The Blues announced today that left-shot defender Calle Rosen has signed a two-year, two-way contract extension. The deal pays him $850K in the NHL and $500K in the AHL next year before seeing an NHL pay bump to $900K in 2027-28.
Rosen is in his second stint with the Blues organization. He hasn’t seen an NHL game since his first go-around in St. Louis ended following the 2023-24 season, though. He signed with the Avalanche on a two-way deal the following summer and did the same with the Capitals last offseason before Washington traded him back to St. Louis for fellow minor-league depth defender Corey Schueneman last November.
Now 32, Rosen has never really been a full-time NHL piece and has had multiple opportunities to return home to Sweden since arriving in North America with the Maple Leafs as an undrafted free agent in 2018. Instead, the 6’1″ lefty has chosen to pursue an often thankless career as a minor-league mainstay who consistently churns out quality bottom-pairing hockey in his NHL call-ups. He’s been quite well-compensated for an AHLer – his new minors salary is actually a small pay cut from the $525K he landed on his deal with the Caps last summer – but still, it’s rare to see an import player opt for that lifestyle instead of a more stable pro career in Europe, especially considering he has previous Swedish Hockey League experience.
Rosen, now in his ninth season stateside, has long been one of the AHL’s better puck-movers. He had seven points in nine games with Hershey to start the year and has since been a valuable contributor on St. Louis’ struggling affiliate in Springfield, leading their blue line with a 7-19–26 scoring line in 47 games. He was an AHL All-Star back in 2019, won a Calder Cup in Toronto the year before, and now is up to 224 points in 407 career minor-league games.
It’s surprising he hasn’t gotten more NHL opportunities. The only time he got an extended run on a roster was with St. Louis in the 2022-23 campaign. While he served mostly as a #7 piece, he was absolutely excellent when deployed, putting up eight goals and 18 points with a +19 rating despite only averaging 15:36 of ice time per game across 49 outings. None of that production came on special teams, either. He’s fairly consistently had positive relative Corsi shares at 5-on-5 and, while he’s far from being a physical threat, has shown he can be an efficient driver of offense in limited minutes.
