Carson Carels Commits To North Dakota

Top 2026 NHL Draft prospect Carson Carels has committed to play NCAA hockey at North Dakota, according to an official announcement from the program. The decision indicates that he will leave the WHL after just two seasons there, meaning the league is set to lose one of its very best defensemen.

Carels, 17, is widely considered to be among the top prospects in the upcoming 2026 NHL Draft, and is in the conversation as the draft’s top blueliner. While most rankings have OHL defenseman Chase Reid slightly ahead, some analysts are in favor of Carels, such as Craig Button of TSN.

In terms of Carels’ style, Corey Pronman of The Athletic called him a “powerful, fluid skater” who both “plays with a lot of physicality” and “should generate offense” at the NHL level. He was projected as a “great top-four defenseman who will play significant NHL minutes.”

As previously mentioned, Carels was one of the WHL’s top all-around defensemen last season. Serving as an alternate captain for the Prince George Cougars, Carels scored 20 goals and 73 points in 58 regular-season games, and added 10 points in 10 playoff games. He ended the season tied for fourth place among all WHL blueliners in scoring.

Carels is set to join a North Dakota defense that already boasts NHL-drafted prospects in E.J. Emery (2024 first-round pick, New York Rangers) and Sam Laurila (2025 fifth-round pick, New York Islanders). Interestingly, Carels could end up being a future teammate of Emery, a blueliner he could end up partnered with as soon as next season. Carels is well within range to be picked by the Rangers No. 5 overall at the draft next month, and that’s where Pronman projected him to land in his most recent mock draft.

With today’s commitment, North Dakota could end up having two of the upcoming draft’s top-10 picks on its defense next year. 2025-26 was Keaton Verhoeff‘s freshman season at North Dakota, and he is widely considered to be among the draft’s top defensive prospects. He could go as high as, or even higher than Carels next month. As our Gabriel Foley noted, Carels’ decision gives North Dakota the chance to potentially ice a pairing of two top-ten draft picks from the same draft class as soon as next season.

Morning Notes: Carle, Berube, Kuhlman

The Toronto Maple Leafs have had an “initial conversation” with University of Denver head coach David Carle to “gauge his interest” in potentially filling Toronto’s vacant head coaching position, reports Elliotte Friedman in Monday’s edition of the 32 Thoughts podcast. Friedman cautioned that the talks between Carle and the Maple Leafs are purely preliminary, and that neither Carle, nor anyone else, should be considered the favorite in the process at this time.

According to previous reports, the Maple Leafs may be targeting a “fresh face” as their next head coach – a departure from their previous coaching search, which resulted in the hire of a Stanley Cup-winning veteran in Craig Berube. Carle, 36, is widely considered to be among the top coaching candidates who has never held a coaching role in the NHL, or even at the professional level. Carle has been the Denver Pioneers’ head coach since 2018-19, and is a three-time NCAA national champion in that role. He’s also won a gold medal as head coach at two World Junior championships – at both tournaments he got to coach. It’s been widely reported that Carle will be selective about where and when he eventually decides to turn pro (and if he even does) and has already withdrawn himself from consideration from one NHL search in the past.

Other notes from around the hockey world:

  • The Edmonton Oilers have received permission to speak with Berube, the former Maple Leafs coach, reports Elliotte Friedman of Sportsnet. Berube was fired by the Maple Leafs less than a week ago after his second season behind the bench there. The 60-year-old, as previously mentioned, led the St. Louis Blues to their franchise’s first-ever Stanley Cup championship in 2019. Berube’s first season in Toronto was reasonably successful, as the club went 52-26-4, and won a playoff series for just the second time in the Auston Matthews-led “Core Four” era. But Toronto fell in the second round to the eventual champions, the Florida Panthers, and endured a disastrous 32-36-14 campaign in 2025-26. The Oilers are under significant pressure to win a Stanley Cup as soon as next season, and it appears the club may target the most experienced coaches available, and specifically those with a Stanley Cup win on their resume.
  • 147-game NHL veteran Karson Kuhlman has signed a one-year contract extension with Rögle BK of the SHL, per a team release. The 30-year-old signed with Rögle last summer and had a solid debut season there, scoring 13 goals and 25 points in 52 games played, and seven points in 17 playoff games. Kuhlman has played in Europe since 2024-25, when he spent the year with Lukko in the Finnish Liiga. From 2018-19 through 2022-23, Kuhlman played in nearly 150 NHL games for the Boston Bruins, Seattle Kraken, and Winnipeg Jets. The NCAA national champion nearly won a Stanley Cup with the Bruins in 2019, and also got the chance to represent the United States at the 2022 IIHF Men’s World Championships.

Snapshots: Mastrosimone, Porter, Predators Draft Pick

The Charlotte Checkers, AHL affiliates of the Florida Panthers, have signed forward Robert Mastrosimone to a one-year AHL contract extension. As is custom for AHL contracts, the financial terms of the deal were not made public. A 2019 second-round pick of the Detroit Red Wings, Mastrosimone played four seasons of college hockey (three as a Boston University Terrier, one as an Arizona State Sun Devil) before turning pro in 2023-24. A point-per-game scorer at ASU, Mastrosimone struggled through the first two years of his pro career with the Toronto Marlies, putting up just 29 points in 95 games.

The Marlies didn’t re-sign Mastrosimone for a third year, and instead he signed a one-year deal in Charlotte. In October, it looked as though Mastrosimone had lost his spot in the AHL, as he was sent down to the ECHL after the Checkers signed veteran Tyler Motte to a PTO. By early December, Mastrosimone had worked his way back into the AHL by scoring nine goals and 15 points in 13 ECHL games. That stint in the third tier seemed to make a major difference for Mastrosimone, as he took his AHL performance to a new level after being recalled. He finished the 2025-26 season with 13 goals and 32 points in 49 games for the Checkers, and could be on the way to establishing himself as a full-time AHL middle-six scorer. With today’s extension news, he’ll get to continue on that path with the Checkers.

Other notes from around the hockey world:

  • USA Hockey announced today that former NHLer Kevin Porter has been hired as a head coach for the U.S. National Team Development Program. Per Sean Shapiro of Elite Prospects, Porter will coach the NTDP’s U18 team. Porter spent last season as an assistant coach for the U18’s, and also coached the United States to a gold medal at the Hlinka Gretzky Cup, their first win at the tournament since 2003. Before coaching at the NTDP, Porter was an assistant coach with the AHL’s Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Penguins from 2020-21 through 2023-24. As a player, Porter had a 249-game NHL career and also served as a captain in the AHL with the Rochester Americans.
  • As a result of the Vegas Golden Knights’ victory over the Anaheim Ducks last night, a win that propelled them to the Western Conference Finals, the 2027 third-round pick Vegas surrendered to the Nashville Predators will officially upgrade to a 2027 second-round pick. The Golden Knights sent what was originally a conditional third-round pick to Nashville as part of last summer’s Nicolas Hague/Jeremy Lauzon trade. The development gives the Predators another second-round pick to work with in next year’s draft, and means that, barring any further trades, the club will go three consecutive years with two second-round picks in the draft. The club acquired a 2026 second-rounder from the Minnesota Wild in last year’s Gustav Nyquist trade, and a 2028 second-rounder from the Wild in this past season’s Michael McCarron deal.

Quinn Hughes “Open To” Extension In Minnesota

In his end of season media availability today, superstar defenseman Quinn Hughes said he is “definitely open to re-signing” with the Minnesota Wild. (quote via Joe Smith of The Athletic) He also indicated that he would prefer to get a contract signed over the summer, but it isn’t a requirement. Hughes expressed confidence in GM Bill Guerin’s ability to construct a championship-caliber team, and said he likes playing in Minnesota, his teammates, and his interactions with management.

Hughes’ status is the single most important storyline surrounding the Wild, and it will be until he either signs an extension or departs the team in any manner.

Hughes is one of the game’s very best defensemen, and the Wild surrendered a major package of assets including young players, prospects, and draft picks, in order to acquire him, even with less than two years of team control remaining at the time.

With franchise forward Kirill Kaprizov committed on an expensive new contract, the Wild are locked into trying to compete for a Stanley Cup in the immediate future. Re-signing Hughes is essential to maximizing those efforts.

Smith and colleague Michael Russo wrote this morning that “it wouldn’t be a surprise for Hughes to sign a three-year extension this summer,” as such a term would align Hughes’ deal with the expiry of his brother Jack Hughes‘ contract with the New Jersey Devils. Doing so would allow for a timeline where the two older Hughes brothers could decide where to play together – forming a kind of superstar package deal unlike any other in NHL history.

As for what Hughes might be able to earn on his next contract, there really isn’t an upper ceiling on the amount of money he could command. Kaprizov’s AAV of $17MM on his next deal is unlikely to be surpassed, of course, but Hughes has just as strong of a case to earn a market-shattering AAV on his next deal as Kaprizov had. The 2024 Norris Trophy winner earned $7.85MM on his last contract, one he signed in October 2021. With the way the cap is set to rise, Hughes could conceivably push to double his AAV figure on his next deal.

The Wild’s interest in the Hughes family does not appear to stop at the eldest brother. Russo and Smith reported this morning, citing league sources, that Guerin “made a pitch to former Devils GM Tom Fitzgerald” to acquire Luke Hughes this past season.

The youngest Hughes brother, who scored 35 points in 68 games in 2025-26, is under contract at a $9MM AAV through 2031-32. It seems far-fetched that the Wild will be able to unite all three, especially since Jack and Luke already play together. But at the very least they appear positioned to retain Quinn beyond next season, and given the amount Guerin had to surrender to acquire him, that’s a significant win on its own.

Many things can change between now and whenever Hughes might put his signature on an extension with the Wild. That he expressed interest in re-signing today is no guarantee that he actually does so. But after such a disappointing end to their season at the hands of the Colorado Avalanche, Hughes’ comments today should come as a much-needed positive development for fans in Minnesota and the Wild organization overall.

Photos courtesy of Nick Wosika-Imagn Images

Senators Reportedly Targeting Defense In Offseason

One of the primary offseason objectives of the Ottawa Senators’ hockey operations department will be to secure the services of “a big defenceman who can play big minutes,” Bruce Garrioch of the Ottawa Citizen reported last week.

Garrioch had previously reported that the Senators considered making a play for St. Louis Blues defenseman Colton Parayko at the trade deadline, and he could be a possibility if he would consider waiving his no-move clause for Ottawa.

The Blues agreed to a deal with the Buffalo Sabres for Parayko near the deadline, but Parayko declined to waive his no-move clause to head to Western New York. Garrioch also noted that the Senators “pushed hard” to acquire Philadelphia Flyers veteran Rasmus Ristolainen at the deadline but couldn’t finalize a deal. Like Parayko, Ristolainen could remain an option for the summer but the Flyers may also not have much interest in subtracting such an important piece from their roster after making a run to the second round of the playoffs this spring.

As the Senators’ reported targets before the deadline indicated, the team’s clear need for a defenseman is specifically for a right-shot blueliner. The team’s top two defensemen, Jake Sanderson and Thomas Chabot, both play on the left side.

Chabot is under contract at an $8MM AAV for the next two seasons, while Sanderson is signed at $8.05MM AAV through 2029-30. They have been the anchors of Ottawa’s defense, and veteran Artem Zub, who is under contract through next year at $4.6MM is the team’s top right-shot blueliner.

Adding one more right-handed defenseman to the mix would give Ottawa an enviable set of top-four defensemen.

Of course, the hope to add a big, minutes-eating right-shot defenseman isn’t something unique to the Senators. Players who check those boxes are often among the most coveted assets in the NHL.

What is most interesting about the Senators’ aggressive pursuit of such a blueliner at the trade deadline is what it says about how they view their internal options for the role. Ottawa invested the No. 7 overall pick at the 2024 draft in a dynamic right-shot blueliner, Carter Yakemchuk. Now 20, he could be close to NHL-ready after a solid debut professional season. In addition, Ottawa has 25-year-old Jordan Spence, who enjoyed a strong 31-point debut season with the Senators. He is set to become a restricted free agent, but remains club property for the time being.

On paper, it might make sense for the Senators to simply stand pat, and trust in that duo of internal options alongside Zub to make up the right side of their defense. But after getting pushed around in a first-round series against the Hurricanes, Ottawa appears set to redouble their efforts to acquire a top-four defenseman of a specific mold, one that is traditionally viewed to be best-suited for the rigors of playoff hockey.

While the upcoming free agent class appears deepest at the position of right-shot defensemen, there are some caveats. Rasmus Andersson appears likely to re-sign in Vegas while Darren Raddysh and John Carlson aren’t quite built in the same mold as Parayko and Ristolainen. While both players would certainly represent an upgrade over Spence, they may not be enough of a stylistic departure for the Senators. Additionally, the league-wide interest each is expected to receive could remove them as an option for Ottawa, as the market has traditionally struggled to attract the league’s very best free agents.

The best fit for the Senators could be veteran Jacob Trouba, who has had a bounce-back stint with the Anaheim Ducks after a difficult end to his time as captain of the New York Rangers. It remains to be seen if Trouba will end up hitting the open market, or if he even would have interest signing with the Senators. But of all of the upcoming free agents, he is the one most stylistically comparable to the defenders Ottawa reportedly attempted to acquire at the deadline. After Trouba, the next-best fit might be Connor Murphy of the Edmonton Oilers, a 6’4″ rearguard who is able to weather substantial time on the penalty kill.

Photos courtesy of Marc DesRosiers-IMAGN Images

Flyers Sign Aleksei Kolosov To One-Year Contract Extension

The Philadelphia Flyers have signed goaltender Aleksei Kolosov to a one-year contract extension, the team announced today. The deal carries an $850K AAV, though it is unclear at this time whether the extension is of a one-way or two-way structure.

Kolosov’s three-year entry level contract, a deal he signed in July 2023, was set to expire next month. He was slated to become an RFA with arbitration rights, assuming he had received a qualifying offer from the club.

Now, Philadelphia has avoided the (admittedly unlikely) prospect of Kolosov heading to arbitration, while Kolosov has secured his place in the Flyers organization for another season.

A 2021 third-round pick, Kolosov’s time with the Flyers organization has been somewhat uneven. His first of three years on his entry-level deal was spent on loan in the KHL, where he got to play for his hometown team, Dinamo Minsk.

Kolosov’s final two campaigns in the KHL were spent as the No. 1 goalie in Minsk. In 2023-24, he went 22-21-3 with a .907 save percentage in 47 games played. Seeing as Kolosov was already an experienced KHL starter, there was some hope that he would be able to hit the ground running in North America.

That did not happen. He began the 2024-25 season in a “standoff” with Flyers management. ESPN’s Greg Wyshynski wrote at the time that Kolosov failed to report to Flyers rookie camp and had “asked the Flyers to loan him back to Dinamo Minsk of Russia’s KHL.” There were conflicting reports in prior months that Kolosov’s adjustment to North America had proven challenging. Inside AHL Hockey’s Tony Androckitis cited an AHL source saying that Kolosov “felt isolated” living in a hotel by himself and without the ability to speak much English.

Amid the reported standoff, GM Danny Briere said of Kolosov that it was “time for him to step up and respect the contract” he signed. A little over a week later, the Flyers and Kolosov’s camp found a solution. Kolosov stayed in North America for 2024-25, and did the same for 2025-26. In October of 2024 Kolosov’s agent, Dan Milstein of Gold Star Hockey, told Jackie Spiegel of the Philadelphia Inquirer that “all previous concerns” related to his client had “been thoroughly addressed and are now resolved.”

Although that proved to be the end of the off-ice controversy surrounding Kolosov, his on-ice play did not immediately pay dividends for the Flyers. He got into 17 NHL games for the team but struggled to the tune of an .867 save percentage. In 12 AHL games, Kolosov went 5-6-1 with an .884 save percentage.

This past season, Kolosov settled in as Philadelphia’s organizational No. 3 goalie. While his NHL struggles persisted, (.830 save percentage across four games of action) Kolosov showed improvement in the AHL, posting an .895 save percentage in 38 games played. Though he has struggled in North America, his improvement this past season has kept him on the board as one of the Flyers’ better prospects. He recently ranked No. 15 in the team’s system by The Athletic’s Scott Wheeler.

The goal for Kolosov on this one-year extension will, undoubtedly, be to push for more NHL time. The Flyers have Dan Vladar entrenched as their No. 1 goalie, but their backup spot could open if the team chooses not to qualify or extend Samuel Ersson. Ersson’s 2025-26 season was a struggle, though he did improve over the Olympic break. The Flyers will most likely sign a goalie to be the front-runner for the backup job, but with this extension, Kolosov should get the chance to at least push whoever the Flyers sign for that NHL spot behind Vladar.

Photos courtesy of Charles LeClaire-Imagn Images

AHL Notes: Griffith, Pietroniro, Miller

Veteran AHL scorer Seth Griffith signed a two-year AHL contract extension with the Bakersfield Condors, affiliate of the Edmonton Oilers. In a statement, Griffith called Bakersfield “a special place to play” and expressed excitement about being able to stay with the club an additional two years. The 33-year-old veteran has served as captain of the Condors for the last two seasons, and has played for the club since the 2020-21 season.

While the financial terms of AHL contracts are not publicly disclosed, one would have to imagine that Griffith’s deal in Bakersfield doesn’t come too cheap. He’s a multi-time AHL All-Star who has twice led the league in assists, as recently as 2024-25. That year, he scored 21 goals and 72 points in 65 games, and this past campaign had 18 goals and 67 points in 71 games. A veteran of 80 NHL games, Griffith hasn’t appeared at the game’s highest level since 2021-22, but remains one of the AHL’s most productive and reliable scorers.

Other notes from the AHL:

  • Fresh off of a breakout AHL campaign, defenseman Matteo Pietroniro signed a two-year AHL contract extension with the Syracuse Crunch. It’s been a long road to this point of stability for the 27-year-old defenseman. A former USHL captain, Pietroniro wasn’t able to play U.S. college hockey as the result of since-changed rules preventing CHL players from playing NCAA hockey. Instead of go the USports route, Pietroniro took the unconventional step of signing in the Finnish Liiga after his final USHL campaign. He played 2019-20 for the Lahti Pelicans before spending 2020-21 with HC Bolzano in Italy. He joined the North American pro ranks in 2021-22, beginning in the ECHL before breaking into the AHL on a full-time basis as a reserve defenseman. In 2025-26, Pietroniro took a massive step forward in his career, proving himself as a legitimate top-four AHL defenseman with 31 points in 65 games. His reward for those efforts? A multi-year extension.
  • The Crunch also signed right-shot defenseman Tommy Miller to a one-year AHL contract extension. The 27-year-old is the former captain of Michigan State University and was a full-time AHLer for the Toronto Marlies from 2022-23 through 2024-25. Last summer, he signed with Syracuse, who would go on to utilize Miller as a third-pairing defenseman with some penalty-killing time. He only managed 10 points in 55 regular-season games but did add three points in four playoff contests.

Transaction Notes: Ritchie, Panocha, Dubinsky

Former NHL forward Brett Ritchie has signed a contract for the 2026-27 season with Vlci Zilina, a club in the Slovakian Extraliga. The 32-year-old is a veteran of nearly 400 NHL games, playing in the league from 2014-15 through 2022-23. Ritchie last appeared in the NHL with the Arizona Coyotes, arriving there in a mid-season trade from the Calgary Flames. It was in that deal that Ritchie was actually traded for his brother, Nick Ritchie.

Since playing out 2022-23 with the Coyotes, Ritchie has continued his professional career in Europe. As most veteran NHLers who elect to try their hand in Europe do, Ritchie began in one of the continent’s top leagues: the KHL. He signed with Dynamo Minsk, but played in just 14 total games and scored just three points. The following year, he signed in Slovakia, but ended up splitting 2024-25 between that league and the German DEL. This past season, Ritchie began the year in Austria before transferring to Sheffield in the British EIHL, where he scored 12 goals and 22 points in 24 games.

Other notes on player movement from around the hockey world:

  • Buffalo Sabres prospect Norwin Panocha has changed clubs, signing with the DEL’s Iserlohn Roosters. The 6’2″ defenseman was a seventh-round pick by Buffalo at the 2023 draft, selected out of Eisbären Berlin’s junior ranks. Panocha spent 2023-24 and 2024-25 split between three North American junior leagues, namely the QMJHL, WHL, and USHL. He split this past season between the DEL with Berlin and second-division DEL2 on loan to Lausitzer Füchse. Per PuckPedia, the Sabres hold the exclusive rights to sign Panocha through June 1 of next year, but it appears unlikely at this stage that he’ll earn an entry-level deal.
  • The Laval Rocket announced yesterday that defenseman Aiden Dubinsky has been signed to a one-year AHL contract for next season. Dubinsky was playing on a tryout deal with the Rocket before their season ended at the hands of the Toronto Marlies in the AHL playoffs. The Rocket signed Dubinsky, 22, out of the University of Wisconsin. He skated in 39 games for the Badgers this past season, scoring six points.

East Notes: Flyers, Luukkonen, Golcic

The Philadelphia Flyers issued a slate of injury updates today, clarifying what ten of their skaters were battling through or otherwise managing while the season drew to a close. In the NHL, it is customary for players and teams to disclose injuries but not with complete specificity. The media might learn a player is out with a lower-body injury, rather than, specifically a sprained ankle, for example. When a season ends, more specific detail is often provided on injuries, and that’s exactly what the Flyers have done today.

Some of the Flyers’ disclosures are already things that have been made public – namely the ones suffered by Owen Tippett, Christian Dvorak, and Cam York. But some are new developments. Defenseman Emil Andrae was previously considered a healthy scratch when he exited the team’s playoff lineup, but the Flyers revealed today that the blueliner suffered a fractured wrist that will require surgery. The injury that knocked Noah Cates out of the second-round series was a fractured foot, but that won’t require surgery according to the team. Additionally, other Flyers were revealed to be playing through injury, including Travis Konecny (fractured rib; nasal fracture,) Garnet Hathaway (fractured fibula,) Trevor Zegras (elbow ligament sprain,) and Alex Bump (MCL sprain.)

Other notes from the Eastern Conference:

  • The Buffalo Sabres appear to be sticking with Ukko-Pekka Luukkonen as their starting netminder for tonight’s crucial game five against the Montreal Canadiens, The Buffalo News’ Rachel Lenzi reported from morning skate today. The Sabres made the decision to swap Alex Lyon for Luukkonen after going down two games to one in Montreal, and Luukkonen rewarded them with a brilliant performance that allowed the team to return to Western New York with a tied series. Luukkonen actually began the postseason as Buffalo’s No. 1 but lost the role after two games in the first round against the Boston Bruins.
  • Tampa Bay Lightning prospect Jan Goličič announced on social media that he has committed to play college hockey at Quinnipiac University. The Lightning selected Goličič, 19, in the fourth round of the 2024 NHL Draft. A big 6’5″, 209-pound left-shot defenseman, Goličič actually developed in the junior leagues of Austria before heading to the QMJHL for his draft year. He’s spent the last three campaigns in the QMJHL, and scored 44 points in 57 games this past season. Goličič is a top prospect for the Slovenian national team. He represented his country at the 2025 IIHF Men’s World Championships, and was named to the roster for this year’s tournament as well. As indicated by this article from PuckPedia, it appears Goličič’s decision to make a college commitment before June 1 will extend Tampa Bay’s exclusive rights to sign him, which will now follow the more extended timeline associated with college prospects.

Edmonton Oilers Fire Kris Knoblauch

The Edmonton Oilers have fired head coach Kris Knoblauch, per an official announcement. The news was first reported by TSN’s Ryan Rishaug. Assistant coach Mark Stuart has also been relieved of his duties.

Oilers GM Stan Bowman issued the following statement regarding the decision:

Following a thorough review of this past season, we believe these changes are needed. We are grateful for the contributions both Kris and Mark have made to our organization and we wish them the best moving forward.

A three-year contract extension signed by Knoblauch has yet to begin, meaning the coach is set to be paid by the Oilers through the 2028-29 season.

This past campaign was Knoblauch’s third behind the bench in Edmonton. He was hired away from the AHL’s Hartford Wolf Pack early in the 2023-24 season, after Edmonton fired former coach Jay Woodcroft amid a disastrous start to the season.

Knoblauch, who was Connor McDavid‘s head coach in the OHL and a WHL and OHL championship-winning bench boss, immediately turned the Oilers around. Knoblauch led Edmonton to a 46-18-5 record in the 69 games he coached, and the Oilers went to the Stanley Cup Final.

In the 2024 Final, Knoblauch’s Oilers stormed back from a 3-0 series deficit to the Florida Panthers, nearly accomplishing one of the most stunning championship victories in the history of the sport – but they ended up falling in a nail-biter seventh game.

The following season, Knoblauch’s Oilers, who went 48-29-5, made it to another Stanley Cup Final, but once again lost to the Panthers, this time in six games.

This past season, Knoblauch and the Oilers took a decided step back. Bogged down by roster issues, most pressingly in goal, the Oilers struggled to find their identity all season. They went 41-30-11 and lost in the first round to a young, upstart Anaheim Ducks team. After the loss, McDavid was critical of the Oilers, saying they were “an average team all year.”

The signs that Edmonton would eventually make this decision emerged a few days ago, when reports indicated that the Oilers had requested permission to speak with former Vegas Golden Knights head coach Bruce Cassidy. Cassidy remains under contract with the Golden Knights despite being fired during the season. While requests for permission to speak with fired coaches are usually a formality, the Golden Knights, according to reports, have withheld permission to speak with Cassidy. It is unclear if that has changed or will change.

But the reasons for the Oilers’ interest in Cassidy are clear: he is generally considered the most accomplished coach without a job at the moment, and this is a hire the Oilers can’t afford to get wrong. McDavid signed a two-year contract extension this season, one that would allow him to hit unrestricted free agency after the 2027-28 season. The 29-year-old’s extension officially put the Oilers on the clock – they have to prove to McDavid that he can still win a Stanley Cup in Edmonton. In other words, they have to earn his continued loyalty.

Cassidy, a Stanley Cup champion with Vegas in 2023, would give the Oilers a demanding coach who is still widely considered to be among the league’s best. But even if Edmonton doesn’t end up hiring the former Golden Knights, Boston Bruins, and Washington Capitals head coach, they still have now guaranteed they’ll be making a change behind the bench.

The list of other available veteran coaches doesn’t inspire as much confidence – especially after the New York Islanders took Peter DeBoer off the board late in the regular season – but it would still be a major surprise to see Edmonton turn to another first-time NHL head coach after parting ways with Knoblauch.

As for Knoblauch himself, one would have to imagine he will draw some league-wide interest in his services. The 47-year-old doesn’t have a Stanley Cup ring, but has been able to bring his teams as close as a team can possibly get without winning it all. His contract extension means Knoblauch doesn’t have to rush into his next gig, but it’ll be interesting to see if he’s considered for the vacancy of the Toronto Maple Leafs, Los Angeles Kings, or potentially even in Vegas if current coach John Tortorella decides not to return for a full campaign.

Photos courtesy of Mark J. Rebilas-USA TODAY Sports