Blackhawks Reassign Isaak Phillips
The Blackhawks have assigned defenseman Isaak Phillips to AHL Rockford, per Mario Tirabassi of CHGO Sports. His roster spot is expected to go to Alec Martinez, who’s almost ready to come off injured reserve after missing the last 12 games with a groin injury, relays Charlie Roumeliotis of WGN Radio 720.
Phillips, 23, has had a bit of a roller-coaster season. Chicago placed the defender on waivers the day before opening night rosters were due but didn’t assign him to the minors after clearing. He stuck around for a few days, serving as a healthy scratch for their season opener against Utah before being demoted to Rockford to begin the season. He was recalled again for a brief stretch in mid-October without playing before heading back down to Rockford.
The Blackhawks then summoned Phillips for a second time on Oct. 29, which yielded his first three NHL appearances of the season earlier this month. The 2020 fifth-round pick scored a goal, just his second in the NHL, and averaged 11:54 per game while recording four blocks, three hits and two giveaways. Phillips struggled to make a positive possession impact at even strength, posting a career-worst 35.4 CF% and 31.8 xGF%.
Phillips, an Ontario native, played a career-high 33 games last season, recording six assists and a -26 rating. The stay-at-home defender has been solid overall in Rockford over the past four seasons since turning pro during the COVID-19 pandemic, including a 10-goal, 25-point campaign in 64 games in the 2021-22 season. Last year also saw him log four goals and 10 assists in 29 appearances for the AHL club with a +7 rating. This year, he’s yet to record a point in two appearances for Rockford.
Phillips will be an arbitration-eligible restricted free agent at the end of the season. He was an RFA for the first time this past summer, eventually coming to terms with Chicago on a two-way deal ($775K/$350K) in late July. He’d been a healthy scratch in two straight before today’s demotion.
Meanwhile, Martinez will practice in full on Wednesday before traveling with the team on their road trip, head coach Luke Richardson told Ben Pope of the Chicago Sun-Times. The Blackhawks don’t play again until Thursday in Seattle, so Martinez still has a few days to complete his recovery before returning to game action.
Wild Reassign Michael Milne
Nov. 11: The Wild announced today that they’d reassigned Milne back to Iowa. Contrary to Hynes’ proclamation, he did not make his NHL debut and instead watched three games from the press box. With Minnesota off until Thursday, there was no need for an extra forward on the roster. He could be back up later in the week for another shot at NHL minutes.
Nov. 6: The Wild announced Wednesday that they’ve recalled left-winger Michael Milne from AHL Iowa. The 22-year-old will make his NHL debut in the coming days, head coach John Hynes said after yesterday’s 5-1 loss to the Kings (via Michael Russo of The Athletic).
Minnesota selected Milne in the third round of the 2022 draft after he’d been passed over in 2021 as one of the oldest first-year eligible players available, given his Sep. 21 birthday. The 5’11” British Columbia native was coming off a breakout fourth and final season of major junior hockey with the WHL’s Winnipeg Ice, tying for second in scoring on a star-studded team that included a pair of top-15 picks that year in Matthew Savoie and Conor Geekie.
The Wild signed Milne to his entry-level contract a few months later, allowing him to turn pro and start his professional career in Iowa. That’s where he’s played exclusively since the start of the 2022-23 season. Injuries limited him to a combined 97 appearances over the last two years, and his production was fine but not attention-grabbing (15 G, 19 A, 34 P). This year, however, he’s off to a hot start with four goals and four assists in 10 games. His eight points are second on the club in scoring behind NHL veteran Travis Boyd, and he’s tied for second on the team with a +2 rating.
Minnesota had a pair of open roster spots and $2.6MM in cap space prior to the recall, per PuckPedia. That’s plenty of space to add Milne to the roster to give Hynes some lineup flexibility without general manager Bill Guerin having to make any corresponding moves.
It’s unclear who may come out of the lineup among the Wild’s 12 regular forwards, but it would make sense to ease Milne into his NHL debut against a fairly easy opponent tomorrow in the form of the 4-8-2 Sharks. How he performs in limited action could be quite consequential in his contract negotiations next summer – he’s set to be a restricted free agent at the end of the season.
Maple Leafs Place Max Pacioretty On IR With Lower-Body Injury
The Maple Leafs have placed winger Max Pacioretty on injured reserve due to a lower-body injury, per a team announcement. Pacioretty sustained the injury, which appeared to affect his left hamstring, after he fell awkwardly following a cross-check from Canadiens defenseman Mike Matheson on Saturday.
He’s listed as week-to-week, a positive sign given that he needed help getting to the locker room after exiting the ice. As David Pagnotta of The Fourth Period notes, that timeline indicates it’s a pulled hamstring rather than a tear, which could have sidelined him for the rest of the season. As such, it’ll likely be a simple rehabilitation period for Pacioretty over the next few weeks without involving anything surgical.
That’s a welcome bit of news for Pacioretty, who’s been under the knife more than his fair share over the past few years. A pair of Achilles tears and a trio of surgeries limited him to 52 appearances over the last two seasons with the Hurricanes and Capitals. A PTO signing by the Leafs late in the summer, a successful training camp earned him a one-year, $1.5MM contract at the beginning of the month – one that likely had been agreed to in principle throughout his tryout.
Thus far, it’s been a worthy gamble from Leafs general manager Brad Treliving. Through 13 games, Pacioretty had two goals and four assists, although he’d gone without a point in his past five. He’d been scratched on a couple of occasions earlier in the season for load management purposes, although he’d played in eight straight games before getting hurt. Pacioretty had also worked his way up Toronto’s left-wing depth chart, recently skating in second-line minutes alongside John Tavares and William Nylander.
Pacioretty’s absence makes the recent reinstatement of Connor Dewar from long-term injured reserve all the more important. The 25-year-old was scratched against Montreal, but with Pacioretty unavailable, he’ll likely make his season debut tomorrow against the Senators, especially if captain Auston Matthews remains out with his upper-body injury. That’s possible after Matthews did not participate in today’s practice, per David Alter of The Hockey News.
The Maple Leafs will likely use Pacioretty’s vacated roster spot to activate defenseman Jani Hakanpää from LTIR. At the beginning of the month, he and Dewar both headed down to AHL Toronto on conditioning loans after offseason surgeries. While their activation didn’t come simultaneously, multiple reports indicate that Hakanpää was at practice with the NHL club this morning, signaling his Maple Leafs debut likely isn’t far away. They’ll have enough cap space, albeit by less than $500K, to remain compliant with Calle Järnkrok and Dakota Mermis still on LTIR. However, they’ll still need to free up roster spots when Matthews and Pacioretty are ready to return from their respective IR stints.
Image courtesy of USA Today Sports.
Penguins Recall Samuel Poulin
The Penguins announced that they have recalled right-winger Samuel Poulin from AHL Wilkes-Barre/Scranton. Center Kevin Hayes was transferred to injured reserve to open an active roster spot.
Poulin, now 23, was Pittsburgh’s first-round selection in the 2019 draft. They selected him 21st overall, a tad higher than the consensus at the time, ahead of names like Connor McMichael and Shane Pinto. He’d been taken second overall in the QMJHL Entry Draft by the Sherbrooke Phoenix just two years prior, and he’d started his major junior career on the right foot with 45 goals, 76 assists, and 121 points through 122 appearances over two seasons before being plucked by the Penguins.
After another two years of high-end offensive performances in the Q, Poulin turned pro and began the 2021-22 season on assignment to WBS. Injuries and a lengthy leave of absence to focus on his mental health have limited his games played and overall performance significantly since then, though. 2022-23 was a low point – while he did make his NHL debut that season amid a three-game call-up, he was limited to just four goals in 15 AHL contests. Last year, though, he seemed to gain some traction back with 31 points (16 G, 15 A) in 41 appearances with the Baby Pens, the best point-per-game showing of his AHL career by a wide margin.
In 2024-25, Poulin was waiver-eligible for the first time, leading to a fair amount of speculation that he’d make the team out of camp purely out of fear of losing him on the wire. That didn’t happen, though, and Poulin cleared waivers without incident in early October and began the season back in Wilkes-Barre/Scranton. He’s got three goals and six assists for nine points in his first 11 games, tying him for second in scoring.
Poulin now looks to see NHL ice for the third year in a row after three-game showings in each of the last two seasons. In those combined six appearances, he has one assist, a -4 rating, four shots on goal and eight hits while going 13-for-29 on draws and averaging 8:53 per game. He’s no longer among the league’s top 100 prospects, but McKeen’s Hockey still ranks him as the seventh-best up-and-comer in the Pens’ system. He can remain on Pittsburgh’s roster for up to 30 days or play 10 games before he requires waivers again to head back to Wilkes-Barre/Scranton.
As for Hayes, he was downgraded to week-to-week yesterday with an upper-body injury. The IR placement only rules him out for tonight’s game against the Stars, but he’ll miss more time than that.
Blue Jackets Claim Dante Fabbro Off Waivers From Predators
2:15 PM: Columbus has moved Kent Johnson to injured reserve to make space for this waiver claim, per Aaron Portzline of The Athletic. Johnson hasn’t played since suffering a shoulder injury on October 17th. Columbus will be able to make this IR placement retroactive to that date, making this move purely a paper transaction and Johnson eligible to return as soon as he’s back to full health.
1:00 PM: The Blue Jackets have claimed defenseman Dante Fabbro off waivers from the Predators, according to Elliotte Friedman of Sportsnet. Columbus’ assignment of Kent Johnson to IR opens the roster spot to make this possible.
Fabbro, a 6’0″ right-shot defender who was a first-round pick out of Boston University in 2016, is now in his seventh NHL season and had been a fringe top-four option for most of his time in Nashville. But after signing a one-year, $2.5MM extension in March to keep him off last summer’s restricted free-agent market, Fabbro tumbled down the Preds’ depth chart and was a healthy scratch in five straight games before landing on waivers yesterday.
In hindsight, 2023-24 marked the writing on the wall for Fabbro’s tenure in Nashville. He was a healthy scratch on more than a few occasions last season, too, only making 56 appearances and averaging a career-low 16:21 when in the lineup. This year, Fabbro went scoreless in six games with a -3 rating and set a new career-low with a 13:06 ATOI before hitting the waiver wire.
Some thought Fabbro’s $2.5MM cap hit meant teams would stray away from submitting claims, but Columbus has the second most cap space in the league, at $22.92MM, per PuckPedia. It’s not a challenge to fit him on the roster financially, although they now carry eight defensemen. With Erik Gudbranson potentially out for the rest of the season after shoulder surgery last month, there likely won’t be a ton of roster movement regarding Columbus’ back end from here on out unless more injuries strike.
Fabbro’s addition does give the Jackets another experienced name on the back end, and he has decent career possession numbers with a 50.0 CF% and 49.5 xGF% at even strength. However, his presence on the roster means additional competition for 20-year-old right-shot defender David Jiříček, who’s been a healthy scratch for all but five games this season and has averaged under 12 minutes per game in the lineup. It’s not a promising sign for his development after Columbus selected him sixth overall in 2022.
Since Nov. 1 is in the rearview mirror, waiver priority is determined by reserve standings order in terms of points percentage. That means the Canadiens, Sharks, Blackhawks, Ducks, Flyers, Kraken, and Penguins all passed on Fabbro.
Penguins’ Kevin Hayes Out Week-To-Week, Cody Glass Diagnosed With Concussion
The Penguins have downgraded forward Kevin Hayes to week-to-week with his upper-body injury, head coach Mike Sullivan told reporters (including Matt Vensel of the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette). Sullivan also confirmed that Cody Glass had been diagnosed with a concussion after landing on injured reserve on Friday.
Hayes has already missed two games with his upper-body injury, which he sustained last Tuesday against the Islanders, although it’s unclear which play. If the Pens need to open a roster spot, he can be placed on injured reserve retroactive to Nov. 5, while a week-to-week designation starting today means he’ll likely miss at least Pittsburgh’s next four games.
The Penguins acquired the 32-year-old Hayes from the Blues in June, also landing a 2025 second-round pick to take on the final two years of the declining veteran’s contract, of which the Flyers are already retaining half. He’s made 14 appearances for the Penguins this season, notching three goals and an assist while averaging a career-low 9:27 per game.
Meanwhile, a concussion indicates a longer-term absence for Glass than the minimum seven days required for an IR placement. Like Hayes, it’s unclear exactly what play Glass sustained the concussion during his last appearance, a 5-1 loss to the Hurricanes on Thursday. He played a season-low 4:47 and did not take a shift after the first period.
Like Hayes, Glass had made 14 appearances for Pittsburgh before the injury, recording four assists and a -7 rating while averaging 11:48 per game. It’s the 25-year-old’s first season with the Pens, who acquired him in an August trade with the Predators.
Selected sixth overall by the Golden Knights in the 2017 draft, Glass has been deployed peculiarly in a more shutdown role with Pittsburgh, making a career-high 69% of his zone starts in the defensive end at even strength. He’s responded quite well, controlling 58.7% of shot attempts and 58.3% of expected goals, even if he hasn’t broken out yet offensively.
2024-25 NHL Salary Retention Slots Available
Nearly every NHL team has some money tied up in players no longer playing for the club or penalties for exceeding the salary cap the prior season, usually due to clubs not having ample space in their performance bonus cushion. Buyouts are generally the most common form of money tied up in players not on the active roster or injured reserve. However, they also don’t come into play much during the regular season, as teams can only execute them during specific windows over the summer.
Retained salary transactions, though, do matter year-round. They’re also occurring more frequently as the number of multi-team trades increases, allowing playoff contenders and big spenders to accumulate more talent at lesser cap hits while rebuilding squads accumulate assets for taking on a portion of a player’s contract who will never play for them.
While teams could theoretically have unlimited buyouts on the books year-over-year, they can only retain salary on three contracts simultaneously. Those three slots are quite valuable for rebuilding clubs near the trade deadline, which is why they’ll normally stray away from eating money on contracts with more than two or three years left. There are some notable exceptions to that in this list, though.
Teams cannot retain more than 50% of a player’s salary, and a contract cannot be involved in more than two retained salary transactions. Here are the NHL’s current retained salary slots available for 2024-25, which we’ll continue to update through the rest of the regular season and the first part of the offseason:
Updated 11/10/24 (10:35am CT)
Anaheim Ducks
3/3 available
Boston Bruins
3/3 available
Buffalo Sabres
3/3 available
Calgary Flames
2/3 available
- G Jacob Markström ($1.875MM through 2025-26)
Carolina Hurricanes
3/3 available
Chicago Blackhawks
2/3 available
- D Jake McCabe ($2MM through 2024-25)
Colorado Avalanche
3/3 available
Columbus Blue Jackets
3/3 available
Dallas Stars
3/3 available
Detroit Red Wings
3/3 available
Edmonton Oilers
3/3 available
Florida Panthers
3/3 available
Los Angeles Kings
2/3 available
- D Ivan Provorov ($2.025MM through 2024-25)
Minnesota Wild
3/3 available
Montreal Canadiens
1/3 available
- D Jeff Petry ($2.344MM through 2024-25)
- G Jake Allen ($1.925MM through 2024-25)
Nashville Predators
2/3 available
- D Mattias Ekholm ($250K through 2025-26)
New Jersey Devils
3/3 available
New York Islanders
3/3 available
New York Rangers
3/3 available
Ottawa Senators
2/3 available
- G Joonas Korpisalo ($1MM through 2027-28)
Philadelphia Flyers
2/3 available
- F Kevin Hayes ($3.571MM through 2025-26)
Pittsburgh Penguins
1/3 available
- D Jeff Petry ($1.563MM through 2024-25)
- F Reilly Smith ($1.25MM through 2024-25)
San Jose Sharks
0/3 available
- D Brent Burns ($2.72MM through 2024-25)
- D Erik Karlsson ($1.5MM through 2026-27)
- F Tomáš Hertl ($1.388MM through 2029-30)
Seattle Kraken
3/3 available
St. Louis Blues
3/3 available
Tampa Bay Lightning
3/3 available
Toronto Maple Leafs
3/3 available
Utah Hockey Club
2/3 available
- D Oliver Ekman-Larsson (cost fluctuates due to buyout through 2030-31, costs $320K this season)
Vancouver Canucks
1/3 available
- F Ilya Mikheyev ($712.5K through 2025-26)
- D Tucker Poolman ($500K through 2024-25)
Vegas Golden Knights
3/3 available
Washington Capitals
3/3 available
Winnipeg Jets
3/3 available
Snapshots: Tynan, Prishchepov, Quenneville, Ahcan
The Avalanche reversed a pair of paper transactions, recalling forwards T.J. Tynan and Nikita Prishchepov from AHL Colorado ahead of tonight’s matchup against the Hurricanes.
With the moves, Colorado is back to having a full 23-man active roster. The injury fill-ins have been frequently shuttled between the NHL over the past week-plus, in Tynan’s case, delaying his temporary waiver exemption.
The 32-year-old Tynan has made four appearances for the Avs while they remain without the services of Gabriel Landeskog, Valeri Nichushkin, Jonathan Drouin, Ross Colton, and Miles Wood. Arguably the AHL’s top playmaker of the past decade, he’s still yet to make much of an impact at the NHL level. That hasn’t changed this season, as Tynan has gone without a point and is averaging only 8:24 per game.
Prishchepov, 20, is also looking for his first point of the season. It’s unsurprising – a seventh-round pick just a few months ago, the Russian pivot is making his first NHL appearances way ahead of schedule and out of necessity, given Colorado’s injury situation. He’s averaged 9:15 per game and gotten involved physically, logging six hits and controlling play quite well with a 79.6 CF%.
More from around the hockey world:
- Former NHL left-winger John Quenneville has landed a one-year deal in Finland with Tappara for the remainder of 2024-25, the team announced. Now 28, Quenneville last suited up in the NHL with the Blackhawks in the 2019-20 season. In only 42 career appearances with Chicago and New Jersey over four seasons, the 2014 first-round pick managed two goals and three assists. The Edmonton native has plied his trade across the AHL and Europe in the past five years, suiting up for AHL Rockford and Belleville in addition to stops in Switzerland and Sweden. He spent last season with HC Lugano of the Swiss National League, logging two goals and eight assists in 20 appearances.
- The Blue Jackets’ AHL affiliate, the Cleveland Monsters, have re-upped forward Roman Ahcan on a one-year deal for the rest of the season. He’d previously been with Cleveland on a PTO and more than earned his spot on the club with seven goals through his first 10 games. That’s a huge jump in production for the 25-year-old, who had nine goals and 19 points in 52 games with Cleveland last year. The Minnesota native has been with Cleveland ever since graduating from the University of Wisconsin in 2022 but has yet to land an NHL contract.
Vince Dunn To Miss Three More Weeks With Mid-Body Injury
Star Kraken defenseman Vince Dunn may begin skating with the team this weekend but is still around three weeks away from returning from his mid-body injury, general manager Ron Francis told Alison Lukan of the Kraken Hockey Network.
Dunn originally sustained an upper-body injury in Seattle’s second game of the season on Oct. 12. He sat out the next game but returned for just two more, getting banged up again in the middle of an Oct. 17 contest against the Flyers. He hasn’t played since, and while he was initially listed as day-to-day, the team placed him on long-term injured reserve a few days later, ruling him out for the past few weeks.
The 28-year-old was theoretically eligible to come off LTIR ahead of Tuesday’s game against the Blue Jackets, but it’ll still be a while before he’s back on the ice. A three-week return timeline from yesterday keeps him out past Thanksgiving and puts his next game on Nov. 29 against the Sharks, meaning he’s still set to miss around nine contests.
Dunn has been a mainstay on Seattle’s top pairing since he was plucked from the Blues in the 2021 expansion draft, but injury troubles have now limited him to 63 combined appearances since the beginning of last season. In his four appearances in 2024-25, he has a goal and two assists while averaging 18:49 per game, dragged down by leaving multiple games prematurely.
With the Kraken off to a 6-8-1 start despite spending big on Chandler Stephenson and Brandon Montour in free agency, it’s an inauspicious sign for their chances of returning to the postseason. Dunn’s spot at left defense alongside Adam Larsson has been filled by sophomore Ryker Evans, who’s filling in admirably with eight points in 15 appearances while averaging over 20 minutes per game. But Seattle has controlled just 38.3% of expected goals with Evans and Larsson on the ice compared to 49.5% with Dunn and Larsson last year, per MoneyPuck, a key culprit in their defensive struggles. They’re allowing 3.20 goals per game, tied with the Blackhawks for 20th in the league.
Dunn is in the second season of the four-year, $29.4MM deal he signed in 2023 after becoming a restricted free agent.
Central Notes: Brunette, Sissons, Kapanen, Jets
Predators head coach Andrew Brunette isn’t entirely on the hot seat yet, despite his club’s horrific run out of the gate, according to Mike Harrington of The Buffalo News.
The third-year head coach is off to just a 4-9-1 start after the Preds went on a highly-publicized free-agency spending spree, sitting squarely in last place in not only the Central Division but the entire league. General manager Barry Trotz hasn’t thrown his newly installed bench boss under the bus just yet, but he did tell Harrington that he thinks “we don’t have enough chemistry on all our lines.”
“Our 5-on-5 play overall has improved defensively since the start of the year,” Trotz continued. “But we haven’t scored a lot of goals.” His assessment is apt. Very few numbers indicate the Predators should be as bad as they are. They’ve controlled the majority of shot attempts, scoring chances and high-danger chances at 5-on-5 while having one of the league’s best penalty kills and a perfectly average power play (20.8%). Juuse Saros hasn’t been outstanding between the pipes, but he’s still been above average, logging a .904 SV%.
The Preds have two main drags. The first is Scott Wedgewood, who’s been borderline unplayable with a .841 SV% and 4.37 GAA in three appearances. The second is a 7.4% shooting percentage that ranks 31st in the league, precisely what Trotz alluded to. That should correct itself over the coming weeks and get Brunette off the media hot seat, especially with Trotz not seriously considering making a coaching change yet.
Also in Nashville, they may be without veteran pivot Colton Sissons again tonight against Utah. He’s a game-time decision with the upper-body injury that kept him out of Thursday’s game against the Panthers, Brunette told 102.5 The Game’s Nick Kieser.
Here’s more from the Central:
- Kasperi Kapanen will return to the Blues’ lineup tonight against the Capitals, head coach Drew Bannister told Lou Korac of NHL.com. The right-winger had missed the last four games with an upper-body injury. The 28-year-old could have been an unrestricted free agent last summer but signed a one-year, $1MM pact to return to St. Louis on July 1. He’s been an on-again, off-again participant in the lineup this season, even when healthy, limited to just one goal in eight games while averaging south of 12 minutes per night. 2021 first-round pick Zachary Bolduc will sit in the press box to accommodate Kapanen’s return, the team said.
- After today’s 4-1 win against the Stars, the Jets have become the first team in NHL history to win 14 of their first 15 games. It’s not quite the best start to a season in league history – that belongs to the 2012-13 Blackhawks and their 21-0-3 run through the season’s first 24 games. But it’s an impressive feat nonetheless, and it has them six points clear of the Wild for first in the NHL, Western Conference and Central Division.
