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Jack Roslovic, Matt Grzelcyk, Victor Olofsson Among Top Remaining UFAs

July 11, 2025 at 8:01 am CDT | by Josh Erickson 6 Comments

Our list of top 50 UFAs saw many of its top names land a “re-signed” designation before the 2025-26 league year even began. Now, 10 days into free agency, 44 of those players have signed new contracts, leaving just six without deals:

20. C Jack Roslovic
22. D Matt Grzelcyk
27. LW Victor Olofsson
42. G Ilya Samsonov
46. LW Jeff Skinner
48. G Alexandar Georgiev

Roslovic still being on the market isn’t particularly surprising. It seems there’s always an odd man out in the top 20 range that lingers well into week two, particularly with the depth of this year’s class being as thin as it is.

His ongoing availability likely isn’t a knock on how teams perceive his value, either. Many clubs have already solidified their middle-six group with UFA pickups like Andrew Mangiapane and Pius Suter, and the ones that haven’t likely have interest in Roslovic as a backup option if they can’t land more of a needle-moving, first-line caliber player in a trade. That’s the case with the Maple Leafs, one of the few teams that have been linked to Roslovic in the last few days.

While far from being a bang-and-crash forward, Roslovic holds value in his positional versatility and has emerged as one of the more consistent depth scorers in the league. A third-line piece, ideally, he tied his career-high in goals last season with 22 in 81 games with the Hurricanes, adding 17 assists for 39 points. He’s scored between 30 and 45 points in each of the last five seasons.

Roslovic was projected to receive a three-year contract worth $4.09MM per season by AFP Analytics, while we forecasted a more conservative $3.5MM cap hit on a three-year deal. Either way, with most teams having filled out their rosters, only 11 teams have under $3.5MM in cap space and should likely be considered out of the running. Teams in need of added middle-six depth, like the Avalanche, Wild, and Red Wings, might be names to watch in the coming days.

The lack of capped-out teams this deep into July, a direct result of the quickly rising cap, likely means that players who were left without contracts after the first week of free agency may not need to take as steep a discount on their initial market value as they have in years past. That principle should at least apply to players like Roslovic and Grzelcyk, who at least have interest but are likely at the mercy of teams preferring trade options before they circle back with a firm offer. For someone like the offensively gifted but defensively challenged Olofsson, though, he’s likely abandoning hope of cashing in on his resurgent season with the Golden Knights.

Nonetheless, Olofsson is arguably the highest-ceiling name left on the market. He’s a three-time 20-goal scorer with the Sabres, with whom he spent the first six seasons of his career, but became a free agent in 2024 on the heels of a seven-goal, 15-point showing in 51 games.

Vegas took a flyer on him, and he settled quickly for a one-year, $1.075MM deal on July 2 last year. Injuries again limited him to less than 60 games, but he did get a few reps in the Knights’ top six, putting together a 15-14–29 scoring line in 56 outings. That was a 43-point pace – still the second-worst of his career behind his disastrous 2023-24.

He needs sheltered even-strength minutes and power-play deployment to be effective, but he’s a relatively safe bet for 20 goals and 40 points if he stays healthy. Only he and Roslovic can realistically provide that production among the remaining UFAs.

Grzelcyk is the only defenseman left on the board among our top 50, and he actually had the most points among any remaining UFA last season with 40. That was a career-high for the 31-year-old, who departed Boston for Pittsburgh last summer on a one-year deal and saw considerably more power-play deployment than he had in the past.

The Sharks looked like a potential fit for Grzelcyk at the start of free agency, but their slew of other additions has now led to a logjam of blue-liners, so they’re out of the market. Grzelcyk may have to expect a reduction in minutes on the 20 per game he saw last season, and look for another one-year commitment on a team looking for power-play help.

The most likely outcome for the ’tenders, Samsonov and Georgiev, may be contracts in Europe at this point. There’s no team with a glaring hole at the No. 1 or No. 2 positions, and teams looking for an upgrade are likely looking for a more consistent option than the roller-coaster play those two have provided over the last couple of seasons.

Some other names still available include wingers Joel Kiviranta, Luke Kunin, Craig Smith, and Michael Carcone. Nikolai Kovalenko leads the way among intriguing non-tendered forwards, assuming he doesn’t sign in the KHL. The top defenseman outside of Grzelcyk, both in terms of name value and scoring last season, is Ryan Suter.

Image courtesy of Perry Nelson-Imagn Images.

Pro Hockey Rumors Originals

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Canucks Sign Aleksei Medvedev To Entry-Level Contract

July 10, 2025 at 5:29 pm CDT | by Josh Erickson 4 Comments

The Canucks have signed goaltender Aleksei Medvedev to an entry-level contract, according to a team press release. The three-year deal is slide-eligible for up to two seasons. Financial terms were not disclosed.

Medvedev, still 17 for another two months, foregoes NCAA eligibility and will presumably play out the remainder of his major junior eligibility as a result. The 6’3″, 181-lb netminder went to Vancouver in the middle of the second round (No. 47 overall) in last month’s draft.

The St. Petersburg, Russia native has been in North America since his early teenage years and jumped to premier junior play with the OHL’s London Knights in 2024-25. He did quite well in backup duties for the OHL and Memorial Cup champions, posting a 2.79 GAA, .912 SV%, three shutouts, and a 22-8-2 record in 34 appearances.

Medvedev did not see ice time in the OHL playoffs or the Memorial Cup tournament. However, he was still named to the OHL’s First All-Rookie Team and received the Dinty Moore Trophy for the best GAA from a rookie.

He will likely spend the next two seasons as London’s starter before making the jump to the pros in the Canucks organization in 2027-28, upon which his entry-level contract would go to effect (unless he plays 10 NHL games in 2025-26 or 2026-27, an unlikely outcome). The Canucks now have a league-high eight goalies under contract, although Medvedev won’t count against the 50-contract limit if he’s in the OHL this season.

Transactions| Vancouver Canucks Aleksei Medvedev

4 comments

Avalanche Sign Josh Manson To Two-Year Extension

July 10, 2025 at 4:06 pm CDT | by Josh Erickson 2 Comments

The Avalanche have signed defenseman Josh Manson to a two-year extension, the team announced in a press release. The contract carries a $3.95MM cap hit for a total value of $7.9MM, Elliotte Friedman of Sportsnet reports (via X).

The deal goes into effect next season and will keep him in Colorado through the 2027-28 campaign. He was entering 2025-26 on the final year of the four-year, $18MM extension he signed to remain with the Avs following their Stanley Cup win in 2022, so he still counts $4.5MM against their cap for this year before his impact reduces by $550K in 2026-27.

Manson has a lengthy but injury-plagued NHL resume. He began his career with Anaheim in the 2014-15 season and grew into a reliable top-four piece over eight seasons there before Colorado acquired him at the 2022 deadline in advance of their championship win. He’s seen his minutes reduced somewhat in Denver but has still spent much of his time there as the No. 2 righty on their depth chart behind superstar Cale Makar.

On multiple occasions, injuries have taken more than half of Manson’s regular-season availability. He only played 27 games in the first year of his extension due to a recurring lower-body injury, and varying issues limited him to 48 appearances last season. He has only played in 61% of the Avs’ regular-season games since his acquisition and has missed roughly one in four games due to injury in his career, a trend positively skewed by four straight seasons with 70-plus appearances early on.

That makes any multi-year extension a risky bet, particularly for a player who will be 34 in October and saw his possession impacts nosedive in 2024-25. The physical stay-at-home defender has largely held up his end of the bargain in helping his team boast the majority of shot attempts while he’s on the ice despite his defensively-minded usage at even strength, but that wasn’t the case last season. Colorado still controlled 51.4% of shot attempts with Manson on the ice, but clicked at 56.2% without him. That difference of -4.8% was the worst in his career outside of his injury-plagued 2020-21 season with the Ducks.

With one year left on his deal, some considered Manson to be trade bait as the Avs looked to create salary cap flexibility. They opted to subtract from their forward group instead, sending Charlie Coyle and Miles Wood to the Blue Jackets and augmenting their defensive depth by picking up veteran Brent Burns in free agency. The extension all but ensures he’ll remain in Colorado for the foreseeable future, perhaps for the remainder of his career, given his recent trajectory.

Image courtesy of Robert Edwards-Imagn Images.

Colorado Avalanche| Newsstand| Transactions Josh Manson

2 comments

Sharks Sign Jakub Skarek To One-Year Contract

July 10, 2025 at 3:36 pm CDT | by Josh Erickson 2 Comments

The Sharks have signed goaltender Jakub Skarek to a one-year contract, the team announced today in a press release. It’s unclear if it’s a one-way or a two-way deal, but it’s a league-minimum contract either way.

Skarek, 25, has been playing professionally for a decade, dating back to his time in the second tier of Czech hockey, years before the Islanders selected him in the third round of the 2018 draft. He has played almost exclusively for the Isles’ AHL affiliate in Bridgeport since his arrival in North America in 2019.

The Czech native didn’t make his NHL debut until injuries forced him into action for a stretch last season, posting a .872 SV% and 3.94 GAA in one start and one relief appearance in February. He’s long struggled to be a needle-mover at the minor league level, posting a 3.34 GAA, .890 SV%, five shutouts, and a 49-84-17 record in 161 career appearances for Bridgeport.

Skarek was a Group VI unrestricted free agent this summer and likely didn’t anticipate having much NHL interest as a result of his poor minor-league track record, so he signed a one-year deal in Finland with HIFK back in May. Instead, he’s back in North America with the Sharks, who needed depth netminders with Alexandar Georgiev and Georgi Romanov reaching free agency and top prospect Yaroslav Askarov expected to take over as their No. 1 this season.

San Jose now has four goaltenders under contract, with Skarek likely being the No. 3 on their depth chart behind Askarov and recent trade pickup Alex Nedeljkovic. He’ll presumably land on waivers in the fall and, if he clears, share the San Jose Barracuda’s crease with undrafted prospect Gabriel Carriere and the AHL-contracted Matt Davis.

San Jose Sharks| Transactions Jakub Skarek

2 comments

Stars Trade Matt Dumba To Penguins

July 10, 2025 at 2:31 pm CDT | by Josh Erickson 29 Comments

The Stars are trading defenseman Matt Dumba and their 2028 second-round pick to the Penguins in exchange for defenseman Vladislav Kolyachonok, reports Elliotte Friedman of Sportsnet. Both teams have since announced the trade, which doesn’t include any salary retention.

Completing the deal will make the Stars cap-compliant for the 2025-26 season. Even if Dallas has Kolyachonok on its opening night roster, he costs the league minimum $775K against the cap.

That’s $2.975MM less than Dumba’s $3.75MM cap hit, since Pittsburgh takes on the totality of his salary with no retention on Dallas’ part. That savings puts Dallas, which is currently $1.79MM above the upper limit, back under the cap.

The Stars signed Dumba to a two-year, $7.5MM contract in free agency last summer, viewed as a risky commitment at the time after the 6’1″ righty had just 12 points and a -18 rating in 76 games with the Coyotes and Lightning the year prior. The fears around the contract were quickly realized. Dumba, who turns 31 later this month, had negative possession impacts everywhere he was deployed and was out of the lineup entirely by the time the postseason rolled around.

Dumba played 63 games for the Stars last season, averaging just 15:18 per game with a 1-9–10 scoring line. He logged a minus-five rating in what amounted to his lowest usage since his rookie campaign and was a healthy scratch for all 18 playoff games.

The best years of Dumba’s NHL career came as a top-pairing piece for the Wild, who drafted him No. 7 overall in 2012. He remained there through the beginning of his steep decline in the early 2020s, leaving for Arizona in 2023 in free agency on a one-year contract. After failing to re-establish his value there, he was flipped to the Lightning at the trade deadline for two late-round picks and finished out the year as a bottom-pairing piece in Tampa before signing in Dallas in the offseason.

Dumba’s best season came back in 2017-18 as a 23-year-old, when he finished 19th in the league in scoring among defensemen with 50 points in 82 games and tied for 10th with 14 goals. He also had 12 goals and 22 points in just 32 games the following year before an upper-body injury ended his season. His offensive production never recovered, averaging just 22.4 points per 82 games since returning.

It’s unclear if Dumba will have much of a role in Pittsburgh’s lineup next season. They have three right-shot defenders ahead of him on the depth chart in Connor Clifton, Erik Karlsson, and Kris Letang, although Karlsson is well-known trade bait this summer. If he remains in the picture, though, Dumba could start the season in the press box – or even on waivers and buried in the minors – unless someone shifts to their offside.

Dumba’s price tag is exceedingly steep for the No. 6/7/8 defender he is at this stage of his career, one Dallas simply couldn’t afford to shoulder with their cap crunch after extending Mikko Rantanen and retaining UFAs Jamie Benn and Matt Duchene. They part with a second-round pick to wipe his deal off the books one year early – a steep price considering the market for cap dumps this summer, although they do well in acquiring a serviceable depth piece in Kolyachonok. They’re now without a pick before the third round in 2028.

The Penguins already had a bit of a crunch among depth defensemen after signing Alexander Alexeyev, Caleb Jones, and Parker Wotherspoon in free agency. It isn’t surprising to see them unwilling to take on a defenseman without moving one out.

They picked up Kolyachonok, a 24-year-old 6’2″ lefty with some untapped two-way potential, off waivers from Utah in February last season. He didn’t get into much game action, though, recording two assists and a minus-five rating in 12 appearances while averaging 14:20 per game. There wasn’t going to be much opportunity for him in Pittsburgh with their aforementioned additions and younger, higher-profile names like Owen Pickering pushing for more NHL ice time.

Kolyachonok, a second-rounder in 2019, has 14 points in 74 career NHL games with a minus-seven rating and 72 hits. He’ll presumably compete with veteran Alexander Petrovic to exit training camp as the extra defenseman on the NHL roster.

Sean Shapiro of DLLS Sports was first to report the Stars and Penguins were working on a trade centered around Dumba and Kolyachonok.

Image courtesy of Jerome Miron-Imagn Images.

Dallas Stars| Newsstand| Pittsburgh Penguins| Transactions Matt Dumba| Vladislav Kolyachonok

29 comments

Dylan Ferguson Signs With HK Nitra

July 10, 2025 at 1:42 pm CDT | by Josh Erickson Leave a Comment

Depth goaltender Dylan Ferguson will continue his career in Europe. He’s signed with HK Nitra, the Slovak club announced on Facebook. It’s a one-year deal, leaving the door open for a return to North America in 2026-27.

Ferguson is only 26 years old but has already built up a well-traveled career, playing for 11 different clubs in the NHL, AHL, ECHL, and KHL since his professional career began in 2018. He spent last season on a two-way contract with the Wild after veteran AHL option Troy Grosenick went down with a season-ending injury before the campaign began, but didn’t see any NHL action. His last NHL appearances – just two of his three career showings – came with the Senators in March 2023.

The 2017 seventh-round pick by the Stars, who was immediately flipped to the Golden Knights for defenseman Marc Methot, has a .929 SV% and 2.81 GAA across the trio of games with a 1-1-0 record. He’s spent most of his time in the AHL, where he’s largely been serviceable but had a difficult 2024-25 season. He managed a 3.81 GAA, .878 SV%, and 3-8-0 record in 12 games for the Iowa Wild.

The British Columbia native now heads overseas for the second time in his career. He spent 2023-24 with Belarus’ Dinamo Minsk, posting a .904 SV% in 23 games. He’ll bring his services to a Nitra team headlined by 44-year-old Branislav Mezei, who’s still going in his home country after being selected No. 10 overall by the Islanders in the 1999 draft.

Transactions Dylan Ferguson

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Tennessee State To Add Division I NCAA Hockey For 2026-27 Season

July 10, 2025 at 12:38 pm CDT | by Josh Erickson 6 Comments

The top division of NCAA hockey is gaining a new face for the first time in a few years. After beginning a feasibility study four years ago, Tennessee State University reaffirmed that it’s sponsoring a Division I men’s hockey program, which will begin play in the 2026-27 season. That was the initial plan, although they’re reverting to it now after previously attempting to launch DI play for the 2025-26 campaign.

The school began to ice a club hockey team in 2024-25 and will presumably do so again this year instead of making the jump to the top flight. Unlike recent new DI programs like Augustana and Lindenwood, there is no history of ACHA – a collegiate hockey association roughly equivalent to NCAA DIII play – representation at TSU. In this case, the program is truly being built from scratch in a brief period.

Tennessee State, located in Nashville with a total enrollment of just 8,198, will be the first historically Black college or university (HBCU) to introduce a DI hockey program, either men’s or women’s. In today’s announcement, Assistant Athletic Director Nick Guerriero stated that they’ve received a $ 250,000 grant from the NHL and NHLPA’s Industry Growth Fund, in addition to continued consultancy and support from the Predators and College Hockey, Inc.

While the club’s playing roster for its inaugural season isn’t yet secured, it does have its head coach. They tapped Duanté Abercrombie for the role in April 2024. The 28-year-old Washington, D.C. native previously worked as a development coach with the Maple Leafs during the 2022-23 season and served as an assistant coach for Stevenson University’s Division III program in 2023-24.

Like Lindenwood, TSU is expected to begin its life as an independent program.

NCAA

6 comments

Kraken Announce Player Development Staff Changes

July 10, 2025 at 11:41 am CDT | by Josh Erickson 3 Comments

The Kraken have already made a multitude of staff changes this offseason, replacing nearly their entire coaching staff and naming Jason Botterill as the second general manager in franchise history. The moves aren’t stopping there, however.

According to a press release from the team, they’re also refreshing their player development staff. Former NHL defenseman Cory Murphy, who had worked with the team over the past two seasons as a player development consultant, has been promoted to director of the department.

Murphy replaces Jeff Tambellini, who had worked as Seattle’s director of player development since 2022-23. Tambellini was tabbed earlier this week by the Lightning as a new assistant general manager and director of hockey operations.

As the release states, Murphy’s work over the last two years has involved working with the team’s pool of defense prospects, which doesn’t include any blue-chip names but has a few intriguing projects. The club highlighted his impact on the development of 2022 third-rounder Ty Nelson, who had 32 points and a +17 rating in 72 games with AHL Coachella Valley in his first professional season in 2024-25. He’ll now have a broader range and influence throughout Seattle’s development ideology.

Seattle has also created a new title – Head of Player Strategy – and given it to 31-year-old Justin Rai, who has worked with the club as a consultant for the last three years. “My job is to be able to research the league, research our players and figure out the existing trends,” Rai said. “Most specifically, it is my role to be additive to Coach [Lane Lambert]’s staff, making sure players can better execute his structure at a higher level, staying on the same message as the coaching staff … I’m grateful for the opportunity and that the Kraken organization puts its employees in spots to succeed.”

Seattle Kraken Cory Murphy| Justin Rai

3 comments

Joe Snively Signs With Djurgardens IF

July 10, 2025 at 10:47 am CDT | by Josh Erickson 1 Comment

Free agent forward Joe Snively has signed a one-year contract with Djurgardens IF, the Swedish team announced via press release on Wednesday.

Snively has spent most of his career in the Capitals organization after initially signing an entry-level contract with Washington in March 2019. He signed a couple of more contracts with the Caps, including a two-year, one-way deal in 2022, before reaching unrestricted free agency last summer. The 29-year-old spent last season with the Red Wings on a two-way deal, clearing waivers during training camp and spending the entirety of the campaign on assignment to AHL Grand Rapids.

In his last three seasons for the Capitals, Snively appeared in a total of 27 NHL regular-season games, scoring six goals and 11 points in 11:40 of ice time per contest.

A diminutive 5’9″ left-winger who was an ECAC All-Star at Yale, Snively will play international hockey for the first time after three seasons of junior hockey with USHL Sioux City, four collegiate seasons, and six full professional campaigns in the NHL and AHL.

Snively had hovered around a point per game for AHL Hershey while in Washington’s system in recent years, but he managed only 21 goals and 47 points in 72 games for Grand Rapids in 2024-25. It’s not surprising to see Detroit show little interest in retaining him as a result.

The Virginia native pauses his AHL career with 219 points in 292 career minor-league games over the last seven years. He joins a Djurgarden team, likely headlined by 2025 No. 3 overall pick Anton Frondell, if he doesn’t make the Blackhawks’ roster, which is looking to stick in the top-level SHL after gaining promotion from the HockeyAllsvenskan, Sweden’s second-tier pro league, this year.

SHL| Transactions Joe Snively

1 comment

Panthers Sign Mackie Samoskevich To One-Year Deal

July 10, 2025 at 10:06 am CDT | by Josh Erickson 16 Comments

The Panthers have re-signed restricted free agent winger Mackie Samoskevich to a one-year contract, per a press release from the team. It is a league minimum, one-way contract, according to PuckPedia.

Samoskevich was ineligible to sign an offer sheet as a 10.2(c) player with less than three years of professional experience after signing their entry-level contract at age 20. The Connecticut-born forward will now look to cash in as an RFA again next summer after what he hopes will be a step forward in 2025-26.

The 24th overall pick of the 2021 draft, Samoskevich was a full-time roster player last season after spending most of his first professional campaign in 2023-24 between the Panthers and AHL Charlotte. He finished 11th in Calder Trophy voting for Rookie of the Year, finishing ninth on Florida in scoring with 31 points (15 goals, 16 assists) in 72 games.

Samoskevich was a lineup fixture later in the regular season, particularly as a top-six replacement for the injured Matthew Tkachuk down the stretch. However, the return of Tkachuk and Brad Marchand to the lineup in the postseason meant he saw just four games of playoff action in Florida’s second straight Stanley Cup championship, as he was passed over for fourth-line duties in favor of more experienced players like Jesper Boqvist, Jonah Gadjovich, and A.J. Greer.

While it may be surprising to see Samoskevich settle for such a cheap deal after a strong regular season, he had virtually no leverage in negotiations thanks to his 10.2(c) status. With Florida over the salary cap, they were presumably only willing to sign him to a one-year, league minimum deal to give him a chance to earn more in talks in 2026. While his NHL salary is cheaper than his qualifying offer afforded him, it does guarantee his full salary, something a two-way QO would not have done.

The 22-year-old’s deal was the last pressing piece of business for the Cats – they still have a few unsigned RFAs in the organization, but they’re all destined for waivers in the fall if they re-sign. Now, general manager Bill Zito’s focus can be fully on getting the two-time defending champs cap-compliant for opening night.

Florida is $3.725MM over the upper limit with a full 23-player roster after signing Samoskevich, according to PuckPedia. They could kick the can down the road using long-term injured reserve if a player with a cap hit greater than $3.725MM won’t be ready to start the season, or they can offload a salary via trade.

Versatile top-nine forward Evan Rodrigues, who carries a $3MM cap hit for two more seasons, has been an oft-speculated candidate. Samoskevich could realistically replace his role outright, too.

But just clearing Rodrigues won’t open enough space for Florida – they’d have to waive a player as well, likely a depth forward like Gadjovich, Greer, or Tomas Nosek – and operate with just one extra skater to finish the job. Notably, Samoskevich is no longer exempt from waivers, so the Panthers would need to expose him to the wire to send him to the minors, a highly improbable outcome.

Image courtesy of Nick Turchiaro-Imagn Images.

Florida Panthers| Newsstand| Transactions Mackie Samoskevich

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