Headlines

  • Montreal Canadiens Sign Alexandre Texier
  • Alexander Romanov To Miss 5-6 Months, Will Have Shoulder Surgery
  • Mikko Rantanen Suspended One Game
  • Blues Terminate Alexandre Texier’s Contract
  • Sabres Activate Zach Benson, Assign Isak Rosen To AHL
  • Lightning’s Nikita Kucherov, Brayden Point Leave With Injury
  • Previous
  • Next
Register
Login
  • MLB Trade Rumors
  • Hoops Rumors
  • Pro Football Rumors

Pro Hockey Rumors

  • Home
  • Teams
    • Atlantic
      • Boston Bruins
      • Buffalo Sabres
      • Detroit Red Wings
      • Florida Panthers
      • Montreal Canadiens
      • Ottawa Senators
      • Tampa Bay Lightning
      • Toronto Maple Leafs
    • Central
      • Chicago Blackhawks
      • Colorado Avalanche
      • Dallas Stars
      • Minnesota Wild
      • Nashville Predators
      • St. Louis Blues
      • Utah Mammoth
      • Winnipeg Jets
    • Metropolitan
      • Carolina Hurricanes
      • Columbus Blue Jackets
      • New Jersey Devils
      • New York Islanders
      • New York Rangers
      • Philadelphia Flyers
      • Pittsburgh Penguins
      • Washington Capitals
    • Pacific
      • Anaheim Ducks
      • Calgary Flames
      • Edmonton Oilers
      • Los Angeles Kings
      • San Jose Sharks
      • Seattle Kraken
      • Vancouver Canucks
      • Vegas Golden Knights
  • About
  • Advertise
  • Contact Us
  • MLB/NBA/NFL
    • MLB Trade Rumors
    • Hoops Rumors
    • Pro Football Rumors
Go To MLB Trade Rumors
Go To Hoops Rumors

Flames Will Loan Zayne Parekh To Team Canada For World Juniors

November 19, 2025 at 1:07 pm CDT | by Josh Erickson 1 Comment

Flames defenseman Zayne Parekh will be on Canada’s roster for the World Junior Championship when it’s announced in December, Eric Francis of Sportsnet reports. First, he’ll need to recover from the upper-body injury that’s kept him out since Nov. 7 and has him listed as week-to-week.

Parekh has already been ruled out through the Flames’ ongoing road trip, Francis writes, but the team is targeting an early December return for their 2024 ninth overall pick. They have a four-game homestand to kick off the month and will look to get him into a couple of those games before letting him join the Canadian national junior team, which commences its camp in Niagara Falls on Dec. 12. He’s also eligible for a conditioning stint with AHL Calgary as a result of his missed time, something Pat Steinberg of Sportsnet 960 reports is under consideration.

The ultimate deadline for Parekh’s inclusion on the Canadian roster is Dec. 20, though, according to Francis. Even if Parekh can’t get on the ice before then, that would at least leave him enough time to get into a couple of exhibition games in Minneapolis and St. Paul, the host cities of this year’s WJC.

The injury has dotted what’s been a trying adjustment to pro hockey for Parekh. As a result of the 19-year-old being ineligible for a full-time assignment to the AHL, he’s been stuck operating as a No. 6/7 piece on the Flames’ NHL roster and hasn’t gotten extended playing time. He was a healthy scratch on multiple occasions before sustaining his injury. He was only averaging 14:46 of ice time per game when in the lineup, limiting him to one assist through 11 appearances.

Calgary’s only other option was to send him back to junior hockey for the remainder of the season. That was never something the Flames were seriously considering, though. Parekh has won back-to-back OHL defense scoring crowns with the Saginaw Spirit, putting up back-to-back 33-goal seasons from the blue line and logging 107 points in just 61 games last season. But depending on the state of their defense after Parekh returns from the World Juniors, letting him finish the season in Saginaw – where he’ll at least get back to playing top-pairing minutes – might be a better outcome for his readiness heading into training camp next fall.

Calgary Flames| Team Canada World Juniors| Zayne Parekh

1 comment

Lightning Reassign Scott Sabourin

November 19, 2025 at 12:23 pm CDT | by Josh Erickson Leave a Comment

The Lightning announced Wednesday that they’ve reassigned forward Scott Sabourin to AHL Syracuse. Forwards Pontus Holmberg and Nick Paul are eligible to come off IR and LTIR, respectively, before tomorrow’s game against the Oilers, and one of them will presumably get Sabourin’s roster spot.

Sabourin, 33, has only played three games and has been rostered for 11 days since last clearing waivers, so he doesn’t need them to return to the minors today. He was summoned on multiple short-term occasions in October to serve a four-game suspension he was assessed in the preseason, meaning he didn’t make his season debut until his latest recall, which came on Nov. 12. The depth enforcer managed to rattle off a goal and an assist in his first two games – his first NHL points since April 2022 – before racking up 16 penalty minutes (three minors and a misconduct) and going pointless against the Canucks last Sunday. He was then scratched for Tuesday’s 5-1 loss to the Devils to make way for Dominic James’ return to the lineup, making it apparent he’d be the odd man out when Tampa needed to open its next roster spot at forward.

It was still a much better offensive showing than expected from the 6’4″, 207-lb fighter, who’s now up to a 3-7–10 scoring line in 50 career NHL appearances. While his NHL resume doesn’t offer much more than his fights, he’s had enough offensive utility in the AHL in the past to work his way into a middle-six role there. This season, Sabourin’s logged three goals and two assists for five points in 11 contests.

After spending his last two seasons in the Sharks organization, this is Sabourin’s first in Tampa after they signed him to a two-way deal with a $350,000 guarantee last summer. It’s the 14th season of Sabourin’s professional career, which began as a free agent signing by the AHL’s now-defunct Manchester Monarchs.

Tampa Bay Lightning| Transactions Scott Sabourin

0 comments

Panthers’ Eetu Luostarinen Out Week-To-Week, Cole Schwindt To Undergo Arm Surgery

November 19, 2025 at 11:24 am CDT | by Josh Erickson 8 Comments

Panthers winger Eetu Luostarinen suffered significant burns as a result of a barbecue accident and will miss a few weeks, head coach Paul Maurice said (via George Richards of Florida Hockey Now). He also informed reporters that depth forward Cole Schwindt requires arm surgery and will miss two to three months, per the team’s Jameson Olive.

The two-time defending champions are now facing even more significant strain on their top-nine forward group. They were already down Aleksander Barkov and Matthew Tkachuk to start the season. In their absence, they were relying on Luostarinen heavily – essentially bumping up last year’s third line of him, Anton Lundell, and Brad Marchand, into first-line minutes.

Given the aggressive increase in deployment and the quality of competition, the experiment has largely gone well. Luostarinen has been the definitive third wheel on that line but was still on the best point pace of his career with 10 points (three goals, seven assists) through 18 games. The versatile 6’3″ forward has been the checking conscience of that line with 42 hits and is still tied for fifth on the club in scoring, a solid feat after back-to-back seasons in the 20-point range. He’s helped Lundell along to a strong 5-11–16 start in 19 games as he temporarily assumes Barkov’s role as Florida’s No. 1 center and has added fuel to Marchand’s resurgent 13-10–23 start in 18 games as the Cats’ leading scorer.

Understandably, relying on that trio for more offensive responsibility has come at the expense of defense. After they allowed only 1.14 goals against per 60 minutes in last year’s playoffs, that figure has spiked to 3.07 so far in the regular season. Their 47.8% share of expected goals is the worst among the Panthers’ five lines to play at least 50 minutes together this season, per MoneyPuck.

Regardless, Luostarinen’s absence will force even more line-shuffling from Maurice and even less support for struggling veterans like Sam Bennett, who’s been limited to four goals and seven points in 19 games and has a team-worst -7 rating. As for who replaces him in top-line duties with Lundell and Marchand, it’ll be 2021 first-rounder Mackie Samoskevich getting the first crack, according to Jordan McPherson of the Miami Herald. Considering he’s put up similar point production (a 2-7–9 scoring line in 19 games) to Luostarinen this year in less ice time, it’s a logical bet for him to be able to elevate his game.

Florida also loses a fourth-line option in Schwindt, who had played in 10 straight games after sitting as a healthy scratch for the first nine. The former Panthers draft pick returned to the organization via a preseason waiver claim after intermediate stops in the Flames and Golden Knights organizations. He first entered the lineup in place of the injured Jonah Gadjovich in late October and managed two goals on seven shots to kick off his second stint in Sunrise. His minutes were limited at 8:38 per game, but the 24-year-old was still among the Cats’ most freshly experienced options for fourth-line minutes after he made a career-high 42 appearances for Vegas last year.

His absence means more consistent deployment for Noah Gregor, who didn’t make his season debut until Oct. 28 but has now played in six of the last nine. It’ll also mean an extended runway for top prospect Jack Devine, who has 12 points through 13 games with AHL Charlotte this year and was formally elevated earlier Wednesday.

Florida Panthers| Newsstand Cole Schwindt| Eetu Luostarinen

8 comments

Oilers’ Curtis Lazar, Noah Philp Out For At Least A Week

November 19, 2025 at 10:56 am CDT | by Josh Erickson Leave a Comment

Oilers forwards Curtis Lazar and Noah Philp have been shut down for the remainder of the team’s road trip due to upper-body injuries, head coach Kris Knoblauch told reporters today (including the team’s Bob Stauffer). With no available cap space for a corresponding recall, the Oilers will dress 11 forwards and seven defensemen for the remainder of the trip, Knoblauch said.

Both played in Monday night’s 5-1 loss to the Sabres on Edmonton’s fourth line with Mattias Janmark. Lazar finished the game, but Philp’s last shift came with 16:50 remaining in the third period. It’s unclear when either player got banged up.

Lazar, 30, had been an infrequent option for Edmonton to start the year but had been getting more reps as of late, making five straight appearances. A spot in Edmonton’s forward group had opened up courtesy of an undisclosed injury to Ryan Nugent-Hopkins, as well as the club’s reassignment of Isaac Howard to AHL Bakersfield. Still, he’s been a virtual non-factor after signing a league-minimum deal with the Oilers over the summer. He’s been limited to one goal in nine games and had a -3 rating while averaging 9:34 of ice time per game. He’s been somewhat valuable as a defensive-zone faceoff specialist, though, winning 55.9% of his draws. His usage means he won’t be sniffing the career-high 25 points he set two years ago with the Devils, though.

The 27-year-old Philp has drawn in on Edmonton’s fourth line with more consistency. He was scratched for a couple of stretches in October but has remained in the lineup since then, meaning tonight’s game against the Capitals will be his first missed game since Oct. 30. The right-shot center has occasionally factored in on the Oilers’ penalty kill and averaged 10:02 per game at all strengths in his most extended stint on an NHL roster thus far. Through 15 appearances, the Alberta native has two goals and an assist with a -7 rating, 24 hits, and two blocks. His 56.9% winning percentage in the dot is the second-highest on the team behind Adam Henrique.

Their unavailability for the next three games at a minimum makes the Oilers’ financial situation quite dicey. As they’re rolling 11-7, they don’t have any healthy extra skaters available. If someone were to sustain an injury tonight and be unavailable to play tomorrow against the Lightning, Edmonton would have to play a skater short in Tampa before being eligible to recall a no-cap-hit emergency exception from Bakersfield for the final game of their road trip against the Panthers on Saturday.

The Oilers could also avoid that by shifting Nugent-Hopkins to long-term injured reserve, but doing so would rule him out for the rest of the month. Considering he’s already past his initial projected return date, that’s unlikely.

Edmonton Oilers Curtis Lazar| Noah Philp

0 comments

Sabres Recall Zach Metsa, Place Michael Kesselring On IR

November 17, 2025 at 12:24 pm CDT | by Josh Erickson Leave a Comment

The Sabres announced they’ve recalled defenseman Zach Metsa from AHL Rochester. They didn’t have an open roster spot but placed fellow rearguard Michael Kesselring on injured reserve to make one, according to Rachel Lenzi of The Buffalo News. Kesselring is still being evaluated after sustaining an apparent ankle injury Saturday against the Red Wings, but is expected to be out long-term, head coach Lindy Ruff told reporters (including Paul Hamilton of WGR Sports Radio 550).

Metsa has already been recalled once this season. He was summoned for 11 days last month, resulting in the first four appearances of the 27-year-old’s NHL career. He didn’t record a point and averaged a minuscule 8:49 of ice time per game, but managed to record a +3 rating and four shot attempts. The 5’9″ righty added two blocks and a hit but didn’t have great possession metrics, controlling 42% of shot attempts at 5-on-5 despite starting nearly 80% of shifts in the offensive zone.

The Wisconsin native went undrafted out of the BCHL in 2017 but eventually landed at Quinnipiac University, where he spent five seasons and captained the team to a national championship in 2023. He recorded a 9-28–37 scoring line in 40 games during his graduate season, earning NCAA All-Tournament Team honors, but he didn’t initially secure an NHL contract. He spent the last two seasons on minor-league deals with Rochester before finally landing his first big-league deal, a two-year, two-way pact, from the Sabres in July.

Metsa has rewarded Buffalo’s commitment with his best play yet in the minors. The talented playmaker at the blue line has two goals and nine assists for 11 points through 11 games with a +2 rating. Ten of those points have come in his last six games down in Rochester, including a three-assist night against the Bridgeport Islanders on Saturday.

His right-shot attribute made him the natural replacement for a fellow righty in Kesselring instead of more experienced names like Zachary Jones or Ryan Johnson. He’ll serve as the Sabres’ extra defenseman for the foreseeable future, but with Conor Timmins serving as the only other right-shot rearguard on the active roster, he might have the inside track toward a No. 6 job over lefty Jacob Bryson.

Kesselring, 25, was viewed as the principal piece of the return the Sabres received from the Mammoth for winger JJ Peterka during the offseason. So far, though, it’s been winger Josh Doan who’s proved the more invaluable part of the deal with 12 points in 18 games. That’s not entirely Kesselring’s fault, though. He sustained an undisclosed injury in training camp that, together with his now-injured ankle, has limited him to nine games. However, he’s been a non-factor when healthy, averaging just 15:37 of ice time per game and posting a -3 rating with no points.

Buffalo Sabres| Transactions Michael Kesselring| Zach Metsa

0 comments

Blackhawks’ Laurent Brossoit Resumes Skating

November 17, 2025 at 11:44 am CDT | by Josh Erickson 7 Comments

Blackhawks goaltender Laurent Brossoit was on the ice today ahead of practice for the first time in well over a year, Ben Pope of the Chicago Sun-Times reports.

Brossoit has not played since April 28, 2024, when the former Jets netminder entered Winnipeg’s loss in Game 4 of the first round against the Avalanche in relief of Connor Hellebuyck. He hit unrestricted free agency the following offseason and signed a two-year, $6.6MM contract with Chicago, but he’s yet to even practice with the club – until today.

He’s spent the last 12 months mired in injuries. It started with a meniscus surgery in late August 2024 before he reported to his first training camp in Chicago. That was only supposed to keep him out for around two months, but his return kept getting pushed back until he was downgraded to being out indefinitely in November. He had a second procedure on his knee around Thanksgiving that was supposed to put him back in the lineup in mid-January, but after radio silence until the trade deadline, he was shut down for the year. Brossoit underwent a third surgery this past summer – on his hip, not his knee – and general manager Kyle Davidson said at the beginning of camp that he remained out long-term.

That made most believe he’d essentially spend the balance of his two-year deal on injured reserve and never actually appear on Chicago’s roster before reaching free agency again next summer. He’s still likely weeks, if not months, away from a return, considering how much time he’s missed, but the fact that he’s on the ice this early in the campaign gives him a fighting chance at returning to play at some point.

Before signing with the Blackhawks, Brossoit had put up back-to-back career years. A lifelong backup, he’d posted a .927 SV% and 2.00 GAA with three shutouts in a career-high 22 starts for Winnipeg in 2024-25. The year prior, injuries limited Brossoit to 11 regular-season appearances for the Golden Knights, but he was similarly efficient, posting a 7-0-3 record and a .927 SV% with a 2.17 GAA. On a per-60-minute basis, Brossoit ranked sixth in the league in goals saved above expected in 2022-23 and fifth in 2023-24 among goalies with at least 10 games played, according to MoneyPuck.

That had the Hawks high on him as a veteran option to provide insurance for Petr Mrázek, whose workload they wanted to decrease after he started in a career-high 53 games in 2023-24. Since then, Chicago’s crease has undergone a drastic transformation. After Mrázek put together a strong .907 SV% in 2023-24, he dipped to a .890 SV% and 3.46 GAA in 33 appearances for the Hawks last year and was shipped off to the Red Wings at the deadline.

Now, Chicago’s crease is locked in with two young names. There’s 2019 first-rounder Spencer Knight, acquired from the Panthers last season in the Seth Jones deal, who’s arguably been the best goalie in the league this season with a .924 SV%, 2.42 GAA, and 14.7 goals saved above expected in 13 starts. His backup is 26-year-old Arvid Söderblom, whose emergence as an above-average backup option last year made Mrázek expendable. He hasn’t gotten much playing time this year behind Knight, but in five starts, he’s been more than passable with a 2-2-1 record, .913 SV%, and 2.63 GAA.

That doesn’t leave a clear spot for Brossoit on the NHL roster if he’s to return. With Knight shouldering such a high percentage of the workload, a three-goalie rotation isn’t feasible. He’ll likely land on waivers if he’s cleared to play and assigned to AHL Rockford. Since he’s had so much time away, it’s hard to see a team trading for him – or signing him in free agency next summer – before they see him get into sustained action at the minor-league level.

Chicago Blackhawks Laurent Brossoit

7 comments

Bruins Recall Matej Blumel, Riley Tufte

November 17, 2025 at 11:05 am CDT | by Josh Erickson Leave a Comment

The Bruins announced they’ve recalled wingers Matěj Blümel and Riley Tufte from AHL Providence. To open the necessary roster space, forwards Casey Mittelstadt and Viktor Arvidsson were placed on injured reserve retroactive to Nov. 6 and Nov. 15, respectively. With under $1MM in cap space, Boston also moved defenseman Jordan Harris from standard IR to LTIR to facilitate the recalls.

It’s Blümel’s first recall to Boston since landing there as a Group VI unrestricted free agent over the summer. He was a semi-surprising omission on the Bruins’ opening night roster. Not only did they sign him to a one-way deal worth $875,000, but there was legitimate concern he wouldn’t clear waivers after an exceptionally strong three-year run of play in the minors in the Stars’ system. A fourth-round pick of the Oilers back in 2019, he never signed with Edmonton and instead landed in Dallas as a free agent out of Czechia in 2022.

While Blümel only scored twice in 13 career appearances with Dallas, he was among the AHL’s top players while with the Texas Stars. He was a two-time All-Star and led the league in goals last season with 39, capping off his first campaign above a point per game with 33 assists and 72 points in 69 outings. For a Bruins roster that looked starved for depth scoring coming into the season, he looked like a logical candidate to get an audition in a middle-six role.

That didn’t happen, and Blümel has actually been off to a sluggish start in Providence with two goals in 13 appearances. He’s still added 11 assists to maintain a point-per-game pace, though. With another top-six name in Arvidsson now out week-to-week with his lower-body injury, Ty Anderson of 98.5 The Sports Hub confirms, Blümel will likely be the one to replace his spot on the depth chart alongside Pavel Zacha.

While Tufte has been more offensively explosive in the minors this season, the 27-year-old’s play style makes him a more natural fit for a bottom-six/fourth-line job. The 6’6″, 230-lb winger is in his second season with the Bruins organization, but hasn’t suited up for them yet this year. He suited up six times last season, going without a point and logging a -3 rating in 9:12 of ice time per game.

The 2016 first-rounder does have 24 games of NHL experience to his name, though, and has been the centerpiece of a red-hot Providence team thus far. He’s tied for the team lead in scoring with eight goals and 16 points in 13 outings while also carrying a team-leading +10 rating. After back-to-back 20-goal campaigns in the minors, he’s more than on track for a third.

Since Mittelstadt’s already missed more than a week, he’s eligible to come off IR at any time. Like Arvidsson, he carries a week-to-week designation because of a lower-body issue, but he’ll presumably be back in the lineup sooner than his frequent linemate this year because he’s already missed four contests. As for Harris, he underwent ankle surgery in late October and isn’t expected back in the lineup until after Christmas.

Boston Bruins| Transactions Casey Mittelstadt| Jordan Harris| Matej Blumel| Riley Tufte| Viktor Arvidsson

0 comments

Lightning Reassign Boris Katchouk

November 17, 2025 at 10:14 am CDT | by Josh Erickson 1 Comment

The Lightning announced they’ve reassigned winger Boris Katchouk to AHL Syracuse. They now have two open roster spots, leaving the option for multiple IR activations ahead of tomorrow’s game against the Devils.

Katchouk was recalled last Wednesday in the wake of injuries to depth forwards Pontus Holmberg and Dominic James. It marked the 27-year-old’s first time on an NHL roster since April 2024. The second-round pick of the Lightning in 2016 spent last year on a minor-league contract with AHL Wilkes-Barre/Scranton after being non-tendered by the Senators the previous offseason.

The Ontario native returned to the Bolts for his second stint in Tampa over the summer on a two-way deal and cleared waivers during training camp. After the 6’2″ grinder had 21 goals and 49 points in 67 games for Wilkes-Barre/Scranton last year, he got off to a similarly strong start in Syracuse with four goals and nine points through his first 12 games.

With Holmberg, James, and Anthony Cirelli all unavailable for each of the Bolts’ last three games (in addition to the LTIR-bound Nick Paul), Katchouk was never scratched and played each game of his call-up. He didn’t make much of an impact, though. He was held without a point and managed just one shot attempt despite averaging over 12 minutes of ice time per game. Tampa’s injuries forced him to slot in down the middle instead of on the wing, though, a potential explanation for why he looked so overmatched offensively. He went 36.8% in the dot on 19 attempts and recorded five hits.

Katchouk’s recall burned three games and five days off his temporary waiver exemption. After passing through them unscathed in October, Katchouk can remain on the Lightning’s roster for 25 more days or play seven more games until he needs them again to head back to Syracuse.

Tampa Bay Lightning| Transactions Boris Katchouk

1 comment

Maple Leafs Place Brandon Carlo On IR, Recall Jacob Quillan

November 17, 2025 at 9:49 am CDT | by Josh Erickson 2 Comments

The Maple Leafs announced they’ve placed defenseman Brandon Carlo on injured reserve, retroactive to Nov. 13. His roster spot has gone to forward Jacob Quillan, who’s been recalled from AHL Toronto.

The Leafs only have $359,833 remaining in their long-term injured reserve pool, per PuckPedia. That isn’t enough space to add Quillan’s $875,000 cap hit to the roster. They’ve presumably shifted one of their IR-bound players to LTIR to create the required flexibility. That’s likely Chris Tanev, who’s been out the longest of the group and has already missed 16 out of the 24 days and seven out of the 10 games required for an LTIR placement. If so, he’ll be eligible for activation on Nov. 26 against the Blue Jackets.

With Carlo now designated for IR as well, neither of the Leafs’ top two right-shot options is on the active roster. The 28-year-old missed Saturday’s loss to the Blackhawks with a lower-body injury. It’s not clear when he sustained it. He didn’t miss a shift in his previous appearances, an overtime loss to the Kings last Thursday. His IR placement rules him out of tomorrow’s game against the Blues, but he can be reinstated ahead of Thursday’s contest against the Blue Jackets.

Carlo, 29 later this month, has had an underwhelming start to his first full season in the blue and white. Acquired at last season’s trade deadline from the Bruins to serve as a stay-at-home complement to Morgan Rielly, his possession numbers have cratered despite softer even-strength minutes than what he was used to in Boston. In 166 minutes together this season, Carlo and Rielly are allowing a team-worst 3.11 expected goals against per 60 minutes at 5-on-5, per MoneyPuck.

The 6’5″, 227-lb righty’s lack of physicality has also been apparent. He’s routinely logged over 100 hits per season over his 10-year NHL career, but has just 12 of them through 18 games this year.

Philippe Myers took Carlo’s place alongside Reilly on Saturday night in Chicago, but he cratered the Leafs in his 5-on-5 minutes with an xG% of 5.39 and a CF% of 26.32%. It wouldn’t be surprising to see head coach Craig Berube do some line shuffling and scratch Myers against St. Louis in order to give Troy Stecher his Leafs debut after being claimed off waivers from the Oilers over the weekend.

Quillan, 23, gives Toronto another option at forward as Scott Laughton and Auston Matthews remain on IR. The undrafted center out of Quinnipiac is in his second professional season and earns the recall amid a hot start in the AHL, rattling off two goals and 12 assists for a point per game through 14 appearances. He made his NHL debut last season, although it was short-lived: he skated just 5:21 in a loss to the Senators in January before leaving the game as a result of a knee-on-knee collision with Nick Cousins. The winner of the ECAC’s Best Defensive Forward award in 2023-24 had 18 goals and 37 points in 67 AHL appearances last year.

Toronto Maple Leafs| Transactions Brandon Carlo| Jacob Quillan

2 comments

Kings Sign Adrian Kempe To Eight-Year Extension

November 17, 2025 at 9:01 am CDT | by Josh Erickson 19 Comments

Nov. 17: The Kings have announced Kempe’s extension as reported. PuckPedia relays that the deal contains a no-movement clause through 2029-30 that then downgrades to a 15-team no-trade list. Pierre LeBrun of TSN and The Athletic reports the breakdown is as follows:

2026-27 through 2028-29: $1MM salary, $11MM signing bonus
2029-30: $2.5MM salary, $9.5MM signing bonus
2030-31 through 2031-32: $9.75MM salary
2032-33 through 2033-34: $8.75MM salary

Nov. 16: The Kings are in agreement with star winger Adrian Kempe on a deal to keep him in Los Angeles past this season, Emily Kaplan of ESPN reports. It’s an eight-year deal worth $85MM for a cap hit of $10.625MM, according to Elliotte Friedman of Sportsnet. The contract secures Kempe, who was arguably the top UFA remaining next season, in Southern California through the 2033-34 season.

Most have viewed a Kempe extension as a must-do for Kings general manager Ken Holland, and for good reason. With captain Anže Kopitar’s pending retirement already set to leave a glaring hole in their top six next season, losing a second member of their top unit would have been catastrophic.

More so than ever, Kempe has taken the reins from Kopitar as the team’s top offensive threat. With six goals and 13 assists in 19 games this season, he’s on track to hit the point-per-game mark for the first time in his career despite an early-season shooting slump. His 9.7% finishing rate is currently his worst since hitting a low of 7.4% in the 2019-20 season. He’s only on track to hit 26 goals this year at present, but with his shooting average up at 14.2% over the prior four years, there’s a high chance he’ll hit over 30 once again and finish in the 80-to-90-point range.

Kempe has now scored 30 goals in three of the last four years and would have gone four-for-four if not for a five-game absence in 2023-24. He’s been stapled to Kopitar’s wing on L.A.’s top line since first getting an extended promotion in the 2020-21 season. It was somewhat of a delayed breakout for the 29-year-old, who was a first-round pick back in 2014. He didn’t make his NHL debut until late in his third year post-draft and spent the following few years posting around 30 points a year in a middle-six role. His big break didn’t come until his first full season on Kopitar’s wing in 2021-22, when he notched a team-leading 35 goals as L.A. ended a three-year playoff drought.

The 6’2″ winger has been a money-in-the-bank producer since then, while also hitting the 100-hit mark in every year since 2021-22. Since his breakout, Kempe’s 145 goals in 337 games are tied for 21st in the league. He’s now at 200 goals for his career, putting him just inside the top 10 in Kings franchise history and 14th in points with 420.

With him and Kevin Fiala checking in as L.A.’s only semi-consistent 30-goal options, there was little chance they could sustain losing him and Kopitar without many other options slated to be available to replace them in free agency without dropping back out of the playoff picture. His new deal will make him the Kings’ highest-paid forward next year, and he could be their highest-paid player outright starting in 2027-28 with the expiry of Drew Doughty’s contract.

The Kings tried aggressively to get Kempe’s deal done months ago during the offseason, but were unsuccessful. Shortly before training camp, Kempe said he wanted something done as soon as possible and all but set the Christmas break as a drop-dead date for talks. Today’s news marks a seemingly significant concession from Kempe’s camp, which was eyeing a match to the $11.5MM average annual value that Martin Nečas landed in his extension with the Avalanche a few weeks ago.

Even with the eight-figure commitment, the Kings still boast $23.1MM in cap space for next season, per PuckPedia. That’s with seven open roster spots. The contract is also one of the few truly long-term ones left on the Kings’ books. Only Mikey Anderson, whose deal expires following the 2030-31 season, is under contract past the end of the decade.

Image courtesy of Jeff Curry-Imagn Images.

Los Angeles Kings| Newsstand Adrian Kempe

19 comments
« Previous Page
Load More Posts
    Top Stories

    Montreal Canadiens Sign Alexandre Texier

    Alexander Romanov To Miss 5-6 Months, Will Have Shoulder Surgery

    Mikko Rantanen Suspended One Game

    Blues Terminate Alexandre Texier’s Contract

    Sabres Activate Zach Benson, Assign Isak Rosen To AHL

    Lightning’s Nikita Kucherov, Brayden Point Leave With Injury

    Kraken Looking To Add Impact Winger, Re-Sign Jaden Schwartz

    Jets Sign Adam Lowry To Five-Year Contract Extension

    Flames’ Samuel Honzek Likely Done For Season

    Connor Hellebuyck To Undergo Arthroscopic Knee Procedure, Out 4-6 Weeks

    Recent

    Canadiens Recall Adam Engström

    Oilers’ Jack Roslovic Proving A Worthwhile Signing

    Rangers Announce Multiple Roster Moves

    Jets’ Neal Pionk, Josh Morrissey Leave With Injury

    Chris Driedger Terminates Deal With KHL’s Traktor

    Alexander Georgiev On Waivers For Termination, Headed To KHL

    Montreal Canadiens Sign Alexandre Texier

    Injury Notes: Lindholm, McAvoy, Pageau, Dickinson

    Alexander Romanov To Miss 5-6 Months, Will Have Shoulder Surgery

    Mikko Rantanen Suspended One Game

    Rumors By Team

    Rumors By Team

    • Avalanche Rumors
    • Blackhawks Rumors
    • Blue Jackets Rumors
    • Blues Rumors
    • Bruins Rumors
    • Canadiens Rumors
    • Canucks Rumors
    • Capitals Rumors
    • Devils Rumors
    • Ducks Rumors
    • Flames Rumors
    • Flyers Rumors
    • Golden Knights Rumors
    • Hurricanes Rumors
    • Islanders Rumors
    • Jets Rumors
    • Kings Rumors
    • Kraken Rumors
    • Lightning Rumors
    • Mammoth Rumors
    • Maple Leafs Rumors
    • Oilers Rumors
    • Panthers Rumors
    • Penguins Rumors
    • Predators Rumors
    • Rangers Rumors
    • Red Wings Rumors
    • Sabres Rumors
    • Senators Rumors
    • Sharks Rumors
    • Stars Rumors
    • Wild Rumors

    Latest Rumors & News

    Latest Rumors & News

    • 2025’s Top 50 Unrestricted Free Agents
    • Rasmus Andersson Rumors
    • Erik Karlsson Rumors
    • Rickard Rakell Rumors
    • Bryan Rust Rumors

    Pro Hockey Rumors Features

    Pro Hockey Rumors Features

    • Support Pro Hockey Rumors And Go Ad-Free
    • 2025 NHL Free Agent List
    • 2026 NHL Free Agent List
    • Active Roster Tracker
    • Offseason Trade Tracker
    • PTO Tracker 2025
    • Summer Synopsis Series 2025
    • Training Camp Rosters 2025
    • Pro Hockey Rumors On X
    • Pro Hockey Rumors Polls

     

     

     

     

    Navigation

    • Sitemap
    • Archives

    PHR Info

    • About
    • Privacy Policy
    • Commenting Policy

    Connect

    • Contact Us
    • Twitter
    • Facebook
    • RSS Feed

    Pro Hockey Rumors is not affiliated with National Hockey League, NHL or NHL.com

    Do not Sell or Share My Personal Information

    scroll to top

    Register

    Desktop Version | Switch To Mobile Version