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NHL

Golden Knights Sign Trent Swick To Entry-Level Contract

March 1, 2025 at 8:33 pm CDT | by Gabriel Foley Leave a Comment

The Vegas Golden Knights have signed 2024 sixth-round pick Trent Swick to a three-year entry-level contract. The deal is set to begin in the 2025-26 season. Swick is currently with the OHL’s Kitchener Rangers, where he’s scored 57 points in 55 games this season – second-most on the team.

Swick is a towering six-foot-six, 210-pound winger who skates smoothly, doesn’t take penalties, and gets back on defense. Those points are evidenced by his measly 38 penalty minutes and a strong plus-seven this year. His size limits what roles Swick can play in the offensive end, but he fills what’s asked of him well – holding space in the slot and using a long reach to disrupt opponents.

Swick had a breakout year last season. With the eyes of NHL scouts watching close, he jumped from 18 points in 33 games in 2022-23 to 62 points in 63 games last year. He found his niche as a passing catalyst for Kitchener’s smaller and more dynamic scorers. But Swick was distinctly helped along by an improved ability to hang onto the puck and work his way into space. He improved his play through traffic on and off of the puck, and continues to improve his scoring pace this year as a result.

With sixth-round acclaim and juniors scoring that, while strong, doesn’t jump off the page – it’s not likely that Swick will make an impact on the NHL roster in the short term. He’ll instead likely be forced to decided between the AHL and college hockey next season, with recent agreements between the CHL and NCAA opening the door for the soon-to-be 21-year-old to take either path. Should he turn pro, Swick’s body control in his lofty frame could earn Vegas’ attention very quickly. The New York Rangers have notably found their own successes leaning into their oversized forwards, with Adam Edstrom and Matt Rempe each carving niche roles in the Rangers bottom-six.

CHL| NHL| OHL| Transactions| Vegas Golden Knights Trent Swick

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Wild Recall David Jiricek, Reassign Two

March 1, 2025 at 5:34 pm CDT | by Gabriel Foley Leave a Comment

The Minnesota Wild have recalled defenseman David Jiricek and reassigned forwards Marat Khusnutdinov and Liam Ohgren. The moves clear space for winger Gustav Nyquist, who Minnesota acquired from the Nashville Predators for a second-round pick on Saturday morning.

Jiricek’s recall comes after news that both Zach Bogosian and Jonas Brodin are banged up. Bogosian sat out of Minnesota’s Friday game with a lower-body injury, per NHL.com’s Joe Smith. Brodin played just 15:47 of the outing, and his availability remains up in the air per Michael Russo of The Athletic.

Jiricek will be the beneficiary of any open minutes, after he recorded his first point in seven AHL games on Friday. He’s struggled to find a consistent rut in the Wild organization, with two points in six NHL games and six points in 26 AHL games. The Wild acquired Jiricek from the Columbus Blue Jackets on November 30th, sending Daemon Hunt and three draft picks the other way. Jiricek is in his third season in North America, and his cold scoring has dragged through every year. He has 66 points in 114 career AHL games, and 13 points in 59 NHL games.

The Wild’s swap of forwards in this mix might not sway their scoring a ton. Ohgren and Khusnutdinov have combined for just four points across their last 10 games. Ohgren has often served as Minnesota’s extra forward, with just four points in 23 games this season. Khusnutdinov has served a hardier role as the fourth-line center, but has just seven points in 57 games. Nyquist has confidently outscored both youngster in his time with Nashville – netting 21 points in 57 games – but he’s managed just one assist in his last 10 NHL games.

Nyquist had a stint with the Wild during the 2022-23 season as well. He scored five points in three games on that stint, but an upper-body injury kept him from stepping into the lineup more before hitting unrestricted free agency. With these moves, Minnesota has carved out the lineup spot needed to give Nyquist a truer look this time around.

AHL| Columbus Blue Jackets| Free Agency| Injury| Minnesota Wild| NHL| Nashville Predators David Jiricek| Liam Ohgren| Marat Khusnutdinov

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Rangers To Place Chris Kreider On IR, Recall Brett Berard

March 1, 2025 at 4:52 pm CDT | by Gabriel Foley Leave a Comment

The New York Rangers have recalled rookie winger Brett Berard from the minor leagues. They’re also expected to place winger Chris Kreider on injured reserve in a corresponding move per Vince Z. Mercogliano of USA Today Sports. Kreider has missed New York’s last three games with an upper-body injury. He was a late scratch for each absence and doesn’t yet have a clear timeline to return. The Rangers can make Kreider’s IR placement retroactive to his last game on February 22nd. That will make him eligible to be activated as soon as he’s back to full health.

Berard spent six weeks on the NHL roster between November and January. He stepped into the first 19 games of his NHL career on that stint and recorded seven points, eight penalty minutes, and a minus-nine. The Rangers returned Berard to the minors in mid-January, and he’s shown the top-flight stint kicked his game into a new gear. He has 10 points, 25 penalty minutes, and a minus-five in 14 AHL games since returning to the minors.

Berard will join fellow rookie Brennan Othmann on the NHL roster. Othmann filled in Kreider’s vacancy over the last two games, with no scoring and just 18 minutes of combined ice time. Berard will give the Rangers a hotter hand to try and make up for Kreider’s lineup hole. They could also turn towards new addition Juuso Parssinen to fill a left-wing role, after acquiring him as part of a swap that sent Jimmy Vesey and Ryan Lindgren to the Colorado Avalanche. Parssinen has 11 points in 37 games this season – split between time in Nashville and Colorado. The Rangers have two wing vacancies to fill.

Kreider has turned his season around in February, recording four points in six NHL games and one goal in two games at the 4-Nations Face-Off. He’s up to 17 goals and 21 points in 48 games this season. That’s enough to tie for second on the Rangers in goals scored, leaving a glaring hole in New York’s hot-and-cold offense. Their pair of rookies, and new acquisition, will have a golden opportunity to step up in Kreider’s absence. A hot performance could go a long way towards earning routine minutes with the Rangers now down Vesey.

AHL| Injury| NHL| New York Rangers Brennan Othmann| Brett Berard| Chris Kreider

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Trade Deadline Notes: Boeser, Sharks, Schenn

February 28, 2025 at 9:07 pm CDT | by Gabriel Foley 11 Comments

Vancouver Canucks winger Brock Boeser has reportedly turned down a five-year, $40MM contract extension per Daily Faceoff’s Frank Seravalli, who adds that Boeser is looking for more term on his next deal. The $8MM cap hit on the rumored offer would be a $1.35MM bump from Boeser’s price tag this season.

Boeser is certainly due for a raise on his next deal, after posting the first 40-goal season of his career last year. His statement performance came after four straight seasons of failing to even reach 25 goals. It was largely helped along by a career-high 19.6 shooting percentage, over seven percent higher than his average of 12.7 percent in six seasons prior. And while Boeser has struggled to reach that same success rate this year, his 18 goals and 17.3 shooting percentage in 52 games suggest he may have really found a new gear to his scoring.

Boeser will be a top name leading into the Trade Deadline if Vancouver isn’t willing to commit to him for a longer term. His spike in scoring and inflated shooting percentage are certainly warning flags, but he could offer the experience of a 500-game pro for the cheap cost of a deadline rental. A short-sighted trade would leave Boeser open to pick his next team in unrestricted free agency, though if he’d get another $8MM offer could hinge on how well he scores through the end of the year.

Other Trade Deadline notes from out West:

  • An NHL executive pointed out the potential chemistry between the San Jose Sharks and Buffalo Sabres defenseman Bowen Byram to Sheng Peng of NBC Sports. The 23-year-old Byram has been loosely circulated around trade rumors and could be a perfect addition to San Jose’s rebuild. The Sharks also have plenty to give up for the top-pair defender. Peng shares that there’s a sense Buffalo could use more size and grit. That motivation could make Sharks prospects like Quentin Musty or Kasper Halttunen enticing options. Both top prospects are performing well in the OHL this season. Musty has 43 points in just 26 games and Halttunen has 29 points in 27 games and 13 in his last 10. With the right mix of draft capital, either name could be enough to swing Byram away from Buffalo – though Peng notes he still doesn’t sense San Jose would pay such a price. He shares that the team could instead try and leverage some of their first-round draft picks to land big additions.
  • The St. Louis Blues could be asking for as much as two first-round draft picks for captain Brayden Schenn, per Seravalli in his latest trade board. That’s notably the same price St. Louis asked for Pavel Buchnevich, who has five more points than Schenn this season, at last year’s Trade Deadline. The Blues couldn’t find a suitor, and it’s hard to envision they’ll make a match for Schenn at this price either. With Schenn boasting a full no-trade clause, it may take a silver tongue to convince veteran Blues GM Doug Armstrong to trade his captain… once again.

NHL| OHL| Prospects| San Jose Sharks| St. Louis Blues| Vancouver Canucks Bowen Byram| Brayden Schenn| Brock Boeser

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Latest On Utah’s Trade Deadline Plans

February 28, 2025 at 7:23 pm CDT | by Gabriel Foley 5 Comments

The Trade Deadline is less than a week away and the bubble surrounding it appears ready to burst. There’s plenty of trade buzz circulating in the league, headlined by the Utah Hockey Club’s continued efforts to try to figure out their deadline approach. The Hockey Club was split between buyer and seller status during the 4-Nations Face-Off break, but general manager Bill Armstrong has now shared that the team won’t sell if they stay in playoff contention per Pierre LeBrun of The Athletic. Utah has been on a heater since returning from break, posting a 3-1-0 record and outscoring opponents 13-to-eight. They’re also outshooting opponents 128-to-80, or an average of 32-to-20 per game.

Utah’s surge forward seemed inevitable. They’ve faced injuries to many of their key contributors and notable summer additions this season. That includes burly defender Sean Durzi, who missed four months with a shoulder injury sustained in Utah’s fourth game of the season. Durzi averaged a team-high 25:34 in ice time and recorded two assists through the year’s first three games. That includes a 29-minute performance in his last full game before getting injured. He’s scored two points in four games since returning on February 22nd – though he’s not yet back to his October ice time. In getting Durzi back, Utah effectively added a free top-four defender to a lineup that was already in contention for the Western Conference’s second wild card.

Utah has inched closer to that wild card with their recent hot streak. But Armstrong claiming the team won’t be sellers at the deadline doesn’t mean they’ll be free of action. The divide between winger Matias Maccelli and a routine lineup spot is growing wider over Utah’s last few games. He hasn’t played since February 8th, as pointed out by Sportsnet’s Elliotte Friedman in the latest 32 Thoughts. Friedman adds that the undersized Maccelli could find his spark with a trade away from the team – a claim that’d certainly have teams around the league excited.

Maccelli has just 18 points in 52 games this season, but he broke out as a strong, young playmaker over the last two years. Maccelli recorded 38 assists and 49 points in 64 games of the 2022-23 season – his first full year in the NHL – and followed it up with 40 assists and 57 points in 82 games last year. He’s still just 24 years old, and would likely be an exciting upside buy should a team convince Armstrong that he’s expendable.

While they might not look thrilling on paper, Utah has found a lineup that works this month. They are glaringly shallow at center, where Barrett Hayton and Jack McBain fill the middle-six roles – but it’s hard to point out a weakness anywhere else. Utah’s wingers have performed up to par and the return of Durzi brings some much-needed weight behind Mikhail Sergachev and John Marino on defense. With a gust of wind behind their sails, any of Utah’s moves would likely focus solely on beefing up their bottom three forward lines. They’ll have the money to pursue whoever they’d like on the open market – with a projected $28.52MM in deadline cap space, per PuckPedia.

That much cap space is bound to weigh down a wallet, and Armstrong’s indication that the team won’t sell assets could be a subtle indication that they’re looking to lean heavily into the post-break success.

NHL| Utah Mammoth Matias Maccelli| Sean Durzi

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Blues Sign Tyler Tucker To Two-Year Extension

February 28, 2025 at 6:22 pm CDT | by Gabriel Foley 1 Comment

The St. Louis Blues have signed defenseman Tyler Tucker to a two-year, $1.85MM contract extension. The deal will carry a $900K salary in year one and a $950K salary in year two. Tucker was set to be a restricted free agent this summer.

The Blues drafted Tucker with the 200th-overall pick in the 2018 NHL Draft. He followed his draft selection with 59 points and 105 penalty minutes in 68 games during his age-19 OHL season. The performance stamped Tucker as a bruising enforcer – a role he embraced in full when he moved to the pros two years later. Tucker played his rookie AHL season during the shortened 2020-21 campaign and posted a quaint seven points and 34 penalty minutes in 27 games as a result. But he came to life in 2021-22, leading the Springfield Thunderbirds with 114 penalty minutes in 72 games – over 40 more than anyone else on the team.

Tucker made his NHL debut in the following year and very quickly found his role as St. Louis’ bruiser in reserve. He split the 2022-23 season between recording four points and 31 PIMs in 26 NHL games; and posting 21 points and 79 PIMs in 41 AHL games. He returned to the role of seventh-defender last season, posting two points and 42 PIMs in another 26 games – though routine injury held him to just six AHL games. Tucker has found a better balance between scoring and penalties this season, with four points and 30 PIMs in 20 NHL games and 10 points and 39 PIMs in 19 AHL games.

Tucker’s 72 career NHL games are more than anyone else drafted in 2018’s seventh round. His impact has proven fairly minimal, and is often limited to the defensive zone, but the Blues have clearly taken to the physical presence he brings to the lineup. Tucker is still only 24 years old. With a lineup spot carved out, this two-year deal will represent a chance for him to truly hone his style and push for routine minutes before he hits his prime years.

AHL| NHL| St. Louis Blues Tyler Tucker

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Senators’ Brady Tkachuk, Joshua Norris, Shane Pinto Nearing Return

February 28, 2025 at 5:59 pm CDT | by Gabriel Foley Leave a Comment

Friday’s practice brought plenty of positive injury updates to the Ottawa Senators, captured by the Ottawa Citizen’s Bruce Garrioch. Captain Brady Tkachuk has confirmed he’ll return on Saturday after missing Ottawa’s last two games with a lower-body injury sustained at the 4-Nations Face-Off. Centers Joshua Norris and Shane Pinto were also full participants at Friday’s practice and seem close to a return of their own, though they haven’t been confirmed just yet. Both centermen are recovering from upper-body injuries. Pinto has been out for Ottawa’s last four games, while Norris has missed the last six.

The Senators are in desperate need for this wave of replacement. They’ve dropped their last five games, dating back to before the 4-Nations break, while getting outscored eight-to-23. That imbalance is largely thanks to the absence of Tkachuk and Norris, the team’s top two goal scorers. Tkachuk has 21 goals and 44 points through 56 games, while Norris has 19 goals and 31 points in 50 games. They’re closely followed by Shane Pinto, who has managed 11 goals and 22 points in 46 games and grown to a second-line role. Tkachuk leads the Senators in shots-per-game, while Pinto and Norris rank third and sixth among the team’s forwards. Their return should instantly spur a Senators team that’s managed just 26.8 shots-per-game over their losing streak.

The wave of returnees will force the Senators to shake up their lineup once again. Forwards Angus Crookshank and Jan Jenik are likely the first on the chopping block, after making their first and second NHL appearances of the season in Ottawa’s last game. Neither has managed any scoring.

Ottawa will also need to shelve a defender after icing seven in their last effort – but deciding who could be a challenge. Top-four defender Nick Jensen left Ottawa’s Friday practice early nursing a limp, per Garrioch. No update on Jensen’s pain was provided, but Garrioch adds the defender was already playing through an injury. Tyler Kleven was also absent from practice with what head coach Travis Green referred to as a “strain”. Green did not rule out Kleven for Saturday’s matchup. Both defenders have found a routine groove on Ottawa’s right-side. Jensen has 18 points in 53 games this season. He also ranks second on the team with a plus-11. Kleven hasn’t been as lucky, with just four points and a minus-five in 58 games.

Injury| NHL| Ottawa Senators Brady Tkachuk| Joshua Norris| Shane Pinto

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Penguins Recall Emil Bemstrom, Place Michael Bunting On IR

February 27, 2025 at 6:25 pm CDT | by Gabriel Foley 1 Comment

The Pittsburgh Penguins have made a flurry of roster moves in the wake of winger Michael Bunting’s appendectomy. Bunting has been moved to injured reserve and will miss at least a week of action. Pittsburgh has recalled winger Emil Bemstrom to fill the resulting roster vacancy. In a separate pair of moves, the Penguins activated enforcer Bokondji Imama off of injured reserve and assigned veteran forward Matthew Nieto to the minor leagues. Nieto cleared waivers earlier today.

Through the mix of injury, demotion, and surprise surgery, this flurry of moves should give Bemstrom a hardier crack at the NHL lineup. He leads the AHL’s Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Penguins with 21 goals and 46 points in 43 games this season – the only player on the team scoring above a point-per-game pace. Despite that, Pittsburgh waited until early February to award Bemstrom his first call-up of the season. He’s played in two NHL games since then but didn’t manage any scoring.

The Penguins acquired Bemstrom in a swap for Alexander Nylander and a conditional draft pick late last February. He spent the rest of the year on the NHL roster but scored just three goals and five points in 24 games. His pattern of red-hot minor-league scoring in the AHL and minimal scoring in the NHL keeps Bemstrom in the same rut he’s spent all six years of his North American career in. He’s scored 93 points in 76 career games in the minors but has just 34 goals and 74 points across 230 games in the NHL. On the back of an extended hot streak in the minors, Bemstrom will hope this call-up is the time he finally proves his NHL worthiness.

Bunting leaves big shoes to be filled in Pittsburgh’s lineup. He’s been one of Pittsburgh’s best power-play assets, with nine goals and 14 points on the man advantage in 58 games this season. Bemstrom should be the beneficiary of the power-play opening, though it could also go to Anthony Beauvillier or Philip Tomasino. Pittsburgh’s other roster moves likely won’t carry as much weight. Nieto ceded his bottom-six role to Danton Heinen and Blake Lizotte over February, on the back of just three points in 31 games this season. Meanwhile, Imama will return to his role as Pittsburgh’s extra man – having only played in six games, with no scoring and seven penalty minutes, on the year.

AHL| Injury| NHL| Pittsburgh Penguins Bokondji Imama| Emil Bemstrom| Matthew Nieto| Michael Bunting

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Rangers’ Chris Kreider Day-To-Day, Brennan Othmann In

February 25, 2025 at 7:02 pm CDT | by Gabriel Foley Leave a Comment

In the moments leading up to Tuesday night’s game, the New York Rangers shared that winger Chris Kreider won’t play due to a day-to-day upper-body injury. Kreider participated in the Rangers’ morning practice and even took reps on the team’s power-play unit, making his last-minute absence a bit of a surprise. He will be replaced by top prospect Brennan Othmann, who is playing in his first NHL game of the season.

This news sets Othmann up for his season debut after a red-hot February in the minor leagues. The Rangers’ top prospect has eight points in his last 10 AHL games, bringing him up to 12 goals and 20 points in 27 games this season. That’s good enough to rank Othmann fourth on the Hartford Wolf Pack in point-per-game scoring, though he ranks sixth in total points. It’s been a year of finding his footing for Othmann. He missed two months with an upper-body injury sustained on October 19th. He’s scored in 14 of his 24 games since returning, and hasn’t gone longer than one game without a point – save for a four-game cold streak in mid-January. Othmann scored an admirable 21 goals and 49 points in 67 games as an AHL rookie last year but didn’t find any scoring through the first three NHL games of his career.

While Othmann fights for his first career point, Kreider will look to find his own footing as he works his way back to health. It’s been a historically down year for the 33-year-old winger, who has just 17 goals and 21 points in 48 games this season. But there are signs of life. He entered the 4-Nations Face-Off break with three points in his last five games – spurring a stretch of two points in eight games. He scored once in two games with Team USA at the 4-Nations tournament and notched a goal in New York’s return on February 22nd. Those gradual improvements seem to point towards the wind finally being back behind Kreider’s sails, but he’ll now face the challenge of maintaining the momentum through an injury absence.

Injury| NHL| New York Rangers Brennan Othmann| Chris Kreider

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Five Key Stories: 2/17/25 – 2/23/25

February 23, 2025 at 9:01 pm CDT | by Brian La Rose 3 Comments

The 4 Nations Face-Off is in the books with Canada defeating the United States in a 3-2 overtime thriller and the stretch run is underway.  We didn’t see any activity on the trade front but there was still plenty of notable news across the league which is highlighted in our key stories.

Battered Boston Blueline: This was not a good week on the injury front for Boston’s back end.  Top defenseman Charlie McAvoy sustained an upper-body injury at the 4 Nations Face-Off, one that was revealed when he was examined by Bruins team doctors.  He sustained an infection and ultimately underwent surgery to remove it and is now listed as out week-to-week.  Meanwhile, rearguard Hampus Lindholm (who is second on the team in ATOI behind McAvoy) likely will not return this season.  He has undergone surgery to repair a fractured patella tendon and hasn’t played since mid-November.  Boston is already on the outside looking in at a playoff spot and they’ll be hard-pressed to stay in the mix while missing their top two blueliners.

More Expansion Options: It feels like only a matter of time before the NHL expands past its current 32 teams.  Over the years, we generally see the same speculated cities in the mix, Kansas City, Houston, or returns to Atlanta and now Phoenix.  But another city has emerged as representatives from a prospective ownership group in New Orleans met with the league.  At this point, discussions were almost certainly on the preliminary side as at this point, a formal expansion process hasn’t been started yet.  New Orleans doesn’t have a long history with hockey with the only team in the city being the ECHL’s Brass from 1997-98 to 2001-02.

Five For Lankinen: Kevin Lankinen was a late signee this offseason, inking a one-year, $875K contract to serve as injury insurance for Thatcher Demko.  Instead, the 29-year-old has taken over the number one job and even became the starter for Finland at the 4 Nations.  He was rewarded for his efforts with a five-year, $22.5MM extension, one that increases his current cap charge by more than 500% while also securing him more trade protection.  With Demko back on injured reserve with a lower-body injury, Lankinen will be counted on to help keep them in the playoff picture and with there being some concerns about Demko’s long-term health given the knee issue he dealt with earlier in the season, Lankinen at a minimum will continue to serve as injury insurance for 2025-26, just as a much more expensive option.

Jones Open To A Trade: Seth Jones initially joined a Chicago team that was hoping to be a playoff contender.  Instead, the team quickly pivoted and is now in the midst of a full-scale rebuild.  After a few years of that, the defenseman indicated that he’d welcome a move if the team can find one although he has not formally requested a trade.  Of course, it’s not quite that simple.  While Jones remains a legitimate top-pairing defender, he also carries a $9.5MM AAV through the 2029-30 season and has a full no-move clause.  For the Blackhawks to find a suitable swap, they would probably need to retain a fair-sized chunk of that contract which will only increase the asking price from the acquiring team.  At first glance, this feels like something that’s more likely to be resolved in the offseason when more teams have cap flexibility but his name will undoubtedly come up in trade speculation before March 7th.

Rantanen On The Move Again? When the Hurricanes picked up Mikko Rantanen, it sent a message that they were going for it and felt they could sign the pending UFA winger to a long-term contract extension.  It appears an offer has been made that would give him the highest AAV for a winger in NHL history but Rantanen hasn’t given the club an answer just yet.  Meanwhile, he’s off to a quiet start offensively with his new team with just three points in seven games.  That has led to some speculation that Carolina could look to flip Rantanen if an agreement on a new deal can’t be reached by the trade deadline.  In theory, that would allow them to at least recoup some of the assets they gave up to get him but before it gets to that point, expect them to take another run at trying to get him to put pen to paper on an extension that will surpass the $100MM threshold.

Photo courtesy of Imagn Images.

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