Sabres Announce Multiple IR Moves
The Buffalo Sabres have sorted out their injuries ahead of their return to action on Wednesday night. Forwards Joshua Norris and Joshua Dunne, as well as goaltender Ukko-Pekka Luukkonen, have been activated from injured reserve and will be available for Wednesday’s game against the New Jersey Devils. In a corresponding move, Buffalo has also placed wingers Zach Benson and Jordan Greenway on IR per NHL.com’s Heather Engel. Greenway has not played since January 22nd, while Benson missed Buffalo’s final game before break on February 5th.
Buffalo will exchange roster forwards with these moves. Norris has served a middle-six center role when healthy but has only appeared in 19 games this season as he battled through multiple injuries. His most recent was sustained on January 14th, in a matchup against the Philadelphia Flyers. The 26 year old has racked up 17 points in his appearances this season, the third-highest scoring pace on the team behind Tage Thompson and Rasmus Dahlin. He should return to an impact role on the second-line and should help the Sabres bridge the divide until Benson is able to return.
The 20-year-old Benson dealt with a couple of different ailments over the three-week Olympic break. His current injury has not been disclosed, though head coach Lindy Ruff did clarify that it is separate from the upper-body injury he sustained on February 2nd. Benson returned to skating earlier this week but hasn’t yet been folded into Buffalo’s practices, suggesting he could still have a bit before returning to NHL action. He will be eligible for activation as soon as he’s back to full health.
Buffalo will want their dynamo winger back as soon as possible. Benson has earned 26 points in 42 games this season – a 51-point scoring pace. On top of that, his best impacts have seemed to come away from the puck, where his mix of tenacity and skill allow Benson to fill any role on the forecheck. He has often been deployed on the second-line but has received upwards of 20 minutes of ice time a night when Buffalo needs a punch.
The biggest impact from these moves could be in net. Luukkonen went down with a lower-body injury on January 27th. The injury not only held him out of Buffalo’s subsequent five games, it also costed Luukkonen his spot on Team Finland’s Olympic roster.
Buffalo survived Luukkonen’s absence by leaning on Alex Lyon as their starter. He performed well, setting a .922 save percentage and two wins in four games in injury-relief, while rookie backup Colten Ellis recorded one overtime-loss. Luukkonen has split starts with Lyon for much of the year and recorded 11 wins and a .902 save percentage in 21 games. Those marks both fall just shy of the 14 wins and .912 save percentage that Lyon has reached in 27 games. The pair of goaltenders will continue to compete for starts, while Ellis likely remains with the NHL roster as an extra hand.
Buffalo’s series of moves is wrapped up by swapping two bruising depth-forwards off of IR. Greenway ranks seventh on the Sabres in hits-per-game, with an average of 7.18. Just above him, at sixth, is Dunne who has averaged 7.66 hits in what is his first chance at an extended NHL look. Greenway has beat out the first-year pro on the scorecard, netting five points and a minus-nine in 33 games, while Dunne has four points and a minus-four in 28 games. The two will exchange spots near the bottom of Buffalo’s lineup. The veteran Greenway would seem to have the edge on minutes when he’s back to full health.
Senators Recall Stephen Halliday
2/25: After two days of practice with the top club, defense prospect Carter Yakemchuk has also been reassigned to Belleville. The move was expected after the team ended Wednesday’s practice, head coach Travis Green told Julian McKenzie of The Athletic.
2/23, 4:00 p.m.: The Senators reassigned Boucher back to Belleville, confirming that his recall earlier today was simply for practice purposes. Belleville’s schedule resumes on Friday, when the team travels to take on the Utica Comets, who are AHL affiliates of the New Jersey Devils.
2/23, 10:03 a.m.: The Senators announced they’ve recalled forwards Tyler Boucher and Stephen Halliday, as well as defenseman Carter Yakemchuk, from AHL Belleville. They’ll give the Sens some roster insurance as they await the returns of captain Brady Tkachuk and top defenseman Jake Sanderson from Olympic play, with both questionable to return in time for Ottawa’s first game back against the Red Wings on Thursday.
This is Boucher’s first time being rostered during the regular season. The 23-year-old was summoned as a Black Ace for last year’s playoff run but has yet to make his NHL debut nearly five years after being selected 10th overall in the 2021 draft. He remains the only active player in the top 20 that has yet to make his NHL debut (Winnipeg’s Chaz Lucius, selected 18th overall, was forced into medical retirement).
That could now change. The 6’2″, 216-lb winger was viewed as a late first-round choice at best by prospect evaluators in his draft year, so it was a highly controversial decision for the Sens to spend such a high pick on him. The gamble hasn’t worked out. Boucher disenrolled from Boston University 17 games into his post-draft season after struggling to catch on and spent the following year and a half in junior hockey with the OHL’s Ottawa 67’s, where he struggled through injuries and managed 17 goals and 31 points in 45 games – not nearly the level of offense expected out of a top-10 pick after his draft date.
Boucher’s struggles persisted after he turned pro with the Sens in 2023. He’s spent his entire career to date in the AHL and had just two goals and five points in 21 games as a rookie two years ago. Last year’s 10 points in 47 games weren’t much better.
This season, though, the Arizona native has picked up a little bit of steam. He’s already set new career-highs across the board with six goals, 10 assists, and 16 points in 29 games with a +9 rating. Injuries have again limited him to just over half of Belleville’s schedule, but getting his offensive output up over half a point per game is a definitive step in the right direction. He’ll now get a shot to at least get some practice reps in with the Sens over the coming days until Tkachuk is back in the mix.
Halliday’s recall is more of a formality. He’s been up with the Sens for a big chunk of the season already and was only sent down over the break so that he could keep getting some playing time in Belleville. The 23-year-old figures to remain up with Ottawa’s NHL group for the stretch run, serving as a depth forward option while David Perron continues his recovery from sports hernia surgery.
The 6’4″ pivot had something of a difficult time generating offense in Belleville over the break, limited to three assists in seven games. That only brought him down to a point per game in 29 AHL contests this year, though. He’s also been exceptionally productive in a fourth-line role for Ottawa, managing four goals and 11 points in 25 NHL games despite averaging just 8:08 of ice time per night. Only Nikita Kucherov, Nathan MacKinnon, and Martin Necas have scored more points per 60 minutes at 5-on-5 than Halliday’s 3.14 (min. 10 games played).
Like Boucher, this marks the first regular-season recall for Yakemchuk, who gives Ottawa a seventh defenseman available while Sanderson makes his way back to the club. The 20-year-old’s stint on the NHL roster isn’t likely to last any longer than necessary. Drafted seventh overall in 2024, he’s a first-year pro and hasn’t had a smooth transition from the WHL to Belleville. Yakemchuk has demonstrated the offensive acumen Ottawa’s hoped for, leading the B-Sens’ D group with 25 points in 41 games, but has a team-worst -33 rating in the process. The hard-hitting puck-mover will need to build out his two-way game a lot more before he’s considered for NHL minutes.
Stars Activate Lian Bichsel From LTIR
The Stars announced today that they’ve activated defenseman Lian Bichsel from long-term injured reserve. They opened a roster spot yesterday by placing Radek Faksa on IR, and they have ample cap space with Tyler Seguin still feeding their LTIR pool, so no corresponding moves are required.
Bichsel is expected to play tonight, along with freshly anointed Olympic silver medalist Thomas Harley, tonight against the Kraken, Robert Tiffin of D Magazine relays. Ilya Lyubushkin and Kyle Capobianco will serve as healthy scratches while Nils Lundkvist and Alexander Petrovic remain in the lineup. It will be Bichsel’s first appearance since undergoing a lower-body surgery following an injury he sustained against the Senators back on Nov. 30. All told, he missed nearly three months and 31 games.
The 21-year-old Bichsel will form the Stars’ third pairing with Petrovic. They were stapled together before the former’s injury with underwhelming results. They outscored opponents 12-8 due to some puck luck on both ends of the ice, but they only managed to control 42.1% of expected goals and 41.0% of shot attempts at 5-on-5, per MoneyPuck.
Nonetheless, the Stars appear pleased with Bichsel’s work as a bottom-pairing fixture. It’s now been three years since they made him the 18th overall pick in the 2022 draft, and they remain hopeful the 6’7″ Swiss rearguard can remain a long-term shutdown fixture on the left side behind Miro Heiskanen and Harley. He wasn’t scratched once this season before getting hurt, recording three points and a +6 rating in 26 outings. He’s only averaging 15:49 of ice time per game – he’s not been given much shorthanded deployment.
The Stars will continue to monitor Bichsel’s possession impacts down the stretch. Petrovic has had better underlying numbers this season when paired with Capobianco, with that duo posting a 52.4 xGF% while outscoring opponents 7-2. If Bichsel’s and Petrovic’s previous form holds up, it might be worth giving the veteran Capobianco another look in the 3LD slot.
Oilers Recall Matthew Savoie
Feb. 25: The Oilers announced today that they’ve brought Savoie back up from Bakersfield. Only today did they accrue enough cap space to recall him and activate Henrique from LTIR as expected. He suited up once for Bakersfield last Friday and had an assist, a -1 rating, and three shots in a 5-4 overtime loss to the Calgary Wranglers.
Feb. 17: The Oilers announced that they’ve reassigned forward Matthew Savoie to AHL Bakersfield. The move was made to give them temporary salary cap flexibility, per the team’s Bob Stauffer, likely to activate center Adam Henrique from long-term injured reserve before their schedule resumes next week. Bakersfield has three games between now and Feb. 25, so Savoie will get a lengthy run-up before the team accumulates enough cap space to recall him again.
It certainly wouldn’t be a performance-based demotion for Savoie. The 22-year-old is the only one of Edmonton’s young guns who’s been able to carve out a consistent spot in their top nine this season. Even so, his production hasn’t been overwhelming. He’s posted nine goals and nine assists for 18 points through 58 games, tied for ninth on the team in scoring and on pace for 25 points on the year. For a player drafted with a top-10 pick who’s seen extensive time on a line with Leon Draisaitl, more production would be desirable.
Acquired from the Sabres in 2024, he’ll return to a familiar environment in Bakersfield, albeit for a few games. He had immense success there last season as a first-year pro, finishing second on the team in scoring with a 19-35–54 line in 66 games. For a few games, he’ll now get to link up with one of the AHL’s most dynamic duos this season in wingers Isaac Howard and Quinn Hutson, both of whom are clicking at over a point per game.
Clearing Savoie’s $886,666 cap hit gives Edmonton the flexibility to reinstate Henrique before next Wednesday. He’s been out since early January with an undisclosed injury. At a cap hit of $3MM, the Oilers will be hoping for more production from the 36-year-old than the two goals and 10 points he’s given them in 43 games this season.
Capitals Place Sonny Milano On Waivers
The Capitals will place Sonny Milano on waivers today at 1:00 pm Central, Tom Gulitti of NHL.com reports. Until he’s assigned to AHL Hershey tomorrow or is claimed by another team, he’s been designated as a non-roster player to afford Washington the open spot to activate Connor McMichael from injured reserve as expected.
Milano, 29, initially signed a league-minimum deal with the Caps at the beginning of the 2022-23 season after being non-tendered by the Ducks. He had so much success in a depth role, notching 11 goals and 33 points in 64 games, that Washington quickly moved to get him locked into a three-year, $5.7MM extension with a $1.9MM cap hit. He’s now in the final year of that deal, during which he’s been decimated by injuries. After scoring a career-high 15 goals in 49 games in 2023-24, Milano suited up just three times last season before sustaining a season-ending concussion in November.
Back healthy this year, he’s not the same player. Part of that is simply how little he’s been used. With names like Anthony Beauvillier, Ethen Frank, and Justin Sourdif surpassing him on the depth chart, he’s essentially now the Caps’ 14th forward. He’s been scratched for long stretches and, when dressed, has only averaged 8:53 of ice time per game in 31 showings. Considering that usage, his four goals and eight points aren’t too bad.
He’ll now get his first AHL usage since a brief stint with Hershey after signing with the Caps in 2022. He had two goals and an assist in five games that time around and has 118 points in 171 minor-league games for his career.
Milano is at his best when he’s given top-nine deployment and trusted to do little else but score. With no real fit for him to fill that role in D.C. anymore, he may ride out the last few months of his deal in the minors before reaching free agency this summer. If he goes unclaimed on waivers and remains in the Caps’ system, they’ll be left with a $750K cap charge.
Mammoth Reassign Dmitri Simashev, Maveric Lamoureux
Feb. 25: Evidently, Simashev’s and Lamoureux’s recalls yesterday were to get them one last practice in before the Olympic break ended. The team announced today that both have been returned to Tucson, giving them the space to activate Cooley and Kerfoot before tonight’s game against the Avalanche.
Feb. 24: The Mammoth announced today that they’ve recalled defense prospects Dmitriy Simashev and Maveric Lamoureux from AHL Tucson. They opened up roster spots yesterday with a bevy of reassignments and thus don’t need corresponding moves today.
Simashev got out to something of a slow start to his NHL career. The 2023 sixth overall pick signed out of Russia last offseason and made Utah’s opening night roster, but was sent down to Tucson after being limited to one assist and a -9 rating through 24 outings. He was averaging 15:28 of ice time per game but was seeing some top-pair deployment alongside countryman Mikhail Sergachev, although the results weren’t great with a 48.3 xGF% and 33.3 GF% at 5-on-5.
The reassignment lit a fire under him. Touted as a low-offense shutdown D-man, he bucked those expectations with a gargantuan 7-18–25 scoring line in 27 games for Tucson. He already got a brief recall before the break that didn’t result in any playing time, but now that he’s in a groove, he’ll look to usurp Nick DeSimone for more consistent playing time down the stretch amid the Mammoth’s playoff push.
Meanwhile, Lamoureux still grades out as Utah’s clear-cut #2 defense prospect behind Simashev. Also a first-rounder, going 29th overall to the Coyotes in 2022, he was viewed as more of a puck-mover than Simashev was, but it hasn’t worked out that way yet. He’s still a towering physical defense-first threat that’s gotten a lot of ice time in the minors and hasn’t looked out of place in his previous NHL call-ups, either.
Lamoureux has 20 NHL games to his name since debuting in October 2024, including five this season. During that span, he has four points and a +7 rating with a highly promising 54.3 CF% at even strength, averaging 15:45 per game. He’s got 14 points and a +4 in 42 AHL games this season, but is already near hitting his floor as a stable third-pairing shutdown righty who can kill penalties.
It’s worth noting that while Utah has a full roster, it includes 12 forwards and nine defensemen. With Logan Cooley and Alexander Kerfoot expected to come off injured reserve in short order, more roster spots will be needed.
Canadiens To Activate Alex Newhook From Injured Reserve
The Canadiens will activate Alex Newhook from injured reserve before tomorrow’s game versus the Islanders, Eric Engels of Sportsnet reports. The speedy forward is set for his first appearance in over three months after sustaining an ankle fracture on Nov. 13. They had an open roster spot after waiving and reassigning Sammy Blais to AHL Laval before the Olympic break, so no corresponding move is needed.
This was the second ankle injury for Newhook in three years. He also missed 27 games in 2023-24 after sustaining a high ankle sprain in December of that year before this season’s complete fracture, which ended up keeping him sidelined for nearly half the campaign. After plenty of warmup time over the break, he’ll now be an option for the Habs as they look to secure consecutive playoff berths for the first time since 2020 and 2021.
Before the break, Newhook was well on his way toward avenging a disastrous 2024-25 campaign. He had racked up six goals and 12 points through 17 games, giving him a career-high 0.71 points per game rate. He was doing so in 14:38 of ice time per game, down from his first two years in Montreal, but was seeing even-strength deployment as the Habs’ second-line left winger with Oliver Kapanen and Ivan Demidov.
While moving Newhook away from his natural center position has appeared to yield dividends for the Habs, whether he remains in a top-six role remains to be seen. Since Newhook’s injury, the Habs have opted to break up their usual top line and have bumped Juraj Slafkovsky down to the 2LW slot with Kapanen and Demidov, giving them an added element of secondary production. There’s an argument to be made that, if Montreal wants to keep that unit together, Newhook would be a higher-ceiling fit on the first line with Nick Suzuki and Cole Caufield than either Zachary Bolduc and Alexandre Texier, both of whom have cycled into that slot since Slafkovsky moved down to the second line.
Of course, that debate may be moot after the trade deadline. Montreal has been testing the market for a top-six winger to play with Suzuki and Caufield. They could either leverage Newhook in that move – something they could comfortably do as they’re scoring 3.46 goals per game this season – or bump him down to a bottom-six job if they bring someone in above him.
Stars Recall Arttu Hyry, Reassign Remi Poirier
The Dallas Stars will return to NHL action tonight without several forwards. In need of some depth, the team announced that they’ve recalled Arttu Hyry from the AHL’s Texas Stars, and reassigned netminder Rémi Poirier in a corresponding roster move.
Already without Tyler Seguin for the foreseeable future, the Stars have also placed Mikko Rantanen and Radek Faksa on injured reserve due to ailments suffered during the Olympics. Additionally, Roope Hintz isn’t expected to be in the lineup tonight, either, as he’s dealing with an illness.
Those absences should allow Hyry to participate in his first NHL contest since last January. He’s in his second year with the team after signing as an international free agent last season. Before his move to North America, Hyry spent several years with the Finnish Liiga’s Kärpät organization.
He has provided encouraging results. Last season, primarily with AHL Texas, Hyry finished his rookie campaign with 24 goals and 49 points in 67 games with a +15 rating. That output was good for sixth on the team in scoring. Furthermore, Hyry added one goal and six points in 14 postseason contests.
This year, he hasn’t been as explosive offensively, largely due to an injury earlier in the year, but he is still having a solid season. At the time of writing, Hyry is 12th on the team in scoring with seven goals and 17 points in 26 games with a -4 rating.
Meanwhile, Poirier will return to the AHL as expected. The Stars called him up a few days ago to serve as practice depth, given that fellow netminder Jake Oettinger remained in Milan with Team USA. He’s played exclusively for AHL Texas this season, managing a 16-14-5 record in 34 games with a .906 SV% and 2.74 GAA.
Tampa Bay Lightning Activate Brayden Point
According to team insider Erik Erlendsson, the Tampa Bay Lightning have activated forward Brayden Point and defenseman Emil Martinsen Lilleberg from long-term injured reserve. Additionally, the team has placed Nick Paul on the injured reserve in a corresponding roster move.
The transactions were largely expected on all accounts. Despite being sidelined with a significant knee injury since January 12th, there was a fringe chance that Point would suit up for Team Canada at the Olympics. Although that didn’t happen, the expectation is that he would return to the team for their first game back, while taking time during the break to complete his rehabilitation.
Tampa Bay has arguably been the most dominant team in the Eastern Conference this season, and they’ve mostly done so without Point at the top of his game. When he has been healthy, Point has scored only 11 goals and 30 points in 37 games, averaging 18:02 of ice time. Still, his possession and defensive metrics have remained stable throughout his career averages.
Still, the point production has been worrisome, and would have a bigger impact if the rest of the team hadn’t been filling in the gaps. Point is only a year removed from an impressive three-year stretch where he scored 139 goals and 267 points in 240 games. Hopefully, the Olympic break provided Point with the necessary time to fully rehabilitate from the injuries that have negatively impacted his 2025-26 campaign, allowing him to regain his form in the final stretch.
Meanwhile, the Lightning are also adding some defensive depth back into the lineup. Lilleberg has missed multiple months with an undisclosed injury and is one of many Tampa Bay defenders to suffer long-term injuries this season. Before exiting the lineup in mid-December, Lilleberg scored two goals and six points in 32 games, averaging 17:21 of ice time. There’s no word on whether he’ll enter the lineup tonight against the Toronto Maple Leafs.
Lastly, Paul, like Lilleberg, is dealing with an undisclosed injury from before the Olympics. Unfortunately, the Lightning haven’t provided any rigid timeline for his return. Already seeking middle-six depth leading up to the deadline, Paul’s absence could further influence this plan. The 30-year-old veteran has registered six goals and 12 points in 34 games for the Bolts this season.
Penguins Place Sidney Crosby On IR, Activate Kris Letang
The lower-body injury Sidney Crosby sustained at the Olympics will significantly impact the rest of his season. According to a team announcement, the Pittsburgh Penguins have placed their captain on the injured reserve. Additionally, the team has activated veteran defenseman Kris Letang in a corresponding roster move.
Although Team Canada, largely out of respect for the Penguins, failed to clarify the extent of Crosby’s injury; Pittsburgh did. The team shared that Crosby is expected to miss the next four weeks at a minimum, putting his projected return toward the end of March in a best case scenario.
Obviously, Crosby’s absence will have a significant impact on Pittsburgh’s competitiveness to close out the regular season. Despite their strong performance this season, largely led by Crosby offensively, the team is only one point up on the New York Islanders and five points up on the Columbus Blue Jackets and Washington Capitals. Still, the Penguins have a few games in hand on the Islanders and Capitals, respectively.
Even if the Penguins commit to buying at the deadline, there are few options to fill the void left by Crosby, both on and off the ice. In his age-38 campaign, he’s remained a point-per-game player, registering 27 goals and 59 points in 56 games, averaging 19:35 of ice time per night. There’s a 15-point gap between Crosby and fellow veteran Evgeni Malkin for the team-lead in scoring.
If there’s any consolation, Pittsburgh will be able to move Malkin to the first-line center, where he’s filled in on occassion throughout Crosby’s career. Also incumbered by injuries throughout the season, Malkin has had a quality year when healthy, scoring 13 goals and 44 points in 41 games.
It’ll be interesting to see if Crosby’s injury will have any impact on the Penguins’ plans for the trade deadline. Given that they’re surprisingly competitive this season, General Manager Kyle Dubas has been able to add a few NHL pieces in a flurry of trades while also improving the team’s draft capital moving forward.
Meanwhile, Letang returns from injury after a month, though much of that was from the Olympic break. He had been recovering from a broken foot. The 20-year veteran has scored three goals and 25 points in 50 games for the Penguins this season. It’s expected that he’ll resume his role on Pittsburgh’s second defensive-pairing, alongside recent acquisition, Samuel Girard.
