Mammoth Assign Kevin Rooney To AHL
April 11: The Mammoth announced that Rooney was returned to the Roadrunners. Despite being up for a little more than a week, he didn’t get into any games, keeping his total this season at one.
April 3: The Mammoth recalled center Kevin Rooney from AHL Tucson on Friday, per a team announcement.
His addition to the roster comes after fellow middleman Jack McBain left Thursday night’s 6-2 win over the Kraken in the second period with a lower-body injury. It wasn’t clear what caused the departure, and the team hasn’t issued an update on his status yet. They likely won’t until they hold their morning skate before tomorrow’s clash with the Canucks.
In any event, Utah is guaranteed at least 13 healthy forwards this weekend if McBain has to miss time. Adding Rooney to the mix allows them to insert a natural center into the lineup in his place, rather than shifting anyone from the wing. Enforcer Liam O’Brien was their lone healthy scratch up front last night, and Alexander Kerfoot is their only regular winger with tangible experience down the middle who could shift over.
Utah has recalled Rooney several times this season; this is now his sixth distinct recall. He’s cleared waivers twice during that time but has rarely been needed in the lineup, only dressing once back on Nov. 28 against the Stars, scoring a goal in his Mammoth debut. That may change now with their specific need for centermen – Barrett Hayton has also been sidelined for the last three games with an upper-body injury and is week-to-week.
Rooney, a veteran of 331 NHL games over parts of 10 seasons, landed a two-way deal with Utah at the beginning of the regular season after being released from his professional tryout with the Devils. The 32-year-old has been a shrewd pickup for Tucson, posting 12 goals and 23 points through 43 games. A grinder, he was never that much of an offensive centerpiece in his previous minor-league stints.
Devils Shutting Down Jacob Markstrom For Season
The Devils will not play starting goaltender Jacob Markström in their final three games of the season, head coach Sheldon Keefe said Friday.
Markström “gets the chance to go into the offseason without doing any further damage,” Keefe said, implying he’d been dealing with some lingering injuries. He’ll get a head start now to get back to 100% for training camp, presumably without needing surgery.
That certainly gives some context for the Devils’ decision to recall third-stringer Nico Daws from AHL Utica earlier today. He will split the remaining starts with backup Jake Allen, with the latter ticketed to play Saturday against the Red Wings and Daws slated to get New Jersey’s home finale on Sunday against the Senators.
Today closes the book on a forgettable season for Markström. After signing a two-year, $12MM extension early in the season, he proceeded to put his worst numbers since first emerging as a starting option with the Canucks back in 2017-18. He managed a 23-19-1 record in 43 starts but backed that up with a subpar .883 SV%, 3.07 GAA, and a quality start percentage of just .395. His -11.9 goals saved above expected are the ninth-worst in the league, per MoneyPuck.
Of course, those aforementioned injuries certainly played a part. Markström dealt with a lower-body injury in early October, and while he hasn’t missed a game since, it’s clear now that he was never back to 100%.
Markström was a top-10 goalie in the league for a decent chunk of his prime. On the heels of back-to-back average-at-best seasons in Newark, though, there’s a chance their successor to Tom Fitzgerald in the general manager’s chair might want to move on from his pending extension, particularly with Allen still putting up serviceable numbers and Daws looking excellent in his limited NHL action over the past two years.
If so, their options will be limited. Markström has a no-movement clause until July 1. When his extension kicks in, then he’ll be immediately owed a $1.5MM signing bonus while his movement production drops to a 20-team no-trade list. That could allow for a deal; if they don’t think they’ll find one, they could buy him out during the first window in June. That would leave him on their books for the next four years, but at a reduced cap hit of $3.25MM for 2026-27 and $1.75MM for the subsequent three seasons.
He could also very well be back in the starter’s crease in the fall. If the Devils don’t feel Daws is ready for a full-time role, there aren’t any undeniable upgrades on Markström available on this summer’s free agent market.
Bruins Reassign Lukas Reichel
The Bruins assigned forward Lukas Reichel to AHL Providence on Friday, per a team announcement. It’s not expected to be a long-term demotion, though, Ty Anderson of 98.5 The Sports Hub relays. He’ll get into action for Providence tonight before being added back to the roster as early as Saturday.
That makes sense considering he’s sat out of two of Boston’s last three games. While head coach Marco Sturm confirmed new rookie addition James Hagens will be a healthy scratch tomorrow morning against the Lightning, his inclusion on the roster only makes NHL playing time for Reichel a tougher battle to fight.
Boston acquired Reichel, the 17th overall pick in 2020, from the Canucks at the trade deadline for a sixth-round pick. Vancouver had acquired the struggling 23-year-old from the Blackhawks just a few months prior for a fourth.
At the time of the trade, he was on an AHL assignment after clearing waivers, so he reported to Providence to begin his B’s tenure. The German sharpshooter looked like a natural there, racking up a goal and four assists through his first three games.
That earned him a quick recall to Boston. Since then, he’s averaged 12:53 of ice time across nine contests, scoring once and adding a pair of assists.
Reichel’s physicality remains a non-factor, but his possession impacts, an area of concern throughout his career in Chicago and still through his pit stop in Vancouver this year, have seen improvement in a small sample. Boston has controlled 53.0% of shot attempts with Reichel on the ice at 5-on-5 despite him receiving the least defensively sheltered usage of his career.
That’s mostly due to Reichel being able to effectively gel on a high-event third line with Elias Lindholm and Morgan Geekie. They gave up considerable quality defensively in their nine games together but were able to produce enough quality chances to offset, controlling 52.2% of expected goals and outscoring opponents 6-2, per MoneyPuck.
If Reichel can keep up that level of play, there are worse options to toss into that position in the playoffs if a need arises. With Geekie and Lindholm now being bumped up the lineup to skate with David Pastrňák, though, there’s less of a fit for Reichel in the lineup with less two-way support available for him in the middle six.
Reichel is a pending restricted free agent with arbitration rights. His inability to hold down a full-time NHL job this season makes it unlikely that the Bruins will risk themselves getting roped into an award, nor will they likely be willing to extend him the $1.3MM qualifying offer he’s owed. While a strong non-tender candidate, Boston could look to bring him back on a cheaper deal if both sides have liked the fit thus far.
Ducks Extend GM Pat Verbeek
The Ducks have agreed to terms with general manager Pat Verbeek on a multi-year contract extension, the team announced Friday. The team has also promoted assistant GM Mike Stapleton to associate GM, with the title of senior VP of hockey operations added.
It’s a welcome reward for Verbeek, who’s built a good chunk of the current Ducks roster that has the franchise on the verge of its first postseason appearance in eight years. He took over at the top of Anaheim’s hockey ops department in February 2022 after spending several years under Steve Yzerman as an assistant GM with both the Lightning and the Red Wings.
Since then, he’s been aggressive in his pursuit of finishing up the Ducks’ rebuild. He’s made six first-round selections during that time. With Nathan Gaucher making his NHL debut recently, four of them have already logged game action. Two of them, Leo Carlsson in 2023 and Beckett Sennecke in 2024, are already among the team’s top three scorers. The other name in that mix, Cutter Gauthier, was the fifth overall pick in 2022 by the Flyers, but Verbeek acquired his signing rights in exchange for Jamie Drysdale two years later.
Over the past couple of offseasons, he’s been busy trying to insulate his still-developing young core with experienced talent. He’s made free-agent splashes for Mikael Granlund, Alex Killorn and captain Radko Gudas while weaponizing his cap space to acquire beleaguered names like Chris Kreider and Jacob Trouba. His open-market record has been something of a mixed bag, but his trade history, particularly over the past two seasons, is difficult to argue with. He capped all of that work off by acquiring a likely Hall-of-Fame defenseman in John Carlson, albeit as a potential rental, at this year’s trade deadline.
Of Anaheim’s top 10 scorers, Verbeek has signed, drafted, or acquired seven of them. It’s fully his team now, especially after making his mark behind the bench last summer with the hiring of Joel Quenneville. As such, Ducks ownership had no intention of letting him reach the end of his contract without a new deal. Owners Henry and Susan Samueli said Verbeek has “turned the Ducks into what we believe are perennial contenders for the next decade.”
As for Stapleton, his promotion secures his Anaheim tenure should extend meaningfully into its second decade. The veteran of 697 NHL games never suited up in Orange County during his playing career, but has only been with the Ducks in his front-office work.
After several years of coaching in the OHL and AHL, Anaheim picked Stapleton up as a pro scout back in 2014. He was promoted to the team’s director of player personnel in 2022 before Verbeek bumped him up to an AGM role two years later.
Hurricanes Assign Pyotr Kochetkov On Conditioning Stint
Hurricanes goaltender Pyotr Kochetkov might be an option in the playoffs after all. The team announced today that they’ve assigned the netminder to AHL Chicago for a conditioning stint.
Kochetkov has been out since Dec. 20 after undergoing a lower-body surgery that was thought to be season-ending. He can now be in the minors for up to six days or three games, whichever comes first. Carolina will need to apply to the NHL for an extension if they want to keep him there past that.
The 26-year-old’s season was virtually over before it began. He first started dealing with the lower-body issue in training camp. It wasn’t initially expected to impact his regular-season availability, but he ended up not being able to make his season debut until November after looking good in one conditioning start in Chicago.
Kochetkov never got back to 100%, though. He was in and out of the lineup throughout the next several weeks. He made eight starts and one relief appearance, managing a 6-2-0 record with a .899 SV% and 2.33 GAA, before electing for surgery.
Kochetkov’s absence, plus the veteran Frederik Andersen‘s struggles, has paved the way for preseason waiver claim Brandon Bussi to fully claim the starter’s crease in Carolina ahead of the postseason. With him logging a 30-6-1 record in 37 starts with a .890 SV% and 2.52 GAA, there’s little question about who will be starting Game 1.
Still, those numbers are below average on the surface. They aren’t much better when taking a look behind the curtain. Out of the 48 goalies to play 30-plus games this season, Bussi’s -0.3 goals saved above expected ranks 26th, per MoneyPuck. He’s a middle-of-the-road starting option – still a great outcome from someone initially expected to be their third-stringer – but hasn’t been dominant by any stretch.
Kochetkov obviously wasn’t much better in his brief action earlier this season, and throwing him into the playoff fire after such a lengthy absence carries risk. He is, however, coming off a strong enough 2024-25 campaign that saw him log a 6.0 GSAx, and he’s made at least one playoff appearance for Carolina in each of the last four seasons.
Still, goaltending has been a persistent relative weak spot for the Canes this season and in past playoff runs. It stands to reason that Bussi, while overwhelmingly likely to take the crease for Game 1 later this month, will be on a short leash. If Kochetkov is available, that’s an even-better insurance policy for head coach Rod Brind’Amour.
Miro Heiskanen Undergoing Imaging To Evaluate Lower-Body Injury
The Stars lost Miro Heiskanen in last night’s win over the Wild with an apparent lower-body injury, toepicking as he received a hit from Minnesota center Ryan Hartman. He was never actually ruled out for the game – Dallas said he was questionable to return after he left in the first period – but it’s now clear he’ll miss at least one more contest tomorrow against the Rangers. General manager Jim Nill told Lia Assimakopoulos of the Dallas Morning News that the full extent of Heiskanen’s injury is still unknown and that he needs an MRI today to come up with a return timeline.
At this stage, anything more than a day-to-day or week-long designation would impact Heiskanen’s availability for the beginning of the playoffs. The Stars only have three regular-season games left and could begin their first-round series, which is already set against the Wild, as soon as eight days from now.
It’s not as if Heiskanen is the only injury Dallas’ back end is dealing with, either. Nils Lundkvist was scratched last night due to illness and remains day-to-day. Trade deadline pickup. Tyler Myers has missed three of the last five with an undisclosed injury and could sit out again this weekend after re-aggravating it, head coach Glen Gulutzan told Sam Nestler of DLLS Sports.
Those absences obviously pale in comparison to the prospect of losing Heiskanen, but the strain already on Dallas’ depth before the postseason starts is something worth monitoring. After knee surgery derailed Heiskanen’s season in January last year and kept him out until midway through the second round, he hasn’t missed a game due to injury this season. That’s allowed the 26-year-old to do some of his best work, racking up 54 assists and 63 points in 77 games. He’s averaging above 25 minutes per night for the third time in his career, ranks third on the team with 148 shots on goal, and has a team-high 39 takeaways as well.
Of course, the Stars managed to win one playoff round without Heiskanen’s services just last year. They surely hope they won’t have to do so again with the toughest path in the league through the first two rounds ahead of them.
If he does need to miss some playoff action, more will be needed out of Thomas Harley. The Stars have split him and Heiskanen up at even strength over the past couple of years, and while he looked like a true #1 in Heiskanen’s absence last season, he’s taken a step back in 2025-26. The 24-year-old has been limited to a 6-29–35 scoring line in 67 outings, his worst point-per-game output of his three full NHL seasons, and his possession numbers have taken a considerable hit. His 47.0 CF% and 51.9 xGF% are both career lows.
Penguins Sign Jake Livanavage To Entry-Level Deal
The Penguins signed undrafted free agent defenseman Jake Livanavage to a two-year, entry-level contract on Friday, per a team announcement. The contract begins immediately with a prorated cap hit of $975K, per PuckPedia. He’ll be greeted by a $97.5K signing bonus and a prorated salary of $877.5K. Those two figures carry into next season, joined by up to $250K in Schedule ‘A’ performance bonuses and a $85K salary if he’s in the AHL.
By signing a deal that begins now, Livanavage will report to Pittsburgh, not AHL Wilkes-Barre/Scranton. He is ineligible for an AHL assignment, nor will he be an option for the Pens in the playoffs since he wasn’t on their reserve list at the trade deadline. He is eligible to play in any of their three remaining regular-season contests, however, and will be a restricted free agent following the 2026-27 campaign.
Livanavage, 21, is a premier offensive threat who’s long been overlooked because of his 5’10”, 174-lb frame. Some scouts viewed him going as high as the third round when he was initially draft-eligible back in 2022, but he ended up falling through the cracks for several years.
During that time, he made the jump from the USHL’s Chicago Steel to the University of North Dakota, where he’s emerged as one of the NCAA’s top blue-liners. He was the Fighting Hawks’ clear-cut #1 option this season on a team that saw its season come to an end at the hands of Wisconsin in last night’s national semifinal, racking up a 5-20–25 scoring line in 39 games with a career-best +15 rating.
Livanavage has received year-end All-Star consideration in the NCHC in every season of his collegiate career. The junior logged over 25 minutes per night for North Dakota this season en route to his second regular-season conference title.
If he carves out an NHL role, it’ll likely be as a bottom-pairing piece at even strength and as a power-play specialist. The Penguins do have some long-term uncertainty on the left side and would presumably like to develop a succession plan to replace the declining Kris Letang as the second-unit power play quarterback. He could get a brief look there if he dresses down the stretch before competing for a roster spot in the fall.
Frank Seravalli of Victory+ was first to report that Livanavage was signing with Pittsburgh.
Devils Recall Nico Daws, Topias Vilen
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.
Flames Sign Abram Wiebe To Entry-Level Deal
1:15 p.m.: The Flames have officially announced Wiebe’s signing. Per PuckPedia, it’s actually a cap hit of $950K that carries an NHL salary of $855K, a $95K signing bonus, and a minors salary of $82.5K each season. He’ll be owed a $940.5K qualifying offer upon expiry in 2027 as a 10.2(c) player.
10:48 a.m.: The Flames are expected to sign defense prospect Abram Wiebe to his entry-level contract, per reports from Frank Seravalli of Victory+ and Pat Steinberg of Sportsnet 960. It will be a two-year deal that will take effect immediately, carrying a prorated cap hit of $980K and making him a restricted free agent following the 2026-27 season.
Wiebe’s junior season at the University of North Dakota came to an end Thursday afternoon as the Fighting Hawks were upset in the NCAA national semifinals by Wisconsin. Calgary had acquired the 22-year-old’s signing rights from the Golden Knights in January as part of the Rasmus Andersson deal. He was a seventh-round pick in Vegas in 2022, then out of the Chilliwack Chiefs of the junior-level British Columbia Hockey League.
The 6’3″, 209-lb lefty has had a good run at North Dakota over the past few years. After being named the BCHL’s top defenseman and a first-team All-Star in 2022-23, he compiled a 10-53–63 scoring line with a +25 rating in 118 career outings for the Fighting Hawks.
He capped things off with a 29-point, +13 showing in 40 games this season as an alternate captain, serving as their #2 defenseman behind undrafted free agent Jake Livanavage and playing over 20 minutes a night. He made it onto the NCHC’s second All-Star team and helped propel the Fighting Hawks to their second regular-season conference championship in his three years with the program.
Needless to say, Wiebe turns pro carrying more prestige than a standard seventh-rounder. He’s the #9 prospect in a Calgary pool that ranks top-three in the league, according to The Athletic’s Scott Wheeler, and is of particular long-term importance to a club without much current or future depth on the left side of their blue line.
Their current group of lefties consists of Kevin Bahl, Olli Määttä, Joel Hanley and Yan Kuznetsov – all of whom are signed through at least next season. Bahl and Hanley are currently injured, though, so there’s an immediate opportunity for Wiebe to step into a third-pairing role behind Kuznetsov and Määttä for the final four games of the season.
Seth Jones Sustains Broken Foot
The Panthers will be without yet another defense fixture for the final few games of the season as Seth Jones sustained a broken foot in Tuesday’s shootout loss to the Canadiens, head coach Paul Maurice told reporters today (including the team’s Katie Engleson). Florida recalled two names, Mikulas Hovorka and Ludvig Jansson, yesterday after receiving news that Dmitry Kulikov also wouldn’t return this season, but they’ve done some more roster shuffling this morning. Hovorka has headed back to AHL Charlotte while Marek Alscher comes up in his stead to make his NHL debut, along with Jansson, tonight against the Senators, the team announced.
Jones sustained the foot fracture in the second period on Tuesday but pushed through to finish the outing and play nearly 30 minutes, Maurice said. He had only gotten back in the lineup less than a month ago after sustaining a collarbone injury during the Winter Classic that kept him out for over two months.
Between those two injuries, Jones’ first full season in Florida ends with a 7-25–32 scoring line and a -3 rating in 52 games. He averaged 23:42 per game as Florida’s top minute muncher, but that’s still the lowest workload he’s had in nearly a decade on a much deeper defense group than he had during his days as a Blue Jacket and Blackhawk.
Defensively, it was a year to write home about for Jones. Despite the negative rating, Florida actually outscored opponents 37-35 with Jones on the ice at 5-on-5 while he controlled 51.3% of shot attempts and 52.7% of expected goals. Those numbers are no doubt bumped up by the stronger Florida possession system compared to his previous stop in Chicago, but those are still the best raw totals he’s posted since his last top-10 Norris finish in 2018-19.
For the first time since 2019, the Cats will have a full-length offseason. That will no doubt be beneficial to Jones and their bevy of other injury-plagued talent this season to come back with a clean slate in the fall to attempt a fourth Stanley Cup Final run in five years.
As for the current state of the Panthers’ blue line, it’s hard to imagine it getting any uglier. They are now without Jones, Kulikov (broken finger), Uvis Balinskis (foot fracture), Aaron Ekblad (finger fracture), and Niko Mikkola (knee). None has a chance to return in the four games left on Florida’s schedule. That leaves Gustav Forsling as the last regular standing. He’ll be joined tonight by Michael Benning and his 14 games of NHL experience on the top pairing. Donovan Sebrango is expected to anchor the second pairing with Jansson as he makes his NHL debut, and Tobias Björnfot will skate on the third pairing with a fellow lefty in Alscher.
Alscher, 22, was a third-rounder in 2022. The 6’3″, 205-lb lefty is a defensive specialist and has had a great second season in Charlotte after some rookie growing pains last year, posting 11 points and a strong +18 rating in 51 outings. He likely won’t top out as much more than a third-pairing piece or possibly a complementary second-pairing one with an offensive partner, but he’s played well enough to earn a look.
