely fair to speculate that the immense surplus value the Devils continue to receive from Jack Hughes’ contract has led the Hughes camp to more aggressively price future years on any Luke Hughes extension.

AFP Analytics currently projects Hughes’ worth on an eight-year contract extension to be $8.386MM AAV. Such a contract would make Hughes the second-highest-paid Devils defenseman behind Dougie Hamilton, and it’s worth noting that per PuckPedia’s tracking, the Devils do not at this stage project to have the cap space to fit in such a cap hit.

In any case, this is not an overly encouraging development for the Devils. While it’s certainly a positive that the disagreement appears to be narrowed down to contract value, rather than both term and value, it remains less than ideal for Hughes to be missing so much of the team’s training camp. The Devils are set to compete in what is likely to be a fiercely contested Metropolitan Division, and it’s possible this delay impedes Hughes’ ability to get off to a fast start – and that’s assuming he ends up signing a deal in the preseason.

If he misses any regular-season time, the overall impact of Hughes’ absence would obviously be all the more pronounced. While Hamilton’s presence means the Devils don’t need to rely on Hughes exclusively to bring offensive punch to their blueline, the Devils are most definitely a weaker team without him.

While there’s no indication at this point that this contract standoff is set to last until then, it is important to note that an RFA must sign a contract by 5pm EST on December 1st, 2025 in order to be eligible to compete in the 2025-26 NHL season.

It remains extremely unlikely that this situation extends that far, though. Hughes is one of the Devils’ most important players, he’s the brother of the face of their franchise, and he’s one of the NHL’s top young blueliners. With stakes this high, it’s difficult to imagine both sides not coming to some sort of agreement before Hughes misses too much game action.

Photos courtesy of Jerome Miron-Imagn Images

New Jersey Devils Luke Hughes

7 comments

Alex Pietrangelo Remains Unlikely To Play In 2025-26

September 23, 2025 at 5:05 pm CDT | by Ethan Hetu 10 Comments

09/24/2025: TSN’s Darren Dreger spoke on Pietrangelo’s comments on the network’s Insider Trading segment Tuesday and stated that the blueliner’s comments were met with “too much optimism.” Dreger said that those close to Pietrangelo noted how much effort it took for Pietrangelo to simply be able to play in games last season, a sentiment that echoes reporting surrounding fellow defenseman Shea Weber’s retirement from several years ago, which was also brought on by severe injury trouble.

Dreger said that Pietrangelo’s current recovery process is entirely focused on returning him to as much health as possible “lifestyle-wise” and that the defenseman definitely “is not playing this year.” So despite how things may have appeared based on Pietrangelo’s comments and the many reports that emerged yesterday, it does not seem at this stage that a return to the ice in 2025-26 is at all realistic.

09/23/2025: In June, the Vegas Golden Knights announced that star defenseman Alex Pietrangelo was dealing with significant injury issues, to the point that Pietrangelo himself stated that the “likelihood is low that my body will recover to the standard required to play” hockey again. But today, ESPN’s Greg Wyshynski reported that Pietrangelo elected not to undergo surgery to repair his lingering hip issue and is instead continuing a rehab program that has thus far “given him positive results.”

Wyshynski added that despite his earlier statement, Pietrangelo would not rule out potentially returning to play. Pietrangelo said “Nothing is really concrete. I’m just going to continue to take it day-by-day and see where it goes,” which, while far from a confirmation that he’s looking to return to the ice, sounds considerably different from earlier this summer, when he appeared to rule out a return to play.

This past summer, it appeared Pietrangelo’s situation would be similar to that of recently-traded netminder Carey Price, whose knee issues forced a premature end to his playing career. Pietrangelo would not be the first NHL star to prioritize his long-term health over pushing for a return to the game, but today’s news indicates that he might be headed in a different direction than Price.

Should Pietrangelo ultimately recover enough to return to NHL action, it would be a major boost to the Golden Knights’ Stanley Cup hopes. Although there’s no telling at this stage to what extent Pietrangelo’s playing abilities have been sapped by the injury, his return would nonetheless add a blueliner with an elite résumé back into the Vegas lineup. The 35-year-old has been a number-one defenseman on two Stanley Cup-winning teams, and he has finished a season top-five in Norris Trophy voting three times.

Pietrangelo has nearly 1,100 games of regular-season experience and has skated in 149 postseason contests. Even if his abilities are diminished compared to where they were when he was fully healthy, he’d still most likely be a highly valuable NHL contributor.

Financially, the picture becomes a little cloudier should Pietrangelo return. His $8.8MM cap hit would not, at this moment, fit into the team’s financial structure in a way that would allow them to remain cap compliant. And with the NHL now enforcing the salary cap in the postseason, the pathway for making a potential Pietrangelo return work on the team’s balance sheet is now all the more complex.

Today’s news isn’t Pietrangelo announcing a return to play, of course, it’s just him changing his tune slightly to leave the door open for a potential return. Accordingly, since his hypothetical return is far from imminent, at the very least Vegas’ hockey operations department will have ample time to figure out how to make it all fit.

But stepping away from the finer details of a potential Pietrangelo return, today’s news is undoubtedly a positive one for not just the Golden Knights, but hockey in general. Pietrangelo has been one of the most consistent, widely-respected figures of the game’s current era. To see him hang up his skates prematurely due to injury would be an unfortunate way to end the career of one of this generation’s finest defensemen.

Photos courtesy of Gary A. Vasquez – Imagn Images

Vegas Golden Knights Alex Pietrangelo

10 comments

West Injury Updates: White, Klingberg, Buium

September 23, 2025 at 4:00 pm CDT | by Ethan Hetu Leave a Comment

San Jose Sharks forward Colin White is dealing with an upper-body injury that will sideline him on a week-to-week recovery timeline, reports Max Miller of Sharks Hockey Digest. It’s a tough blow for the 28-year-old center as he’ll miss an opportunity to compete in training camp and preseason games that could help him push for an NHL role. The 28-year-old 2015 first-round pick was a full-time NHLer from 2018-19, when he scored 41 points for the Ottawa Senators, through 2022-23. But persistent injury issues (White missed most of 2021-22 due to shoulder surgery) along with declining performance led to White losing his status as a full-time NHL player.

White played in 24 AHL games in 2023-24 and spent most of 2024-25 as an AHL player. He scored 25 points for the San Jose Barracuda and got into a total of three NHL games. Despite the fact that he played in his fewest NHL games of any season in the past half-decade as a Shark, White elected to re-sign in San Jose on a one-year, two-way contract carrying a $775K NHL salary, $425K AHL salary, and $475K guarantee. Now sidelined by this upper-body injury, White won’t be able to compete for a spot on the Sharks’ opening-night roster.

Some other injury updates from the Western Conference:

  • Sharks head coach Ryan Warsofsky also issued an update on a second injured player, veteran blueliner John Klingberg. Klingberg is also dealing with an upper-body injury and is out on a day-to-day timeline. Warsofsky added that Klingberg’s injury isn’t related to the hip issues that cost Klingberg significant time over the last two years. After signing with the Edmonton Oilers and helping them reach the Stanley Cup Final, Klingberg signed a one-year, $4MM contract in San Jose with the expectation that he’d play in a top-four role. This injury appears to be a slight setback for him, but thankfully not one likely to impact his status for the start of the season.
  • There had been some concern among fans in the Twin Cities when Minnesota Wild rookie Zeev Buium, considered by many to be a leading Calder Trophy contender, missed a third consecutive day of training camp due to injury. But Buium was a full participant at practice today and Wild coach John Hynes told reporters (including The Athletic’s Joe Smith) that Buium is progressing well and is likely to dress for the club’s preseason game on Thursday. That Buium appears to have avoided any major injury trouble is great news for the Wild, who are likely to rely on Buium quite a bit in his rookie campaign. The 19-year-old former University of Denver star is an elite puck distributor and could very well start the season quarterbacking a power play unit ahead of one of Brock Faber or Jared Spurgeon.

Injury| Minnesota Wild| San Jose Sharks Colin White| John Klingberg| Zeev Buium

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2025 NHL Training Camp Rosters

September 23, 2025 at 2:38 pm CDT | by Josh Erickson 8 Comments

Originally published Sep. 4

The NHL’s 32 clubs are beginning their full training camps ahead of the 2025-26 regular season. They’ve all announced their full camp rosters – a list that most will need to chop in half in order to get to the 23-player roster limit by the time opening night rolls around on Oct. 7.

Players who are attending via PTOs and those who aren’t participating due to injury are listed in the total counts. This page will be updated as cuts are made – a new feature here at PHR for the 2025-26 season. This article will be continually updated as more announcements come in.


Anaheim Ducks

Roster size: 46/23
Last updated Sep. 20, 6:55 p.m.

Forwards (26): Justin Bailey, Leo Carlsson, Judd Caulfield, Sam Colangelo, Nathan Gaucher, Cutter Gauthier, Mikael Granlund,  Jansen Harkins, Ross Johnston, Alex Killorn, Chris Kreider,  Mason McTavish, Nico Myatovic, Jan Mysak, Nikita Nesterenko, Sasha Pastujov, Matthew Phillips, Coulson Pitre, Ryan Poehling, Beckett Sennecke, Yegor Sidorov, Ryan Strome, Troy Terry,  Frank Vatrano, Tim Washe, Jaxsen Wiebe

Defenseman (14): Jeremie Biakabutuka, Nikolas Brouillard, Radko Gudas, Drew Helleson, Tyson Hinds, Jackson LaCombe, Tristan Luneau, Pavel Mintyukov, Ian Moore, Konnor Smith, Stian Solberg, Jacob Trouba, Noah Warren, Olen Zellweger

Goaltenders (6): Vyacheslav Buteyets, Calle Clang, Lukas Dostal, Ville Husso, Petr Mrazek, Tomas Suchanek

Boston Bruins

Roster size: 50/23
Last updated Sep. 15, 9:08 a.m.

Forwards (28): Joey Abate, Viktor Arvidsson, Dalton Bancroft, John Beecher, Matej Blumel, Patrick Brown, Riley Duran, Michael Eyssimont, John Farinacci, Morgan Geekie, Brett Harrison, Tanner Jeannot, Mark Kastelic, Marat Khusnutdinov, Sean Kuraly, Elias Lindholm, Dans Locmelis, Fabian Lysell, Georgii Merkulov, Fraser Minten, Casey Mittelstadt, David Pastrnak, Matthew Poitras, Jake Schmaltz, Alex Steeves, Riley Tufte, Jeffrey Viel, Pavel Zacha

Defensemen (17): Jonathan Aspirot, Frederic Brunet, Michael Callahan, Jackson Edward, Colin Felix, Ty Gallagher, Jordan Harris, Loke Johansson, Henri Jokiharju, Hampus Lindholm, Mason Lohrei, Charlie McAvoy, Andrew Peeke, Victor Soderstrom, Billy Sweezey, Max Wanner, Nikita Zadorov

Goaltenders (5): Luke Cavallin, Michael DiPietro, Joonas Korpisalo, Jeremy Swayman, Simon Zajicek

Buffalo Sabres

Roster size: 58/23
Last updated Sep. 19, 8:00 a.m.

Forwards (32): Zach Benson, Matteo Costantini, Justin Danforth, Josh Doan, Joshua Dunne, Riley Fiddler-Schultz, Mason Geertsen, Jordan Greenway, Konsta Helenius, Jagger Joshua, Tyler Kopff, Tyson Kozak, Peyton Krebs, Jiri Kulich, Trevor Kuntar, Jake Leschyshyn, Beck Malenstyn, Ryan McLeod, Carson Meyer, Olivier Nadeau, Viktor Neuchev, Joshua Norris, Noah Ostlund, Jack Quinn, Isak Rosen, Redmond Savage, Graham Slaggert, Tage Thompson, Alex Tuch, Anton Wahlberg, Brendan Warren, Jason Zucker

Defensemen (19): Isaac Belliveau, Jacob Bryson, Bowen Byram, Rasmus Dahlin, Aidan Fulp, Ryan Johnson, Zachary Jones, Michael Kesselring, Vsevolod Komarov, Noah Laaouan, Noah Laberge, Zach Metsa, Radim Mrtka, Nikita Novikov, Owen Power, Jack Rathbone, Mattias Samuelsson, Conor Timmins, Peter Tischke

Goaltenders (7): Alexandar Georgiev, Ryerson Leenders, Topias Leinonen, Devon Levi, Ukko-Pekka Luukkonen, Alex Lyon, Scott Ratzlaff

Calgary Flames

Roster size: 52/23
Last updated: Sep. 23, 4:00 p.m.

Forwards (30): Mikael Backlund, Andrew Basha, Parker Bell, Clark Bishop, Lucas Ciona, Blake Coleman, Matthew Coronato, Joel Farabee, Martin Frk, Morgan Frost, Alex Gallant, Matvei Gridin, Samuel Honzek, Jonathan Huberdeau, Dryden Hunt, Nazem Kadri, Rory Kerins, Carter King, Justin Kirkland, Adam Klapka, Hunter Laing, Ryan Lomberg,  Sam Morton, Martin Pospisil, Yegor Sharangovich, David Silye, William Stromgren, Aydar Suniev, Carter Wilkie, Connor Zary

Defensemen (16): Rasmus Andersson, Kevin Bahl, Jake Bean, Hunter Brzustewicz, Nick Cicek, Artem Grushnikov, Joel Hanley, Yan Kuznetsov, Simon Mack, Daniil Miromanov, Etienne Morin, Brayden Pachal, Zayne Parekh, Jerome Poirier, Ilya Solovyov, MacKenzie Weegar

Goaltenders (6): Devin Cooley, Connor Murphy, Ivan Prosvetov, Owen Say, Arsenii Sergeev, Dustin Wolf

Carolina Hurricanes

Roster size: 48/23
Last update: Sep 17, 4:00 p.m.

Forwards (26): Sebastian Aho, Jackson Blake, Skyler Brind’Amour, William Carrier, Nikolaj Ehlers, Noel Gunler, Taylor Hall, Juha Jaaska, Mark Jankowski, Seth Jarvis, Tyson Jost, Jesperi Kotkaniemi, Kevin Labanc (PTO), Jordan Martinook, Bradly Nadeau, Justin Robidas, Eric Robinson, Ivan Ryabkin, Josiah Slavin, Givani Smith (PTO), Jordan Staal, Logan Stankoven, Ryan Suzuki, Andrei Svechnikov, Gleb Trikozov, Felix Unger Sorum

Defensemen (16): Dominik Badinka, Gavin Bayreuther, Jalen Chatfield, Domenick Fensore,  Shayne Gostisbehere, Aleksi Heimosalmi, Oliver Kylington (PTO), Charles Alexis Legault, K’Andre Miller, Bryce Montgomery, Alexander Nikishin, Joel Nystrom, Mike Reilly, Ronan Seeley, Jaccob Slavin, Sean Walker,

Goaltenders (6): Frederik Andersen, Ruslan Khazheyev, Pyotr Kochetkov, Amir Miftakhov, Cayden Primeau, Nikita QuappRead more

Chicago Blackhawks

Roster size: 53/23
Last updated Sep. 16, 11:08 a.m.

Forwards (30): Joey Anderson, Connor Bedard, Nathan Behm, Tyler Bertuzzi, Andre Burakovsky, Jackson Cates, Colton Dach, Jason Dickinson, Ryan Donato, Nick Foligno, Ryan Greene, Gavin Hayes, Parker Holmes, Sam Lafferty, Nick Lardis, Paul Ludwinski, Ilya Mikheyev, Martin Misiak, Oliver Moore, Frank Nazar, Jack Pridham, Lukas Reichel, Samuel Savoie, Brett Seney, Landon Slaggert, AJ Spellacy, Teuvo Teravainen, Aidan Thompson, Dominic Toninato, Marek Vanacker

Defensemen (17): Nolan Allan, Louis Crevier, Ashton Cumby, Ethan Del Mastro, Cavan Fitzgerald, Matt Grzelcyk, Taige Harding, Ty Henry (inj.), Wyatt Kaiser (RFA), Kevin Korchinski, Dmitry Kuzmin, Artyom Levshunov, Ryan Mast, Connor Murphy, Andrew Perrott, Sam Rinzel, Alex Vlasic

Goaltenders (6): Stanislav Berezhnoy, Laurent Brossoit (inj.), Drew Commesso, Spencer Knight, Arvid Söderblom, Mitchell Weeks

Colorado Avalanche

Roster Size: 51/23
Last Updated Sep. 23, 1:28 p.m.

Forwards (29): Alex Barre-Boulet, Artturi Lehkonen, Brock Nelson, Chase Bradley, Cooper Gay, Danil Gushchin, Gabriel Landeskog, Gavin Brindley, Ivan Ivan, Jack Drury, Jason Polin, Jayson Megna, Joel Kiviranta, Logan O’Connor, Mark Senden, Maros Jedlicka, Martin Necas, Matthew Stienburg, Nathan MacKinnon, Nikita Prishchepov, Parker Kelly, Ross Colton, T.J. Tynan, Taylor Makar, Tristen Nielsen, Tye Felhaber, Valeri Nichushkin, Victor Olofsson, Zakhar Bardakov

Defensemen (16): Wyatt Aamodt, Jack Ahcan, Ronnie Attard, Sean Behrens, Brent Burns, Alex Gagne, Samuel Girard, Connor Kelley, Hank Kempf, Jacob MacDonald, Cale Makar, Sam Malinski, Josh Manson, Keaton Middleton, Devon Toews, Saige Weinstein

Goaltenders (6): Mackenzie Blackwood, Kyle Keyser, Mathis Langevin, Trent Miner, Isak Posch, Scott Wedgewood

Columbus Blue Jackets

Roster Size: 52/23
Last Updated Sep. 23, 8:09 a.m.

Forwards (28): Roman Ahcan, Zach Aston-Reese, Riley Bezeau, Yegor Chinakhov, Charlie Coyle, Luca Del Bel Belluz, Jordan Dumais, Adam Fantilli, Hudson Fasching, Brendan Gaunce, Boone Jenner, Kent Johnson, Oiva Keskinen, Isac Lundestrom, James Malatesta, Kirill Marchenko, Max McCue, Hunter McKown, Sean Monahan, Ryland Mosley, Mathieu Olivier, Luca Pinelli, Mikael Pyyhtia, Cole Sillinger, Owen Sillinger, Dmitri Voronkov, Jack Williams, Miles Wood

Defensemen (19): Ole-Julian Bjorgvik-Holm, Corson Ceulemans, Jake Christiansen, Charlie Elick, Dante Fabbro, Erik Gudbranson, Daemon Hunt, Christian Jaros, Caleb MacDonald, Will MacKinnon, Luca Marelli, Denton Mateychuk, Dysin Mayo, Ivan Provorov, Guillaume Richard, Damon Severson, Brendan Smith (PTO), Stanislav Svozil, Zach Werenski

Goaltenders (5): Ivan Fedotov, Jet Greaves, Nolan Lalonde, Elvis Merzlikins, Zach Sawchenko

Dallas Stars

Roster size: 58/23
Last updated Sep. 23, 10:54 a.m.

Forwards (34): Francesco Arcuri, Oskar Back, Nathan Bastian, Jack Becker, Jamie Benn, Colin Blackwell, Mavrik Bourque, Sean Chisholm, Matt Duchene, Adam Erne, Justin Ertel, Radek Faksa, Cross Hanas, Emil Hemming, Roope Hintz, Justin Hryckowian, Arttu Hyry, Cameron Hughes, Wyatt Johnston, Kole Lind, Angus MacDonell, Ayrton Martino, Kyle McDonald, Curtis McKenzie, Kaleb Pearson, Mikko Rantanen, Jason Robertson, Tyler Seguin, Harrison Scott, Matthew Seminoff, Artem Shlaine, Sam Steel, Antonio Stranges, Chase Wheatcroft

Defensemen (18): Tommy Bergsland, Tristan Bertucci, Lian Bichsel, Kyle Capobianco, Thomas Harley, Miro Heiskanen, Aidan Hreschuk, Michael Karow, Vladislav Kolyachonok, Christian Kyrou, Esa Lindell, Kyle Looft, Nils Lundkvist, Ilya Lyubushkin, Alexander Petrovic, Connor Punnett, Trey Taylor, Gavin White

Goaltenders (6): Antoine Bibeau, Casey DeSmith, Ben Kraws, Jake Oettinger, Remi Poirier, Arno Tiefensee

Detroit Red Wings

Roster size: 51/23
Last updated: Sep. 20, 1:30 p.m.

Forwards (28): Mason Appleton, Carson Bantle, Carter Bear, Ondrej Becher, Jonatan Berggren, Michael Brandsegg-Nygard, J.T. Compher, Andrew Copp, Nate Danielson, Alex DeBrincat, Alexandre Doucet, Sheldon Dries, Emmitt Finnie, Patrick Kane, Marco Kasper, Dylan Larkin, John Leonard, Amadeus Lombardi, Carter Mazur, Michael Rasmussen, Lucas Raymond, Jakub Rychlovsky, Gabriel Seger, Dominik Shine, Elmer Soderblom, Eduards Tralmaks, James van Riemsdyk, Austin Watson

Defensemen (17): Jacob Bernard-Docker, Shai Buium, Ben Chiarot, Justin Christensen (ATO), Simon Edvinsson, Erik Gustafsson, Travis Hamonic, Justin Holl, Albert Johansson, William Lagesson, Alex Kannok Leipert, Ian Mitchell, Axel Sandin-Pellikka, Moritz Seider, Jacob Truscott, Antti Tuomisto, William Wallinder

Goaltenders (6): Sebastian Cossa, John Gibson, Carter Gylander, Rudy Guimond, Michal Postava, Cam Talbot

Edmonton Oilers

Roster size: 53/23
Last updated Sep. 20, 4:15 p.m.

Forwards (31): Connor Clattenburg, Matt Copponi, Leon Draisaitl, Trent Frederic, Seth Griffith, Jayden Grubbe, James Hamblin, Adam Henrique, Isaac Howard, Quinn Hutson, Zach Hyman, Mattias Janmark, Roby Jarventie, Max Jones, Kasperi Kapanen, Curtis Lazar, Andrew Mangiapane, Viljami Marjala, Connor McDavid, William Nicholl, Ryan Nugent-Hopkins, Matvey Petrov, Noah Philp, Rem Pitlick, Rhett Pitlick, Vasily Podkolzin, Josh Samanski, Matthew Savoie, James Stefan, Brady Stonehouse, David Tomasek

Defensemen (16): Beau Akey, Evan Bouchard, Josh Brown, Damien Carfagna, Cam Dineen, Mattias Ekholm, Ty Emberson, Brett Kulak, Atro Leppanen, Mason Millman, Darnell Nurse, Luke Prokop, Alec Regula, Troy Stecher, Riley Stillman, Jake Walman

Goaltenders (6): Nathaniel Day, Samuel Jonsson, Calvin Pickard, Stuart Skinner, Matt Tomkins, Connor Ungar

Florida Panthers

Roster size: 56/23
Last updated Sep. 23, 9:28 a.m.

Forwards (34): Corey Andonovski, Aleksander Barkov, Sam Bennett, Jesper Boqvist, Brett Chorske, Joshua Davies, Jack Devine, Mackenzie Entwistle, Nolan Foote, Jonah Gadjovich, A.J. Greer, Noah Gregor, Hunter Johannes, Luke Kunin, Anton Lundmark, Eetu Luostarinen, Anton Lundell, Brad Marchand, Ryan McAllister, Liam McLinskey, Tyler Motte, Tomas Nosek, Sam Reinhart, Evan Rodrigues, Mackie Samoskevich, Gracyn Sawchyn, Kai Schwindt, Wilmer Skoog, Hunter St. Martin, Ben Steeves, Jack Studnicka, Matthew Tkachuk, Carter Verhaeghe, Sandis Vilmanis

Defensemen (16): Marek Alscher, Uvis Balinskis, Michael Benning, Tobias Bjornfot, Trevor Carrick, Aaron Ekblad, Gustav Forsling, Ben Harpur, Mikulas Hovorka, Colton Huard, Ludvig Jansson, Seth Jones, Dmitry Kulikov, Niko Mikkola, Evan Nause, Jeff Petry

Goaltenders (6): Cooper Black, Sergei Bobrovsky, Brandon Bussi, Evan Cormier, Kirill Gerasimyuk, Daniil Tarasov

Los Angeles Kings

Roster size: 55/23
Last updated: Sep. 17, 2:47 p.m.

Forwards (31): Joel Armia, Logan Brown, Quinton Byfield,  Kenny Connors, Martin Chromiak, Phillip Danault, Jacob Doty, Kevin Fiala, Warren Foegele, Glenn Gawdin, Liam Greentree, Cole Guttman, Samuel Helenius, Jack Hughes, Kenta Isogai, Aatu Jamsen, Adrian Kempe, Anže Kopitar, Andrei Kuzmenko, Alex Laferriere, Kaleb Lawrence, Andre Lee, Jeff Malott, Trevor Moore, Corey Perry, Francesco Pinelli, Akil Thomas, Alex Turcotte, Taylor Ward, Jared Wright, Koehn Ziemmer

Defensemen (19): Mikey Anderson, Parker Berge, Samuel Bolduc, Angus Booth, Henry Brzustewicz, Kyle Burroughs, Cody Ceci, Brandt Clarke, Drew Doughty, Brian Dumoulin, Jakub Dvorak, Joel Edmundson, Joe Hicketts, Kirill Kirsanov, Jack Millar, Jacob Moverare, Tim Rego, Otto Salin, Jared Woolley

Goaltenders (5): Pheonix Copley, Anton Forsberg, Darcy Kuemper, Erik Portillo, Isaiah Saville

Minnesota Wild

Roster size: 61/23
Last updated Sep. 16, 6:00 p.m.

Forwards (34): Lirim Amidovski, Nicolas Aube-Kubel, Caedan Bankier, Adam Benak, Matt Boldy, Cameron Butler, Elliot Desnoyers, Joel Eriksson Ek, Marcus Foligno, Jean-Luc Foudy, Hunter Haight, Ryan Hartman, Riley Heidt, Vinnie Hinostroza, Marcus Johansson, Ben Jones, Kirill Kaprizov, Carter Klippenstein, Rasmus Kumpulainen, Brett Leason, Mark Liwiski, Bradley Marek, Ryan McGuire, Michael Milne, Liam Ohgren, Tyler Pitlick, Marco Rossi, Ryan Sandelin, Matthew Sop, Nico Sturm, Vladimir Tarasenko, Yakov Trenin, Danila Yurov, Mats Zuccarello

Defensemen (20): Zach Bogosian, Jonas Brodin, Zeev Buium, Brock Faber, Ben Gleason, David Jiricek, Jack Johnson, Matt Kiersted, Mike Koster, Carson Lambos, Stevie Leskovar, Kyle Masters, Jake Middleton, Wyatt Newpower, Jack Peart, David Spacek, Jared Spurgeon, Rowan Topp, Jordan Tourigny, Will Zmolek

Goaltenders (7): Filip Gustavsson, Samuel Hlavaj, Riley Mercer, Cal Petersen, William Rousseau, Jesper Wallstedt, Chase Wutzke

Montreal Canadiens

Roster size: 60/23
Last updated Sep. 16, 6:30 p.m.

Forwards (34): Josh Anderson, Vincent Arseneau, Owen Beck, Alex Belzile, Sammy Blais, Zachary Bolduc, Cole Caufield, Lucas Condotta, Kirby Dach, Laurent Dauphin, Jared Davidson, Ivan Demidov, Will Dineen, Joe Dunlap, Mark Estapa, Jake Evans, Sean Farrell, Brendan Gallagher, Egor Guriunov, Oliver Kapanen, Riley Kidney, Patrik Laine, Filip Mesar, Israel Mianscum, Alex Newhook, Vinzenz Rohrer, Joshua Roy, Xavier Simoneau, Juraj Slafkovsky, Nick Suzuki, Tyler Thorpe, Luke Tuch, Joe Veleno, Florian Xhekaj

Defensemen (19): Alexandre Carrier, Nathan Clurman, Marc Del Gaizo, Noah Dobson, Adam Engstrom, Kaiden Guhle, Lane Hutson, Joshua Jacobs, Darick Louis-Jean, Charles Martin, Mike Matheson, Ryan O’Rourke, Tobie Paquette-Bisson, Owen Protz, David Reinbacher, Jayden Struble, William Trudeau, Wyatte Wylie, Arber Xhekaj

Goaltenders (7): Jakub Dobes, Jacob Fowler, Benjamin Gaudreau, Hunter Jones, Kaapo Kahkonen, Kevin Mandolese (PTO), Sam Montembeault

Nashville Predators

Roster size: 54/23
Last updated Sep. 22, 11:00 a.m.

Forwards (29): Michael Bunting, Daniel Carr (PTO), David Edstrom, Luke Evangelista, Filip Forsberg, Dylan Gambrell, Erik Haula, Joakim Kemell, Zachary L’Heureux, Kalan Lind, Jake Lucchini, Jonathan Marchessault, Kyle Marino, Brady Martin, Michael McCarron, Navrin Mutter, Cole O’Hara, Ryan O’Reilly, Isaac Ratcliffe, Austin Roest, Ryder Rolston, Reid Schaefer, Cole Smith, Steven Stamkos, Fedor Svechkov, Oazis Wiesblatt, Ozzy Wiesblatt, Joey Willis, Matthew Wood

Defensemen (19): Justin Barron, Nick Blankenburg, Andreas Englund, Andrew Gibson, Kevin Gravel, Nicolas Hague, Scott Harrington, Zack Hayes, Roman Josi, Jack Matier, Tanner Molendyk, Chad Nychuk (PTO), Jordan Oesterle, Nicklaus Perbix, Cameron Reid, Brady Skjei, Spencer Stastney, Ryan Ufko, Adam Wilsby

Goaltenders (6): Justus Annunen, Magnus Chrona, Ethan Haider, Matt Murray, Juuse Saros, T.J. Semptimphelter

New Jersey Devils

Roster size: 61/23
Last updated Sep. 17, 10:10 a.m.

Forwards (35): Tag Bertuzzi, Thomas Bordeleau, Jesper Bratt, Connor Brown, Alexander Campbell, Brian Carrabes, Paul Cotter, Angus Crookshank, Evgenii Dadonov, Josh Filmon, Cody Glass, Luke Glendening, Arseny Gritsyuk, Jonathan Gruden, Brian Halonen, Lenni Hameenaho, Mike Hardman, Nico Hischier, Jack Hughes, Shane Lachance, Juho Lammikko, Nathan Legare, Kurtis MacDermid, Jack Malone, Marc McLaughlin, Timo Meier, Matyas Melovsky, Dawson Mercer, Stefan Noesen, Ondrej Palat, Xavier Parent, Kevin Rooney, Ryan Schmelzer, Cam Squires, Dylan Wendt

Defensemen (19): Calen Addison, Seamus Casey, Dennis Cholowski, Brenden Dillon, Mikael Diotte, Jimmy Dowd Jr., Ethan Edwards, Dougie Hamilton, Jeremy Hanzel, Johnathan Kovacevic, Simon Nemec, Dmitri Osipov, Brett Pesce, Luke Reid, Jonas Siegenthaler, Austin Strand, Jackson van de Leest, Topias Vilen, Colton White

Goaltenders (7): Jake Allen, Tyler Brennan, Jeremy Brodeur, Nico Daws, Jakub Malek, Jacob Markstrom, Georgi Romanov

New York Islanders

Roster size: 58/23
Last updated Sep. 22, 9:30 a.m.

Forwards (33): Mathew Barzal, Adam Beckman, Cameron Berg, Casey Cizikas, Max Dorrington, Hunter Drew, Jonathan Drouin, Anthony Duclair, Pierre Engvall, Liam Foudy, Marc Gatcomb, Julien Gauthier, Emil Heineman, Matthew Highmore, Simon Holmstrom, Bo Horvat, Alex Jeffries, Daylan Kuefler, Joey Larson, Anders Lee, Eetu Liukas, Kyle MacLean, Matthew Maggio, Ross Mitton, Jesse Nurmi, Jean-Gabriel Pageau, Kyle Palmieri, Calum Ritchie, Maxim Shabanov, Chris Terry, Cam Thiesing, Maxim Tsyplakov, Gleb Veremyev

Defensemen (18): Kashawn Aitcheson, Ethan Bear, Adam Boqvist, Sean Day, Tony DeAngelo, Isaiah George, Scott Mayfield, Cam McDonald, Cole McWard, Travis Mitchell, Calle Odelius, Adam Pelech, Jesse Pulkkinen, Ryan Pulock, Alexander Romanov, Luke Rowe, Matthew Schaefer, Marshall Warren

Goaltenders (7): Parker Gahagen, Marcus Hogberg, Tristan Lennox, David Rittich, Ilya Sorokin, Henrik Tikkanen, Semyon Varlamov

New York Rangers

Roster size: 48/23
Last updated: Sep. 20, 3:45 p.m.

Forwards (28): Nathan Aspinall, Brett Berard, Anton Blidh, Brendan Brisson, Jonny Brodzinski, Sam Carrick, Jaroslav Chmelar, Will Cuylle, Justin Dowling, Adam Edstrom, Trey Fix-Wolansky, Noah Laba, Alexis Lafreniere, Bryce McConnell-Barker, J.T. Miller, Brennan Othmann, Artemi Panarin, Juuso Parssinen, Gabe Perreault, Taylor Raddysh, Matt Rempe, Dylan Roobroeck, Conor Sheary (PTO), Adam Sykora, Carey Terrance, Vincent Trocheck, Kalle Vaisanen, Mika Zibanejad

Defensemen (16): Will Borgen, Jackson Dorrington, Casey Fitzgerald, Adam Fox, Vladislav Gavrikov, Blake Hillman, Connor Mackey, Case McCarthy, Scott Morrow, Derrick Pouliot, Matthew Robertson, Brandon Scanlin, Braden Schneider, Carson Soucy, Andrej Sustr, Urho Vaakanainen

Goaltenders (4): Talyn Boyko, Dylan Garand, Jonathan Quick, Igor Shesterkin

Ottawa Senators

Roster size: 49/23
Last updated Sep. 21, 12:50 p.m.

Forwards (29): Michael Amadio, Drake Batherson, Wyatt Bongiovanni, Tyler Boucher, Xavier Bourgault, Jake Chiasson, Nick Cousins, Dylan Cozens, Philippe Daoust (PTO), Lars Eller, Lucas Ellinas, Claude Giroux, Ridly Greig, Stephen Halliday, Hayden Hodgson, Landen Hookey, Jan Jeník, Arthur Kaliyev, Olle Lycksell, Zack MacEwen, David Perron, Oskar Pettersson, Garrett Pilon, Shane Pinto, Jamieson Rees, Tim Stützle, Brady Tkachuk, Keaan Washkurak, Fabian Zetterlund

Defensemen (15): Matthew Andonovski, Thomas Chabot, Cameron Crotty, Jorian Donovan,  Tomas Hamara, Nick Jensen, Tyler Kleven, Nikolas Matinpalo, Jake Sanderson, Donovan Sebrango, Jordan Spence, Lassi Thomson, Djibril Touré, Carter Yakemchuk, Artem Zub

Goaltenders (5): Leevi Merilainen, Jackson Parsons, Hunter Shepard, Mads Søgaard, Linus Ullmark

Philadelphia Flyers

Roster size: 54/23
Last updated Sep. 19, 2:55 p.m.

Forwards (32): Rodrigo Abols, Denver Barkey, Sawyer Boulton, Bobby Brink, Alex Bump, Noah Cates, Sean Couturier, Nicolas Deslauriers, Karsen Dorwart, Christian Dvorak, Oscar Eklind, Tyson Foerster, Matthew Gard, Jacob Gaucher, Alexis Gendron, Nikita Grebenkin, Garnet Hathaway, Devin Kaplan, Travis Konecny, Jett Luchanko, Cooper Marody, Matvei Michkov, Jack Nesbitt, Lane Pederson, Anthony Richard, Massimo Rizzo, Tucker Robertson, Owen Tippett, Samu Tuomaala, Garrett Wilson, Zayde Wisdom, Trevor Zegras

Defensemen (16): Emil Andrae, Oliver Bonk, Jamie Drysdale, Dennis Gilbert, Spencer Gill, Adam Ginning, Helge Grans, Noah Juulsen, Hunter McDonald, Andre Mondoux, Ty Murchison, Ethan Samson, Travis Sanheim, Nick Seeler, Luke Vlooswyk, Cam York

Goaltenders (6): Carson Bjarnason, Samuel Ersson, Aleksei Kolosov, Yaniv Perets, Keith Petruzzelli, Dan Vladar

IR: D Rasmus Ristolainen (triceps, proj. return Oct.-Nov.)

D Egor Zamula was not listed on the Flyers’ camp roster in what GM Daniel Brière called an “oversight,” per Charlie O’Connor of PHLY Sports.

Pittsburgh Penguins

Roster size: 68/23
Last updated Sep. 23, 11:55 a.m.

Forwards (36): Raivis Ansons, Justin Brazeau, Tristan Broz, Callahan Burke, Atley Calvert, Sidney Crosby, Mathieu De St. Phalle, Connor Dewar, Brayden Edwards, Robby Fabbri, Zach Gallant, Max Graham, Filip Hallander, Rafael Harvey-Pinard, Avery Hayes, Kevin Hayes, Danton Heinen, Aaron Huglen, Bokondji Imama, Benjamin Kindel, Gabe Klassen, Ville Koivunen, Joona Koppanen, Blake Lizotte, Evgeni Malkin, Anthony Mantha, Aidan McDonough, Brett Murray, Thomas Novak, Samuel Poulin, Valtteri Puustinen, Rickard Rakell, Nolan Renwick, Bryan Rust, Philip Tomasino, Zach Urdahl

Defensemen (24): Sebastian Aho, Alexander Alexeyev, Quinn Beauchesne, David Breazale, Scooter Brickey, Harrison Brunicke, Tommy Budnick, Connor Clifton, Matt Dumba, Ryan Graves, Finn Harding, Brent Johnson, Caleb Jones, Erik Karlsson, Philip Kemp, Daniel Laatsch, Kris Letang, Jake Livingstone, Owen Pickering, Emil Pieniniemi, Chase Pietila, Ryan Shea, Jack St. Ivany, Parker Wotherspoon

Goaltenders (8): Joel Blomqvist, Marc-André Fleury, Taylor Gauthier, Tristan Jarry, Filip Larsson, Sergei Murashov, Maxim Pavlenko, Arturs Silovs

IR: F Noel Acciari (undisclosed), F Rutger McGroarty (undisclosed), F Tanner Howe (undisclosed), F Bill Zonnon (undisclosed), D Peyton Kettles (undisclosed)

San Jose Sharks

Roster size: 57/23
Last updated Sep. 22, 4:15 PM

Forwards (34): Egor Afanasyev, Shane Bowers, Filip Bystedt, Ethan Cardwell, Macklin Celebrini, Igor Chernyshov, Ty Dellandrea, William Eklund, Adam Gaudette, Patrick Giles, Barclay Goodrow, Collin Graf, Carl Grundström, Kasper Halttunen, Donovan Houle, Jimmy Huntington, Philipp Kurashev, Samuel Laberge, Cameron Lund, Michael Misa, Quentin Musty,  Oskar Olausson, Zack Ostapchuk, Ryan Reaves, Pavol Regenda, Jeff Skinner, Will Smith, Tyler Toffoli, Lucas Vanroboys, Anthony Vincent, Oliver Wahlstrom, Alexander Wennberg, Carson Wetsch, Colin White

Defensemen (26): Noah Beck, Luca Cagnoni, Lucas Carlsson, Cole Clayton, Vincent Desharnais, Sam Dickinson, Mario Ferraro, Jake Furlong,  Braden Haché, Mattias Hävelid, John Klingberg, Nick Leddy, Timothy Liljegren, Shakir Mukhamadullin, Dmitry Orlov, Jack Thompson, Haoxi (Simon) Wang

Goaltenders (5): Yaroslav Askarov, Gabriel Carriere, Matt Davis, Alex Nedeljkovic, Jakub Skarek

Seattle Kraken

Roster size: 58/23
Last updated Sep. 4, 1:24 p.m.

Forwards (33): Jon-Randall Avon, Matty Beniers, Berkly Catton, Jordan Eberle, Jagger Firkus, Oscar Fisker Molgaard, Frédérick Gaudreau, David Goyette, John Hayden, Justin Janicke, Kaapo Kakko, Tye Kartye, Andrei Loshko, Mason Marchment, Jared McCann, Max McCormick (inj.), Ian McKinnon, Jacob Melanson, Ben Meyers, Julius Miettinen, Logan Morrison, Jani Nyman, Jake O’Brien, Carson Rehkopf, Lleyton Roed, Eduard Sale, Jaden Schwartz, Mitchell Stephens, Chandler Stephenson, Eeli Tolvanen, Nathan Villeneuve, Ryan Winterton, Shane Wright

Defensemen (19): Alexis Bernier (inj.), Lukas Dragicevic, Vince Dunn, Ryker Evans, Jakub Fibigr, Blake Fiddler, Cale Fleury, Kaden Hammell, Tyson Jugnauth, Adam Larsson, Ryan Lindgren, Josh Mahura, Brandon Montour, Ty Nelson, Jamie Oleksiak, Gustav Olofsson, Ville Ottavainen, Caden Price, Will Reynolds

Goaltenders (6): Joey Daccord, Philipp Grubauer, Niklas Kokko, Jack LaFontaine (PTO), Matt Murray, Victor Ostman

St. Louis Blues

Roster size 53/23
Last updated Sep. 22, 11:00 a.m.

Forwards (31): Nikita Alexandrov, Sam Bitten, Nick Bjugstad, Pavel Buchnevich, Justin Carbonneau, Zach Dean, Dalibor Dvorsky, Dylan Holloway, Mathieu Joseph, Aleksanteri Kaskimaki, Jordan Kyrou, Milan Lucic, Matt Luff, Hugh McGing, Jake Neighbours, Matthew Peca, Juraj Pekarcik, Dylan Peterson, Simon Robertsson, Brayden Schenn, Jimmy Snuggerud, Jakub Stancl, Sam Stange, Otto Stenberg, Oskar Sundqvist, Pius Suter, Alexandre Texier, Robert Thomas, Alexey Toropchenko, Chris Wagner (PTO), Nathan Walker

Defensemen (17): Philip Broberg, Michael Buchinger, Quinton Burns, Justin Faulk, Cam Fowler, Marc-Andre Gaudet, Adam Jiricek, Samuel Johannesson, Anthony Kehrer, Matthew Kessel, Theo Lindstein, Leo Loof, Logan Mailloux, Colton Parayko, Corey Schueneman, Hunter Skinner, Tyler Tucker

Goaltenders (5): Jordan Binnington, Will Cranley, Colten Ellis, Joel Hofer, Vadim Zherenko

Tampa Bay Lightning

Roster size: 63/23
Last updated Sep. 16, 2:02 p.m.

Forwards (36): Nicholas Abruzzese, Tristan Allard, Oliver Bjorkstrand, Mitchell Chaffee, Anthony Cirelli, Ethan Czata, Dylan Duke, Jack Finley, Cooper Flinton, Aidan Foster, Brendan Furry, Ethan Gauthier, Conor Geekie, Zemgus Girgensons, Gage Goncalves, Yanni Gourde, Jake Guentzel, Brandon Hagel, Pontus Holmberg, Niko Huuhtanen, Boris Katchouk, Spencer Kersten, Nikita Kucherov, Connor Kurth, Lucas Mercuri, Marco Mignosa, Reece Newkirk, Sam O’Reilly, Nick Paul, Jakob Pelletier, Kaden Pitre, Brayden Point, Milo Roelens, Scott Sabourin, Wojciech Stachowiak, Gabriel Szturc

Defensemen (21): Everett Baldwin, Declan Carlile, Erik Cernak, Maxwell Crozier, Charle-Edouard D’Astous, Dyllan Gill, Jan Golicic, Maxim Groshev, Chris Harpur, Victor Hedman, Maddox Labre, Emil Martinsen Lilleberg, Simon Lundmark, Ryan McDonagh, Tommy Miller, J.J. Moser, Matteo Pietroniro, Darren Raddysh, Steven Santini, Roman Schmidt, Grant Spada

Goaltenders (6): Ryan Fanti, Brandon Halverson, Caleb Heil, Jonas Johansson, Harrison Meneghin, Andrei Vasilevskiy

Toronto Maple Leafs

Roster size: 66/23
Last updated Sep. 23, 1:28 p.m.

Forwards (40): Brandon Baddock, Matthew Barbolini, Travis Boyd, Easton Cowan, Max Domi, Gunnarwolfe Fontaine, Luke Grainger, Benoit-Olivier Groulx, Luke Haymes, Miroslav Holinka, Calle Järnkrok, Reese Johnson, Marc Johnstone, Dakota Joshua, David Kämpf, Ben King, Ryan Kirwan, Matthew Knies, Braeden Kressler, Scott Laughton, Vinni Lettieri, Steven Lorentz, Matias Maccelli, Auston Matthews, Bobby McMann, Alexander Nylander, William Nylander, Cédric Paré, Michael Pezzetta, Jacob Quillan, Nick Rhéaume, Nicholas Robertson, Nicolas Roy, Logan Shaw, Landon Sim, Marko Sikic, Sam Stevens, John Tavares, Ryan Tverberg, Borya Valis

Defensemen (20): Simon Benoit, Matt Benning, Brandon Carlo, Noah Chadwick, Ben Danford, Oliver Ekman-Larsson, Jake McCabe, Ryan McCleary, Dakota Mermis, Philippe Myers, Rhett Parsons, John Prokop, Morgan Rielly, Marshall Rifai, Chas Sharpe, Blake Smith, Chris Tanev, Henry Thrun, William Villeneuve, Cade Webber

Goaltenders (6): Ken Appleby, Artur Akhtyamov, Dennis Hildeby, Vyacheslav Peksa, Anthony Stolarz, Joseph Woll

Utah Mammoth

Roster size: 66/23
Last updated Sep. 17, 10:20 a.m.

Forwards (37): Andrew Agozzino, Owen Allard, Maksim Barbashev, Cole Beaudoin, Daniil But, Michael Carcone, Logan Cooley, Lawson Crouse, Caleb Desnoyers, Curtis Douglas, Coster Dunn, Dylan Guenther, Carson Harmer, Barrett Hayton, Cameron Hebig, Tij Iginla, Clayton Keller, Alexander Kerfoot, Michal Kunc, Sam Lipkin, Julian Lutz, Miko Matikka, Jack McBain, Ben McCartney, Ryan McGregor, Noel Nordh, Liam O’Brien, JJ Peterka, Austin Poganski, Jack Ricketts, Nick Schmaltz, Gabe Smith, Kevin Stenlund, Brandon Tanev, Ty Tullio, Samuel Walker, Kailer Yamamoto

Defensemen (21): Ian Cole, Kevin Connauton, Nick DeSimone, Artem Duda, Sean Durzi, Terrell Goldsmith, Ludvig Lafton, Maveric Lamoureux, Tomas Lavoie, Olli Määttä, John Marino, Lleyton Moore, Montana Onyebuchi, Scott Perunovich, Max Pšenička, Nate Schmidt, Mikhail Sergachev, Dmitri Simashev, Maksymilian Szuber, Veeti Väisänen, Juuso Välimäki

Goaltenders (8): Connor Ingram, Dryden McKay, Jaxson Stauber, Anson Thornton, Vítek Vaněček, Karel Vejmelka, Matt Villalta, Dylan Wells

Vancouver Canucks

Roster size: 50/23
Last updated: Sep. 21, 4:00 p.m.

Forwards (26): Vilmer Alriksson, Nils Aman, Arshdeep Bains, Teddy Blueger, Brock Boeser,  Filip Chytil, Braeden Cootes, Jake DeBrusk,  Conor Garland, Nils Hoglander,  Evander Kane, Linus Karlsson, Danila Klimovich, Vitali Kravtsov,  Joseph LaBate, Jonathan Lekkerimaki, Mackenzie MacEachern, Ty Mueller, Drew O’Connor,  Elias Pettersson, Aatu Raty, Anri Ravinskis, Max Sasson, Kiefer Sherwood, Chase Stillman, Chase Wouters

Defensemen (18): Parker Alcos, Joe Arntsen, Guillaume Brisebois, Derek Forbort, Filip Hronek, Quinn Hughes, Pierre-Olivier Joseph, Nikolai Knyzhov, Kirill Kudryavtsev, Jayden Lee, Victor Mancini, Tyler Myers, Sawyer Mynio, Elias Pettersson, Marcus Pettersson,  Jimmy Schuldt, Tom Willander, Jett Woo

Goaltenders (6): Thatcher Demko, Aku Koskenvuo, Kevin Lankinen,  Jiri Patera, Nikita Tolopilo, Ty Young

Vegas Golden Knights

Roster size: 56/23
Last updated Sep. 20, 6:15 p.m.

Forwards (34): Ivan Barbashev, Braeden Bowman, Jakub Brabenec, Mathieu Cataford, Jakub Demek, Pavel Dorofeyev, Jack Eichel, Joe Fleming, Jackson Hallum, Ben Hemmerling, Tomas Hertl, Alexander Holtz, Brett Howden, William Karlsson, Keegan Kolesar, Tanner Laczynski, Raphael Lavoie, Mitch Marner, Riley McKay, Mitch McLain,  Devon Paliani, Cole Reinhardt, Jonas Rondbjerg, Brandon Saad, Matyas Sapovaliv, Cole Schwindt, Colton Sissons, Reilly Smith, Sloan Stanick, Mark Stone, Trent Swick, Kai Uchacz, Tuomas Uronen, Kevin Wall 

Defensemen (17):  Artur Cholach, Dylan Coghlan, Lukas Cormier, Jeremy Davies, Noah Hanifin, Brandon Hickey, Ben Hutton, Lucas Johansen, Viliam Kmec, Kaedan Korczak, Jeremy Lauzon, Samuel Mayer, Brayden McNabb, Jaycob Megna, Christoffer Sedoff, Shea Theodore, Zach Whitecloud

Goaltenders (5): Adin Hill, Carl Lindbom, Akira Schmid, Jesper Vikman, Cameron Whitehead

Washington Capitals

Roster size: 53/23
Last updated Sep. 23, 8:09 a.m.

Forwards (31): Anthony Beauvillier, Graeme Clark, Andrew Cristall, Nic Dowd, Pierre-Luc Dubois, Brandon Duhaime, Ethen Frank, Zac Funk, Ryan Hofer, Lynden Lakovic, Hendrix Lapierre, Ryan Leonard, Eriks Mateiko, Connor McMichael, Sonny Milano, Ivan Miroshnichenko, Alex Ovechkin, Terik Parascak, Ludwig Persson, Aliaksei Protas, Ilya Protas, Sheldon Rempal, Spencer Smallman, Justin Sourdif, Dylan Strome, Matthew Strome, Alexander Suzdalev, Patrick Thomas, Bogdan Trineyev, Tom Wilson

Defensemen (16): Cam Allen, Louis Belpedio, John Carlson, Ryan Chesley, Declan Chisholm, Jakob Chychrun, Martin Fehervary, David Gucciardi, Vincent Iorio, Dylan McIlrath, Leon Muggli, Aaron Ness, Calle Rosen, Matt Roy, Rasmus Sandin, Trevor van Riemsdyk

Goaltenders (6): Garin Bjorklund, Mitchell Gibson, Antoine Keller, Charlie Lindgren, Clay Stevenson, Logan Thompson

Winnipeg Jets

Roster size: 55/23
Last updated Sep. 12, 3:00 p.m.

Forwards (30): Jaret Anderson-Dolan, Colby Barlow, Morgan Barron, Nikita Chibrikov, Jacob Cloutier, Kyle Connor, Phillip Di Giuseppe, Walker Duehr, Samuel Fagemo, Parker Ford, David Gustafsson, Kevin He, Alex Iafallo, Jacob Julien, Cole Koepke, Brad Lambert, Owen Martin, Vladislav Namestnikov, Nino Niederreiter, Gustav Nyquist, Tanner Pearson, Cole Perfetti,  Mark Scheifele, Mason Shaw, Jonathan Toews, Gabriel Vilardi, Fabian Wagner, Kieron Walton, Brayden Yager, Danny Zhilkin

Defensemen (18): Dylan Anhorn, Dawson Barteaux, Tyrel Bauer, Kale Clague, Dylan DeMelo, Edison Engle, Haydn Fleury, Ethan Frisch, Ville Heinola, Colin Miller, Josh Morrissey, Isaak Phillips, Neal Pionk, Elias Salomonsson, Dylan Samberg, Ashton Sautner, Luke Schenn, Logan Stanley

Goaltenders (6): Eric Comrie, Domenic DiVincentiis, Connor Hellebuyck, Thomas Milic, Isaac Poulter, Alex Worthington 

Injured Reserve (1): Adam Lowry (hip surgery, proj. return: October or November)

Newsstand| Pro Hockey Rumors Originals

8 comments

Ville Koivunen Expected To Make Penguins’ Roster

September 23, 2025 at 1:48 pm CDT | by Josh Erickson 7 Comments

Rookie winger Ville Koivunen “is a lock to start the season” on the Penguins’ opening night roster, Josh Yohe of The Athletic reports Tuesday. The 2021 second-round pick was always a strong candidate to land a job after impressing in a short call-up down the stretch last season, but his waiver-exempt status made the roster math not in his favor with the Pens holding onto more veterans than expected over the summer.

Where exactly he fits on the depth chart is still in question. During last year’s eight-game call-up, during which the 22-year-old went nearly point-per-game with seven assists, he split time equally in Pittsburgh’s top six on the left wing with either Sidney Crosby and Bryan Rust or Evgeni Malkin and Rickard Rakell. Daily Faceoff’s most recent lineup projection has him sticking with Malkin, but this time with free-agent pickup Anthony Mantha on the right flank while Rakell and Rust slot in as Crosby’s wingers.

His path to minutes got clearer when Rutger McGroarty, the organization’s top forward prospect and a 2022 first-rounder, reported to camp with an upper-body injury that has him out indefinitely. One of the Pens’ top young forwards was always likely going to get a crack in the top six to begin the season as the retool begins to accelerate; it was more a question of whether that would be Koivunen, McGroarty, or a wildcard name when the dust settled. More will be in competition for those premier minutes when names like Rakell and Rust are presumably offloaded in trades, but for now, it’ll be Koivunen coasting to those minutes with McGroarty not currently a factor.

Koivunen was the crown jewel of the Penguins’ haul they received from the Hurricanes in exchange for winger Jake Guentzel at the 2024 trade deadline. The 6’0″ Finn has developed like a dream since his draft year, peaking with an excellent 56-point showing in 59 games for Liiga’s Kärpät in the 2023-24 season. He came to North America last year and fit like a glove in AHL Wilkes-Barre/Scranton, leading the Pens’ farm team with a 21-35–56 scoring line in 63 games. He still slots in as their No. 2 prospect to McGroarty for now, at least according to NHL.com, but has a legitimate case to claim the No. 1 throne – or work his way out of “prospect” designation entirely this year.

Pittsburgh Penguins Ville Koivunen

7 comments

Training Camp Cuts: 9/23/25

September 23, 2025 at 1:27 pm CDT | by Josh Erickson 5 Comments

We’re nearly through the first week of training camps. Teams are still making initial cuts, trimming amateur invites and AHL-contracted players as they inch closer to their final 23-player opening night rosters. You can keep track of full training camp rosters here. We’re keeping track of all of today’s trimmings here:

Calgary Flames (via team announcement)

F Jacob Battaglia (to Kingston, OHL)
D Axel Hurtig (to Calgary, WHL)

Columbus Blue Jackets (via team announcement)

G Evan Gardner (to WHL Saskatoon)
F Owen Griffin (to OHL Oshawa)
D Marcus Kearsey (released from ATO to QMJHL Charlottetown)
F Nicholas Sima (released from ATO to OHL Saginaw)

Dallas Stars (via team release)

F Jaxon Fuder (to WHL Red Deer)

Florida Panthers (via team release)

F Shea Busch (to WHL Everett)
D Carson Cameron (released from ATO to OHL Peterborough)
D Dennis Cesana (to AHL Charlotte)
F Riley Hughes (to AHL Charlotte)
D Cole Krygier (released from PTO)
F Josh Lopina (released from PTO to AHL Charlotte)
F Robert Mastrosimone (to AHL Charlotte)
F Shamar Moses (to OHL North Bay)
D Eamon Powell (to AHL Charlotte)
G Michael Simpson (to AHL Charlotte)
F Christophe Tellier (to AHL Charlotte)
D Mitchell Vande Sompel (to AHL Charlotte)
F Daniel Walcott (released from PTO to AHL Charlotte)
D Phip Waugh (released from PTO to AHL Charlotte)
D Andy Welinski (released from PTO to AHL Charlotte)
F Nicholas Zabaneh (to AHL Charlotte)

Pittsburgh Penguins (via team announcement)

F Travis Hayes (to OHL Soo)

Toronto Maple Leafs (via team announcement)

D Owen Conrad (to QMJHL Charlottetown)

Washington Capitals (via team announcement)

F Grant Cruikshank (to AHL Hershey)
G Seth Eisele (to AHL Hershey)
D Nick Leivermann (to AHL Hershey)
D Jon McDonald (to AHL Hershey)
F Justin Nachbaur (to AHL Hershey)
F Miroslav Satan (to OHL Saginaw)
F Maxim Schäfer (to QMJHL Chicoutimi)
F Dalton Smith (to AHL Hershey)
F Luke Toporowski (to AHL Hershey)

Columbus Blue Jackets| Dallas Stars| Florida Panthers| Pittsburgh Penguins| Transactions| Washington Capitals

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