Central Notes: Hague, Duchene, Foligno
The Nashville Predators were dealt a blow in the preseason when defenseman Nicolas Hague suffered an upper-body injury, but the team has adapted well to his absence. The club is off to a solid 2-2-2 start, a notable improvement from where they began last year, and now they’re set to get Hague back from his injury. The Tennessean’s Alex Daugherty noted today that it’s been four weeks since Hague was originally ruled out and prescribed a four-to-six week recovery timeline, and he added that one shouldn’t be surprised if Hague returns to the lineup at some point this week. Later in the day, Daugherty reported that Hague was on the ice for the Predators’ practice, further underscoring the likelihood that his return is coming sooner rather than later.
Hague was first seen back on the ice on Oct. 11, per team reporter Brooks Bratten, for an optional morning skate. He was originally injured during the team’s second preseason game against the Florida Panthers. At that time, Hague was paired with team captain Roman Josi on the club’s first pairing. Josi was paired with Adam Wilsby during the team’s most recent game, and Hague could end up claiming that spot back from Wilsby when he’s ready to make his Nashville debut. The 6’6 blueliner has played in 364 career NHL games and won the Stanley Cup with the Vegas Golden Knights in 2023. Nashville acquired him (and a conditional 2027 third-round draft choice) in June, sending Colton Sissons and Jeremy Lauzon to Vegas in return.
Other notes from the Central Division:
- Dallas Stars forward Matt Duchene missed the team’s practice today, reports the Dallas Morning News’ Lia Assimakopoulos. Stars head coach Glen Gulutzan expressed confidence that Duchene would be able to play tomorrow when the Stars host Duchene’s former team, the Columbus Blue Jackets, but added that Duchene has been battling an upper-body injury suffered last week. Duchene is one of the Stars’ key offensive producers; he led them in scoring last season with 82 points in 82 games.
- Chicago Blackhawks captain Nick Foligno returned to practice today after stepping away to tend to a personal matter, reports NBC Sports Chicago’s Charlie Roumeliotis. Foligno’s leadership has helped the Blackhawks to a surprisingly strong start to their season. The team, which was projected by many media outlets to be among the NHL’s worst for 2025-26, has gone 3-2-2 to start the season, good for 13th in league standings. Foligno has been a core veteran for the club since arriving in 2023, scoring at least 15 goals and 35 points in each of his two seasons there.
Latest Injury Updates On Cole Perfetti, Adam Lowry, Dylan Samberg
Winnipeg Jets head coach Scott Arniel spoke with the Winnipeg Free Press’ Mike McIntyre today, issuing updates on the recovery timelines of three crucial Jets players who are each out with an injury.
According to Arniel, Cole Perfetti, who skated both today and yesterday, is “slightly ahead of schedule” in his recovery from an ankle sprain he suffered in a preseason game. Perfetti is reportedly aiming to return at some point in the middle of November.
Adam Lowry, the Jets’ captain, is reportedly “trending towards” a return close to the end of October or early November. Lowry is still completing his recovery from a hip surgery he underwent in May. Lowry returned to practice two days ago in a non-contact jersey, an undeniably positive sign for the likelihood that he’ll be able to return at some point next week, or the week after.
It was announced in September that defenseman Dylan Samberg would miss about six to eight weeks with a broken wrist, and Arniel’s update on Samberg’s status was less definitive, and less positive, than the other two players’. Per McIntyre, Samberg’s exact recovery timeline is at this point “still TBD.” It’s a difficult break for Samberg, who emerged last season as an important top-four anchor for the Jets. He scored 20 points in 60 games, averaged 21:08 time on ice per game (good for No. 4 among Jets blueliners) and played a massive role on the penalty kill, leading Jets players in shorthanded ice time per game during the team’s highly successful 2024-25 regular season.
Samberg, who is repped by Pete Rutili of Wasserman Hockey, signed a three-year $5.75MM AAV contract extension in July. As a result, this significant injury won’t impact Samberg’s earning potential, at least in the short to medium term, though it will cost him the chance to play in a full 82-game season for what would have been the first time in his career.
While Samberg has the security of a freshly signed contract, the same cannot be said for the other two injured Jets players. Lowry is currently slated to become an unrestricted free agent this summer, and is likely to expect a sizable raise from the $3.25MM AAV he earned on his last deal. He’s firmly established himself as a valuable middle-six center in Winnipeg, and provides the team with significant all-around value both on and off the ice.
His injury does not appear to have changed where he stands in the minds of the Jets’ lead hockey operations decision-makers, though, as it was reported earlier this month that re-signing Lowry is one of the team’s top remaining priorities. It can take players some time to get back to their full on-ice ability after a significant hip surgery, so it will be interesting to see how quickly Lowry is able to regain his footing on the ice once he returns in the next few weeks.
Like Lowry, Perfetti is also a pending free agent, though he is a pending RFA, not a UFA. It’s unwise to speculate on how Perfetti’s ankle sprain might impact negotiations for his next deal, but it is worth mentioning that this absence has robbed him of an opportunity to build off of his solid 2024-25 season in the early portion of 2025-26. Perfetti’s most recent year went a long way in justifying the team’s investment of a top-10 pick to draft him, as he set a career high scoring 50 points in 82 games.
With the salary cap set to continue to rise, Perfetti is likely hoping to be able to earn a significant raise from the $3.25MM AAV on his most recent deal. If he can hit the ground running upon returning next month, a productive follow-up to his breakout 2024-25 will go a long way in convincing Jets decision-makers that he’s worth the additional investment.
Tampa Bay Lightning Reassign Conor Geekie, Recall Charle-Edouard D’Astous
The Tampa Bay Lightning announced today that forward Conor Geekie has been reassigned to the team’s AHL affiliate, the Syracuse Crunch. In a corresponding move, the club recalled defenseman Charle-Edouard D’Astous.
Geekie lined up on Tampa’s second line for their most recent game, but has just one assist through six NHL games this season. It’s possible the club could view a stint in the AHL, where he has thus far been successful (20 points in 24 career games) as a way to help him regain some confidence. It’s also entirely possible Geekie is recalled before the club’s next game, which is on Thursday.
This recall of D’Astous comes as the Lightning manage an injury suffered by Maxwell Crozier, the player the Lightning entered the season with slotted in as their seventh defenseman. It was announced last week that Crozier would land on IR with an undisclosed injury, and no further update on his status has been provided. During Crozier’s absence, veteran Steven Santini had served as the club’s spare blueliner, but Santini was reassigned to Syracuse yesterday.
Since the Lightning don’t play until Thursday, meaning there’s still a decent runway for Crozier to return from IR in time for the club’s next game. But if he does not, this recall positions D’Astous as the team’s spare blueliner, giving him a chance to make his NHL debut.
The 27-year-old has been on quite the hockey journey to reach this point. He finished his junior career as a star in the QMJHL for the Rimouski Oceanic, serving as the top-scoring blueliner and captain for a team that featured 2020 No. 1 pick Alexis Lafreniere.
Despite winning QMJHL Defenseman of the Year honors in his final year of junior hockey (and CHL Humanitarian of the Year for his work with local charities in Rimouski), D’Astous didn’t receive NHL interest. He signed a two-year AHL contract with the Grand Rapids Griffins, and failed to make their AHL squad out of training camp. He spent almost his entire first season as a pro in the ECHL, scoring 22 points in 46 games.
His encouraging progress in the ECHL earned him a late-season three-game cameo with Grand Rapids (where he would score his first AHL goal), but his progress slowed to a halt in 2020-21, as the COVID-19 pandemic greatly limited the number of games able to be played in the minor leagues.
D’Astous became a free agent at the end of his contract, and signed a one-year, two-way AHL/ECHL deal with the Colorado Eagles. While he only played in the AHL for one month of the season, D’Astous was stellar in the ECHL. He had a breakout season, scoring 57 points in 52 regular-season games and a whopping 30 points in 18 playoff games, winning ECHL Defender of the Year honors.
For many skaters, success in the ECHL isn’t a realistic path right to the NHL. But for the league’s best players, success in the ECHL presents a very realistic path to getting an opportunity to sign a contract in a high-level European league. Those opportunities often offer higher pay and a more comfortable playing experience than a player might find in the ECHL. The European path is the one D’Astous took, cashing in on his stellar ECHL season to sign a contract with KooKoo in the Finnish Liiga.
Just like his experience in the ECHL, it took D’Astous a year to adjust to the European pro game. But by 2023-24, he had found his groove. He scored 17 goals and 46 points in just 54 Liiga games for KooKoo in his second season there, leading the entire Liiga in time-on-ice per game and winning the league’s Defenseman of the Year honors.
His success in Finland earned him a two-year deal with SHL’s Brynas IF, and there, no adjustment period was needed. D’Astous was once again excellent, scoring 39 points in 49 games and winning the SHL’s Defenseman of the Year honors.
In a period of just four seasons, D’Astous had captured the Defenseman of the Year honors in three separate professional leagues. That undeniable track record of success finally earned D’Astous the NHL contract he’d been seeking, as the Lightning signed him to a one-year deal carrying a $775K NHL salary, $150K AHL salary, and $200K guarantee.
Now back in North America, D’Astous has picked up where he left off. He’s currently playing in a number-one defenseman role for the Crunch, playing a heavy workload in all situations through four games and leading his team in scoring by a blueliner with a goal and two assists.
Even if he doesn’t end up getting to play in the NHL on this current recall, the transaction is nonetheless a tangible reward for a player who has worked tirelessly to climb up the ladder of pro hockey.
Ottawa Senators Reassign Arthur Kaliyev
10/20/2025: The Senators announced Monday that they reassigned Kaliyev back to Belleville. He got into two games for the Senators during his recall, a victory over the Seattle Kraken and a loss to the New York Islanders.
Kaliyev lined up on the Senators’ fourth line for the first game of his recall, and ultimately saw himself elevated to the team’s first line for his second game. He registered an assist on David Perron‘s power play marker against the Islanders, but it appears his performance was not enough for him to retain his spot on the team’s NHL roster. He’s been a difference-maker at the AHL level with Belleville so far this season, scoring two assists in two games played.
10/16/2025: The Ottawa Senators have recalled forward Arthur Kaliyev from their AHL affiliate, the Belleville Senators, the team announced today. The move comes as the team grapples with the loss of Brady Tkachuk, who will miss at least a month with a wrist injury. He’s landed on injured reserve as the corresponding transaction, per the league’s media site.
The Florida Panthers’ claim of defenseman Donovan Sebrango yesterday cleared a roster spot for Ottawa (something that would have also happened had Sebrango cleared waivers and been reassigned to Belleville, which was likely the team’s preferred outcome) and they’ve filled it with this recall of Kaliyev.
While Kaliyev certainly won’t be able to replace, or likely even come close to replacing, the on-ice and off-ice impact brought by Tkachuk, he does nonetheless bring quite a bit of NHL experience. The 24-year-old, who was signed to a one-year, two-way $775K/$425K contract this past summer, has played in over 200 NHL games and scored 38 goals and 75 points. He was originally drafted by the Los Angeles Kings in the second round of the 2019 draft, with most public-facing scouts rating him as a potential high-upside scorer with some very real risk to his projection.
Kaliyev scored goals at an extremely high rate in his junior hockey days in the OHL (where current Senators GM Steve Staios was his team’s president) but has not been able to translate that goal-scoring prowess to the pro ranks.
He started off pretty well, scoring 14 goals and 27 points in 80 games during his 2021-22 rookie season, and followed that up by scoring 13 goals and 28 points in just 56 games in 2022-23, which is a 19-goal, 41-point 82-game scoring pace.
But despite showing some signs of offensive proficiency, Kaliyev struggled to make an all-around impact. He managed just seven goals and 15 points in 2023-24, and got into just 14 NHL games last season, all coming with the New York Rangers after they claimed him off of waivers.
2025-26 has been widely viewed as a make-or-break year for Kaliyev’s hopes of having a long-term future as an NHL player, and while he didn’t make the Senators out of training camp and cleared waivers in the preseason, it appears this Tkachuk injury will give him the opportunity to play in NHL games once more. The Senators elevated forward Michael Amadio to the first-line left wing spot on Tim Stutzle‘s line that Tkachuk vacated, but the team had a nightmare game falling 8-4 to the Buffalo Sabres, with Amadio failing to register a point.
While that doesn’t mean the team will give Kaliyev a run in that coveted lineup spot next to Stutzle, it does indicate that the team’s solution for managing Tkachuk’s absence is far from settled. In that, there is opportunity. Kaliyev may begin his NHL tenure with the Senators as a healthy scratch, but even if that’s the case, this recall still presents a major opportunity for Kaliyev.
Even if he fails to make the most of that opportunity, this recall will at the very least give him a nice financial boost, as he’ll make the pro-rated portion of his NHL salary of $775K for as long as he can spend on the Senators’ NHL roster.
Photo courtesy of Jeff Curry-Imagn Images
Seattle Kraken Recall Ville Ottavainen
The Seattle Kraken have recalled defenseman Ville Ottavainen from their AHL affiliate, the Coachella Valley Firebirds.
Amidst the recent news that Kraken defenseman Brandon Montour is taking a temporary leave of absence from the Kraken to tend to a family matter, this recall gives Seattle an additional right-handed defensive option to work with while Montour is gone.
Ottavainen, 23, will not be able to offer the Kraken the kind of dynamic, aggressive offensive ability that Montour brings, but that’s not to say that he doesn’t have a solid résumé as a player. The 2021 fourth-round pick played three seasons for JYP in the Finnish Liiga before joining the Firebirds late in 2022-23.
He scored 34 points in 70 games in his first full season with the club, helping the Firebirds get to game six of the 2024 Calder Cup Final. While Ottavainen’s AHL production took a step back in 2024-25, the blueliner doesn’t just bring points, he also offers rare size and strength at the position, standing 6’5″, 225 pounds.
While he has just one NHL game to his name, Ottavainen has, as mentioned, an extensive amount of pro experience for a blueliner still in his early twenties. It’s entirely possible that with this recall, the Kraken give Ottavainen a look on the team’s second pairing alongside Ryan Lindgren in a spot occupied by Cale Fleury during last night’s overtime win over the Toronto Maple Leafs.
Tampa Bay Lightning Reassign Steven Santini, Scott Sabourin
The Tampa Bay Lightning have made a pair of roster moves, reassigning forward Scott Sabourin and defenseman Steven Santini to their AHL affiliate, the Syracuse Crunch. Both Santini and Sabourin were elevated to the NHL roster on Friday, though Santini did not dress in the team’s two games that he was on their roster.
Sabourin was not eligible to play in either of the Lightning’s games since his recall as he has yet to fully serve the four-game suspension he was assessed in the preseason for roughing committed against Florida Panthers defenseman Aaron Ekblad. By recalling him, the Lightning have ensured Sabourin would get two games’ worth of credit towards the suspension.
Since Sabourin hasn’t played in four or more NHL games in a single season since 2021-22, recalls such as this, with the specific intent of allowing Sabourin to serve his suspension, will be essential to restoring the player’s ability to be eligible to play should he be recalled later in the season.
The 33-year-old grinder is a longtime AHL veteran, and scored 10 goals and 25 points alongside 111 penalty minutes in 68 games last season for the San Jose Barracuda.
Santini, unlike Sabourin, was eligible to play in the team’s two games over the course of his recall, but ultimately remained in the press box as the team’s spare blueliner. The recall was not without benefit for the 30-year-old defenseman, as he is playing on a two-way contract, so he will be paid the pro-rated portion of his NHL salary ($775K) rather than what he would have received in the AHL, where his salary is $250K. While he didn’t get into either game, the recall did increase the odds that after enough further recalls, Santini may be able to exceed the $350K annual guarantee on his contract.
As Santini’s recall was directly related to an injury suffered by defenseman Maxwell Crozier, this move could be seen as an indication that Crozier is ready to return to the ice after a two-game absence, though there have not yet been any reports or any official announcements as to whether that is the case.
East Notes: Michkov, Lyon, Marchand
The Philadelphia Flyers completed a dramatic overtime victory over the Minnesota Wild yesterday, but not everything is going smoothly so far to start the season in Philadelphia. While the Flyers have compiled a decent 2-2-1 record to start the year, one of the more notable emerging storylines on the Flyers has been the usage of star second-year forward Matvei Michkov. According to The Athletic’s Kevin Kurz, the 2023 seventh-overall pick was once again benched by head coach Rick Tocchet late in last night’s game, with Kurz attributing the move to “too many ineffective shifts and careless plays with the puck.”
Michkov has struggled thus far under Tocchet, with just one goal and zero assists through five games. While he remains the Flyers’ top power play forward in terms of time-on-ice per game, his overall usage has declined from 16:41 per game last season to just 14:50 this year. While Tocchet’s usage of Michkov may ultimately help the young forward develop a more well-rounded all-around game, it’s also potentially fair to question whether taking this approach with Michkov, who is one of the Flyers’ most lethal offensive weapons, ultimately hurts the team’s chances to win more than it helps.
Other notes from the Eastern Conference:
- The Buffalo Sabres have rebounded in a strong way since their 0-3-0 start, rattling off consecutive dominant victories against two of last year’s playoff teams: the Ottawa Senators and Florida Panthers. While Zach Benson‘s return from injury has greatly helped matters, leading the charge for the Sabres has been netminder Alex Lyon, who was signed for $1.5MM AAV this past summer to be the backup to starter Ukko-Pekka Luukkonen. Lyon has a .929 save percentage through five games this season, a mark that ranks third in the NHL among goalies with four starts or more. While Luukkonen is likely to remain the team’s go-to starter whenever he recovers from his injury, Lyon is putting together a strong case to receive an increased workload as a backup.
- Florida Panthers forward Brad Marchand was fined $5K by the NHL’s Department of Player Safety today, for unsportsmanlike conduct committed in yesterday’s 3-0 loss to the Sabres. The unsportsmanlike conduct occurred midway through the second period when Marchand got into a scuffle with Sabres captain Rasmus Dahlin. Dahlin had cross-checked Marchand, and Marchand went after Dahlin as a result, delivering a few punches. Marchand was ultimately taken to the penalty box, but he travelled there with Dahlin’s helmet in hand, and once in the penalty box, Marchand proceeded to rip several straps off of Dahlin’s helmet and toss it back onto the ice. This is not the first time Marchand has gotten into trouble for an unconventional kind of unsportsmanlike conduct: during the 2018 playoffs, Marchand was officially warned by the league after he licked the face of then-Tampa Bay Lightning forward Ryan Callahan.
Ottawa Senators Recall Mads Sogaard, Reassign Leevi Merilainen
The Ottawa Senators have swapped which goalie will hold the backup’s role on their NHL roster. Per an official team announcement, netminder Leevi Merilainen has been reassigned to their AHL affiliate, the Belleville Senators, while Mads Sogaard has been recalled.
Merilainen won the Senators’ backup goalie job coming out of training camp, a development that was a continuation of the Senators’ goaltending depth chart order from 2024-25. Merilainen, 23, got into 12 NHL games last season, compared to just two for Sogaard.
Sogaard and Merilainen were polar opposites in terms of form last season, as Sogaard struggled mightily in limited AHL action and couldn’t gain momentum to play in the NHL when he was healthy, while Merilainen excelled in his second full season of pro hockey in North America.
Last year, Merilainen posted a .913 save percentage across 37 AHL games and a .925 mark across 12 NHL games. Sogaard, on the other hand, posted an .858 save percentage in just eight AHL games.
Injuries didn’t help matters for Sogaard last season, but the reality is that the towering netminder, a 2019 second-rounder, looked to have been passed by on the team’s goaltending depth chart by Merilainen, a 2020 third-rounder.
Today’s roster move flips things. Outside of the two netminders’ competition in preseason and training camp (one that Merilainen won, as Sogaard was placed on waivers and sent to Belleville earlier this month) neither goalie has had the chance to make an extended impact in the crease.
Sogaard has played in two AHL games for Belleville this year, going 0-1-1 with an .864 save percentage and 2.94 goals-against average.
Merilainen, on the other hand, has played in just one game, and was unfortunate enough to be on the wrong end of what has been, to this point, the worst game of this young Senators campaign. Merilainen was tagged for seven goals against in an 8-4 loss to the Buffalo Sabres, and saving 19 of 26 shots against a team that had, to that point in the season, struggled mightily to score goals, is not a performance that is going to inspire a lot of confidence.
It would be unfair, of course, to lay the blame for that loss entirely on Merilainen’s shoulders. But that performance, combined with today’s move, does throw into question the Senators’ goaltending plans behind entrenched starter Linus Ullmark.
The Athletic’s Julian McKenzie wrote that with neither Merilainen nor Sogaard inspiring much confidence, and Ullmark struggling, “a goalie may be needed” from outside the organization in order to stabilize the position.
While it’s too early to say that the Senators’ decision not to retain veteran backup Anton Forsberg over the summer (he signed a two-year, $2.25MM AAV deal with the Los Angeles Kings) was a mistake, things appear highly unsettled in net for the Senators so far this year. In what is a crucially important season in Ottawa, one where the Senators simply cannot afford to take a step back after finally returning to the playoffs in 2024-25, goaltending appears to be emerging as an early problem area for the team.
External help in the crease could become available at some point. The Carolina Hurricanes and Buffalo Sabres are currently carrying an extra goalie they claimed on waivers due to injuries to their expected NHL goalies, and therefore it’s possible one or both of Colten Ellis and Brandon Bussi find their way back onto the waiver wire at some point.
That is also the case for Cayden Primeau in Toronto, though the fact that Joseph Woll has taken a leave of absence to deal with a family matter (which understandably does not have as concrete of a return timeline as an injury) does complicate things.
Photo courtesy of Matt Blewett-Imagn Images
Morning Notes: Robertson, Pinto, Varone
In this early stretch of the 2025-26 NHL season, one of the better storylines on the New York Rangers has been the emergence of rookie defenseman Matthew Robertson, who scored his first NHL goal last night in the team’s much-needed comeback victory over the Montreal Canadiens. Robertson took on injured defenseman Carson Soucy‘s role as the Rangers’ number-five defenseman, and while he hasn’t been perfect, he has generally impressed. This has led to questions as to what will happen when Soucy is ready to return to the lineup, and The Athletic’s Peter Baugh wrote yesterday that it “definitely feels like” Robertson will retain a spot in head coach Mike Sullivan’s regular lineup once Soucy returns.
Should Robertson end up retaining his regular lineup spot, that would likely mean veteran Urho Vaakanainen would become the team’s seventh defenseman, filling the role Robertson began the season in. Vaakanainen, 26, is averaging the fewest minutes per game of any Rangers blueliner (15:02) though he has played in all seven of the team’s games thus far this season. The stay-at-home defenseman has an additional year on his contract beyond this one at a $1.55MM AAV, and managed a healthy 15 points in 46 games for the Rangers last season. Vaakanainen’s play has drawn more criticism than Robertson’s this year, though, and being on the wrong end of a Trent Frederic game-winning goal on Tuesday didn’t help his case to stay in the lineup.
Other notes from around the hockey world:
- Yesterday, we covered reports coming out of Ottawa that Senators center Shane Pinto and the team were set to re-engage in talks over a contract extension for the talented young center. Those reports indicated that there was a notable gap between the Senators’ expectations for a new contract and the expectations of Pinto’s representatives, led by Lewis Gross of Sports Professional Management. Sportsnet’s Elliotte Friedman added to the reporting around Pinto last night, revealing that the Senators had offered Pinto an eight-year contract extension. It’s unclear at this time whether Pinto and the Senators will be able to reach an agreement on such a long-term contract (Pinto’s goal-scoring success so far this season should certainly embolden his camp’s pursuit of a major pay raise) but as of right now, it’s abundantly clear the Senators are hoping to keep Pinto in the fold for as long as possible.
- Former AHL MVP Phil Varone has found a place to play the 2025-26 season, signing a contract with Slovakia’s HK Dukla Trencin. The 34-year-old, who was once one of the top players in the AHL and has 97 career NHL games to his name, has landed in Slovakia after a two-year stint in Germany’s DEL. Since leaving North America at the end of a 2019-20 season that saw him post 19 points in 33 AHL games, Varone has struggled to find consistency in Europe. He’s bounced between six different clubs over the last five years across three different leagues and four different countries, with his best year coming in 2023-24, when he scored 27 points in 34 games for the DEL’s Düsseldorfer EG. He now joins a Trencin team in desperate need of scoring reinforcement: the team currently sit in the No. 8 spot in the Slovak Extraliga standings (out of 12 teams) and have scored the third-fewest goals as a team (27 through 12 games played).
Injury Updates: Gostisbehere, Stone, Lundkvist
Carolina Hurricanes defenseman Shayne Gostisbehere left last night’s victory over the Los Angeles Kings with a lower-body injury, according to a team announcement. After the game, head coach Rod Brind’Amour told the media, including team reporter Walt Ruff, that Gostisbehere “tweaked something,” and could add to the list of injured Hurricanes defensemen – one that already includes star blueliner Jaccob Slavin, who is out indefinitely with a lower-body injury of his own.
If Gostisbehere is to miss any games with this injury, beyond just the portion of the game he missed last night, it would be a serious blow to the Hurricanes defense. Despite playing in the fewest even-strength minutes per game of any Hurricanes blueliner so far this season, Gostisbehere quarterbacks Carolina’s top power play unit and is tied for the league lead in points by a defenseman with seven in five games. In Gostisbehere absence, offseason addition K’Andre Miller took over the team’s top power play unit, and in terms of who could draw into the lineup in the case that Gostisbehere misses game action moving forward, rookie Charles-Alexis Legault is in position as the team’s current spare blueliner.
Other injury notes from around the league:
- Vegas Golden Knights captain Mark Stone left last night’s victory over the Calgary Flames with an apparent wrist injury, reports Mark Anderson of the Associated Press. According to Anderson, Stone left the ice midway through the third period, clearly dealing with something. After the game, head coach Bruce Cassidy didn’t have a further update on Stone’s status, but said they’d likely have more information to give on Monday. Stone, 33, ranks second in leaguewide scoring at the moment with 13 points in six games, and it’s worth noting that he has been injury prone for much of his NHL career. Stone hasn’t hit 70 games played in a season since 2018-19, and played in 66 games last season.
- Dallas Stars defenseman Nils Lundkvist suffered a lower-body injury in the team’s Thursday contest against the Vancouver Canucks, an injury that limited him to a season-low 11:18 time-on-ice. Last night, Stars coach Glen Gulutzan provided an additional update on Lundkvist’s status, telling the media (including the Dallas News’ Lia Assimakopoulos) that Lundkvist would be out for “a little bit” with the injury. Lundkvist, 25, has scored three points through four games so far this season, and saw his spot on the team’s second pairing alongside Thomas Harley filled by veteran Ilya Lyubushkin.
