With just five teams still alive in the playoffs, most of the NHL is in offseason mode. There was plenty of news away from the ice, including a unanimous Calder Trophy winner plus a pair of coach firings, which are featured in our key stories.
Canucks Set Front Office: With now-former GM Patrik Allvin gone and Jim Rutherford set to move into an advisory role for next season, the Canucks have now set their new-look front office. Well, new in the sense that they’ve promoted people into roles they haven’t had before. Ryan Johnson, who briefly played for Vancouver late in his career, has been promoted from his Assistant GM role to GM to replace Allvin. It will be his first opportunity running an NHL franchise. Meanwhile, with Rutherford’s role change opening the Team President role, the organization decided to split the role, naming long-time Canucks mainstays Daniel Sedin and Henrik Sedin as Co-Presidents. Their promotion is a little less gradual as they were only working as development coaches but will now turn their focus to the business side of operations.
Six For McAvoy: The Bruins will be without their top defenseman for the first couple of weeks of next season. This isn’t due to injury, but rather a suspension as he received a six-game ban for a slash on Buffalo’s Zach Benson late in the first round. The ruling indicated that McAvoy used his stick as a weapon, even winding up for the strike, which undoubtedly played a big role in the ruling. As the suspension is for longer than five games, McAvoy has the right to appeal the penalty if he so chooses. Barring that happening, he’s set to forfeit a little over $300K in salary as a result of this suspension.
Six For Coyle: The number six was notable for Blue Jackets center Charlie Coyle, albeit for a much happier reason. One of the few centers of note who was set to test the open market, that will no longer be the case as he signed a six-year deal to stay with Columbus, one that will carry a $6MM AAV. The 34-year-old bounced back quite nicely this season with 58 points, the second-highest total of his 14-year NHL career. While there is certainly some risk in giving someone his age a six-year contract, the dearth of impact middlemen available on the open market gave Coyle’s camp plenty of leverage. Had the Blue Jackets not offered a deal like this, someone else likely would have in July.
Expensive Silence: The Golden Knights won their second-round series against Anaheim in six games earlier this week but didn’t open up the dressing room to the media while John Tortorella didn’t speak either. After apparently warning them several times for their failure to adhere to playoff media regulations, the league issued a steep punishment. Tortorella has been hit with a $100K fine while the team has been stripped of its highest draft pick in next month’s draft, their second-rounder. The Golden Knights have the right to appeal and will undoubtedly do so in an effort to at least reduce the forfeited selection. But this sent a strong message across the league that the NHL expects its postseason media obligations to be met at all times with strong penalties for frequent non-compliers.
More Head Coach Openings: A pair of teams have decided to part ways with their head coaches. First, new Toronto GM John Chayka didn’t waste much time making a change, firing Craig Berube after just two seasons with the team. Toronto made the second round last year but struggled mightily this season, missing the playoffs altogether. Overall, he departs with an 84-62-18 record in the regular season. Meanwhile, Edmonton has relieved Kris Knoblauch of his duties, just weeks before his three-year extension was set to begin (he’ll still be paid the money owing on that deal). Knoblauch took over early in the 2024-25 season and ultimately led the Oilers to two straight Stanley Cup Finals, coming up short against Florida each time. This year, they were ousted by Anaheim in the first round. He leaves with a 135-77-21 regular season record (plus a 31-22 mark in the playoffs) and it wouldn’t be shocking to see him get another opportunity to run a bench down the road.
