The St. Louis Blues announced that a pair of young forwards – Zach Dean and Dylan Peterson – have each been signed to a one-year, two-way contract extension. Dean is a client of Matthew Oates of O2K Worldwide Management Group, while Peterson is repped by Randy Robitaille of Edge Sports Management.
Peterson, 24, was a pending restricted free agent with arbitration rights. Dean, 23, was also a pending RFA but did not have arbitration rights. The contracts signed today are both players’ first deals outside the entry-level system.
The financial terms of each contract were not officially disclosed, but were reported by PuckPedia. According to the platform, Peterson’s deal carries an $850K NHL salary, $100K AHL salary, and a $125K guarantee for its one-year term. Dean’s deal carries an $850K NHL salary and a $95K AHL salary, and does not have a guaranteed sum beyond that $95K minor-league salary.
For Peterson, this deal represents a small pay cut, something that is not uncommon for players leaving the entry-level system who have not yet established themselves as NHL players or high-level AHL depth. He took home $172.5K last season ($80K AHL salary plus a $92.5K signing bonus) which is slightly above the $125K guarantee on this deal, though he could exceed that guarantee if he manages to get into some NHL games.
The 6’4″, 203-pound center set a career-high in scoring at the AHL level in 2025-26, putting up 12 goals and 24 points in 57 games for the Springfield Thunderbirds.
He played a bottom-six center role for the team and was a secondary part of the Thunderbirds’ penalty-killing rotation, so it does not seem as though he is truly likely to make a push to win an NHL spot in the fall.
But he could conceivably play his way into being a candidate for a call-up if the Blues have any injuries in their bottom-six, which would therefore position him to exceed the guarantee on this contract. Set to turn 25 in January, next season is an important one for the 2020 third-round pick.
In Dean’s case, this contract is actually a modest pay bump compared to what he earned in 2025-26. A 2021 first-round pick of the Vegas Golden Knights, Dean signed his entry-level deal in December of that season.
Since entry-level deals only have three years of signing bonus – but his deal slid for its first two seasons – Dean has spent the last two years playing on his entry-level contract but without a signing bonus. As a result, while Peterson took home $172.5K last season, Dean was only entitled to his $80K AHL salary. Therefore, the $95K AHL salary on the contract signed today is a small pay raise.
It hasn’t been the easiest road for Dean, 23, in his time in pro hockey. A hard-nosed 6’0″, 176-pound forward, Dean hasn’t been able to translate the offense he displayed at the QMJHL level to the pro game. He scored 70 points in 50 regular-season games in his final season for the QMJHL’s Gatineau Olympiques, and had 26 points in 13 playoff games. But since turning pro, he has just 32 points in 96 AHL games.
In September of last year, Dean entered the NHL/NHLPA Player Assistance Program, returning to the ice in January. While his efforts as a bottom-six forward helped the Thunderbirds pull off playoff upsets of the Charlotte Checkers and Providence Bruins, two of the AHL’s top five regular-season teams, his 17 points across 48 regular season and playoff contests suggests he still has to develop his game before he can become an NHL player.
