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Blue Jackets Sign Brendan Smith To Two-Way Deal

November 24, 2025 at 1:45 pm CDT | by Josh Erickson Leave a Comment

The Blue Jackets signed Brendan Smith to a two-way contract, according to a team announcement. Since he was not placed on waivers today, he will be rostered for tonight’s game against the Capitals. He had played the first several weeks of the season on a professional tryout with AHL Cleveland after being released from a camp tryout with Columbus.

While it’s a delayed resolution, Smith finally gets the NHL contract he’d hoped for ever since signing his PTO with the Jackets back in August. It was the first time in 14 NHL seasons that Smith had needed to settle for a tryout. Because he was already playing in the Jackets’ system, today’s news essentially amounts to a call-up. The past few weeks in Cleveland marked his first minor-league action since being waived by the Rangers in February 2018. In 11 games for the Monsters, the depth defenseman recorded one assist with eight penalty minutes.

Smith was never known for his offense at the NHL level, but he was nearly a point-per-game player in college and had good scoring lines in the AHL in the early stages of his career with the Red Wings organization. That makes his lack of production in Cleveland underwhelming, particularly with his -5 rating being tied for the second-worst on the team.

Nonetheless, the 36-year-old is getting another shot on an NHL roster. Columbus has been down a veteran option for most of the season, with Erik Gudbranson missing all but four games with upper-body and hip injuries. Dysin Mayo has been rostered as a seventh defenseman for a good chunk of the campaign as a result, but they’ve shown an extreme reluctance to play the righty. He’s only appeared once despite being rostered for 13 games.

The Blue Jackets presumably desired a more experienced option for the press box and to challenge the struggling Jake Christiansen for third-pairing minutes, and they’ll get that in Smith. A first-round pick by Detroit back in 2007, he’s gone on to appear in 726 NHL games with 39 goals, 105 assists, and 144 points with a -15 rating. If he gets into a game for the Blue Jackets, they’ll be his sixth NHL team and his third in the past three years following recent stints with the Devils and Stars.

Columbus Blue Jackets| Transactions Brendan Smith

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Penguins Sign Peyton Kettles To Entry-Level Contract

November 24, 2025 at 12:59 pm CDT | by Josh Erickson Leave a Comment

The Penguins announced they’ve signed defense prospect Peyton Kettles to a three-year, entry-level deal. Financial terms were not disclosed.

Kettles is making good use of his spare time after undergoing shoulder surgery last week, which has him out indefinitely. The 6’6″ righty was an early second-rounder in this year’s draft, going to Pittsburgh with the No. 39 overall pick. Drafted with the hope of him peaking as a cornerstone shutdown piece in the Pens’ top four, he had already been the subject of a blockbuster trade that saw the WHL’s Kelowna Rockets surrender a package that included five draft picks to acquire him from the Swift Current Broncos.

Unfortunately, his shoulder injury – plus an ailment that inhibited him during Pittsburgh’s training camp – means he’s only made five appearances this season. He’s shown up and shown out with a goal and two assists with 15 PIMs and a +2 rating, but the missed time is a tough blow, particularly for a player archetype that usually requires a longer developmental path. He was ranked as the Pens’ No. 10 prospect in the preseason by Elite Prospects, third among defenders behind Harrison Brunicke and Owen Pickering.

Nonetheless, the Pens like what they’ve seen from Kettles enough to secure his signing rights until he becomes UFA-eligible at age 27 or after seven accrued seasons, whichever comes first. Kettles will receive the signing bonuses he’s awarded in his ELC, if any, but since he’s not expected to play in the NHL this year, the other aspects of the contract will slide to the 2026-27 season. He’ll be eligible for a second slide if he plays under 10 NHL games next year, meaning his contract could go into effect as late as 2027-28 and expire as late as 2030.

Since Kettles’ deal is slide-eligible, he does not count against Pittsburgh’s 50-contract limit if he’s not on the active roster.

Pittsburgh Penguins| Transactions Peyton Kettles

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Lightning’s Erik Cernak Out Week-To-Week

November 24, 2025 at 11:29 am CDT | by Josh Erickson 5 Comments

Lightning head coach Jon Cooper announced to reporters, including the team’s Benjamin Pierce, that defenseman Erik Černák has sustained an undisclosed injury and is out week-to-week. It’s not related to the lower-body issue that kept Černák out of a pair of games last week. Cooper also said that center Brayden Point won’t play tonight against the Flyers after leaving Saturday’s game against the Capitals with an undisclosed injury, but he’s day-to-day and shouldn’t miss more than a couple of games.

With Černák’s injury, the Bolts recalled defender Maxim Groshev from AHL Syracuse. They’ve had an open roster spot for the last few games, so no corresponding move is necessary.

Černák’s landing back on the injured list leaves Tampa without three of its top four defenders once again. Victor Hedman has already missed six games with an undisclosed issue and won’t be back in the lineup until Dec. 2 at the earliest. Ryan McDonagh has missed the same amount of time but could be back sooner since, unlike Hedman, he hasn’t been transferred to long-term injured reserve.

Despite the pileup, the Lightning have managed to win four times in that six-game stretch. They sit second in the Atlantic Division with a 12-7-2 record, one point back of the Red Wings with one game in hand. There are plenty of reasons for optimism, considering they managed to rebound from the 1-4-2 hole they put themselves in to start the year and have largely carried that momentum through a stretch of brutal luck. Unfortunately, their top right-shot option on the blue line in Černák won’t be a part of that run for the foreseeable future.

Černák continues to be arguably Tampa’s best pure shutdown option. After recording a career-high 21 points and a +29 rating in 76 appearances last season, he’d rattled off four assists and an even rating through 19 appearances in 2025-26. While the Bolts have been outscored 16-12 with Černák on the ice at 5-on-5 this year, on pace for the worst goal share of his career, he’s been the victim of some poor goaltending. His pairing with McDonagh has controlled 57.6% of expected goals together, per MoneyPuck. With McDonagh sidelined, Černák also elevated rookie Charle-Edouard D’Astous to a 53.8 xGF%.

Groshev, who was drafted as a winger but has since converted to defense, won’t be making his NHL debut in Černák’s absence, it appears. They were already rostering six healthy defenders, so Groshev will serve as injury insurance on the blue line, who can also step in at forward if needed. A third-round pick in 2020 out of Russia, the 6’2″ rearguard is in his third season with Syracuse but has yet to make his NHL debut. He’s managed six assists through 17 games this season and has a team-high +8 rating, leaving the Bolts intrigued by the 23-year-old’s defensive upside.

As for the weekend’s news that both Point and superstar Nikita Kucherov departed the Washington game with injuries, they’ve clearly avoided a worst-case scenario. Kucherov wasn’t carrying any injury designation at today’s practice, while Point, who’s struggled this year with just three goals and 11 points in 21 games and could’ve used a reset anyway, won’t have an extended absence.

Tampa Bay Lightning| Transactions Brayden Point| Erik Cernak| Maxim Groshev

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Flyers’ Jett Luchanko Traded In OHL

November 24, 2025 at 10:44 am CDT | by Josh Erickson 3 Comments

For the second season in a row, Flyers center Jett Luchanko was returned to his junior team weeks after making Philadelphia’s opening night roster. Unlike last season, though, the 19-year-old pivot won’t be finishing the year with the OHL’s Guelph Storm. They’ve dealt their captain to the Brantford Bulldogs for draft-eligible center Layne Gallacher and four draft picks, the team announced.

The Storm moving Luchanko was a foregone conclusion. Whether the 2024 No. 13 overall pick will be a fixture on the Flyers next season remains to be seen, but it is known that this is his last year in junior hockey. It’s either the NHL or the AHL’s Lehigh Valley Phantoms for Luchanko in 2025-26. Guelph, which hasn’t advanced past the first round of the OHL playoffs since winning the championship in 2019 and missed them entirely last season, was recently awarded the 2027 Memorial Cup. Given they’ll need to put up a competitive performance at the end of next season against the OHL, QMJHL, and WHL champions, the immediate expectation was that Luchanko would be exchanged for a haul of assets that they could use to improve their outlook for 2026-27.

For his part, Luchanko took the demotion back to Guelph and his impending departure in stride. Despite playing in only 11 of their 24 games so far, the playmaking pivot had already rocketed up to third on the team in scoring with two goals and 15 assists for 17 points.

Luchanko has been one of the OHL’s best playmakers since his draft year despite toiling on an otherwise weak Guelph roster. Since the beginning of the 2023-24 season, Luchanko’s 104 assists in 125 games rank 13th in the league. Among players with at least 100 appearances during that time, his 1.18 points per game rank 18th.

The 5’11” center was viewed by most as a reach at 13th overall, but the Flyers have been impressed enough with his early development to give him a pair of four-game trials before sending him back to Guelph. His stat line was the same each time: no points with a -3 rating. He’s totaled four shots on goal and eight hits while going 48.3% in the faceoff dot and averaging 11:31 per game.

It’ll be particularly interesting to see how much Luchanko’s production takes off in Brantford. Now in his DY+2, a major explosion should be expected – particularly on a Bulldogs offense that already boasts the league’s two leading scorers in Kraken prospect Jake O’Brien (9-31–40 in 21 GP) and Wild draftee Adam Benák (13-25–38 in 21 GP). That’s not their only star power, either. Their roster now includes five first-round picks: O’Brien, Luchanko, Chicago’s Marek Vanacker, St. Louis’ Adam Jiříček, and Toronto’s Ben Danford.

As such, the Bulldogs have yet to lose a game in regulation. They’re 18-0-5 through 23 games and are the overwhelming favorite to take home both the OHL title and the Memorial Cup at season’s end. Since being established as the Hamilton Bulldogs in 2015-16, they’ve won the OHL title twice – 2018 and 2022 – but didn’t manage to convert either of those into a Memorial Cup victory.

OHL| Philadelphia Flyers| Transactions Jett Luchanko

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Blues Terminate Alexandre Texier’s Contract

November 23, 2025 at 1:20 pm CDT | by Josh Erickson 8 Comments

Nov. 23: After much back-and-forth, the Alexander Texier Blues stalemate has reached an end. As expected, the St. Louis forward cleared waivers, and as per the team, his contract has been terminated. Texier is now an unrestricted free agent. The Montreal Canadiens are known as to having interest, the likely favorite to land the speedy two-way winger, with another unknown Eastern Conference team in the running. This morning it was noted that the Ottawa Senators have also expressed interest, but it is unclear if they are the second suitor.

Nonetheless, we will likely find out soon, as Texier is healthy, and likely eager to sign quickly and make an impact with his new club.

Nov. 22: Texier did not report to the minors and he has been placed on unconditional waivers for the purpose of a contract termination, reports Stephen Whyno of the Associated Press.  If he passes through unclaimed as expected on Sunday at 1:00 PM CT, he will become an unrestricted free agent and his $2.1MM AAV will be off the books for the Blues entirely.

He clearly has gotten a head start on talking to other teams even while still signed with St. Louis.  Pierre LeBrun of TSN and The Athletic reports that nine teams are believed to have shown interest in signing Texier when he hits the open market but Texier and his agent Dan Milstein of Gold Star Sports Management have whittled the field down to two Eastern Conference teams.

Nov. 21: Texier has cleared waivers after being placed on them yesterday and has been assigned to AHL Springfield, the team announced. If he fails to report to the minors, he’ll be in breach of contract and can trigger a contract termination.

Nov. 20: Texier has considered asking for a contract termination to become an unrestricted free agent, reports Elliotte Friedman of Sportsnet. He remains on the Blues’ roster for now but has played just once since Oct. 28, sitting as a healthy scratch in nine of their last 10 games.

Texier, the first player in NHL history drafted directly from France’s Ligue Magnus, signed a two-year, $4.2MM contract with the Blues in June 2024 after they acquired his signing rights from the Blue Jackets. He was coming off a career-high 12 goals and 30 points in 78 games with Columbus, averaging north of 15 minutes per game, but the team wasn’t interested in re-signing him as they opened roster spots for a younger wave of prospects.

The 26-year-old just hasn’t been a fit in St. Louis. He made only 31 appearances last season and lost 15 games to illness and injury, meaning he spent nearly half the year in the press box. When dressed, he delivered career-average production on a per-game basis, notching six goals and five assists for 11 points. He did so in reduced ice time, averaging closer to 12:30 per game, as his role as a penalty killer in Columbus was stripped entirely from him with the Blues.

This season, Texier’s ice time has been slashed further to 10:15 per game. He’s only made eight out of 20 possible appearances, on track to finish with a similar workload to last season. Skating most commonly in fourth-line deployment with Nick Bjugstad and Nathan Walker, he’s logged one assist and nine hits. Perhaps more importantly, his chance generation is way down. He averaged 1.61 shots on goal per game last year – even more than he managed during his breakout year in Columbus – but that figure has nearly halved to 0.88 in 2025-26.

A contract termination would allow Texier to be uninhibited by his above-market-value $2.1MM cap hit as he looks for a new home. Still, he would be walking away from roughly 75% of his identical base salary for this season to do so. Whether he desires to remain in the NHL also remains to be seen. He’s made a move back to Europe before to be closer to his family in France, asking the Blue Jackets to spend the 2022-23 season on loan to Switzerland’s ZSC Lions, which they granted.

Newsstand| St. Louis Blues| Transactions Alexandre Texier

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Olle Lycksell Clears Waivers

November 22, 2025 at 1:02 pm CDT | by Josh Erickson Leave a Comment

Saturday: Lycksell has cleared waivers for the second straight month, Garrioch reports.  That will pave the way for him to be reassigned to AHL Belleville.

Friday: The Senators have placed winger Olle Lycksell on waivers, Bruce Garrioch of Postmedia reports. He hasn’t played since Nov. 8 and has been on injured reserve while in concussion protocol, so today’s news indicates he’s been cleared to return. Because he was on IR, he won’t count against Ottawa’s active roster while on waivers and will instead carry a non-roster designation for the next 24 hours.

Lycksell, 26, was a sixth-round pick by the Flyers back in 2017. He remained in the Philadelphia organization until last summer, when he became a Group VI unrestricted free agent and signed a two-way contract with Ottawa. In parts of three seasons on the Flyers’ NHL roster, he churned out a 1-10–11 scoring line in 45 appearances with a -6 rating. On the whole, he had underwhelming possession impacts with a 49.2 CF% at 5-on-5 and averaged 10:53 of ice time per game. Combined with a relative lack of physicality, he wasn’t much of a fit in a bottom-six role and struggled to land a consistent spot despite some high-end scoring numbers in the minors. Over his three seasons with the Flyers’ AHL affiliate in Lehigh Valley, he was nearly a point-per-game player with a 52-76–128 scoring line in 134 appearances.

Since he signed a two-way deal with the Sens and he wasn’t viewed as a threat to grab a top-nine job on the wings, many expected him to land on waivers during training camp. He did just that, but wasn’t assigned to AHL Belleville, at least not immediately. He’s remained on Ottawa’s active roster for the vast majority of the season, aside from a four-day demotion to Belleville in October and his recent IR placement.

Lycksell was used sparingly as an extra forward, though. He hasn’t appeared in more than two consecutive games this season and has just six total appearances, including just one since Oct. 28. His showing was a mixed bag. He did average a shot on goal per game and recorded his second career NHL tally, but his possession impacts weren’t good in sheltered fourth-line minutes. At 5-on-5 with Lycksell on the ice, the Senators have been outscored 4-2, outshot 33-23, and outchanced 34-30. That’s despite Lycksell receiving just one defensive zone start this year.

Given his minor-league success, Lycksell might generate some interest on the waiver wire, but his poor defensive impacts this season and lack of demonstrated upside at the NHL level point toward him clearing. Since they’re comfortable enough to expose him to waivers, he might be in line for a lengthier stint in Belleville, where he went without a point in two appearances last month.

Ottawa Senators| Transactions| Waivers Olle Lycksell

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Kings Reassign Pheonix Copley To AHL

November 21, 2025 at 9:21 pm CDT | by Josh Erickson Leave a Comment

Friday: As expected, Copley has been returned to the minors, per a team announcement.

Thursday: The Kings have recalled goaltender Pheonix Copley from AHL Ontario, John Hoven of Mayor’s Manor reports. He will back up Anton Forsberg on Thursday night in San Jose. It wasn’t a scheduled start for No. 1 option Darcy Kuemper, and he’ll now get the night off entirely by not having to make the jaunt up to the Bay Area. Defenseman Drew Doughty was moved to injured reserve to open a roster spot, the team announced.

Tonight is the first half of a back-to-back for the Kings. Kuemper will start tomorrow as they return home to face the Bruins. The Kings could either leave Copley on the roster for Friday’s game as well to give Forsberg the night off or have Forsberg dress as Kuemper’s backup as usual while returning Copley to the minors.

If Copley enters tonight’s game in relief of Forsberg, it will be his first NHL action in over a year. The Kings’ third-stringer was claimed off waivers by the Lightning during the preseason, but he was traded back to them in exchange for future considerations after not suiting up for the Bolts. He then cleared waivers once back with Los Angeles. That short stint on Tampa’s roster aside, Copley is now in his fourth consecutive season in the Kings organization. He had an extended stint as a tandem option in the 2022-23 season, making a career-high 35 starts, but has been relegated to a No. 3 role since then, with nine total appearances over the last three years.

The 33-year-old Alaska native has played seven games for Ontario since being reclaimed off waivers. He’s struggled to the tune of a 3.84 GAA and .870 SV% with a 2-5-0 record. Since he’s not being summoned to play, his performance isn’t of much concern. He’s been significantly outpaced by 25-year-old prospect Erik Portillo, who’s rebounding nicely after a rough AHL showing last year with a .915 SV%, 2.26 GAA, and 5-1-1 record in nine games. If either Kuemper or Forsberg were to miss any significant time, he would likely be the recall option over Copley at this stage.

As for Doughty, his move to IR is purely procedural. General manager Ken Holland said yesterday he’s set to miss another two to three weeks with his lower-body injury.

Los Angeles Kings| Transactions Drew Doughty| Pheonix Copley

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Devils Reassign Ethan Edwards

November 21, 2025 at 6:57 pm CDT | by Josh Erickson Leave a Comment

Friday: Edwards has been sent back to Utica, per a team announcement.  He didn’t see any game action with New Jersey while on recall.

Monday: The Devils announced they’ve recalled defenseman Ethan Edwards from AHL Utica. New Jersey placed center Cody Glass on injured reserve, retroactive to Nov. 12, in the corresponding move.

After an impressive training camp, the 23-year-old Edwards lands his first recall in his first professional season. The 5’10” lefty was a fourth-round pick in 2020 from the Spruce Grove Saints of the junior ’A’ AJHL before jumping south of the border, first with USHL Sioux City before embarking on a four-year run at the University of Michigan. Edwards was a consistent force on the Wolverines’ blue line, checking in as a top-four puck-mover who played more physically than one would expect from his slight frame. He was named to the Big 10’s Second All-Star Team following his senior season, in which he notched a career-best 5-16–21 scoring line in 36 games, before signing his entry-level deal with Jersey last March.

Although the two-year contract didn’t take effect until this season, he still finished out the 2024-25 season with Utica on a tryout basis. In his first 10 professional games, Edwards notched three assists and a +3 rating. He entered this year as the No. 9 prospect in the system, according to Elite Prospects, and made a legitimate push for a roster spot with two points and four scoring chances in four preseason games. He ended up being a very late cut, though, and started the year in Utica as expected.

Through 13 games in the AHL, Edwards hasn’t exploded offensively but is still chugging along with one goal, four assists, and a -1 rating. The Devils need an additional offensive-minded option with Dougie Hamilton still sidelined with an undisclosed injury, though, and Edwards fits that bill. With Hamilton, Johnathan Kovacevic, and Brett Pesce all out, their top-four group is still strong thanks to a breakout Simon Nemec, but they’re riding a patchwork third-pairing of fringe NHLers Dennis Cholowski and Colton White. As White is pointless with a -1 rating through four games and is averaging under 12 minutes per night, it wouldn’t be surprising to see him get a game or two in the press box for Edwards to make his NHL debut, at least until Hamilton’s able to return (which should be soon).

The Devils previously announced Glass was week-to-week with an upper-body injury, so he’ll be out significantly longer than when he’s first eligible to come off IR on Wednesday. The 26-year-old pivot had only played four games since missing seven with another upper-body issue before exiting the lineup again last week. Through 10 appearances this season, he’s got three goals on 19 shots while averaging 11:59 of ice time per game.

New Jersey Devils| Transactions Cody Glass| Ethan Edwards

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Sabres Reassign Mason Geertsen

November 21, 2025 at 2:00 pm CDT | by Josh Erickson 4 Comments

Nov. 21: Geertsen has cleared waivers and was reassigned to AHL Rochester, per a team announcement.

Nov. 20: The Sabres have placed enforcer Mason Geertsen on waivers, Elliotte Friedman of Sportsnet reports Thursday. Once he’s removed from the active roster tomorrow, that will make way for Buffalo to activate winger Jason Zucker from injured reserve, as head coach Lindy Ruff said yesterday would be the case (via Paul Hamilton of WGR Sports Radio 550).

Geertsen, 30, signed a two-year, two-way contract with Buffalo over the offseason, paying him $775K in the NHL and $425K in the AHL each season. Most expected him to land on waivers during the preseason. The 6’4″ heavyweight only had 25 NHL games to his name entering training camp. All of them came in a limited role with the Devils in the 2021-22 season. While his primary position is defense, the left-shot played as a winger to get into the lineup, recording five fights and 58 hits while averaging 6:57 of ice time per game.

The Devils waived Geertsen the following season, spending the year with AHL Utica before reaching unrestricted free agency in 2023. He signed a two-year, two-way deal with the Golden Knights but spent the entirety of it in the minors. Across his last three AHL campaigns with Utica and Henderson, the former 2013 fourth-round pick of the Avalanche had just 10 goals and 19 points in 150 games, playing about as pure an enforcer role as today’s era allows.

That made Geertsen’s inclusion as depth muscle on Buffalo’s opening-night roster all the more surprising. Modern-day enforcers at the NHL level are still usually able to put up respectable point totals when skating in the minors – Zack MacEwen and Scott Sabourin, to name a pair. Geertsen doesn’t fit that bill. As expected, his role was incredibly limited as a result. He only got into five games for Buffalo, including four of their first six contests, but has now been a healthy scratch in seven straight games – even as injuries to Zucker, Zach Benson, and others have piled up.

In those five appearances, Geertsen remained without an NHL point and recorded a -1 rating with eight hits while averaging 4:07 per game. He managed just two shot attempts and didn’t get into a fight, only logging a tripping minor and an unsportsmanlike conduct penalty for 12 total PIMs. Geertsen shouldn’t have any trouble clearing waivers and will play a fourth-line role, if he sees much ice time at all, in Rochester after he clears.

Buffalo Sabres| Transactions| Waivers Mason Geertsen

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Flames’ Samuel Honzek Likely Done For Season

November 21, 2025 at 1:39 pm CDT | by Josh Erickson 2 Comments

Flames center Samuel Honzek’s regular season is over after undergoing upper-body surgery, Pat Steinberg of Sportsnet 960 reports. He’ll be out for six months, meaning a potential return in May if Calgary makes the playoffs and makes it that far. Considering they’ve been in last place for most of the season with a 6-13-3 record, though, meaning he’s all but played his last hockey of 2025-26.

That’s a jarring change from Honzek’s initial week-to-week timeline. The 21-year-old was injured in last weekend’s game against the Jets when he collided with teammate Mikael Backlund in open ice, leaving the game and not returning. Such a lengthy recovery timeline indicates he sustained potentially significant shoulder damage or a collarbone fracture.

That collision ended what was a disappointing stretch for the 2023 first-round pick. Drafted 16th overall two years ago, the 6’4″ Slovak winger was a late inclusion on the opening night roster after it was apparent Martin Pospisil would miss significant time. While he’s gotten his first extended taste of NHL time, he hasn’t been able to do much with it. Despite being stapled to the left wing with Backlund and Blake Coleman in a top-nine role, Honzek only managed two goals and four points in 18 appearances. That’s no doubt influenced by a lack of power-play usage, which has limited his ice time to 12:21 per game.

Offense has been a consistent concern in Honzek’s game since being drafted, though. He had 56 points in 41 games for the WHL’s Vancouver Giants in his draft year but dipped back under the point-per-game mark for them in 2023-24. Upon turning pro last season, he only scored eight goals and 21 points in 52 games for AHL Calgary. That’s not a bad scoring line for a first-year pro, but for someone with his draft pedigree, the Flames were definitely looking for more production. Nonetheless, he still ranked as the Flames’ No. 2 prospect entering the season, according to Elite Prospects.

The good news is that Honzek was well on his way to establishing his floor as a third-line checking piece. While his unit with Backlund and Coleman hasn’t been explosive offensively, they’ve had great two-way chemistry and have been among the league’s better defensive forward lines. They’re only allowing 1.98 expected goals per 60 minutes at even strength, per MoneyPuck. That’s sixth in the league out of 37 forward trios with at least 100 minutes together this season.

Honzek will remain waiver-exempt next season in what will be the final year of his entry-level contract. With 10 months out of competitive action by the time he suits up in training camp next year and his point production turning pro lacking, it’ll be a storyline to watch to see if the Flames send him to the AHL out of the gate in 2026-27 to try to build up his scoring confidence.

The immediate result will be consistently elevated minutes for fellow first-rounder Connor Zary for the remainder of the season. After a round of drawn-out contract talks last summer, the Flames signed Zary to a three-year, $11.33MM contract but stuck him on the fourth line to begin the year. Understandably, that’s resulted in the 24-year-old only posting a goal and an assist in 20 games for the offense-starved Flames. He’s stepped up onto the wing with Backlund and Coleman in Honzek’s absence and should remain there for the foreseeable future.

Calgary Flames| Newsstand Samuel Honzek

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