NCAA Votes To Expand Collegiate Eligibility To CHL Players

The NCAA’s Division I Council has voted to adopt a rule change in men’s ice hockey, allowing players with previous involvement with professional teams to play for collegiate squads, the organization announced Thursday. As expected, the decision will enable prospects who played major junior hockey in the CHL to transfer to NCAA teams beginning next season.

Under NCAA bylaws, the three CHL sub-leagues (OHL, QMJHL, WHL) had been declared professional organizations despite being comprised solely of major junior players because players receive stipends from their clubs while under Scholarship and Development Agreements. Their restrictions against players with “professional” experience appearing for NCAA Division I member clubs thus previously barred a player who had dressed for a CHL team at any point from going on to play top-level college hockey.

With those restrictions removed, players drafted by NHL teams out of the CHL could theoretically play Division I hockey as an intermediary before signing an entry-level contract with their NHL team. Additionally, players with outstanding NCAA commitments can play CHL hockey without losing their eligibility – a new outlet that quite a few players have already taken advantage of in anticipation of today’s ruling.

The rule change also opens the door for NHL-drafted, unsigned prospects playing Division I hockey to attend their club’s rookie and training camps “as long as they don’t receive compensation above expenses and don’t play in any external scrimmages or exhibitions,” according to PHR’s Gabriel Foley. That means DI players are still unable to participate in NHL preseason action while still enrolled with their school, and they still won’t be able to sign entry-level contracts until they’re ready to turn pro.

It’s good news for both the CHL and NCAA, who expand their potential talent pools by a significant margin with today’s vote. It’s not so good news for other major junior alternatives like the USHL and junior ‘A’ leagues in Canada, such as the BCHL and AJHL, who weren’t affected by the NCAA’s previous rules. Those leagues are no longer unique in being the only viable high-level pre-Division I option for players, meaning they’re likely to lose a lot of top-level talents to the CHL in the coming years.

Panthers Activate, Reassign Justin Sourdif

The Panthers have activated forward Justin Sourdif from season-opening injured reserve and subsequently assigned him to AHL Charlotte, per an announcement from the minor-league club.

Sourdif, 22, landed on SOIR last month after sustaining an upper-body injury about a week into training camp. He was listed as week-to-week and ended up missing around six weeks with the ailment.

A Florida third-round pick in 2020, Sourdif will kick off his third season with Charlotte in the coming days. The 5’11” right-winger/center has made 106 appearances for the AHL franchise since turning pro in 2022, amassing 19 goals and 43 assists for 62 points. The former WHL champion with the Edmonton Oil Kings earned his NHL debut in the early going of last season, going without a point in three appearances for the Panthers in October before being reassigned to the minors and spending the rest of the campaign in Charlotte.

Sourdif produced over a point per game over his final two seasons in major junior play, a feat he’s understandably yet to accomplish at the professional level. He’s getting closer, though. After scoring only seven goals in 48 games during his rookie campaign in Charlotte, he upped his offensive production to 38 points (12 G, 26 A) in 58 games last season. A pending restricted free agent, he could be in line to get another brief NHL look later on in 2024-25.

Sharks Reassign Lucas Carlsson

Nov. 7: Carlsson has cleared waivers, per Friedman. He’ll head to the AHL to get his 2024-25 campaign started.

Nov. 6: The Sharks have activated defenseman Lucas Carlsson from season-opening injured reserve and subsequently placed him on waivers for the purposes of assignment to AHL San Jose, Elliotte Friedman of Sportsnet reports.

Carlsson, 27, joined the Sharks in free agency on a two-year, two-way deal. The Swedish blue-liner had spent the previous three seasons in the Panthers organization, spending most of his time there on assignment to AHL Charlotte aside from an extended 40-game run on the NHL roster in 2021-22.

His NHL journey began with the Blackhawks, who drafted him in the fourth round in 2016. He spent two post-draft seasons with Brynäs IF of the Swedish Hockey League before arriving in North America, suiting up with Chicago’s AHL affiliate in Rockford.

Carlsson spent three seasons in the Blackhawks organization, recording two assists in 18 appearances before he was traded to Florida in April 2021. In total, he added 42 appearances to his career NHL tally with the Panthers, bringing his career stats to three goals and eight assists for 11 points with a +6 rating in 60 games, averaging 12:50 per contest with a 53.0 CF%.

At the minor-league level, the left-shot defender is a premier two-way threat. He led the league in goals by a defenseman in 2022-23 with 20 in 61 games, and he earned a spot in the AHL All-Star Classic last season amid a 15-goal, 39-point season in 52 contests with Charlotte that was cut short by injuries.

There could be some interest in him on the waiver wire given that offensive AHL pedigree and decent possession metrics in his brief NHL minutes. Having another year left on his contract could be a significant enough deterrent to sway away potential claimers, though.

While he’ll start the season in the minors, Carlsson will likely be among the Sharks’ chief call-up options if injuries strike the back end. He’ll be a major boon to an AHL San Jose club that’s already near the top of their division.

Bruins Sign Loke Johansson To Three-Year Entry-Level Contract

The Bruins announced they’ve signed defense prospect Loke Johansson to a three-year, entry-level contract. It will carry a cap hit of $860K, but minor-league salary and bonus details were not disclosed.

Johansson, 19 next month, was a sixth-round pick of the Bruins in this year’s draft (No. 186 overall). The stay-at-home defender was selected mainly due to his size – he’s already 6’3″ and 214 lbs.

He’s not just a heavy hitter and enforcer, though. Johansson flashed legitimate upside last year playing professionally in Sweden. A part of the AIK organization, he had 13 points and a +5 rating in 33 appearances with their U-20 club. He also made his professional debut, appearing in 19 games for the senior club in the second-tier HockeyAllsvenskan while holding his own with an assist and a +1 rating.

The Stockholm native made the jump to North America for 2024-25, just not to play pro hockey. He’s remaining at the major junior level after being selected in the CHL Import Draft by the QMJHL’s Moncton Wildcats. Through 15 games with the club, he has a goal and four assists with 16 PIMs and a +9 rating.

Elite Prospects calls his brand of hockey “simple,” adding that “he’s a technically sound skater, able to cover a lot of ground with his four-way mobility and general shiftiness.” Since he wasn’t selected from a CHL club and instead arrived in Moncton after being drafted, he’s not subject to the NHL-CHL transfer agreement and could now theoretically head to AHL Providence at any time after signing his ELC. It’s fair to assume the Bruins will leave him on loan to Moncton for the remainder of the season for development purposes, though.

As such, Johansson’s contract will slide for at least one season as he won’t appear in at least 10 NHL contests in 2024-25. The same could happen next season if he doesn’t get into 10 games in 2025-26. If there are signing bonuses in the contract, the cap hit of the deal will decrease slightly with each slide, as those get paid out regardless of whether the contract goes into effect.

Lucas Johansen Signs With AHL Henderson

Former Capitals first-round pick Lucas Johansen is joining the Golden Knights organization on a one-year contract with AHL Henderson, per a team announcement.

Johansen, 27 next week, had remained in the Washington organization through last season. He was mainly a fixture with the team’s AHL club in Hershey, though, appearing in just nine NHL games after being selected 28th overall in the 2016 draft.

A career-high six of those NHL games came for Johansen in 2023-24. He recorded his second career NHL assist and added a +1 rating, four shots on goal, and seven blocks while averaging 14:16 per game. With so little NHL experience, he quickly met the requirements for Group VI unrestricted free agency and hit the open market a year ahead of schedule.

Johansen inked a professional tryout with the Predators in September, hoping to stick around the former stomping grounds of his older brother, Ryan Johansen. However, he was released from the NHL camp less than two weeks later and was subsequently let go from a brief tryout with their AHL affiliate, the Milwaukee Admirals.

He heads to Nevada to join the Silver Knights on a full-fledged contract for the rest of the season, not a PTO. The British Columbia native brings 257 games of AHL experience to Vegas’ feeder club, all of which came in a Hershey Bears sweater. The 6’2″ left-shot defenseman totaled 20 goals, 72 assists, and 92 points with a +11 rating and is coming off back-to-back Calder Cup championships.

In the NHL’s eyes, Johansen remains an unrestricted free agent and can sign with any club. However, Vegas is the most likely, given their front office displayed enough interest to bring him in on a minor-league deal. If an NHL team signed him to a two-way contract, he would need to clear waivers to return to the AHL.

Senators Notes: Zub, Pinto, Perron

The Senators will indeed have Artem Zub back in the lineup to face the Islanders tonight, per TSN 1200 Ottawa. Zub had missed the last nine games with a concussion he sustained early in the team’s third game of the season against the Kings back on Oct. 14, but he’s been skating with the team for around a week, and it became clear yesterday that he was likely to return today at home.

It will be Jacob Bernard-Docker coming out of the lineup to make way for Zub’s return, a bit of a surprise given his exemplary possession play (55.3 CF%, fourth on the team). Travis Hamonic remains in the lineup despite going without a point and recording a -5 rating with a 46.7 CF% through 12 appearances. Zub will skate in his usual top-pairing role alongside Jake Sanderson.

Zub posted a +1 rating, one block and three hits in his three regular-season contests last month while averaging 13:58 per game, a number that was dragged down significantly given he sustained his concussion in the first period of his third game. He recorded a career-high 20 assists and 25 points with 122 blocks and 139 hits for the Sens last year in 69 games. Head injuries are becoming a bit of an unfortunate trend for Zub, who missed seven games early last season with a concussion as well and 12 games in 2022-23 with a fractured jaw.

There’s more on the Senators:

  • Shane Pinto skated before today’s game, but he didn’t take line rushes and will remain out against the Isles, per TSN 1200. Bruce Garrioch of Postmedia reported Wednesday that he might be an option to return, but instead, he’ll miss a seventh straight game with an undisclosed injury. He’s still listed as week-to-week but appears close to a return if his presence in tonight’s game was questionable 24 hours beforehand.
  • The same goes for David Perron, who remains around the club for home games and practiced today but remains out of the lineup while on personal leave. The 36-year-old, who signed a two-year, $8MM contract in free agency over the summer, had no points and a -4 rating in five contests before departing the team midway through last month.

Bruins’ Andrew Peeke Out Week-To-Week

An upper-body injury is expected to keep Bruins defenseman Andrew Peeke on the shelf for multiple weeks, head coach Jim Montgomery told Joe Haggerty of Boston Sports Journal.

Peeke sustained the injury on Tuesday night versus the Maple Leafs, leaving the game in the first period after being hit by Max Pacioretty (video link via Sportsnet). Pacioretty was not penalized on the play.

A second-round pick of the Blue Jackets back in 2016, Peeke has flashed upside as a physical stay-at-home defender but was overtaxed in a top-four role in Columbus during his first couple of years as a full-time NHLer. He’s received reduced minutes since the beginning of the 2023-24 campaign and was acquired by the Bruins at the trade deadline for a 2027 third-round pick and Jakub Zbořil. He’s played a third-pairing role on a nightly basis for the Bruins through the first month of this season, however, only being healthy scratched once. The right-shot defenseman is averaging 16:12 per game and has logged two assists, ranking third on the team with 21 blocks.

The Bruins will look to Mason Lohrei and Parker Wotherspoon to factor in on a nightly basis with Peeke out after both were healthy scratches multiple times in the early going. Boston will likely make a recall from AHL Providence in the coming days to have an extra healthy defenseman on hand, and since they have an open roster spot, they can do so without placing Peeke on injured reserve. That could be veteran Jordan Oesterle, who’s appeared in parts of 10 straight NHL seasons with the Oilers, Blackhawks, Coyotes, Red Wings, and Flames and has six points in six games for the P-Bruins to start the season.

Canucks Notes: Demko, Forbort, Joshua

The Canucks have waited a long time to see Thatcher Demko return to practice since exiting their first-round series against the Predators last season with a mysterious knee injury, and it finally came to pass yesterday, the team relayed. Vancouver has received expert goaltending from late-summer pickup Kevin Lankinen in the meantime (.923 SV%, 2.09 GAA), but getting last year’s Vezina Trophy runner-up back in the fold is still top of mind.

It’s the most demonstrable step toward a return that Demko has taken in months, although his return to practice has been on the horizon for the past week. He began working off-ice with goalie coach Marko Torenius last Friday and had an appointment to earn his medical clearance to practice earlier this week.

Demko told reporters during training camp that the specific injury was to the popliteus muscle in one of his knees. This small muscle in the back of the leg plays a key role in stabilizing the knee and allowing it to flex. Instances of popliteal injury in professional sports are rare, even more so in hockey, leading to much uncertainty around his return timeline over the past few months.

Demko, who will be 29 next month, had a career-best 35 wins, .918 SV%, 2.45 GAA, five shutouts, and 21.2 GSAA last season. In addition to finishing second in Vezina Trophy voting, he was selected to the 2024 NHL All-Star Game and was a Second-Team All-Star.

There’s more on the Canucks:

  • Injury news isn’t as positive regarding defenseman Derek Forbort, who could be sidelined for over a month with the knee injury he sustained in practice Monday, reports Irfaan Gaffar of Daily Faceoff. Forbort missed Tuesday’s win over the Ducks with the injury and missed most of October due to personal reasons, limiting him to just one appearance since Oct. 15. Since signing a one-year, $1.5MM contract in Vancouver in free agency, he has one assist and a -2 rating in four appearances while averaging 16:30 per game. The physical left-shot defender has registered just one hit and has controlled 51.8% of shot attempts and 33.3% of expected goals at even strength.
  • Dakota Joshua is still close to returning after undergoing surgery to remove testicular cancer over the offseason but won’t do so today versus the Kings, head coach Rick Tocchet told Sportsnet’s Iain MacIntyre. Tocchet said his absence from yesterday’s practice and unavailability today isn’t indicative of a setback but instead of the team’s cautious approach to his recovery. Joshua has missed all 11 Canucks games this season after signing a four-year, $13MM extension to stay in Vancouver a few days before the start of free agency.

Bruins Place Max Jones On Waivers

Nov. 6: Jones cleared waivers, per Friedman. He’s on his way to the AHL.

Nov. 5: The Bruins have placed winger Max Jones on waivers with intentions to assign him to AHL Providence, Elliotte Friedman of Sportsnet reports Tuesday.

Jones, 26, is in the first season of a two-year, $2MM contract he signed with Boston over the summer after being non-tendered by the Ducks. Despite his seven-figure cap hit, he’s played sparingly this season. He’s been scratched for nine out of the Bruins’ 13 games this season, including their back-to-back contests against the Flyers and Kraken over the weekend. When dressed, he’s averaged 11:13 per game and has no points and a -4 rating. His possession numbers have been abysmal – the Bruins control just 29.7% of shot attempts and 14.3% of expected goals with Jones on the ice at even strength.

With Tyler Johnson now in the fold after finally inking a one-year, league-minimum deal yesterday following a months-long stint on a professional tryout, there was likely a corresponding roster move coming. It wasn’t out of necessity – Boston was at the 23-man roster limit with no rush to open space – but they’ve only carried one extra forward and one extra defenseman this season. Given that Jones ranks last on the team in nearly every meaningful statistic, it’s no surprise that he hit the wire.

If Jones clears waivers, it would mark his first AHL assignment in five years. The Anaheim 2016 first-round pick last played for their AHL affiliate in San Diego in the 2018-19 campaign.

All of Jones’ 31 career goals and 62 career points have come in a Ducks jersey. He made 258 regular-season appearances for the team over six years before being let go in June.

The Bruins will clear Jones’ $1MM cap hit tomorrow, regardless of whether he’s claimed. If he makes it through waivers and is subsequently assigned to Providence, that cap hit is below the $1.15MM maximum buriable threshold, so it won’t count against Boston’s books. He’s still under contract through the 2025-26 campaign and will be an unrestricted free agent upon expiry.