Pacific Notes: Emberson, Vlasic, Jugnauth
With many players now extension-eligible as of today, it will be interesting to see if any come to terms on a new deal in the coming days. In the latest 32 Thoughts podcast (audio link), Sportsnet’s Elliotte Friedman speculates that the Oilers might want to take a run at starting talks with defenseman Ty Emberson in the near future. Acquired in the Cody Ceci trade over the summer, the 24-year-old has settled into a steady third-pairing role, logging just under 15 minutes a night while recording 48 blocks, 53 hits, and five assists in 35 appearances so far.
Making $950K this season, Emberson’s qualifying offer would be just under $1MM if he qualifies for RFA status but he needs to play in 15 more games for that to happen. Otherwise, he’d be a Group Six unrestricted free agent. With the role he has, he should be able to add a bit to that qualifier but it shouldn’t be an exorbitant cost for the Oilers to absorb if they can get something done.
Elsewhere in the Pacific Division:
- Sharks defenseman Marc-Edouard Vlasic took to the ice today as he continues to try to work his way back from a back injury, relays Curtis Pashelka of The Mercury News (Twitter link). The 37-year-old has yet to play this season because of the injury, one that he was hoping he’d only miss a few weeks with originally. Vlasic’s playing time has dropped to that of a third-pairing player in recent years after being an anchor of their defense corps for more than a decade. He still has one year left on his contract after this one at a $7MM AAV.
- Kraken prospect Tyson Jugnauth will soon get a second stint in the NCAA. The defenseman revealed on his Instagram page that he has committed to Michigan State University for next season. Jugnauth, a fourth-round pick in 2022, spent a year and a half at the University of Wisconsin before moving to WHL Portland in December 2023. The 20-year-old has been quite productive this season, tallying six goals and 40 assists in just 33 games for the Winterhawks but he has decided that it’s not time to turn pro just yet. Seattle has until August 15, 2026 to sign Jugnauth as his transfer to the WHL didn’t change his original signing timeline.
PHR Live Chat Transcript: 1/1/25
PHR’s Josh Erickson hosted his weekly live chat today at 2:00pm Central. Use this link to view the transcript.
Ducks Recall Nikita Nesterenko
The Ducks announced they’ve recalled forward Nikita Nesterenko from AHL San Diego. Since there were two open spots on the active roster, no corresponding move was required.
Nesterenko, 23, comes up from the minors for the first time this season after winger Brock McGinn landed on injured reserve last weekend. The New York native gives Anaheim an extra forward for their two-game road swing through Canada in case another injury strikes their group up front.
Nesterenko has played in 12 NHL games, all with the Ducks in the previous two seasons. The Boston College product has two goals and a -3 rating, averaging 12:51 per game. While a natural center, he’s been deployed almost exclusively at left wing in his brief NHL looks, losing all three of his faceoffs. He’s tended to positively impact the Ducks’ poor possession game in his small NHL sample, helping Anaheim control 44.4% of shot attempts at 5-on-5 compared to only 41.4% without him.
A sixth-round pick by the Wild back in 2019, Nesterenko arrived in Orange County at the 2023 trade deadline when Anaheim sent John Klingberg to Minnesota. Nesterenko, who was wrapping up his 34-point junior season with BC, signed his entry-level deal a few weeks later and joined the Ducks for the stretch run. The 6’2″, 183-lb forward has spent most of his time in San Diego since turning pro, scoring 21 goals and 49 points in 99 appearances for the AHL club. He has 12 points and a -9 rating through 29 games this season, ranking seventh on the team in scoring.
Nesterenko gives the Ducks a decent enough bottom-six option to insert into the lineup if another injury outside of McGinn’s or Trevor Zegras‘ arises over the next couple of days. Nesterenko, who will remain waiver-exempt regardless of how long his recall lasts, will presumably be returned to San Diego when Anaheim returns home from its trip. He’ll be a restricted free agent again next summer, this time with arbitration eligibility, after spending a couple of weeks on the closed market last July before inking a two-way pact.
Wild Place Kirill Kaprizov On Injured Reserve, Jared Spurgeon To Miss Time
The Wild are placing star winger Kirill Kaprizov on injured reserve retroactive to Dec. 23, Michael Russo of The Athletic reports. He’s eligible to come off at any time after missing the last three games with a minor lower-body injury but will still miss at least their next two games, Russo adds. The move creates roster space for a recall from AHL Iowa in place of captain Jared Spurgeon, who left last night’s win over the Predators with a right leg injury and did not return after he was on the receiving end of a slew-foot from Nashville rookie Zachary L’Heureux.
Minnesota hasn’t commented on how long Spurgeon might be out of the lineup, but he’ll miss a game or two at the very least – likely longer. The 35-year-old, who’s missed 72 games since the beginning of last season with back and hip issues that resulted in significant midseason surgery in 2023-24, did not put weight on his right leg as he was helped off the ice (video via Nick Kieser of 102.5 The Game). L’Heureux was assessed a match penalty on the play, although the league’s Department of Player Safety hasn’t yet issued any supplemental discipline.
Spurgeon is still capable of top-pairing minutes and has continued to put up stellar possession numbers in his twilight years, but his point totals haven’t recovered since he dropped from 0.62 per game in 2021-22 to 0.43 per game in 2023-24. Add in the emergence of sophomore Brock Faber as the Wild’s new No. 1 defender, and there have been fewer opportunities for Spurgeon to contribute offensively. He has four goals and 13 points in 32 games this season, working out to a 0.41 points-per-game pace that would stand as his lowest since 2015-16, not counting last year’s 16-game stint in the lineup.
Still, Spurgeon is an incredibly important on-ice and off-ice piece to a Wild team trying to get out of the mud. After a hot start to the season, they’re .500 since the beginning of December and have been hamstrung by injuries to star players, a trend that’s unfortunately continuing into the New Year. Despite the rough patch, they accumulated enough points early on to keep them with a 23-11-4 record, still good for second in the Central Division. The 2008 Islanders sixth-round pick has never suited up for anyone other than the Wild, and his 899 games played rank second in franchise history behind Mikko Koivu. No one’s done better than his career +120 rating for the Wild, either.
Minnesota is already without Spurgeon’s usual second-pairing partner, Jacob Middleton, for another couple of weeks while he nurses a hand injury. That means continued increased responsibility for depth defenders Declan Chisholm, Jonathon Merrill and Zach Bogosian, while the newly-acquired David Jiříček should be in line for a recall from AHL Iowa and some power-play time in Spurgeon’s absence. The 2022 sixth-overall pick has just two points and a -4 rating in nine AHL games since being acquired from the Blue Jackets in November.
Meanwhile, Kaprizov’s absence will last a few more days, although he could miss a bit more. Multiple reports indicate that he hasn’t skated since before the holiday break. The 27-year-old, who becomes eligible to sign what will likely be a fruitful extension in Minnesota next summer, had 50 points in 34 games before exiting the lineup and still leads the league with 20 even-strength goals. Somewhat miraculously, the Wild have gone 2-1-0 in his absence, with Matt Boldy filling in on the top line alongside Marco Rossi and Mats Zuccarello.
The Wild will have two open roster spots after placing Kaprizov on IR, but just $378K in cap space is not enough for an additional recall. They could swap a forward for a defense call-up or create additional financial flexibility by moving forward Jakub Lauko, who hasn’t played since Dec. 14 and remains week-to-week with a muscular issue, from standard IR to long-term injured reserve.
Image courtesy of USA Today Sports.
Bettman: Panthers To Host Outdoor Game In 2025-26
After the Blue Jackets host the Red Wings in a Stadium Series matchup at Ohio Stadium later this season, there will be only two NHL franchises left that haven’t played in an outdoor game – the Panthers and Utah. The former will be coming off the list quickly as NHL commissioner Gary Bettman said on Tuesday’s Winter Classic broadcast that the league would announce an outdoor game in Miami in the next couple of weeks.
“It’s going to be a little unusual,’’ Bettman said (via George Richards of Florida Hockey Now). “It’s going to be a little more unique. Some people will think we’ve lost our minds. We’re not ready to announce it, but we will soon. And it’s going to be good.’’
The game will take place at LoanDepot Park, which hosts MLB’s Miami Marlins. It’s a retractable roof stadium, which will presumably be necessary to keep an ice sheet intact in a South Florida climate that routinely sees 70-degree highs in winter.
Those hoping to see an intra-state rivalry matchup between the Panthers and Lightning will be out of luck, Richards reports. That matchup “appears to be off the table,” but the Lightning will still likely be getting their second outdoor game in franchise history in 2025-26 or 2026-27, sources tell Richards – this time on their turf at Raymond James Stadium, home of the NFL’s Tampa Bay Buccaneers. Instead, Richards reports that the Panthers’ visiting club will mark the sixth outdoor game appearance for the Bruins or Rangers.
If the roof at LoanDepot Park remains closed throughout the game in addition to the rink-building process, it wouldn’t be the first time that’s happened. The 2014 Heritage Classic between the Canucks and Senators at Vancouver’s BC Place was played with the retractable roof deployed due to rain in the forecast. Precipitation and humidity, not necessarily temperature, would likely decide whether the Panthers could play with the roof open.
Sources told Jordan McPherson and Barry Jackson of the Miami Herald and Elliotte Friedman of Sportsnet last month that Florida would likely get an outdoor game next season.
List Of Players Now Eligible To Sign Extensions
New Year’s Day does have particular significance on the NHL calendar. As of this morning, players on one-year contracts are now eligible to sign extensions for next season and beyond. Here’s a list of players by club (limited to those currently on an active roster or injured reserve) who can now put pen to paper on a new deal after inking a one-year commitment with their current home.
Anaheim Ducks
F Brett Leason (RFA)
F Isac Lundeström (RFA)
Boston Bruins
F Cole Koepke (UFA)
F Marc McLaughlin (Group VI UFA)
F Oliver Wahlstrom (RFA)
D Parker Wotherspoon (UFA)
Buffalo Sabres
F Nicolas Aubé-Kubel (UFA)
D Jacob Bryson (UFA)
D Dennis Gilbert (UFA)
D Henri Jokiharju (UFA)
G James Reimer (UFA)
F Jason Zucker (UFA)
Calgary Flames
D Tyson Barrie (UFA)
F Justin Kirkland (UFA)
F Anthony Mantha (UFA)
F Jakob Pelletier (RFA)
F Kevin Rooney (UFA)
Carolina Hurricanes
F Tyson Jost (UFA)
F Eric Robinson (UFA)
F Jack Roslovic (UFA)
D Ty Smith (RFA)
D Riley Stillman (UFA)
G Dustin Tokarski (UFA)
Chicago Blackhawks
D Louis Crevier (RFA)
F Pat Maroon (UFA)
D Alec Martinez (UFA)
F Craig Smith (UFA)
Colorado Avalanche
D Calvin de Haan (UFA)
F Jonathan Drouin (UFA)
F Joel Kiviranta (UFA)
D Oliver Kylington (UFA)
F Jere Innala (UFA)
F Juuso Pärssinen (RFA)
Columbus Blue Jackets
F Zach Aston-Reese (UFA)
D Jake Christiansen (RFA)
F Justin Danforth (UFA)
D Dante Fabbro (UFA)
D Jack Johnson (UFA)
F Kevin Labanc (UFA)
F James van Riemsdyk (UFA)
Dallas Stars
F Oscar Back (RFA)
F Colin Blackwell (UFA)
F Matt Duchene (UFA)
D Nils Lundkvist (RFA)
D Brendan Smith (UFA)
F Sam Steel (UFA)
Detroit Red Wings
F Jonatan Berggren (RFA)
F Christian Fischer (UFA)
D Albert Johansson (RFA)
F Patrick Kane (UFA)
F Tyler Motte (UFA)
Edmonton Oilers
F Connor Brown (UFA)
D Ty Emberson (RFA)
F Kasperi Kapanen (UFA)
F Corey Perry (UFA)
F Jeff Skinner (UFA)
Florida Panthers
D Adam Boqvist (RFA)
F Jesper Boqvist (RFA)
F Tomáš Nosek (UFA)
D Nate Schmidt (UFA)
Los Angeles Kings
F Arthur Kaliyev (RFA)
F Andre Lee (RFA)
F Trevor Lewis (UFA)
G David Rittich (UFA)
Minnesota Wild
D Declan Chisholm (RFA)
D Travis Dermott (UFA)
G Marc-André Fleury (UFA)
F Devin Shore (UFA)
While Fleury has already confirmed this season will be his last in the NHL, he’s still technically eligible to sign an extension.
Montreal Canadiens
none on active roster
Nashville Predators
D Adam Wilsby (RFA)
New Jersey Devils
D Nick DeSimone (UFA)
F Tomáš Tatar (UFA)
New York Islanders
D Dennis Cholowski (UFA)
F Simon Holmström (RFA)
F Matt Martin (UFA)
D Mike Reilly (UFA)
F Maxim Tsyplakov (RFA)
New York Rangers
G Louis Domingue (UFA)
D Ryan Lindgren (UFA)
G Jonathan Quick (UFA)
D Urho Vaakanainen (RFA)
Ottawa Senators
F Nick Cousins (UFA)
F Adam Gaudette (UFA)
F Noah Gregor (RFA)
D Nikolas Matinpalo (RFA)
F Cole Reinhardt (RFA)
Philadelphia Flyers
D Erik Johnson (UFA)
Pittsburgh Penguins
F Anthony Beauvillier (UFA)
D Nathan Clurman (UFA)
D Matt Grzelcyk (UFA)
D Pierre-Olivier Joseph (RFA)
D Ryan Shea (UFA)
F Philip Tomasino (RFA)
San Jose Sharks
F Luke Kunin (UFA)
Seattle Kraken
F Kaapo Kakko (RFA)
D Josh Mahura (UFA)
F Daniel Sprong (UFA)
G Ales Stezka (UFA)
St. Louis Blues
D Scott Perunovich (RFA)
D Ryan Suter (UFA)
Tampa Bay Lightning
F Cam Atkinson (UFA)
F Gage Goncalves (RFA)
Toronto Maple Leafs
F Connor Dewar (RFA)
D Jani Hakanpää (UFA)
F Steven Lorentz (UFA)
D Philippe Myers (UFA)
F Max Pacioretty (UFA)
F Nicholas Robertson (RFA)
Utah Hockey Club
D Robert Bortuzzo (UFA)
D Ian Cole (UFA)
D Dakota Mermis (UFA)
G Jaxson Stauber (RFA)
Vancouver Canucks
D Erik Brännström (RFA)
D Derek Forbort (UFA)
G Kevin Lankinen (UFA)
Vegas Golden Knights
F Victor Olofsson (UFA)
F Tanner Pearson (UFA)
G Ilya Samsonov (UFA)
F Cole Schwindt (RFA)
Washington Capitals
F Taylor Raddysh (UFA)
F Jakub Vrána (UFA)
Winnipeg Jets
D Dylan Coghlan (UFA)
D Haydn Fleury (UFA)
