Sabres Notes: Byram, Malenstyn, Krebs, Meloche
Sabres defenseman Bowen Byram is eligible to sign a contract extension as of July 1st when he officially begins the final year of his contract. Inked to a two-year deal after the club filed for arbitration last summer to prevent an offer sheet, the downside to that was that it set the 24-year-old up to hit unrestricted free agency in 2027.
After a prolonged state of uncertainty with winger Alex Tuch who played his walk year without an extension, it appears GM Jarmo Kekalainen is hoping to avoid that this time around. Matthew Fairburn of The Athletic reports that the GM met with Byram’s agent, Darren Ferris, at the NHL Combine this week, a discussion that likely conveyed interest in discussing a new deal over the coming weeks.
Byram had his best season yet in 2025-26, picking up 11 goals and 31 assists while playing in all 82 games, a mark he has now reached for the second straight year. Given his long history with concussions (or concussion-like symptoms), not missing a game in back-to-back seasons is particularly notable. He also logged more than 22 minutes per night of ice time for the second straight year.
Given his performance and the big jumps coming to the Upper Limit of the salary cap, Byram is going to be in line for a significant increase on his current $6.25MM price tag. AFP Analytics pegs a seven-year extension in the $9.5MM range but that might ultimately be on the low end, especially depending on what some of the contracts for unrestricted free agent defenders check in at over the next month or so.
Staying on the UFA front, Fairburn adds that the team met with the representatives for winger Beck Malenstyn this week as he gets set to test the open market for the first time. The 28-year-old has impressed on the fourth line over his two seasons, providing plenty of physicality (including a career-high 282 hits in 2025-26) while taking a regular turn on the penalty kill. Coming off a deal that paid $1.35MM per season, Malenstyn could plausibly double that in free agency. But with only $11.9MM in cap room per PuckPedia and others to sign (including Tuch and RFA Zach Benson), spending that much on a fourth liner might not be the most advisable route to take.
Buffalo has another RFA of some significance this summer in center Peyton Krebs. Fairburn noted that initial discussions on a new deal started this week though no meaningful progress has been made. Krebs is coming off a career-best 39 points this season and is arbitration-eligible while being owed a $1.45MM qualifying offer. Realistically, he should easily more than double that on his next deal, especially if he’s tendered the qualifying offer that then allows him to file for a hearing. With the tender deadline coming up on June 29th, this will need to be a priority for Kekalainen as if they’re too far apart in talks, a trade or non-tender would become a real possibility.
Meanwhile, on the prospect front, goaltender Samuel Meloche was on the move earlier this week as QMJHL Saint John announced that they had acquired him. Meloche was a fourth-round pick back in 2025, going 116th overall. The 18-year-old posted a 2.75 GAA and a .897 SV% in 50 games during the regular season with Rouyn-Noranda but was better in the playoffs, putting up marks of 2.52 and .905, respectively. Meloche is committed to play for Northeastern University but evidently, he won’t make the jump to the college ranks for another year as a result of this move.
Andrei Vasilevskiy Wins 2026 Vezina Trophy
While the playoffs didn’t end the way that Andrei Vasilevskiy would have liked, there was no questioning his strong regular season performance. He was recognized for those efforts on Saturday as the league announced that Vasilevskiy is this year’s Vezina Trophy winner. The award is given to “the goaltender adjudged to be the best at his position,” as voted on by NHL General Managers.
It’s the second time that the 31-year-old has won the award but it has been a while since his victory, one that came back in the 2018-19 season. Since then, he had been a top-three finalist three other times (finishing in the top six in two other years) but had been unable to pick up this second win until now.
Vasilevskiy posted a 2.31 GAA along with a .911 SV% and two shutouts in 58 games during the regular season while finishing fourth in Goals Saved Above Expected with a mark of 24.7, per MoneyPuck. He also led the league with 39 victories, leading in that department for the sixth time in his career. A big chunk of those wins came from a very impressive 17-0-1 run that spanned more than two months, beginning in late December and ending shortly after the Olympic break, one that helped vault the Lightning back into contention for the Atlantic Division title.
Vasilevskiy took home 17 of 31 first-place ballots to give him a comfortable margin of victory over Ilya Sorokin of the Islanders and Jeremy Swayman of the Bruins, who were the other finalists for the award. Their combined vote point totals (97) came in below Vasilevskiy’s (114). Capitals netminder Logan Thompson and Avalanche goalie Scott Wedgewood also received first-place votes while three other netminders had down-ballot consideration as well.
With the award, Vasilevskiy is now the third active goaltender with multiple Vezina Trophy wins, joining Sergei Bobrovsky and Connor Hellebuyck. He is also now the fifth netminder in NHL history to have multiple Vezina Trophies and multiple Stanley Cup championships. Bobrovsky is still playing while the other three, Martin Brodeur, Dominik Hasek, and Patrick Roy, are all in the Hall of Fame.
Photo courtesy of Jonathan Dyer-Imagn Images.
Morning Notes: Poile, Kings, AHL Playoffs
Nashville Predators Assistant General Manager and Director of Hockey Operations Brian Poile is departing the organization. Son of Hall of Fame GM David Poile, Brian had held the role since 2018, a step up from his director of hockey operations position assumed in 2010. The news was shared by Alex Daugherty of The Tennessean.
Even though former Kings GM Rob Blake was hired yesterday as executive vice president of hockey operations, Daugherty emphasized that the two roles are different, and a replacement for Poile will be found by the team. Meanwhile, his father will stay in the mix as an advisor.
No dig at Poile himself, who is still in his 40s as a bright young mind who played at Boston College in the 1990s, with serious pedigree as a third generation executive. Yet since taking over in 2018, his Predators went from a surprise Stanley Cup contender and Presidents Trophy winner, to a relatively stale roster today which has not reached the second round since. Eight years later, they continue to lack high-end production from anybody recently drafted and developed by the club, but to be fair, they’ve been missing top lottery selections. With 16 years of experience in Nashville, another opportunity will come calling for Poile, but both sides will benefit from a change as the Predators move to a new era under Chris MacFarland.
Elsewhere across the league:
- The Kings seem to be zeroing in on a head coaching decision, the first domino of more to fall. On Thursday’s episode of OverDrive, Darren Dreger of TSN reported that Los Angeles could name their head coach next week, and that they won’t be waiting for Bruce Cassidy. Interim D.J. Smith was able to guide the team to the playoffs on an 11-6-6 record, and it’s thought that he’s still a real candidate to stick around. If they opt to start fresh, current Ducks assistant and former Oilers bench boss Jay Woodcroft is a name to watch for the nearby Kings. Woodcroft has a better track record than Smith, although also in a smaller sample size, leading the Oilers on two playoff runs from 2021-23, before things sputtered to a halt early the following season. Whichever decision is made, The Fourth Period’s David Pagnotta reported on Thursday’s edition of The DFO Rundown that key free agent center Scott Laughton’s choice to stay or go will weigh on who is named behind the bench, and having expressed a willingness to stick around already, as long as it get the stamp of approval he could be another name off the board come July 1.
- The Toronto Marlies, AHL affiliates of the Maple Leafs, took a commanding 3-2 series lead over the Wilkes-Barre Scranton Penguins in the conference finals. They’ll need just one win to advance to the Calder Cup Final, playing whoever makes it out between the Colorado Eagles (Avalanche) and Chicago Wolves (Hurricanes). Another 3-2 series there, the Eagles hold the edge. Top Leafs prospect Easton Cowan is rolling, posting a goal and assist last game with points in each of his last four games, playing alongside former OHL teammate Landon Sim who also notched a key goal, as outlined by Lance Hornby of The Toronto Sun. As for Colorado, prospects Gavin Brindley and T.J. Hughes, once collegiate teammates at Michigan, have provided a boost to the Eagles lineup, the latter with 12 points, while Brindley has 8, in 15 playoff games each.
Senators Hoping To Re-Sign Nick Cousins
Nick Cousins had a more impactful second season with the Senators in 2025-26 compared to his first year with the team. As a result, it appears GM Steve Staios would like to keep him in the fold a little longer. Postmedia’s Bruce Garrioch reports that the team has informed Cousins’ representatives that they’d like to re-sign him for next season.
Back in the 2024 offseason, it took until the end of August for Cousins to sign, allowing Ottawa to get him for $800K, only a little above the minimum salary. Given how things went the following year when he had 15 points in 50 games, he ultimately settled for a nominal raise this season, inking a one-year, $825K just before free agency opened up to ensure there wouldn’t be a repeat of the year before.
It wouldn’t be shocking if Cousins has a bit more leverage this time around. The 32-year-old played in all but one game this season, while chipping in with 169 hits and 92 penalty minutes in 11:25 per night of playing time. He remained a regular on the fourth line in the playoffs against Carolina, chipping in with an assist and 16 hits in their four-game series.
Cousins has had success in a bottom-six role for a while now, allowing him to carve out a 723-game career thus far across parts of a dozen seasons. However, he hasn’t stayed in the same place for very long as he has seen action with seven different organizations already.
However, in a UFA market that isn’t the deepest, Cousins should be able to secure a much better contract this time out. AFP Analytics projects that the veteran could land a two-year deal worth a little more than $2MM per season. Even if the Sens aren’t comfortable going that high to a fourth liner, he could still plausibly at least double the AAV of his deal this season and perhaps get more than one season. Given how he has bounced around, a multi-year commitment from Ottawa would certainly have to be appealing.
It took until June 30th last year for a deal between the two sides to get done. We’ll find out soon enough if it will be another prolonged negotiation this time around or if they’ll be able to get something worked out a little earlier this time around.
Maple Leafs Notes: Matthews, Halpern, McKenna
Maple Leafs GM John Chayka met with reporters today at the NHL Combine (video link). Among the topics discussed was the future of Auston Matthews amid speculation that he might not be ready to commit to signing another deal with the franchise. As expected, Chayka certainly tried to downplay that speculation, suggesting that things are promising on that front:
We’ve had several conversations with him and his representatives. What I saw was a happy captain. Someone who’s got a lot of pride to be the captain of the Toronto Maple Leafs. Someone who wants to win in Toronto, which aligns with how we’re thinking about it.
Matthews has two seasons remaining on his contract, one that briefly was an NHL record in terms of AAV at $13.25MM (and has since been surpassed multiple times). The captain has seen his production drop in each of the last two years after a career-best 69 goals and 107 points. This season, he had just 27 goals and 26 assists in 60 games, the lowest goal and assist totals of his 10-year NHL career.
More from Toronto:
- During his presser today, Chayka indicated that he spoke to many candidates with only some moving on to the next stage. One who won’t be doing so is Jeff Halpern. Sportsnet’s Elliotte Friedman reported on the latest 32 Thoughts podcast (audio link) that Halpern did interview with the Maple Leafs for the role but isn’t moving to the next stage. Halpern has been coaching in Tampa Bay’s organization since 2015-16, spending three seasons as an AHL assistant and has been up with the Lightning as an assistant with them since 2018-19.
- Chayka also noted that, as things stand, the likeliest outcome is that Toronto holds and uses the number one selection this month which should come as little surprise. One of the likely players to be selected there is Penn State forward Gavin McKenna. He met with reporters today, including Terry Koshan of the Toronto Sun, and indicated that he’d feel “pretty fortunate” to go there, given that they’re a team that’s likely eyeing a return to the playoffs next season, an outcome that most top picks don’t get to see. McKenna and Swedish winger Ivar Stenberg are viewed as the two likeliest options to go first overall on June 26th.
Offseason Checklist: Pittsburgh Penguins
The offseason has arrived for half of the league’s teams that aren’t taking part in the playoffs, plus those who have already been eliminated. Accordingly, it’s time to examine what they will need to accomplish over the coming months. Next up is a look at Pittsburgh.
No one expected the Pittsburgh Penguins to make the playoffs this year, but thanks to some sly front-office work by Kyle Dubas and company, the team hit on most of their moves and skated into the playoffs. It wasn’t a long playoff run, but it was likely enough to show Dubas and the Penguins’ management team that the roster they have now isn’t far from competing in the Eastern Conference. Despite Pittsburgh being a nice story, the team is still quite old, and most of their key players are on the wrong side of 30, which means they need to find young stars to move into top roles on the roster. With Dubas at the helm, the Penguins could be poised for a big summer.
Add A Top Four Defenseman
Pittsburgh relied on a ragtag top-four defensive unit last year, leaning heavily on Erik Karlsson, Kris Letang, and Parker Wotherspoon, occasionally using Ryan Shea, Brett Kulak, and Samuel Girard to close the year. While Wotherspoon and Karlsson were an excellent pairing, Girard and Letang struggled and probably aren’t best suited for second-pairing duty on a team with playoff aspirations. Letang is best suited for a third-pairing role, or, if he is forced into top-four duty, he needs a defensively responsible, safe partner like Kulak was.
It will be interesting to see whether the Penguins circle back on Kulak this summer, but given Dubas’ mandate to build a younger roster, it’s hard to imagine him pursuing a 32-year-old projected to get a three-year deal this offseason. The Penguins need a top-four defender this summer, preferably one in his mid-20s. Pittsburgh management is high on prospect Harrison Brunicke, but it’s tough to envision him taking on that assignment as a rookie.
It’s likely the Dubas will need to look outside the organization for help on this front, and in terms of unrestricted free agents, there isn’t much available that would fit what the Penguins are looking for. Mario Ferraro is an option if Pittsburgh were looking for a defensive defenseman capable of filling a top-four role, but he may not be the optimal choice. Although he is a decent puck carrier and, at 27 years old, fits the Penguins’ timeline, his contract is projected to be north of $5MM annually on a four-year deal, and that number could go up should a bidding war start. The Penguins already have one contract on the books for left-handed defensive defenseman Ryan Graves, and it is arguably the worst deal in Penguins history (although Jack Johnson’s is up there as well). Graves was signed on the first day of free agency in 2023, and Dubas likely learned his lesson from chasing high-priced defensive rearguards in free agency.
All signs point to the trade market as the best option for Pittsburgh, and they have plenty of assets they could move, including draft picks and prospects. Bowen Byram of Buffalo would be a possible target for the Penguins, but he reportedly likes Buffalo, and the Sabres would like to keep him long term. At 24 years of age, Byram is uber-talented and offers many of the intangibles teams are looking for. However, in the years that followed the 2022 Stanley Cup, he struggled to put it all together, leaving a sizeable gap between his skill set and his on-ice play. This past year, he was much better, setting a career high in points with 42 in 82 games. Despite all of this, Byram might be a target for the Penguins to steer clear of given the trade costs and the financial costs of his future contract.
Braden Schneider of the New York Rangers and Simon Nemec of the New Jersey Devils are two more defensemen who could be on the move this offseason, but it’s hard to envision the Rangers and Devils sending young, emerging defenders to a division rival. The Rangers are the likelier of the two to do so, having sent K’Andre Miller to the Hurricanes last summer in a blockbuster deal. Schneider would be a gamble for Pittsburgh, as he hasn’t quite taken the big step the Rangers were hoping he could take, but at this point, he could probably serve as Girard’s partner on a second pairing. There are major warts to Schneider’s game, and whatever he gets paid on his next contract will exceed his actual impact on the ice. Schneider is neither poised nor skilled with the puck, which is a problem for a team paying him $6MM, which is what a long-term deal will look like right now. That being said, in Pittsburgh, head coach Dan Muse’s style of play might benefit Schneider, as it relies more on short, higher-percentage passing rather than long breakout passes.
Nemec’s warts are on the defensive side, but he has a ton of offensive upside. If Pittsburgh were to acquire him to play in their top four, they would also need to find a defensive left-shot partner to support Nemec as he figures out his play in his own end. Given that Girard and Letang are not that type, the Penguins are unlikely to pursue the 22-year-old.
Finally, there is Olen Zellweger, a fantastic transition defender for the Anaheim Ducks who might fall victim to the numbers game out West. The smooth-skating puck mover is far from a finished product and needs work on both sides of the puck. This leaves him third on Anaheim’s depth chart, behind Jackson LaCombe and Pavel Mintyukov. With a pending cap crunch in Anaheim, he might be squeezed out. The issue for Pittsburgh is that Zellweger is undersized and is almost a carbon copy of Girard, albeit quite a bit younger. It’s possible the Penguins could acquire him and move Girard to the third pairing, but pairing Zellweger with Letang feels like a recipe for disaster, given Girard and Letang’s results from this past year.
Find A 2C
The Penguins have decent depth down the middle of the ice, with Sidney Crosby centering the first line, followed by Thomas Novak, Benjamin Kindel, and Blake Lizotte. The weak link in that chain is on the second line, where Novak isn’t an ideal fit and would be better suited to a bottom-six role. Kindel is probably a bit ripe for a 2C role, but he likely will move into it in the next couple of seasons. The Penguins also have Evgeni Malkin remaining in the fold, but asking a 40-year-old with two bad knees to play second-line center for 82 games is a ridiculous ask. A second-line center would give Pittsburgh a formidable top six and either push Novak into a role better suited to his skill set or allow the Penguins to move him for other assets.
It’s easy to talk about acquiring a top-six center, but much harder to do so, especially for Dubas, who isn’t going to target older players and would much rather grab a younger one. The cost to acquire this type of player will be exorbitant, as many teams are trying to beef up the middle of the ice on their own teams. Some folks will float the name of Vincent Trocheck because of his connection to the city of Pittsburgh, but given that he is 32, it doesn’t fit the Penguins’ long-term plans.
Two St. Louis Blues players come to mind, with Robert Thomas and Jordan Kyrou both mentioned in trade discussions. For the Penguins, either player would make sense given their age, contract status, and talent level, but Thomas would probably be the better fit. The 26-year-old has been a point-per-game player for the better part of five seasons and could slot into the Penguins’ depth chart behind Crosby and play with Malkin and Egor Chinakhov. The issue for Pittsburgh would be the cost, which might start with Kindel, a non-starter if you are the Penguins. That makes this trade unlikely, but if Thomas’ market falls and Pittsburgh could use other prospects and draft picks to make a move, you have to imagine that Dubas would be in on Thomas. Kyrou should be easier to acquire, given that he is a few years older than Thomas and struggled last season. But those two years might be enough to push Dubas to look elsewhere rather than pursue an expensive, underperforming 28-year-old.
Speaking of an expensive, underperforming 28-year-old, Auston Matthews is a name forever tied to Dubas after their time together in Toronto. Matthews has had a tumultuous few seasons in Toronto, and it’s fair to wonder whether it’s time for him and the Maple Leafs to get together and find a new place for him to play. For their part, both the team and Matthews have said they want to continue the relationship, but with two years left on his contract and a poor showing last season, things could change in a hurry. If Toronto were to make Matthews available, Pittsburgh would be one of the more logical landing spots for the former Hart Trophy winner. The Penguins have the assets to make a trade and the cap space to absorb Matthews’ $13.25MM cap hit. But does Dubas have the will to give up his best future assets for a player pushing 30? It’s hard to say, but given the past relationship, it’s not completely out of the question. Matthews would solve some problems in Pittsburgh, and becoming just one of the guys might be best for him, but does the team have enough around him to win if they trade away many of their future top picks and prospects?
Figure Out Erik Karlsson’s Future
Last summer, it seemed a foregone conclusion that Karlsson would be dealt, but the Penguins held on to him, and he was their most important player this season, willing them into the playoffs when Malkin and Crosby missed time in late February and March. The 36-year-old has one year left on his contract, counting $10MM against the Penguins cap (and an additional $1.5MM against the San Jose Sharks cap), and will need a new contract if the Penguins hope to keep him beyond this season. What a new contract will look like remains to be seen, but AFP Analytics has him pegged for a three-year extension worth $6.628MM per season. Karlsson had 15 goals and 51 assists in 75 games this year and significantly cut down on turnovers while playing some of the best defense of his career. Pittsburgh may opt to wait things out on an extension, the way they did with Malkin, but there is one other option on the table, although it’s a limited one.
The Penguins could try to shop Karlsson as they did last summer, but given his age, cap hit, and no-movement clause, it will not be an easy trade to make. It’s hard to say how many teams Karlsson would be open to moving to, but it wouldn’t be many, and he appears to enjoy playing with Crosby and company. There is also the fact that Pittsburgh doesn’t have anything close to a Karlsson in the pipeline. Letang is their next-best option, and he struggled last season and probably needs a lighter workload.
The best move for the Penguins this summer is likely to stand pat with Karlsson and look to extend him during the season if his play remains strong. Trading him away would create too big a hole in the lineup, and extending him too soon could lock Pittsburgh into a regrettable long-term deal with a player approaching 40.
Get Younger
The Penguins’ lineup has become considerably younger in recent seasons, but their top players remain on the wrong side of 30. In fact, Pittsburgh’s top six scorers were all over 30, and their seventh-best scorer (Novak) is 29. It’s a glaring issue in the Penguins’ retool that they haven’t found high-end prospects or young players to mix in with their aging stars, but that doesn’t mean they haven’t found talented impact players. Chinakhov looks like a rising star, and if he can build on last season’s success, he could become a cornerstone piece. The same could be said for Kindel, whose abilities seem to have no limits. Those two make up a solid part of the core, but neither has the feel of a franchise player, though their development path will ultimately decide that.
Among the Penguins’ prospects, goaltender Sergei Murashov could become a superstar and is likely to be an NHL regular next season alongside several other Pittsburgh prospects, such as Rutger McGroarty, Avery Hayes, and perhaps Tristan Broz. That is a nice starting point for the Penguins’ prospect pool, but it’s still missing those top-end options.
Dubas’ biggest long-term need is the one that will be the toughest to acquire: a player he can build his entire team around. It’s going to be difficult because the Penguins are seemingly too good right now to bottom out and get a top draft pick, and other teams are pushing hard to lock up young talent long term. That doesn’t mean future impact players won’t become available; it just means that Dubas, Wes Clark and company will need to do extra due diligence to find a young impact player who has slipped through the cracks at another organization. Easier said than done, but that is why Dubas is one of the highest-paid executives in the NHL.
Photo by Jeff Curry-Imagn Images
Kings Sign Aatu Jamsen To One-Year Extension
The Kings took care of one of their pending restricted free agents on Friday. The team announced that they’ve signed forward Aatu Jamsen to a one-year, two-way extension for next season. The deal will pay $850K at the NHL level.
The 23-year-old was a seventh-round pick by Los Angeles back in 2020, going 190th overall. He took the long route toward signing as he spent the next four seasons playing with Pelicans in his native Finland before signing ten days before his signing rights would have been relinquished. Over that time, his best season offensively came back in 2023-24 when he had 14 goals and 18 assists in 43 games.
Jamsen hasn’t had quite the same level of offensive success in North America, however. Last season, he put up seven goals and four assists in 36 games, missing multiple months due to injuries. This year was a healthier one as he suited up in 59 contests where he notched 16 goals and 12 helpers. That was enough to earn him an extended look for next season.
Jamsen has one season of waiver exemption remaining so he won’t need to pass through unclaimed to return to AHL Ontario. It’s probable that he’ll be going back to the Reign over battling for a potential roster spot with the big club. Instead, the goal will likely be to perform well enough to get a chance to make his NHL debut at some point in the 2026-27 campaign.
Free Agent Focus: Los Angeles Kings
Free agency is now less than a month away, and teams are looking ahead to when it opens. Even with the UFA crop being thinned out in recent months, there will be some quality veterans set to hit the open market in July, while many teams also have key restricted free agents to re-sign. We continue our look around the NHL with an overview of the free agent situation for the Kings.
Key Restricted Free Agents
D Brandt Clarke – If there were any remaining questions about Clarke’s ability to become a top-four defenseman, those have completely subsided. The former first-round pick had an impressive season with the Kings, scoring eight goals and 40 points with a +11 rating in 82 games. It’s not terribly more production than what he had last season, but he proved he could handle nearly 20 minutes of ice time per game. Given that Clarke is the only defenseman in Los Angeles who has yet to enter his prime, it would make the most sense to give Clarke a long-term deal this summer to ensure the Kings have a defenseman to build a defensive corps around.
Other RFAs: F Martin Chromiak, F Francesco Pinelli
Key Unrestricted Free Agents
F Scott Laughton – There wasn’t much hope in Laughton after the Kings acquired him from the Maple Leafs at the trade deadline, given his struggles with Toronto this year. However, Laughton seemingly rediscovered his game in Los Angeles, scoring five goals and eight points in 21 games down the stretch, with a 59.4% faceoff rating while averaging over 15 minutes of ice time per game. Laughton expressed a desire to remain with the Kings at the end-of-season media availability, and the Kings likely won’t have any issue retaining him for a bottom-six role.
F Andrei Kuzmenko – Although Laughton has found a new home with the Kings, Kuzmenko has seemingly lost his. Limited by injuries, the 30-year-old Russian registered only 13 goals and 25 points in 52 games this season. Toward the end of May, Eric Stephens of The Athletic reported that Los Angeles is likely to move on from Kuzmenko this offseason, since he no longer has a spot in the top six. He’s an incredibly streaky scorer, but can provide some offense in a middle-six role. Regardless, he’s likely to join his fifth organization in as many seasons.
Other UFAs: F Mathieu Joseph, F Jeff Malott, D Jacob Moverare, G Pheonix Copley, F Glenn Gawdin, F Logan Brown, F Jan Jenik, F Nikita Alexandrov, D Kyle Burroughs
Projected Cap Space
No pressure, but this offseason has the chance to be a franchise-defining one for the Kings. Yes, the team has a priority to retain Clarke for as long as possible, but they also have an Anže Kopitar-shaped hole down the middle. The team has $18.3MM in cap space, which should leave plenty left over to fill that need. It’s not clear whether Los Angeles is confident in Quinton Byfield assuming that role just yet, so the Kings will likely have to use their available dollars on the trade market to add an impact center this summer.
Photos courtesy of Bob Frid (Clarke) and Griffin Hooper (Laughton) of Imagn Images. Contract information courtesy of PuckPedia.
Blues Sign Georgii Romanov To Two-Year Extension
The St. Louis Blues took care of a free agent this afternoon, re-upping goaltender Georgii Romanov on a two-year, two-way contract extension. The deal carries an AAV of $875k at the NHL level.
Undrafted out of Russia, Romanov was picked out by the Sharks in 2023, signing an entry level contract. Despite playing in just three KHL games to that point, otherwise holding the crease in the VHL, the 6’5″ netminder played in 29 games for the San Jose Barracuda of the AHL in 2023-24 and even made two NHL appearances, allowing just one goal in 59 minutes.
Continuing to get a share of starts for the Barracuda in the following season, alongside Yaroslav Askarov, Romanov posted a solid .905 save percentage. The young Russian was again thrust into the highest level, as the fifth goaltender to spend time in San Jose’s crease during the 2024-25 campaign. Romanov lost all six of his starts, not coming away with a win, but had a solid 3.89 goals-against-average facing a barrage on the 50-loss team, numbers on par with NHL mainstays of the time, Vítek Vaněček and Alexander Georgiev.
With Askarov expectedly taking the spotlight, Romanov departed San Jose last summer, settling for a PTO with the Devils. Not landing a contract, he was then scooped up by St. Louis in October. Taking 28 games as opposed to Vadim Zherenko‘s 42 for the Springfield Thunderbirds, Romanov rewarded the organization with tremendous play in the postseason, getting hot with a .939 save percentage and two shutouts in 11 playoff games.
As Zherenko is a group six free agent this summer, Romanov’s path to #1 for the Thunderbirds and third in the organization is wide open. At age 26, he has flashed enough potential to have real late-blooming NHL upside, and Blues fans should expect him to make his debut with the club at some point next season. As the franchise navigates their youth movement, possibly moving on from Jordan Binnington, the Russian’s continued progression could soften the blow of losing Colten Ellis on waivers to Buffalo.
Snapshots: Canucks, McNabb, Babcock
This afternoon the Vancouver Canucks shared that Daren Hermiston has been named Director of Player Personnel and Player Development.
An NHLPA Certified Player Agent who represented players across the NHL as well as lower leagues, Hermiston had held such a role since 2009, as a member of THE.TEAM company. According to PuckPedia, his clients include Canucks forward Arshdeep Bains, along with several prospects such as Harrison Brunicke of the Penguins.
Before his time as an agent, the native of Kamloops, British Columbia studied Business Administration at Thompson Rivers University. Hermiston’s addition is the latest among several notable changes in the Canucks front office. After finishing last in the NHL, they’ve internally promoted Ryan Johnson to general manager, Manny Malhotra to head coach, and both Henrik and Daniel Sedin have moved up from their development roles.
Elsewhere across the league:
- Vegas head coach John Tortorella did not provide an update on Brayden McNabb other than that he has traveled back with the team, relayed by Danny Webster of the Las Vegas Review-Journal. A lack of transparency on the matter is no surprise at this time of year, especially coming from Tortorella and his Golden Knights. Even lineup decisions aside though, it is a relief to hear that McNabb is at least out of the hospital, after catching a rising shot square to the face in a scary injury early in last night’s game. Ending his night after just 5:39, from there the Golden Knights rolled with four defensemen much of the night, seldom using Dylan Coghlan, which certainly played a factor in Carolina’s eventual overtime win. Averaging just one second shy of 20 minutes a night in their playoff run so far, if McNabb’s injury is too severe to return with facial protection in tomorrow’s Game 3, Ben Hutton figures to be the next man up as Tortorella would continue to lean heavily on his top defenders.
- The Brantford Bulldogs of the OHL named Michael Babcock their new head coach, the league announced. The 31-year-old had been an assistant coach with the AHL’s San Diego Gulls (Ducks) for the past season. Son of Mike Babcock, he was a product of the Little Caesar’s program, playing in the USHL and spending four years with Merrimack College. Joining the coaching ranks as an assistant under his father at the University of Saskatchewan in 2021, Babcock advanced to the NHL level, coaching development/skills for the Senators and Blues before his first gig behind an AHL bench in 2025-26. Now set to take on his head coaching journey, Babcock is the sixth head coach in Brantford history, and the youngest to do so for the club. Meanwhile, San Diego will move forward seeking a replacement shortly.
