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Cal O’Reilly Signs In Switzerland

September 2, 2025 at 8:17 am CDT | by Josh Erickson Leave a Comment

After 19 professional seasons in North America and well over 1,100 games, center Cal O’Reilly is making the jump overseas for a second time. He’s signed a contract with SCL Tigers of Switzerland’s National League that runs through the end of October with an option to extend for the remainder of the 2025-26 season, the team announced.

O’Reilly, the older brother of Ryan O’Reilly, has 145 NHL games to his name but hasn’t touched the top level since 2017-18 with the Wild. He’s played exclusively in the minors ever since, spending the last two seasons in the same organization as his brother on an AHL contract with the Milwaukee Admirals.

Long a premier playmaking threat at the game’s second-highest level this side of the Atlantic, the 6’0″, 187-lb pivot still managed an 11-38–49 scoring line in 68 games for the Admirals last season to lead the club in scoring. As he enters his age-39 season, he’s showing little sign of slowing down – rebounding quite well from some regression that saw him produce as little as 18 points in 59 games with the Lehigh Valley Phantoms in 2022-23.

The move to Langnau marks O’Reilly’s first time playing in Europe in over a decade. His only previous overseas stint coincided with the 2012 lockout, when he joined the KHL’s Metallurg Magnitogorsk on a multi-year deal. For whatever reason, his offense didn’t translate – he only managed 20 points in 46 games before he was released early in the 2013-14 season and promptly returned to North America.

O’Reilly was a fifth-round pick by Nashville way back in 2005 and has since gone on to appear in five AHL All-Star games, although a Calder Cup title has eluded him. He’s notched 177 goals and 606 assists for 783 points in 1,022 career minor-league games, tied for 17th in AHL all-time total points and second among active players behind Chris Terry’s 807.

He joins the Tigers a week ahead of their regular-season opener amid some recent injuries to their forward group. He joins Saku Mäenalanen, Harri Pesonen, André Pettersson, and Juuso Riikola as the NHL-experienced talent on their roster.

NLA| Transactions Cal O'Reilly

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What New Features Would You Like To See At PHR?

September 1, 2025 at 5:55 pm CDT | by Josh Erickson 47 Comments

As the new regular season approaches and we add to our staff at Pro Hockey Rumors, we’re looking to expand our slate of features, originals, and trackers in 2025-26.

In doing so, we’d love to get some reader input. Were tools like our Active Roster Tracker from the 2024-25 season useful? What other features do you wish PHR had to make it a more immersive home for everything related to hockey transactions?

If there are certain features you find valuable or there are things you’d like us to implement, let us know in the comment section below, use the Contact Us page on our website, or email us directly at prohockeyrumorshelp@gmail.com.

Polls| Pro Hockey Rumors Originals

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International Notes: Smith, Yip, Josefson, Barron

September 1, 2025 at 3:09 pm CDT | by Josh Erickson Leave a Comment

As the Shanghai Dragons begin their first season in the KHL under their new name, they’re parting ways with a pair of longtime fixtures under the club’s former moniker, Kunlun Red Star. Former NHL winger Brandon Yip and goaltender Jeremy Smith will not return to the club in 2025-26, the league announced today.

Both Smith and Yip played long enough for Kunlun to earn Chinese player licenses and suited up for the country in top-level competition when they hosted the 2022 Winter Olympics. Yip served as captain and also helped them gain promotion from Division 2A to Division 1B of the World Championship that same year.

Yip continued to serve as Kunlun’s captain until last season, but injuries limited the former Avalanche and Predators forward to two assists in eight games. He played parts of seven seasons for Kunlun since joining the club in 2017, and the 40-year-old now presumably ends his professional career as the franchise’s all-time leader in goals (92), assists (93), and points (185).

As for Smith, the former ECHL MVP and longtime NHL farmhand had been Kunlun’s starter since he first headed overseas in 2019. The 36-year-old Michigan native was arguably one of the league’s best netminders, considering the often porous defense in front of him, logging a respectable .912 SV% in 184 games for the club despite holding an overall record of 53-103-12.

Elsewhere from around hockey:

  • Ex-Devils forward Jacob Josefson’s attempted comeback after three years away is successful, at least for now. After skating for SHL club Djurgårdens IF on a tryout basis during the preseason, he’s landed a full contract with the club for the upcoming regular season, the team announced today. The 34-year-old, who has only played for Djurgården in his home country, dating back to his youth hockey days, has not played a professional game since 2021 and has served in their front office for the past three seasons. He had a 20-44–64 scoring line in 315 career NHL games with New Jersey and Buffalo from 2010 to 2018.
  • After spending the last four seasons with AHL Tucson in the Arizona and Utah organizations, power winger Travis Barron is headed to Austria on a one-year deal with Black Wings Linz of the ICEHL. He was a Group VI unrestricted free agent this summer and turned 27 last month. He was previously pursuing KHL offers but was evidently unsuccessful, leading to him signing in a less competitive but still premier European league. A seventh-round pick by the Avalanche back in 2016, Barron has 43 goals and 93 points in 305 career AHL games.

ICEHL| KHL| SHL| Transactions Brandon Yip| Jacob Josefson| Jeremy Smith| Travis Barron

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PHR Live Chat Transcript: 9/1/25

September 1, 2025 at 12:48 pm CDT | by Josh Erickson Leave a Comment

Click here to view the transcript from Monday’s chat with PHR’s Josh Erickson.

Live Chats

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Snapshots: Price, Prokhorov, PHR Chat

September 1, 2025 at 12:06 pm CDT | by Josh Erickson Leave a Comment

The Canadiens are reportedly intent on moving the contract of LTIR-bound goaltender Carey Price as it enters its final season, a feat that becomes astronomically more achievable after they pay out a $5.5MM signing bonus today. Today, Marco D’Amico of RG confirms that the Sharks are the most likely trade partner for Montreal, but that a move would require some maneuvering on San Jose’s behalf since they’re one contract shy of the 50-player limit. Given that, the framework of any deal would involve the Sharks sending a few AHL depth pieces back to the Canadiens to free up some flexibility, while taking on Price’s deal to ensure they stay above the salary cap floor throughout the season. Montreal still has seven open contract slots, per PuckPedia, so it’s a non-issue for them to take some two-way deals on in a Price trade.

More things to keep an eye on throughout the hockey world:

  • Late last month, Islanders 2025 second-rounder Daniil Prokhorov signed a two-year contract with Dynamo Moscow in his native Russia to continue his development. Unlike with other Russian players, though, that won’t necessarily delay his North American arrival until 2027, Stefen Rosner writes for The Elmonters. His deal has a formal out-clause that could allow him to report to the Islanders or their AHL affiliate in Bridgeport if he’s offered an entry-level contract before his KHL obligation ends. The gargantuan 6’6″, 218-lb power winger scored 20 goals in 43 junior games for Dynamo St. Petersburg’s MHL club last year.
  • With preseason looming, PHR’s Josh Erickson will host a holiday edition live chat today at 1pm CT. You can click here to ask a question in advance, join in live when the chat begins, or stick around to read the transcript when it’s finished.

Live Chats| Montreal Canadiens| New York Islanders| San Jose Sharks| Snapshots Carey Price| Daniil Prokhorov

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Who Will Be The Odd Man Out Among The Panthers’ Depth Forwards?

September 1, 2025 at 11:01 am CDT | by Josh Erickson 3 Comments

It’s long been expected that the Panthers will be without star winger Matthew Tkachuk to start the season as a result of the adductor injury he played through in last year’s postseason en route to his second straight Stanley Cup. Late last month, that was essentially confirmed with reports indicating Tkachuk’s surgery will keep him out past New Year’s, making him eligible to begin the season on long-term injured reserve and, at least for now, solving Florida’s cap woes. They likely won’t care too much about optimizing their LTIR pool since they’ll need flexibility to activate Tkachuk before the trade deadline, meaning they’ll only get about half the potential relief, but won’t need to make any other changes to their roster as the trade-off.

The Panthers did well to retain virtually their entire forward group, including their fourth-liners and press box fixtures, keeping the would-be free agents on deals close to or at the league minimum. They’ll still need to shed north of $4MM worth of cap hits from their roster when Tkachuk is ready to return, which should inform their early-season strategy in how they go about replacing his top-six minutes.

Long speculated as a trade candidate this offseason was Evan Rodrigues, at least until Elliotte Friedman of Sportsnet threw cold water on the idea of them moving him before the start of the season a few weeks ago. Understandably, they wouldn’t want to be down a serviceable, versatile veteran with Tkachuk unavailable, but the reality stands that he’s a $3MM luxury they likely won’t be able to afford when he’s ready to return.

That could result in him seeing some consistent top-six deployment in Tkachuk’s absence to boost his trade value for when general manager Bill Zito’s hand is inevitably forced. The 32-year-old has two years left on the four-year commitment he signed with the Cats in 2023, and he’s coming off his worst offensive season since the pandemic on a per-game basis. His 0.39 points per game still worked out to a fine 15-17–32 scoring line in 82 games, but he’d been on pace for at least 40 points over a full schedule in each of the past few seasons.

That production dip came despite him spending most of his ice time in the regular season with Aleksander Barkov and Sam Reinhart at even strength. It’s worth noting he was coached into far more of a checking role than he was previously used to as the third wheel on that top unit, ending the season with a career-high 128 hits. That likely offers some explanation for the diminished offensive production, but it’s worth wondering if he might get some of Tkachuk’s vacated power-play time as well to boost his numbers and maximize his value if they do end up needing to put him on the block.

Mackie Samoskevich, their 2021 first-rounder, isn’t going anywhere this season. He projects to be their most cost-effective player this season after signing a one-year, league-minimum deal as a 10.2(c) RFA this summer and will get every chance to build on his 15-goal, 31-point performance in 72 games during his rookie season last year. He got reps in second-line duties when Tkachuk was out of commission for the last few months of the regular season and is the odds-on favorite to hold down that spot alongside Sam Bennett again when the new season opens next month.

He stands to be the most significant long-term beneficiary of Tkachuk’s absence. He’ll have infinitely increased negotiating leverage next summer with his newfound eligibility to receive and sign offer sheets, positioning himself to land a lucrative contract if he breaks out – one that the Panthers will have to do serious math to determine if they can afford.

Shedding Rodrigues won’t be enough to make Florida cap-compliant when Tkachuk comes back, though. They’re at a projected cap excess of $4.5MM with a full roster, per PuckPedia, leaving a $1.5MM balance to make up for. That would suggest Jesper Boqvist, who makes exactly that against the cap and served as the Cats’ 13th forward for a good portion of last season, will be on his way out as well. The team recently brought in free agent Luke Kunin to serve a similar role on a league-minimum salary, offering them another safeguard. Subtracting from their already thin defensive depth behind their elite top-end group isn’t a likely option.

Florida Panthers| Pro Hockey Rumors Originals Evan Rodrigues| Jesper Boqvist| Mackie Samoskevich

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Calvin De Haan Likely To Sign In Europe, Linked To SHL’s Brynas IF

August 31, 2025 at 10:36 am CDT | by Josh Erickson 4 Comments

Veteran defender Calvin de Haan’s NHL days appear to be behind him. His agent has been pitching offers from European clubs to him for the past couple of weeks, and he’s being pursued aggressively by Swedish club Brynäs IF, Johan Svensson of Expressen reports.

Brynäs, the reigning SHL regular-season champions, have de Haan as their “absolute main target” to add defensive depth with two weeks before their regular-season schedule begins, Svensson writes. Their early offseason moves didn’t leave them with a lot of defensive depth to start with, an issue that has been exacerbated by a knee injury to veteran Simon Bertilsson, which will keep him out past New Year’s.

De Haan has no desire to stay in North America if it means a minor-league role, Svensson reports. If he’s only open to a one-way deal with a clear path to an NHL roster spot, his options are slim to none as a result. Svensson didn’t mention his willingness to stake things out on a PTO agreement, but if stability is the reason he’s spurned two-way and AHL offers so far, it stands to reason he wouldn’t have any interest in a tryout, either.

That means an everyday role in a top European league will be the next step in the 34-year-old’s career after 13 NHL seasons and nearly 700 games. Last season was a tough one for the 2009 No. 12 overall pick. He was a frequent healthy scratch and only made 47 appearances, his lowest total since the COVID-shortened 2021 season. He had eight assists with a -4 rating and averaged 14:58 per game while playing a No. 7/8 role for the Avalanche and Rangers, moving between clubs in the Ryan Lindgren trade.

De Haan was clearly displeased with how his tenure in New York went, using some colorful language to articulate his lack of usage down the stretch despite the team continuing to slide out of the playoff picture. He only got into three games for the Blueshirts – his first three after being acquired – and was then benched for the last month-plus of the schedule.

If the move to Brynäs is solidified, he’ll join a club that already likely has the most games of NHL experience on its roster in all of Europe. He would become the seventh player on their roster with at least 200 games of NHL time, joining Nicklas Bäckström, Robert Hägg, Michal Kempný, Johan Larsson, Oskar Lindblom, and Jakob Silfverberg.

SHL Calvin de Haan

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Jets’ Josh Morrissey Fully Recovered From Knee Injury

August 31, 2025 at 9:19 am CDT | by Josh Erickson Leave a Comment

Jets star defenseman Josh Morrissey has recovered fully from the knee injury he sustained in the 2025 Stanley Cup Playoffs and will not have any restrictions heading into training camp, he told Ken Wiebe of the Winnipeg Free Press last week.

Morrissey, 30, had to battle through quite a bit of physical adversity in the postseason after finishing fourth in Norris Trophy voting in the regular season – his third straight top-10 finish and the highest placement of his career. He sustained an upper-body injury early in Winnipeg’s come-from-behind Game 7 win over the Blues in the first round that caused him to miss the first game of their second-round tilt against the Stars. While he played the bulk of the Dallas series, he couldn’t finish what ended up being their final contest of the season in Game 6 after sustaining an injury to his left knee while getting tangled up with Stars forward Mikko Rantanen.

Most were expecting Morrissey to be able to go for camp when he said that he wouldn’t require surgery following their elimination, shortening his recovery timeline. All in all, he was only off the ice for around a month while rehabbing. “I’ve been skating for two months now and it feels as good or better than it did before,” he told Wiebe. He also said that he sustained a similar injury in his right knee two years ago during their first-round series against the Golden Knights, meaning he “knew the protocol” and “knew the plan.”

Having Morrissey at full availability out of the gate will be a crucial step for a Winnipeg roster that will need to rely heavily on its defense after losing a key top-six forward piece in Nikolaj Ehlers to free agency. Luckily for them, their group of defenders remains almost entirely unchanged from last year’s Presidents’ Trophy win. Morrissey, Dylan DeMelo, Neal Pionk, and Dylan Samberg will continue to comprise one of the league’s most competent two-way top-four groups after Pionk signed a massive six-year extension midseason and Samberg inked a three-year settlement with the Jets this summer to avoid an arbitration hearing.

The lefty now enters his 11th year in Winnipeg after being taken 13th overall in the 2013 draft. He has three years left on his deal with a $6.25MM cap hit – part of an eight-year deal signed in 2019 that ranks among the league’s most team-friendly deals. Over the last three years, only Quinn Hughes and Cale Makar have produced more assists among defensemen than Morrissey’s 167.

Winnipeg Jets Josh Morrissey

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Seeking Writers For Pro Hockey Rumors

August 30, 2025 at 3:00 pm CDT | by Josh Erickson 13 Comments

PHR is looking to hire two part-time writers with strong weekend availability preferred. The position pays on an hourly basis, with a workload ranging from 10 to 15 hours per week.

Applicants must meet all of the following criteria:

  • Exceptional knowledge of all 32 NHL teams, with no discernible bias.
  • Knowledge of the salary cap, CBA, and transaction-related concepts.
  • At least some college education.
  • Extensive writing experience, with professional experience and a background in journalism, is strongly preferred.
  • Keen understanding of journalistic principles, ethics, and procedures. Completion of basic college-level journalism classes is strongly preferred.
  • Attention to detail — absolutely no spelling errors, especially for player and journalist names.
  • Ability to follow the site’s style and tone.
  • Ability to analyze articles and craft intelligent, well-written posts summing up the news in a few paragraphs. We need someone who can balance quick copy with thoughtful analysis. You must be able to add value to breaking news with your own insight, numbers, or links to other relevant articles.
  • Familiarity with Twitter/X, X Pro, and other relevant platforms. In general, you must be able to multitask.
  • Flexibility. You must be available to work on week-to-week notice.

If you’re interested, email prohockeyrumorshelp@gmail.com by Sunday, Aug. 31, and in a few paragraphs, explain why you qualify. Be sure to attach your resume to the email.

We understand that many of those who read this have applied in the past. If you have previously submitted an application for PHR and are still interested, please submit it again. Many will apply, so unfortunately, we cannot respond to every applicant.

Newsstand

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Jets’ Adam Lowry Underwent Hip Surgery, Out 5-6 Months

August 26, 2025 at 5:45 pm CDT | by Josh Erickson 4 Comments

Aug. 26th: In somewhat of a surprising revelation, given the original recovery timeline, the Jets shared an update of Lowry taking part in an informal skate this morning, donning his full equipment. This doesn’t necessarily mean that Lowry will be ready to start the season on time, but it does indicate he could be available far earlier than expected. An earlier return should prove a boon for Winnipeg, as they’re set to open the 2025-26 season with Namestnikov and the question mark, Jonathan Toews, as their top two center options behind Scheifele.

May 28th: Jets captain Adam Lowry won’t be available at the start of the 2025-26 season after undergoing successful hip surgery on Tuesday, per a club announcement. The procedure carries a five-to-six-month rehabilitation timeline, meaning he’ll likely make his season debut sometime in November.

While it could be a tough start to Winnipeg’s season without their top matchup and penalty-killing center, a roughly month-long absence shouldn’t impact the Jets’ offseason planning too much outside of adding a depth piece down the middle to give them additional insurance through the first few weeks of the campaign. A potential late October return doesn’t guarantee Lowry will miss enough time to qualify for a long-term injured reserve placement at the beginning of the season. Winnipeg general manager Kevin Cheveldayoff must presume Lowry counts against the salary cap to start the year.

The Jets’ center core of Lowry, Mark Scheifele, Vladislav Namestnikov, and Morgan Barron are all signed or under team control for next season, so there likely weren’t going to be many moving parts down the middle for Winnipeg this summer anyway outside of finding a potential upgrade on Namestnikov for the second line. However, Lowry’s absence for the first few weeks will likely allow the Jets to evaluate the readiness of their potential internal long-term replacements for Namestnikov in a top-six role. There’s 2023 first-rounder Brayden Yager, who’s primed to land an opening-night roster spot after scoring 25 goals and 82 points in 54 games with WHL Moose Jaw and Lethbridge this year. 2022 first-round Brad Lambert has gotten a couple of NHL reps over the last two years and might be a candidate as well, although he’s coming off a highly disappointing season with AHL Manitoba (7-28–35, -30 rating in 61 GP).

For Lowry, the hip rehab will mark an inauspicious start to the final season of the five-year, $16.25MM extension he signed in 2021. With Kyle Connor and Cole Perfetti also eligible to sign extensions on July 1, it’s unclear how quickly Cheveldayoff intends to start those talks with his captain. However, it should be expected that they’ll do everything in their power to keep the 11-year veteran in the only NHL city he’s ever known.

If they do opt to engage in extension discussions this summer, AFP Analytics projects the 32-year-old to receive a two-year deal in the $4MM range per season. He’s coming off his third straight 30-point campaign and has averaged at least 15 minutes per game for five straight seasons.

Lowry’s injury also puts a small dent in his climb up the Jets franchise’s all-time leaderboard. His 775 games played are fourth in Winnipeg/Atlanta franchise history, and he needs 69 games to leapfrog Bryan Little for third – that’s still doable next year if he returns at the early end of his timeline and stays healthy the rest of the way. His 121 goals are 10th all-time for the Jets, his 152 assists and 273 points rank ninth, while his +50 rating ranks fourth.

Injury| Newsstand| Winnipeg Jets Adam Lowry

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