Penguins Place Matt Dumba On Unconditional Waivers
The Penguins placed defenseman Mathew Dumba on unconditional waivers Thursday for the purposes of terminating his contract, per PuckPedia.
Since Pittsburgh’s regular season schedule has concluded, the pending unrestricted free agent won’t miss out on any pay. Instead, the move relieves Dumba, who was on assignment to AHL Wilkes-Barre/Scranton, of his obligation to report there for the Calder Cup Playoffs.
Dumba will also get a leg up on trying to find a new home for 2026-27 if he opts to continue his playing career. An NHL role, or even a non-two-way deal, seems highly unlikely, however. Once a top-four fixture for the Wild, the 31-year-old’s game has been in decline for several years now. He still managed to land a two-year, $7.5MM contract from the right-shot-needy Stars in free agency in 2024. Dallas was hoping his underwhelming period from 2022-24 was a flash in the pan for a player who was still only 29 years old when he signed the deal, but it ended up being his new norm.
Last season in Dallas, Dumba went from starting the year on a pairing with Miro Heiskanen to being a healthy scratch for the entirety of their playoff run. Through 63 regular-season games, he only managed a goal and nine assists with a -5 rating while averaging just 15:18 of ice time per game. The cap-strapped Stars then surrendered a second-round pick to the Penguins last summer for them to take on the last year of his contract.
Even on a Pittsburgh defense that had plenty of question marks at the beginning of the season, Dumba couldn’t lock down a role. He essentially started the year as a #7 option – only suiting up 11 times through the first two months – before landing on and clearing waivers. In those few NHL outings, he had a 1-2–3 scoring line with a -5 rating, 12 blocks, and 16 hits in bottom-pairing duties. Pittsburgh was outscored 9-5 in Dumba’s 5-on-5 minutes, and they only controlled 46.2% of shot attempts with him on the ice.
Dumba accepted the assignment to Wilkes-Barre/Scranton, but he hasn’t played since early March. He showed he can still be an impact player at the minor-league level at least, potting 20 points (six goals, 14 assists) in 27 games with a +3 rating. Still, the 6’0″, 191-lb righty hasn’t been the legitimate two-way threat he used to be in Minnesota for several years now. It wouldn’t be entirely surprising to see him land a tryout or two-way offer before next fall, but it would be a shock to see him on an opening night roster.
Blue Jackets Sign Rick Bowness To One-Year Extension
1:25 p.m.: It’s a one-year extension for Bowness, the team announced.
10:23 a.m.: The Blue Jackets have agreed to an extension with head coach Rick Bowness that will be announced later today, Pierre LeBrun of TSN and The Athletic reports.
The news comes less than 48 hours following the end of Columbus’ season, which ended on the low side of a complete roller coaster. On Tuesday, following a 2-1 home loss to the Capitals in Game 82 – their sixth straight home loss to end the season – Bowness had some choice words for his club (via Joe Nugent of NBC4 Columbus):
All you gotta do is look at the stat sheet. Three hits, 23 giveaways. I don’t know if I’m back, but if I’m back, I’m changing this culture. These guys, they don’t care – losing is not important enough to them. It doesn’t bother them. Like, how can you go out and play like that?
The Jackets’ season ended as disappointing as it began. On Jan. 12, they had a 19-19-7 record through 45 games and were last in the Eastern Conference. That prompted them to make a change behind the bench, bringing in Bowness out of retirement while firing Dean Evason, who was midway through his second season with the club after pulling them just short of a playoff berth last season. By March 23, their record under Bowness was 19-3-4, and they had pulled ahead of the Penguins for second place in the Metropolitan Division. Even just going .500 from there likely would have shored up the franchise’s first playoff trip since 2020.
It just wasn’t in the cards. The Blue Jackets won just two of their final 11 games and had eight regulation losses, bringing them down to 40-30-12. They ultimately finished a full six points back of the surging Flyers for the Metropolitan Division playoff cutoff and seven points back of the Senators for the second wild-card spot.
Now, Bowness will get the chance he wanted to change that culture. On the whole, his 21-11-5 record in 37 games was strong. The veteran of 840 games as a head coach and countless more as an assistant had stepped away from the game in 2024 following a two-year run with the Jets, leading that franchise back to the postseason after a 2021-22 campaign that fell far short of expectations.
Bowness, 71, has now been a head coach in parts of 15 NHL seasons. He has a Western Conference championship under his belt with the Stars in 2021 and has amassed a lifetime record of 331-419-90 (.448 points percentage), although that’s dragged down significantly by his time spent coaching the expansion Senators in the early 1990s.
Columbus’ advanced numbers this season suggest a team that could and should be a playoff competitor next spring. While they do have several notable unrestricted free agents pending, their core still revolves around several 25-or-younger players like Kirill Marchenko, Adam Fantilli, Kent Johnson, Cole Sillinger, Denton Mateychuk, and Jet Greaves. Since Bowness took over on Jan. 12, the Jackets ranked 10th in the league in Corsi share (51.5%), sixth in the league in shot share (53.1%), eighth in the league in expected goals share (53.0%), and sixth in the league in scoring chance share (53.2%) at 5-on-5.
The Athletic’s Aaron Portzline was first to report things were trending toward a Bowness extension.
Capitals Notes: Ovechkin, Leonard, Dubois, Sandin, Wilson
The Capitals had their locker cleanout day today, and naturally, Alex Ovechkin continues to be prodded with questions about whether he’s returning for a 22nd NHL season in the fall. He maintains that he needs a little bit of time over the summer to decide with his family, but made things clear today that retirement is far from a sure thing in his mind. “I’m pretty sure it’s not my last game,” he said regarding Tuesday night’s win over the Blue Jackets, via Sammi Silber of The Hockey News.
In an interview earlier this month, Ovechkin said his family’s input, plus how he feels health-wise after a few weeks off, will be the most important factors in his decision. He’ll be 41 in September, but skated in all 82 games this year. It’s the first time he’s done that since 2017-18, although he rarely misses any stretches of significance. The league’s all-time leading goal-scorer still managed a 32-goal, 64-point year to lead the Caps in both categories. His 2.98 shots per game were a career low by a significant margin, though, so there’s definitely some cracks starting to show in his production.
More from the Caps today:
- Right-winger Ryan Leonard is heading to the World Championship to represent the United States on the heels of his rookie season, he told Silber. This year’s event kicks off on May 15 and will be hosted by Zurich and Fribourg, Switzerland. The 2023 eighth overall pick made a smooth transition to full-time duties after being limited to one goal in nine games at the tail end of last year, coming out of Boston College. The 21-year-old finished fifth on the Caps in goals (20), eighth in assists (25), and eighth in points (45) while averaging 14:25 of ice time per game with 124 hits. The 6’1″ bang-and-crash sniper previously had an assist in six games for the U.S. national team at the 2024 Worlds and captained them to gold at the 2025 World Juniors.
- Center Pierre-Luc Dubois broke his hand in Game 80 of the season against the Penguins last Saturday, he confirmed to Silber. He gutted it out and played the next day, but ended up sitting out for the season finale against Columbus after the Caps were eliminated from the playoff picture. That, plus an abdominal surgery in November, limited the top-six middleman to just 29 appearances on the year. Missing so much of Dubois, who was an excellent second-line pivot for them last season, had a considerable impact on the team’s overall regression. When healthy, he managed a 5-14–19 scoring line with a -4 rating while averaging 16:49 per game.
- Joining him on the offseason injury rehab list this summer is defenseman Rasmus Sandin. He also got hurt in that Saturday game against the Penguins and was still in a knee brace today. It doesn’t appear he’ll need surgery and can walk under his own power, but will need “quite a bit of rehab” this offseason, he told Silber, so it won’t be an ideal rest period for him. Sandin averaged 19:12 of ice time per game this season, sliding up and down the depth chart, while posting five goals and 29 points in 73 games with a +4 rating. Fresh off his 26th birthday last month, he just wrapped up year two of the five-year, $23MM extension he signed with the Caps in 2024.
- Tom Wilson also played through the back half of the season and the Olympics with a high ankle sprain, Silber relays. He only missed about two weeks in January with it and while he said it was certainly playable, he was never at 100%. That was evident as he only managed eight goals and 20 points in 31 games after returning after starting the year with a 22-20–42 line in 41 games.
Sharks To Sign Eric Pohlkamp To Entry-Level Deal
The Sharks will be signing defense prospect Eric Pohlkamp to his entry-level contract in the coming days, Sheng Peng of San Jose Hockey Now reports. The deal will begin next season, so he won’t play in tonight’s season finale against the Jets.
San Jose has been littered with top draft picks over the last few seasons. This far into a rebuild, though, it starts to become clear what later-round selections they might be hitting on. Pohlkamp appears to be one of them.
Selected in the fifth round in 2023, the 5’11” righty was passed over entirely in the draft the year prior. Now 22, he’s spent the last three years in the NCAA – one with Bemidji State, two with Denver – where he’s developed into a star. As a junior this season, he was a top-three finalist for the Hobey Baker Award and took home a national title with the Pioneers, leading the team in scoring with a 18-21–39 line in 43 games.
While Pohlkamp is undersized, he doesn’t play like it. He’s put on enough muscle to hit the 205-lb mark and is frequently laying into opponents. A legitimate two-way threat that the Sharks lack at present, there’s a non-zero chance he’ll step into an NHL role out of the gate in the fall.
Pohlkamp sits at #5 in San Jose’s prospect pool, one of the league’s very best, per Scott Wheeler of The Athletic. He’s the top-ranked right-shot prospect in the system and arguably their second-best up-and-coming rearguard overall behind 2024 11th overall pick Sam Dickinson.
There’s a 20-plus minute upside in Pohlkamp’s game with play on both special teams units. He ended the season with both hand and foot injuries, Denver head coach David Carle told Wheeler, so it’s not looking like he’ll join AHL San Jose for its playoff run before joining the Sharks for training camp in the fall.
Pohlkamp’s deal, when announced, will be a two-year pact running through 2027-28. He’ll be a restricted free agent at that point under team control until the 2031 offseason.
Blue Jackets Reassign Zach Aston-Reese, Luca Del Bel Belluz
The Blue Jackets have reassigned forwards Zach Aston-Reese and Luca Del Bel Belluz to AHL Cleveland, per a team announcement. While Columbus isn’t a part of the postseason picture, their minor-league feeder is, so the duo will be able to get some playoff action in after all.
The move could mark the final note on Aston-Reese’s transactions log in his Blue Jackets tenure. A pending unrestricted free agent, the 31-year-old had a trying campaign that’s unlikely to result in him being brought back unless there’s mutual interest in him playing more of a minor-league role.
Once a depth defensive standout for the Penguins, it’s actually been a rocky few years for the 31-year-old. He was once a lineup fixture but lost his grip on that almost overnight, failing to land a deal in the 2023 offseason and getting released from a tryout with the Hurricanes before eventually landing a two-way deal with the Red Wings at the beginning of the year. He ended up clearing waivers before spending most of the season in the AHL. He joined the Golden Knights the following summer but was claimed off waivers by Columbus during training camp.
That move in October 2024 precipitated Aston-Reese’s return to NHL relevancy. The checking winger re-emerged with a relative bang and earned a one-year extension in the process, making a career-high 79 appearances for the Jackets while also setting new best marks in assists (11), shots on goal (101), and blocks (58). While his -15 rating was cause for concern, he spent most of the season on a bottom-six checking unit with Justin Danforth and Mathieu Olivier that actually posted strong underlying metrics, controlling 54.6% of expected goals at 5-on-5 while outscoring opponents 13-9, per MoneyPuck.
This year, with Danforth gone and the offseason acquisitions of Charlie Coyle, Isac Lundeström, and Miles Wood pushing him down the depth chart, Aston-Reese’s impact was considerably more measured. He started the year in a regular role but was a healthy scratch for the first time by the end of October. He continued to fall in and out of the lineup until eventually landing on waivers in January. He cleared and was on assignment to Cleveland until getting called up at the beginning of this month in response to a Lundeström injury concern, although he played just once on his seven-game recall.
Aston-Reese’s NHL showing this year concludes with a 1-4–5 scoring line in 27 outings. He posted a -1 rating, saw decreased penalty-kill responsibilities, and averaged just 9:44 of ice time per game while racking up 78 hits. He’s also scored seven goals and 14 points in 25 AHL contests with Cleveland, where he’ll play a significant factor in the postseason.
Del Bel Belluz, on the other hand, has a clearer future in Columbus. The Jackets selected the 22-year-old middleman 44th overall in 2022, and they have to be pleased with his development, particularly offensively, thus far. He’s already worked his way up to being a consistent recall option, now making 30 NHL appearances over the last three seasons, where he has three goals and seven assists while averaging 11:27 per game. His ice time was down to about nine minutes per game across 14 showings this year, resulting in him generating only an assist and 11 shots on goal, with a -2 rating.
In Cleveland, the 6’1″ center is a star. After erupting for 27 goals and 53 points in 61 outings last season, he’s now over a point per game with a 22-35–57 scoring line in 53 games in 2025-26. He’s already received AHL All-Star honors. But, as The Athletic’s Scott Wheeler points out, he’s the type of prospect who does a lot of things well but doesn’t truly excel in any given area. As such, he sits down at #7 in the organizational prospect rankings, in part due to the difficulty of projecting where exactly he could slot in down the line amid a wealth of other young centers in the system.
Oilers’ Zach Hyman Expected To Return Thursday
The Oilers expect to have winger Zach Hyman back in the lineup for their regular-season finale tonight against the Canucks, per the team’s website. They’d been resting him for the last several games with an undisclosed lingering injury.
There was never any real concern about Hyman’s playoff status, but it’s still good to see him getting a tune-up game before the Oilers kick off their first-round series – which could still be against either the Ducks, Kings, or Avalanche – in a few days. He last dressed on April 2 against the Blackhawks, missing Edmonton’s last five games. Knoblauch said the injury is unrelated to the wrist dislocation he sustained in last year’s Western Conference Final, nor is it something that realistically would have sidelined him for a postseason contest, but they opted to give him some rest to get as close to 100% as possible.
Hyman’s impact in Edmonton’s top six will be even more crucial as Leon Draisaitl‘s status for Game 1 remains cloudy. The German superstar started skating earlier this week for the first time since sustaining a lower-body injury against the Predators over a month ago. He’s expected back sometime during the first round but it’s unclear if he’ll be ready to go for a potential Sunday or Monday Game 1.
With Jason Dickinson, Max Jones, and Mattias Janmark also sidelined, Edmonton’s current bottom six group does not include a double-digit goal scorer and has combined for just 21 tallies on the season, not including the three goals Colton Dach had for the Blackhawks prior to his acquisition. They will need to squeeze all they can out of Connor McDavid and their top two lines, a task that obviously becomes more trying with Draisaitl out but would be virtually impossible without Hyman.
Arguably one of the more successful free-agent gambles in recent memory, Hyman has been a perfect complementary net-front piece to McDavid at even strength since landing in Edmonton in 2021. Aside from what looks like a one-off down year last season, he’s been a true impact producer. Despite his latest ailment and the wrist dislocation that stretched into this season limiting him to 57 games, he’s still racked up 31 goals and 51 points. His 19.6% shooting rate isn’t quite a career high, but it’s up there. He’s on a 45-goal pace over an 82-game season.
He’s clearly the Oilers’ most trusted and most deployed forward behind McDavid and Draisaitl. His 0.89 points per game are fourth on the team behind them and Evan Bouchard, and he’s averaging north of 20 minutes per game for the second time in his career despite no longer factoring in on Edmonton’s penalty kill.
Devils Recall Nico Daws, Topias Vilen
April 15: With the season now over, the team announced that they’ve sent Daws, Vilen, and center Marc McLaughlin back to Utica.
April 10: The Devils recalled goaltender Nico Daws and defenseman Topias Vilen from AHL Utica on Friday, per a team announcement. They’ll be on hand for tomorrow’s game against the Red Wings.
With New Jersey not headed to the playoffs, they’re likely taking an opportunity to get some younger faces into the lineup over their final few games. There’s more of a direct need for Vilen’s services. The 23-year-old lefty could make his NHL debut tomorrow in place of Luke Hughes, who opted for an early end to his season to undergo a much-needed shoulder surgery.
Hughes was shut down before last night’s game against the Penguins, meaning Dennis Cholowski, the team’s only healthy extra on the blue line, dressed in his stead. It was the 28-year-old’s first appearance since being recalled in early March and his first NHL game since Dec. 14. After he posted a -2 rating in 17:40 of ice time, it’s no surprise to see New Jersey want to get a younger, higher-upside face in the lineup for their last three games.
Vilen is now in his third season stateside. A fifth-round pick by the Devils back in 2021, the 6’1″ lefty has been a consistent two-way piece in Utica with a career 7-70–77 scoring line in 171 AHL games with a +5 rating. That includes a career-high four goals and 20 assists for 24 points in 59 appearances this season.
Selected from Pelicans in Finland’s Liiga, he checks in as the #11 prospect in New Jersey’s pool and #3 among left-handed defenders behind 2024 10th overall pick Anton Silayev (#2) and 2022 fourth-rounder Daniil Orlov (#6), per Scott Wheeler of The Athletic. He’s shown enough in his toolkit at the AHL level that he could end up being a bottom-pairing, penalty-killing staple for the Devils in the next couple of years. His entry-level contract is wrapping up this summer, but given his consistency in minor league play, he’s a strong candidate to receive a qualifying offer.
The 25-year-old Daws already has 48 career starts and 53 appearances to his name, but just one of them has come this season. The Devils’ third-stringer got a lone early-season tryout against the Wild back on Oct. 22 while Jacob Markström was dealing with a lower-body injury, allowing just one goal on 31 shots for a shimmering .968 SV% in a 4-1 win.
Daws is an interesting study. The 2020 third-rounder is certainly too old now to be considered a true prospect, and his AHL track record isn’t great. He has an .891 SV% and 2.84 GAA in 42 showings for Utica this season, which will be his third straight finishing below a .900 SV% in the minors.
His recent NHL samples, however, have been excellent. On top of his great start back in October, he had a similarly strong .939 SV%, 1.60 GAA, and 3-1-0 record in six showings in #3 duties last year. That’s good for 7.0 goals saved above expected in his last seven NHL appearances, per MoneyPuck.
Markström is signed through 2027-28, and veteran backup Jake Allen is under contract through 2029-30, so there’s no clear pathway yet for Daws to see more NHL ice next season. He’s in the last year of his contract but is a restricted free agent with arbitration rights, so the Devils can easily retain him if they choose, knowing he might not clear waivers in the fall.
Hurricanes Assign Six To AHL
Wednesday: With their regular season now over, the Hurricanes announced that they’ve returned several players to the minors. Nystrom and Seeley, along with defenseman Charles-Alexis Legault and forwards Skyler Brind’Amour, Bradly Nadeau, and Felix Unger Sorum, have all been sent back to the Wolves.
Tuesday: The Hurricanes announced a pair of roster moves this morning. Defensemen Joel Nystrom and Ronan Seeley have been summoned from AHL Chicago, likely to permit the Canes to rest some more blue-liners for tonight’s regular-season finale against the Islanders. Carolina has made a common practice of resting regulars after locking up the Metropolitan Division and then Eastern Conference regular-season title, sitting a group that included Sebastian Aho, Seth Jarvis, and Jaccob Slavin last night.
Nystrom, 23, has been quite the quick riser after Carolina selected him with the sixth-last pick of the 2021 draft. The 5’11” righty did get his entry-level contract in 2024 on the heels of a breakout year for Färjestad BK in Sweden but was loaned back to them for 2024-25, not making his AHL debut until late last year. But when injuries decimated Carolina’s blue line to begin the season, Nystrom was one of the first names up. He ended up skating in 37 games for the Canes, logging a goal and eight assists with a +5 rating, while averaging 15:10 per night.
His smooth offensive game fit in well with Carolina’s possession-heavy system. Despite the limited role and minimal North American track record, the Canes saw enough to ink him to a four-year extension in December that pays him $1.225MM per season. It’s clear they expect him to hang around as a #7/8 option next year. His waiver-exempt status meant he got demoted back to Chicago once Carolina got healthy in late January, but he’ll get a spot-duty bump now to get one more game in for the year, barring any playoff action.
The Canes would have preferred a bit more offensive output from Nystrom after returning to the minors. He stands with an identical 1-8–9 scoring line to his NHL stats, but in two fewer games. He does have four points in his last 10 outings for Chicago, though, so he’s on the right track.
As for Seeley, he would be in line for his NHL debut. The 23-year-old lefty was also a seventh-rounder, just a year before Nystrom. Now in his fourth professional season, all in the Canes’ system with either Chicago or ECHL Norfolk, he’s put up a career-best 10 goals in 67 games while adding 12 assists for 22 points. His physical game hasn’t really translated to positive defensive results in the AHL – he’s a career -62 player in 264 games – but he’ll get rewarded here for being an available fixture on the farm since making his pro debut back in 2022.
Flyers Return Six Players To AHL
Wednesday: All five players recalled yesterday – Bonk (who had two points in his NHL debut), Gaucher, Richard, McDonald, and Kolosov – were returned to Lehigh Valley, per a team announcement. Also sent down was defenseman David Jiricek, who had been brought up on Sunday.
Tuesday: The Flyers will be resting some talent for tonight’s season finale against the Canadiens after locking up a playoff berth with last night’s win. As such, they announced they’ve called up several reinforcements from AHL Lehigh Valley – including 2023 first-round pick Oliver Bonk, who will be making his NHL debut tonight. Joining the hard-nosed defender are forwards Jacob Gaucher and Anthony Richard, defenseman Hunter McDonald and goaltender Aleksei Kolosov.
Philly likely hoped to get Bonk a look earlier in the season. The 22nd overall pick saw some notable offensive regression in his final season of junior hockey last year but otherwise capped up a successful pre-pro career with a second straight showing for Canada at the World Juniors and a Memorial Cup win with the London Knights. However, he sustained an upper-body injury shortly before training camp that ended up keeping him sidelined until Christmas.
He’s spent the months since getting used to the pro speed in the AHL. Early returns suggest Bonk may end up topping out as a higher-end second or third-pairing shutdown threat, not the top-pair complement they hoped he’d be. The 21-year-old righty has managed a 6-13–19 scoring line with a -10 rating through 44 games with Lehigh Valley, which currently sits two points out of the Calder Cup Playoff picture with three games remaining.
Still, he sits as the Flyers’ #3-ranked prospect and the second-highest name that’s currently playing in North America behind only budding star Porter Martone, who has eight points through his first eight games since turning pro out of Michigan State at the end of last month, per Scott Wheeler of Athletic. Still, his assessment is that of a #4-5 man on Philly’s depth chart long-term.
Everyone else joining the team today does so with NHL experience, save for McDonald. Gaucher, an undrafted free agent who’s worked his way up from being an ECHL mainstay just two years ago, is a pending restricted free agent, so tonight’s game could double as a sort of audition for a qualifying offer in June. The 6’3″, 185-lb center has been a 20-goal man in the AHL in back-to-back years now, but doesn’t have a ton of growth left in his game at age 25. Through seven career NHL outings over the last two seasons, he’s gone pointless with a -1 rating while averaging 7:57 of ice time per game.
Richard is also a pending free agent of the unrestricted variety, but it wouldn’t be surprising in the slightest to see the Flyers extend or retain him. The 29-year-old was an efficient call-up option last year, although he’s yet to see NHL time this season. The former Predators fourth-rounder is now with his fourth NHL organization after making one-year stops with the Canadiens and Bruins in 2022-23 and 2023-24, respectively. He’s been good for six goals and 14 points in 39 career NHL games in parts of five seasons. This year, he’s Lehigh Valley’s second-leading scorer with 18 goals and 44 points in 63 games.
McDonald, 23, was rostered for a few games back in January while Rasmus Ristolainen was sidelined but didn’t end up seeing any action. That should change tonight. The 6’4″, 238-lb lefty was a sixth-round pick in 2022 out of the USHL’s Chicago Steel. He proceeded to have a standout freshman season at Northeastern the following year that got him named to Hockey East’s All-Rookie Team while taking home Best Defensive Defenseman honors.
The New York native signed his entry-level contract, which expires this summer, back in 2024. Over parts of three seasons now in Lehigh Valley, he’s been a pure shutdown threat but a strong one. In 144 career outings, he’s amassed four goals and 27 points with 199 penalty minutes and a +22 rating. He’s much closer to being NHL-ready than his point production indicates and could very easily work his way into the conversation for a roster spot next fall.
Kolosov, after years of drama regarding whether he’d accept a consistent AHL assignment, has now firmly entrenched himself as the Flyers’ #3 netminder. Whether the Flyers will tender him a qualifying offer – or whether Kolosov will sign it – this summer is a different story. His numbers aren’t good. He hasn’t posted a save percentage above .900 at any level since arriving in North America in 2024, with a career .863 mark and a 3.64 GAA in 21 career NHL outings with a 5-11-1 record. As Lehigh Valley’s starter this season, he’s amassed a .898 SV%, 2.88 GAA, two shutouts, and a 15-20-2 record in 37 games.
Wild Sign Ben Dexheimer To Entry-Level Deal
The Wild have signed University of Wisconsin captain Ben Dexheimer to a one-year, entry-level deal. The move was first reported by Michael Russo of The Athletic. The contract will begin next season, with Dexheimer expected to report to AHL Iowa on a tryout to finish out this year.
Dexheimer, a Twin Cities native, hops back across the border after spending the last five years in Wisconsin, including a one-year stint with the USHL’s Madison Capitols in 2021-22. The undersized right-shot defenseman proved to be a solid offensive weapon from the Badgers’ blue line over the last four seasons, leading them to the national championship this year for the first time since 2010, before losing a heartbreaker to Denver.
In 39 games this season, Dexheimer recorded a career-best seven goals while tying his previous career high of 28 points that he set during his sophomore season in one fewer game. He was named to the NCAA’s All-Tournament Team and was a Big 10 First Team All-Star, finishing fourth on the Badgers in scoring.
Coming in at 5’10” and 165 lbs, Dexheimer faces an uphill battle. He’ll likely need to unlock another gear offensively to make himself appealing as a bottom-pairing option who can log power play time. Behind Brock Faber and Jared Spurgeon, Minnesota’s right side next year is in flux. Veterans Zach Bogosian and Jeff Petry are pending unrestricted free agents, and both are retirement candidates. They don’t have any depth options in Iowa, outside of maybe David Spacek, who is ready to step in. They’ll need to address that #3RD hole in free agency, but until they do, there’s a pathway for a name like Dexheimer to make headway on the depth chart with a strong first impression in Iowa.
Dexheimer will be under team control until 2029 if he signs, but will be a restricted free agent in 2027. He’ll bring Minnesota up to 27 out of the max 50 contracts for next season.
