Wild Reassign Liam Ohgren, Jesper Wallstedt

Dec. 4: The Wild announced Wednesday that they reassigned Ohgren and Wallstedt to Iowa. Ohgren did not suit up against Vancouver – evidently, the recalls were for salary cap management purposes to optimize Zuccarello’s LTIR capture.

Dec. 3: The Wild have recalled top prospects Liam Ohgren and Jesper Wallstedt from AHL Iowa ahead of Tuesday’s game against the Canucks, per a team release. The team placed defenseman Jonas Brodin and left-winger Jakub Lauko on injured reserve to open spots on the active roster and also moved right-winger Mats Zuccarello from IR to LTIR to open up the necessary cap space.

Ohgren, 20, made Minnesota’s opening night roster but struggled out of the gate, posting no points and a -2 rating in seven appearances while averaging under 10 minutes a night before being assigned to Iowa at the end of October. He was recalled under emergency conditions for a game against the Stars last month but has otherwise spent all his time in the minors since.

The 2022 first-round pick has fared much better in the AHL, quickly proving himself as one of the club’s most efficient goal-scorers with five in eight contests. It’s unclear if he’ll unseat recent AHL call-ups Ben Jones or Devin Shore for a spot in the lineup tonight with Lauko and Zuccarello still out, but it seems likely.

In Wallstedt’s case, it’s similarly uncertain if they plan to give the 22-year-old his first start of the season between the pipes. Michael Russo of The Athletichas a sense” that his recall is primarily to get him working with Minnesota’s NHL goaltending staff, one that’s worked wonders to help Filip Gustavsson along to a vicious resurgence this season.

Wallstedt, the 20th overall pick in the 2021 draft, is off to a nightmarish start in Iowa in what the Wild hoped would be his last season seeing minor-league ice. After back-to-back AHL All-Star Game appearances, the 6’3″ Swede has just a .860 SV% and 4.34 GAA in 10 games with Iowa this year behind a 3-6-1 record. Minnesota inked Wallstedt to a two-year, $4.4MM extension in October that goes into effect for the 2025-26 campaign.

Brodin’s IR placement doesn’t affect the stalwart’s return timeline. The 31-year-old has already missed three games with an upper-body injury and remains day-to-day for now. He last played on Nov. 25 against the Jets, so he can come off the injured list at any time.

In 19 games this season, Brodin has two goals and six assists for eight points with a +7 rating. His 45 blocked shots are second on the team behind Jacob Middleton‘s 61.

Lauko, 24, also last suited up in the Winnipeg game last week, so his situation is pretty much the same. He’s still listed as day-to-day with a lower-body injury, and while he won’t play tonight, he hasn’t been ruled out for Friday’s game against the Ducks. He has two goals and two assists in 21 games for Minnesota in a fourth-line role after being acquired in an offseason swap with the Bruins.

Zuccarello underwent lower-body surgery on Nov. 14 and is expected back sometime in the next two weeks, although the move to LTIR means he won’t be back until Tuesday against Utah at the soonest.

Hurricanes Recall Dustin Tokarski, Reassign Spencer Martin

The Hurricanes swapped backup goaltenders on Wednesday, announcing they recalled the newly signed Dustin Tokarski from AHL Chicago while reassigning Spencer Martin in a corresponding transaction.

Carolina signed Tokarski, 35, to a one-year, two-way contract on Monday. They immediately placed him on waivers to send him down to Chicago, where he’d spent the season to date on a minor-league deal, and he cleared yesterday.

They’ll turn to the highly experienced netminder to give them more passable play in a backup role than what Martin has provided them over the past few weeks. He’ll play sparingly as long as Pyotr Kochetkov is healthy – he’s the de facto No. 1 as Frederik Andersen is on the shelf recovering from knee surgery – and his .933 SV% and 1.61 GAA in five AHL showings this season suggests he’s still up to the task.

It’s no surprise to see Carolina look elsewhere for a temporary backup after Martin posted a sub-.900 SV% in all but one of his seven starts last month. He allowed 10 goals on just 57 shots faced in back-to-back losses to the Panthers last Friday and Saturday and has a horrid .846 SV% to go along with his 3-4-1 record in nine total appearances.

Tokarski now gets a shot at playing in his first NHL game since he was a member of the Penguins in the 2022-23 season. The Saskatchewan native has rarely been a full-time NHL option throughout his lengthy professional career, but he did briefly get a chance at being a full-time backup with the Sabres a few years ago. Since making his NHL debut with the Lightning way back in the 2009-10 season, he has a 23-34-12 record, two shutouts, 3.15 GAA, and a .902 SV% in 67 starts and 13 relief appearances.

Tokarski can remain on Carolina’s roster for up to 30 days or play 10 games before he requires waivers to return to the AHL. Martin bypassed waivers today because he’s played in nine games since last clearing waivers during the preseason, and a series of paper transactions have kept him on the active roster for fewer than 30 days since his initial recall in late October.

Oilers Reassign Drake Caggiula

The Oilers announced early Wednesday that they reassigned left-winger Drake Caggiula to AHL Bakersfield.

Caggiula, 30, had played in Edmonton’s last five games after being recalled for the second time this season in mid-November. The veteran depth piece did not record a point during that span and averaged 7:11 per game with a -1 rating, 5 PIMs, and four shots.

The former Oilers undrafted free agent signing out of North Dakota has an assist in seven NHL games this season between call-ups, his first in two years after spending all last season on assignment to Bakersfield. He’s in year two of his second stint in the Oilers organization after achieving journeyman status around the turn of the decade, recording stints with the Blackhawks, Coyotes, Sabres, and Penguins after spending the first two-and-a-half seasons of his professional career in Edmonton.

Caggiula has filled in for the past couple of weeks as wingers Viktor Arvidsson and Zach Hyman remain out with undisclosed injuries. Since they haven’t implicated him in paper transactions as of late, his demotion could be a sign that one or both could return tomorrow against the Blue Jackets, or that they plan on dressing 11 forwards and seven defensemen.

A high-energy presence, Caggiula has continued performing as a legitimate offensive impact piece in the minors. He has five goals and nine points in 12 games for Bakersfield this season after recording 37 points in 43 games last year.

After clearing waivers at the beginning of the regular season, Caggiula is nearing the end of his temporary exemption. He can play three more games or remain on the active roster for nine more days until he needs waivers again to return to Bakersfield.

Tyler Seguin To Undergo Hip Surgery, Out 4-6 Months

The Stars announced that forward Tyler Seguin will undergo extensive hip surgery on Thursday and miss the next four to six months. He’ll have two procedures, both on his left hip – one to address a femoroacetabular impingement creating joint damage and one to repair a labral tear.

It’s not necessarily season-ending, but it’s certainly possible. If he returns at the optimistic end of that timeline, the Stars would still have four or five regular-season games left on their schedule for him to play. A return to play during the postseason is the most likely outcome for Seguin given the wide timeline, though, allowing the Stars to keep his $9.85MM cap hit on long-term injured reserve for a massive amount of spending flexibility at the trade deadline.

Seguin has missed five games this year with a recurring lower-body injury, now clearly a hip issue. He was placed on IR before Monday’s game against Utah. He previously missed three straight games in October.

It’s tough news for Seguin, who missed nearly all of the 2020-21 campaign after undergoing a similar surgery on his right hip. He was extremely open about his arduous recovery process from that procedure, which ended up yielding a separate knee surgery and essentially required him to re-learn how to walk.

Past injury issues aside, the news also puts an incredible damper on what had been something of a renaissance season for the 2010 second-overall pick. Seguin had nine goals and 11 assists for 20 points through his first 19 games, on pace to break the point-per-game mark for the first time in nine years while placing third on the team in scoring behind linemates Matt Duchene and Mason Marchment.

Missing Seguin’s services offensively is also of legitimate concern for Dallas, who ranks ninth in the league with 3.38 goals per game but has also faced underwhelming starts from top-liners Jason Robertson (5-9–14 in 24 GP) and Wyatt Johnston (4-10–14 in 24 GP). They’ll need to turn that around quickly to help the Stars stay in the top three of the Central Division while also looking at some depth players like rookie Mavrik Bourque to take on some of the offensive burden. Bourque has averaged under 11 minutes per game this season after being crowned the AHL’s most valuable player last season, scoring only once in 19 games.

Seguin, 32, is in the sixth season of the eight-year, $78.8MM extension he inked in 2018. He’ll be an unrestricted free agent in 2027.

Image courtesy of USA Today Sports.

Sweden Names Roster For 2025 World Junior Championship

After Hockey Canada and USA Hockey announced their preliminary rosters for the 2025 IIHF World Junior Championship on Monday, the Swedish Ice Hockey Association today announced their initial 24-player roster for the tournament. As always, this year’s iteration of the WJC kicks off on Dec. 26 and will be held in Ottawa.

Coached by Magnus Hävelid for the third year in a row, nine players are returning from the team that went 3-0-1 in group play last season and lost the gold medal game to the United States. Some of last year’s top-end talent, such as Canucks prospect Jonathan Lekkerimaki, have aged out, but four of their top six scorers from the 2024 tournament are back as Sweden looks for a medal for the third time in the last four years.

The squad’s strong suit will be its defense, headlined by a trio of 2023 first-round picks in Theo LindsteinAxel Sandin-Pellikka and Tom Willander. All were spectacular for Tre Kronor in 2024, and with another year of development and experience under their belt, will be relied upon even more.

Sweden is light on first-rounders up front, only boasting two, but pencil in the youngest player on the team as a third. 18-year-old left-winger Victor Eklund has made the team and is widely projected to be a top-15 selection in the 2025 draft class, following in the footsteps of older brother William Eklund. He has 15 points (8 G, 7 A) in 20 games for Djurgårdens IF this season in HockeyAllsvenskan, Sweden’s second-tier professional league.

The Swedes also don’t have a clear-cut starter between the pipes, but that’s due to having three good options rather than a few mediocre ones. Utah’s Melker Thelin is the only returnee from last year’s tournament, and while he’s done well with a 7-1-0 record and .914 SV% in eight HockeyAllvenskan games this season, the Islanders’ Marcus Gidlöf has a .915 SV% and 2.10 GAA in top-level SHL action for Leksands IF and has a solid shot at starting games. The Blue Jackets’ Melvin Strahl has been strong stateside, logging a .911 SV% in 15 appearances for the USHL’s Youngstown Phantoms.

The most notable omission is 17-year-old center Anton Frondell, who plays with Eklund with Djurgården and is widely expected to go a few spots ahead of him in next year’s draft. He’s failed to make the offensive impact his counterpart has this season, though, with only a goal and two assists in seven games.

The full roster, which features only a few non-NHL affiliated talents, is here:

Dennis Altörn (undrafted in 2023, 2024)
Jack Berglund (Flyers, 2024, 2-51)
David Edstrom (Predators, 2023, 1-32)*
Victor Eklund (2025 draft-eligible)
Linus Eriksson (Panthers, 2024, 2-58)
F Zeb Forsfjäll (Kraken, 2023, 6-180)
David Granberg (undrafted in 2023, 2024)
Isac Hedqvist (undrafted in 2023, 2024)
Felix Nilsson (Predators, 2023, 2-43)
Otto Stenberg (Blues, 2023, 1-25)
Herman Träff (Devils, 2024, 3-91)
Felix Unger Sörum (Hurricanes, 2023, 2-62)
Anton Wahlberg (Sabres, 2023, 2-39)
Oskar Vuollet (Hurricanes, 2024, 5-133)

Rasmus Bergqvist (Canadiens, 2024, 7-224)
Viggo Gustafsson (Predators, 2024, 3-77)
Wilhelm Hallquisth (undrafted in 2023, 2024)
Axel Hurtig (Flames, 2023, 7-208)
Theo Lindstein (Blues, 2023, 1-29)
Axel Sandin-Pellikka (Red Wings, 2023, 1-17)
Tom Willander (Canucks, 2023, 1-11)

Marcus Gidlöf (Islanders, 2024, 5-147)
Melvin Strahl (Blue Jackets, 2023, 5-156)
Melker Thelin (Coyotes/Utah, 2023, 5-134)

*The Golden Knights drafted Edstrom before trading him to the Sharks, who subsequently dealt him to the Predators.

Devils Notes: Hardman, Trade Market, Haula

The Devils announced Tuesday that they’ve reassigned winger Mike Hardman to AHL Utica.

New Jersey recalled Hardman yesterday ahead of their 5-1 win over the Rangers. The 25-year-old skated 8:24 in his Devils debut as their fourth-line left wing alongside fellow call-ups Justin Dowling and Nathan Legare, attempting one shot and recording two blocks and two hits while losing his lone faceoff attempt.

The Devils have shaken up their depth forwards frequently in recent days amid the indefinite absences of Nathan Bastian (jaw) and Curtis Lazar (knee), giving AHL mainstays like Adam Beckman and Shane Bowers some looks. Hardman may get another crack in the lineup, but with New Jersey off until Friday against Seattle, it makes little sense to keep a waiver-eligible player on a two-way deal on the active roster unless necessary.

Hardman is fifth on Utica in scoring this season with five goals and three assists for eight points through 10 games. He’s in his first season in the Devils organization after spending the previous three years and change with the Blackhawks and their AHL affiliate in Rockford.

There’s more out of the Garden State:

  • While the Devils are content for now to give some of their minor-league depth a crack at NHL minutes, it’s not a long-term solution. Their top priority ahead of the trade deadline will be adding a fourth-line center and a top-nine piece if possible, general manager Tom Fitzgerald told Pierre LeBrun of The Athletic. “I’ve been in touch with teams. … I’m looking for utility players, I guess — guys who can skate,” Fitzgerald said. “I like size and versatility and guys who can play in the middle and on the wing.” Lazar checked most of those boxes, but there’s no certainty about whether he’ll be available again this season. It’s a return to a buyer mentality on the trade market for the Devils, who were largely sellers at last year’s deadline but have rebounded to a 17-9-2 record and a 96% chance at postseason action, per The Athletic.
  • New Jersey may have suffered another hit to their depth forward corps with center Erik Haula being evaluated for an undisclosed injury, head coach Sheldon Keefe told the team’s Amanda Stein. He’s day-to-day but hasn’t been ruled out for Friday’s contest, Keefe added. The 33-year-old has five goals and 11 points in 28 games this year, although his 14:52 average time on ice is his lowest since the 2016-17 campaign.

Penguins Reassign Jack St. Ivany, Activate Cody Glass

The Penguins announced that they’ve sent defenseman Jack St. Ivany to AHL Wilkes-Barre/Scranton. St. Ivany’s vacated roster spot will go to center Cody Glass, who’s nearing a return from a concussion and has been activated from injured reserve.

It’s the first time St. Ivany has been demoted this season. The 25-year-old has been an occasional healthy scratch after making the opening night roster for the first time in his career, but he’s still managed to play in 19 of Pittsburgh’s 26 games this season.

The 6’3″, 201-lb righty has an assist and is averaging 16:22 per game, up significantly from last year’s 13:42 average in his first 14 games in the NHL. He’s had passable possession numbers in largely defensive-zone usage, controlling 46.1% of shot attempts and 46.3% of expected goals at even strength.

St. Ivany is physical, too, throwing the body 38 times, and he’s averaged over two minutes per game on the penalty kill when in the lineup. But he’s provided next to nothing offensively with two assists in 33 career games, although that shouldn’t be surprising for a player who had 15 points in 54 games with WBS last season and eight assists in 63 games the year before.

He’s still waiver-exempt and will be for the rest of this season unless he plays in 27 more games, so it’s no issue for the Pens to sneak him down to the minors. They signed him to a three-year, $2.325MM partial two-way extension back in May to keep him off last summer’s restricted free agent market.

Glass, 25, is technically now eligible to return tonight against the Panthers, but head coach Mike Sullivan told reporters earlier today that there’s been no change in Glass’ status and that he remains day-to-day (via Josh Getzoff of SportsNet Pittsburgh). It’s likely that he’ll be ready for Friday’s game against the Rangers, however.

He’d missed the last 11 games with the concussion, which he sustained on Nov. 7 against the Hurricanes. Glass, who the Penguins acquired from the Predators back in August, had four assists and a -7 rating in 14 games this season while averaging 11:48 before exiting the lineup.

Rangers Reassign Chad Ruhwedel

The Rangers announced Tuesday that they’ve sent defenseman Chad Ruhwedel down to AHL Hartford. Since he’s been rostered for fewer than 30 days and played less than 10 games since last clearing waivers in October, he doesn’t need them today to return to the minors.

Ruhwedel, 34, hasn’t played for the Blueshirts since his season debut against the Maple Leafs on Oct. 19. He’s either been in the press box or in the minors since then and has served as a healthy scratch on 15 occasions this season.

The San Diego native has two assists in seven games for Hartford in 2024-25, his first AHL action since a conditioning stint with the Penguins back in the 2018-19 campaign. The veteran of 365 NHL games across 13 seasons has only made six NHL appearances for the Rangers since they acquired him from Pittsburgh at last year’s trade deadline and subsequently signed him to a one-way, two-year extension.

Today’s reassignment marks the end of his second recall since clearing waivers nearly six weeks ago. He’s been recalled for two stretches of at least a week recently, serving as a healthy extra with the Rangers shuffling their roster to get out of their 1-6-0 run in their last seven.

Ruhwedel has now been rostered for 18 days since last clearing waivers. If his next recall lasts more than 12 days, he’ll need waivers to return to Hartford at the end of it.

Jets Place Nikolaj Ehlers On IR, Recall Brad Lambert

The Jets announced Tuesday that they’ve placed winger Nikolaj Ehlers on injured reserve retroactive to Nov. 29 with his lower-body injury. His roster spot is going to forward prospect Brad Lambert, who was recalled from AHL Manitoba in a corresponding move.

Ehlers has already missed one game with the issue. The IR placement rules him out for the next two games, but he’s eligible to return Saturday against the Blackhawks. He remains day-to-day and hasn’t been ruled out past the minimum requirements for injured reserve.

It puts a damper on what’s been an electric start to the season for the pending unrestricted free agent. Ehlers is third on the jets in scoring with 25 points (9 G, 16 A) in 24 games and is on pace to crack the point-per-game mark for the first time in his career after narrowly failing to do so in 2020-21.

The 28-year-old Dane is doing so despite averaging only 15:33 per game, a story similar to those of years past. He’s tied with the Stars’ Mason Marchment for most points per game (1.04) among skaters averaging fewer than 16 minutes per night.

Nonetheless, the 2014 first-rounder remains without an extension in the final year of his seven-year, $42MM deal signed back in 2017. Ehlers is seventh in Jets/Thrashers franchise history with 629 games played, sixth with 210 goals, sixth with 482 points, and first with a +97 rating.

He’s been skating on Winnipeg’s second line with Vladislav Namestnikov and Cole Perfetti, and Lambert may fill his top-six role tonight against the Blues. The 20-year-old, who the Jets selected 30th overall in 2022, is second on Manitoba in scoring with three goals and eight assists for 11 points in 16 games.

Lambert, the nephew of former Islanders head coach and current Leafs assistant Lane Lambert, recorded an assist in his NHL debut last season against the Canucks. Otherwise, he has 69 points in 94 games for Manitoba since Winnipeg brought him to North America in 2022.

Canadiens Activate Patrik Laine From Long-Term Injured Reserve

The Canadiens announced they’ve activated winger Patrik Laine from long-term injured reserve ahead of Tuesday’s game against the Islanders. He’ll make his Montreal debut after sustaining a left knee sprain during the preseason.

Montreal had a pair of open roster spots, but they’re $317.5K short of having ample space to remove his $8.7MM cap hit from LTIR. Without a corresponding move, that suggests the Habs have transferred goaltender Carey Price‘s contract from IR to LTIR to keep them compliant for the time being.

Laine’s Canadiens regular-season debut comes earlier than most expected after receiving a knee-on-knee hit from Cédric Paré in an exhibition game against the Maple Leafs in late September. Subsequent imaging revealed a sprain but no structural damage, easily the best-case scenario. The team issued a two-to-three-month return timeline for Laine, a window he entered a few days ago.

The 26-year-old Finn will skate in a second-line role at left wing alongside Kirby Dach and Juraj Slafkovsky, reports Kenzie Lalonde of TSN. It’s unclear how much his minutes will be restricted in his first NHL contest in 355 days.

Montreal acquired Laine from the Blue Jackets in a long-awaited move out of Columbus in August. They parted ways with defenseman Jordan Harris but received a 2026 second-round pick to take on the last two seasons of the oft-injured winger’s four-year, $34.8MM contract without any salary retention.

Laine’s 2023-24 campaign was truncated at the 18-game mark due to a collarbone fracture and subsequent lengthy stay in the NHL/NHLPA Player Assistance Program. It marked the fifth straight season in which the 2016 second-overall pick missed at least 10 games due to injury after missing just nine total games combined in the first three seasons of his NHL career.

While the high-ceiling sniper hasn’t hit 30 goals since the 2018-19 campaign, he produced a 34-goal, 74-point clip per 82 games over his three full seasons as a Jacket. He’s a major offensive boost to a Canadiens team in the bottom half of the league at 2.83 goals per game.

Laine enters the lineup for sophomore Joshua Roy, who was reassigned to AHL Laval last night. Enforcer Michael Pezzetta is expected to be a healthy scratch against the Isles for the 16th straight game.

Image courtesy of USA Today Sports.