Blackhawks Sign Jiri Felcman To Entry-Level Deal
The Blackhawks announced Friday that they’ve signed center prospect Jiri Felcman to a three-year, entry-level deal that begins next season. The contract carries a cap hit of $996.7K and will make him a restricted free agent in 2029.
Per PuckPedia, the deal includes a European assignment clause through 2027-28 if he’s assigned to the ECHL, allowing Felcman to trigger a loan back to the SCL Tigers of the Swiss National League, where he’s spent the last three years. The full breakdown of the contract, which carries a $1.045MM qualifying offer upon expiry, is as follows:
| Year | NHL salary | Signing bonus | Minors salary |
| 2026-27 | $850K | $95K | $82.5K |
| 2027-28 | $900K | $95K | $82.5K |
| 2028-29 | $950K | $95K | $82.5K |
Felcman had already signed a tryout with AHL Rockford earlier in the week, but landing him on an NHL deal now ensures they retain his signing rights past their June 2027 expiration. The 6’4″ pivot, who turns 21 next month, was a third-round choice in 2023.
Since then, he’s been grinding away to make his mark professionally in Switzerland, where the Czech forward has spent all of his development despite still representing his home country internationally. He’s suited up for the Tigers in Langnau over the past three years, but didn’t really have a significant presence on the club until this season.
Felcman, who could top out as a third-line checking center, broke out for a 3-17–20 scoring line with a -4 rating in 52 games to lead junior-aged NL players in scoring. He’s an afterthought in a loaded Chicago prospect pool – few would even consider him in a top-20 ranking there – but did take enough steps forward this season to help the Hawks determine he’s at least worth the initial investment of an ELC and the contract slot for the next few years to see if he can continue climbing up the ladder.
Peter Chiarelli, Kevin Maxwell Departing Blues Front Office
Blues vice president of hockey operations Peter Chiarelli and pro scout Kevin Maxwell will not return to the club next season, Darren Dreger of TSN reports. Chiarelli’s departure comes as he’s progressed in the interview process to fill the Predators’ pending general manager vacancy, while Maxwell will be joining the Rangers in a yet-to-be-disclosed management role, Dreger adds.
It may not be the only front office turnover St. Louis will see in the coming weeks. This is Doug Armstrong’s last season in the GM role. The team announced way back in 2024 that following the end of the 2025-26 campaign, Armstrong would elevate to president of hockey operations, while Alexander Steen, who played 765 games as a Blue and has been a special assistant to Armstrong over the past two years, would step into the GM’s chair.
It’s not a complete overhaul – Armstrong will still hold a fairly powerful role – but one that will nonetheless lead to a bit of a shakeup. Chiarelli, 61, had been part of the Blues’ front office for the past seven years. He first joined Armstrong as a senior advisor following their Stanley Cup win in 2019 and was promoted to his current VP role two years later.
As one of the league’s more experienced executives, it’s no surprise the Predators have reached out to him about succeeding Barry Trotz. It would be Chiarelli’s third go-around as a GM, first heading up the Bruins from 2006-15 (and winning a Stanley Cup in the process) before managing the Oilers from 2015-19.
The Predators have cast a wide net in their search, opening themselves up to experience-heavy candidates like Chiarelli while also considering up-and-comers. They’ve previously been linked to former Habs GM and current Sabres AGM Marc Bergevin as well as Panthers AGM Brett Peterson. Elliotte Friedman of Sportsnet reported today that they’ve also interviewed Oilers AGM Bill Scott.
Meanwhile, Maxwell has been with the Blues since 2022. In addition to his scouting duties, he’s also served as the GM for their AHL affiliate, the Springfield Thunderbirds, a role normally reserved for an AGM. St. Louis will need to find a replacement there.
The 65-year-old Maxwell has been in scouting roles as far back as the late 1980’s with the Flyers, and has also logged stints with the Whalers, Islanders, and Stars. He then joined the Rangers, where he’s set to return now, as a pro scout in 2008 and was promoted to their director of pro scouting in 2011. He held that role until his departure from the organization to join the Blues in 2022.
That the Blues are willing to part ways with Maxwell is unsurprising. Springfield is on track to miss the playoffs for the second time in four seasons under Maxwell – a hard feat in a league where 23 of 32 teams qualify. The year before he took over, Springfield had advanced all the way to the Calder Cup Final.
Islanders’ Tony DeAngelo Out One To Two Weeks
The Islanders won’t have their #2 right-side defender for the next three to five games. The team announced at puck drop of last night’s 2-1 win over the Stars that Tony DeAngelo will miss one to two weeks with a lower-body injury.
DeAngelo was unable to go last night, his first time sitting out a game this season. He left Tuesday night’s game against the Blackhawks midway through the first period after appearing to strain something while rushing back to defend a 2-on-0.
Luckily, it’s not worse as the Isles try to emerge victorious in the fierce battle for playoff spots in the Eastern Conference. After joining the team as a stopgap option from the Kontinental Hockey League midway through last season amid a rash of injuries, DeAngelo played well enough to earn a one-year, $1.75MM to return to Long Island at the beginning of free agency.
DeAngelo has rewarded the Isles’ faith by re-establishing himself as an everyday NHL option, ranking sixth on the team with a 5-28–33 scoring line through 72 contests. His -3 rating and 45.2 xGF% at 5-on-5 (per Natural Stat Trick) indicate he remains the imperfect defensive threat he’s been throughout all of his 10-year NHL career, but he’s been valuable as their second-unit power play quarterback behind standout rookie Matthew Schaefer and has found good chemistry with shutdown partner Adam Pelech at even strength.
A pending unrestricted free agent again, the Islanders will likely make a push to retain the 30-year-old. Depth option Adam Boqvist is a non-tender candidate, and with no right-shot options in the system set to challenge for an NHL job, they’d prefer to have him back to fill out that side with Ryan Pulock and Scott Mayfield unless they feel a meaningful upgrade is both available and affordable in free agency.
While Pulock was able to return to action last night after missing two games with a lower-body injury, DeAngelo’s absence now means that Isaiah George will stay on the NHL roster as their #7 option after being jockeyed between New York and AHL Bridgeport a couple of times this week.
Sidney Crosby Leaves Game With Apparent Lower-Body Injury
Penguins captain Sidney Crosby left Thursday’s game against the Senators early in the second period and was subsequently ruled out for the remainder of the contest, per a team announcement.
Crosby went down the tunnel and didn’t return after taking the opening shift of the period. He previously left the bench late in the first period, favoring his left leg following a seemingly innocuous collision with Ottawa forward Nick Cousins (video via Gino Hard on X).
If there’s a saving grace, that’s not the same knee Crosby sustained a Grade 2 MCL sprain in last month when he fell awkwardly on a hit from Czechia’s Radko Gudas while representing Canada at the Olympics. That cost the three-time Stanley Cup champion 11 games coming out of the Olympic break, returning to the lineup just over a week ago.
In Crosby’s first four games back in the lineup, he was immediately back to being his old self offensively. He had at least one point in each outing, totaling a goal and four assists with an uncharacteristic -4 rating. He had a +1 rating and one shot on goal in 6:39 of ice time tonight before bowing out of the contest.
Pittsburgh’s injury situation, particularly among its forwards, has been tenuous of late. Evgeni Malkin is dealing with an upper-body injury and is missing his second consecutive game tonight. Anthony Mantha missed Wednesday’s practice with a lower-body injury but was healthy enough to dress tonight. Blake Lizotte is likely done for the regular season with an upper-body issue, but should be an option for the first round of the playoffs.
That’s if the Penguins can weather the storm – both from inside and out – and hold onto a playoff berth. The Blue Jackets’ recent surge has unseated the Pens from the second-place spot they’ve held in the Metropolitan Division for most of the season. They’re still a relatively safe bet to make it at 74.2%, but have next to no cushion. At the time of writing, they’ve been leapfrogged by the Islanders, who defeated the Stars in regulation tonight, for third in the division and have slipped to the second wild-card slot.
Flyers’ Nikita Grebenkin Out At Least A Week
Flyers winger Nikita Grebenkin won’t be an option for at least the next four games as Philadelphia aims to keep its slim playoff hopes alive. The team announced Thursday that he’ll be out at least seven to 10 days before being reevaluated.
Grebenkin was scratched for the first time in two months when the Flyers suffered a hugely damaging 3-2 regulation loss to the Blue Jackets on Tuesday. It’s still unclear if he was hurt or sustained his upper-body injury separately.
The 22-year-old was a fifth-round pick by the Maple Leafs in 2022. He suited up seven times for Toronto last year, making his NHL debut, before being sent to the Flyers in the deadline deal that brought Scott Laughton to Toronto.
After finishing out last season in AHL Lehigh Valley, Grebenkin broke camp with the Flyers last fall and hasn’t looked back. The 6’2″, 210-lb always projected as a depth checking forward with a bit of a scoring touch and has already lived up to his billing less than five years after being a fifth-round pick.
In 55 outings this season, the Russian has a 4-10–14 scoring line with a -7 rating. He’s averaging 11:17 per night and ranks seventh on the club with 86 hits.
Shot generation is something Grebenkin will look to improve; he has only 32 shots on goal for a 0.58 shots-per-game rate, which is nearly the worst figure on the team. Nonetheless, his defensive impacts have been strong – a relative Corsi for percentage of +1.1% at 5-on-5 grades out well.
Sabres Reassign Zach Metsa
The Sabres announced Thursday that they’ve reassigned defenseman Zach Metsa to AHL Rochester.
Metsa, 27, has been on the NHL roster since early December, outside of two inconsequential minor-league assignments over the Olympic break and at the trade deadline to make him AHL-eligible for the rest of the season. He’s played in 18 of the Sabres’ last 21 games but was scratched in Wednesday’s overtime loss to the Bruins to make way for Conor Timmins, who was returning after being sidelined for three months with a broken leg.
Buffalo already has Michael Kesselring and trade-deadline pickup Luke Schenn available as extra right-shot options, so keeping Metsa up wasn’t a necessity for injury insurance. Instead, they’ll take advantage of his waiver-exempt status to make sure he keeps getting playing time in Rochester while they give the more veteran trio of Timmins, Kesselring, and Schenn more reps, keeping Metsa fresh in case they do decide to insert him into the lineup in the postseason.
Metsa returning and playing a regular role for Buffalo in the playoffs is still very much a possibility. The 5’9″ rookie righty likely takes home the award for the league’s luckiest results this season, but his impact has been impressive nonetheless. Through his first 38 NHL contests, the Quinnipiac product has managed a +20 rating, ranking second among Sabres defenders behind Mattias Samuelsson‘s +34.
That’s despite Metsa averaging just 10:19 of ice time per game. Despite only controlling 45.7% of shot attempts at 5-on-5, Metsa has only been on the ice for two goals against all season long. No defenseman in the league with at least 10 games played has been on the ice for fewer goals against per 60 minutes at 5-on-5 than Metsa at just 0.31.
Considering his xGA/60 is way up at 2.66, per Natural Stat Trick, those results were never likely to hold. The Sabres likely took a significant amount of stock in that figure in today’s decision, realizing that Kesselring’s underlying defensive impacts as a #6/7 option this season (2.44 xGA/60) are preferable.
Still, Metsa’s run this season has been a great success story for a late bloomer who earned his first NHL contract just last summer. He captained Quinnipiac to a national championship in 2023 and had spent the last two seasons in Rochester on minor-league deals before the Sabres finally decided to ink him last July. He’s still under contract through next season but will lose his waiver exemption.
Red Wings Reassign Sheldon Dries
The Red Wings announced Thursday that they’ve reassigned center Sheldon Dries to AHL Grand Rapids. He was the odd man out when captain Dylan Larkin made his return to the lineup against the Senators on Tuesday, ending the emergency conditions he was summoned under earlier this month.
Dries’ demotion won’t be the only roster move coming from the Wings in the next several hours. Head coach Todd McLellan told reporters earlier today that goaltender Cam Talbot will be unavailable to back up John Gibson on Friday against the Sabres after tweaking something, so they’ll need to recall a goalie from Grand Rapids before tomorrow evening (via Helene St. James of the Detroit Free Press).
Dries, 31, had been filling in as the Wings’ fourth-line center for the last five games due to the domino effect caused by injuries to Larkin, Andrew Copp, and Michael Rasmussen, among others. While he’d been recalled several times earlier in the year, none of those resulted in playing time.
As such, his time in the lineup this month marked his first NHL appearances since April 2023 with the Canucks. The Michigan native did not record a point but at least managed to not be on the ice for a goal against at 5-on-5, averaging just 6:58 of ice time per game while winning 42.9% of his faceoffs.
While Rasmussen and Emmitt Finnie remain out of the picture for Detroit’s forward group at present, that’s still the healthiest they’ve been in a while. That’s good news for their playoff push, especially seeing as their regulation loss to Ottawa on Tuesday has dropped their postseason odds to 42.4% entering play tonight, per MoneyPuck.
Grand Rapids will gladly take Dries back. The 5’10” pivot has never been more than a depth scoring touch in his NHL minutes but has been a major impact piece in a leadership role for the Griffins since signing a two-way deal with the Wings in 2024, racking up a 20-17–37 scoring line with a +22 rating in 48 AHL outings this season.
Barrett Hayton Out Week-To-Week With Upper-Body Injury
Mammoth head coach Andre Tourigny said Thursday that center Barrett Hayton is considered week-to-week with an upper-body injury, per Brogan Houston of the Deseret News.
Hayton’s outing against the Oilers on Tuesday lasted just 17 seconds. He left the game following an awkward collision with teammate Jack McBain, leaving Utah with only 11 forwards for virtually the entire game, which ended up being a 5-2 loss for the Mammoth.
It’s another blip in what has been a disappointing campaign from the former fifth overall pick. The 25-year-old finally looked like he could be a solid, two-way top-six threat last season with 20 goals and 46 points in 82 games, suiting up almost exclusively beside Clayton Keller as the team’s top-line pivot to give Logan Cooley some easier matchups in the #2 slot.
Hayton’s production drove speeding off a cliff to begin 2025-26, though. He had just five points in 23 games through the end of November and was quickly moved out of a top-line job, with Tourigny opting to promote the resurgent Lawson Crouse while shifting Nick Schmaltz from the wing to his natural center position.
Hayton’s role in the lineup has shifted frequently in the several weeks since. His production picked up a bit in January and February but has gone cold again following the trade deadline. All in all, he’s managed a 10-15–25 scoring line in 67 games – 0.37 points per game after reaching a career-high 0.56 mark last year.
While he may not be scoring as much as they’d like, Hayton has remained a valuable defensive presence. The 6’1″, 200-lb pivot isn’t an overly physical threat but has won 52.6% of his faceoffs this year while posting a strong 54.1% Corsi for percentage at even strength. That’s despite Hayton starting 53.9% of his shifts in the defensive zone, the fourth-highest figure among Utah forwards.
2023 first-rounder Danil But, recalled from AHL Tucson yesterday, will be stepping into the lineup tonight alongside Cooley and Dylan Guenther as the club’s second-line left wing, per Houston. He’s amassed seven points through his first 28 NHL games.
Artturi Lehkonen Returning To Avalanche Lineup
Avalanche left-winger Artturi Lehkonen will make his return to the lineup from an upper-body injury on Thursday against the Jets, head coach Jared Bednar told reporters after morning skate (via Ken Wiebe of the Winnipeg Free Press).
Lehkonen, who’s remained a top-line fixture with Nathan MacKinnon and Martin Necas this season, will instead return in a more limited role as Colorado looks to spread out their scoring depth while easing him back into the lineup. He’ll be skating on a new-look third line with trade deadline acquisition Nazem Kadri down the middle and Logan O’Connor, who made his season debut after hip surgery and various unrelated complications had him sidelined long-term, on the right wing, per Aarif Deen of Colorado Hockey Now.
The 30-year-old left a March 2 game against the Kings with his upper-body injury and was subsequently ruled out indefinitely. There weren’t many updates in the interim, but they’ll be happy to get him back in the rotation tonight after going 7-3-1 in 11 games without him, especially after receiving news that they’ll be without Nicolas Roy for several games as well.
Injuries have been a constant for Lehkonen ever since joining the Avs at the 2022 trade deadline. He’s yet to play more than 70 games in a season, but could finally hit that mark this year if he plays in 11 of Colorado’s 12 remaining games.
Had he been healthy over the past four years, he would be money in the bank for at least 55 points a year. Instead, he’s only technically hit the 50-point mark once in his career, back in 2022-23. He’s nonetheless been quite consistent when healthy and is averaging 0.71 points per game this season with a 19-23–42 scoring line in 59 games, the third-highest rate of his 10-year career.
Rookie Zakhar Bardakov will be the one exiting the lineup to make way for Lehkonen’s insertion. The versatile 25-year-old Russian has played in all but one game since the Olympic break and has been a fine fourth-line piece, scoring 10 points with a +5 rating in 56 games despite averaging just 7:09 of ice time per game.
Wild To Activate Marcus Foligno From Injured Reserve
Wild left-winger Marcus Foligno will play in tonight’s game against the Panthers, Joe Smith of The Athletic reports. He will need to be activated off injured reserve before then, which will bring Minnesota’s active roster up to 26 – including 16 forwards, all of which are now healthy, so they have no shortage of depth options available heading into the final ten games of the regular season.
Foligno, 34, has been out with a lower-body injury since the beginning of the month. After missing 12 games, he’ll dress alongside his older brother Nick Foligno, acquired from the Blackhawks at the trade deadline for future considerations, for the first time at any level.
Widely regarded as one of the league’s better defensive wingers, Foligno had some tough sledding this year before landing on the shelf. He previously missed nine games with another lower-body issue in November and December and hasn’t been all that effective when he’s dressed. In 48 games, he has a 6-5–11 scoring line with a -11 rating, the latter figure being the second-worst of his 15-year career.
Foligno began the season on a 14-game pointless streak and a 30-game goalless streak, and things haven’t gotten much better from there on the offensive side of the puck. Half of his total goal production on the year came in one game, recording a hat trick against the Maple Leafs on Jan. 19.
He will return in a fourth-line role, suiting up alongside his brother and Yakov Trenin to form a heavy checking unit that averages 6’2″ and 212 lbs. The elder Foligno brother, who’s a natural left-winger like Marcus but has played a good bit down the middle, will center that line after starting his Wild tenure 18-for-33 (54.5%) on faceoffs, per Smith.
Evidently, rookie Danila Yurov is exiting the lineup to make way for Foligno. That’s surprising at first glance – his 10-15–25 scoring line in 65 games is 10th on the team. However, he’s gone without a point in his last five outings and has seen his ice time slip amid Ryan Hartman being elevated back to a top-six center role. Foligno and McCarron have both been staking their claim for regular spots in the lineup with some strong defensive play since their acquisitions as well.
