Headlines

  • Lightning Sign J.J. Moser To Eight-Year Extension
  • ECHL Players Go On Strike
  • Oilers, David Tomasek To Terminate Contract
  • Maple Leafs Promote Steve Sullivan To Assistant Coach
  • Golden Knights’ Adin Hill Out Week-To-Week, William Karlsson Targeting Olympic Return
  • Maple Leafs Fire Assistant Coach Marc Savard
  • 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

Maple Leafs Place Chris Tanev On Injured Reserve

October 23, 2025 at 10:22 am CDT | by Josh Erickson 1 Comment

The Maple Leafs announced they’ve placed right-shot defender Chris Tanev on injured reserve, retroactive to the club’s 5-2 loss to the Devils on Tuesday. Tanev is dealing with an upper-body injury and will be ineligible for the next three games at a minimum. Lefty Dakota Mermis was called up from the AHL to take Tanev’s spot on the active roster.

Tanev is no stranger to injuries, although he’s had a healthy run in the past few years, playing 70-plus games in three of the last four seasons. Today’s news doesn’t necessarily put that mark in jeopardy. Head coach Craig Berube only called Tanev questionable for Friday’s game against the Sabres when he spoke yesterday and said he was feeling better. While he obviously won’t be playing now, it indicates he’s not expected to miss much time past the seven-day minimum.

Tanev, 36 in December, only logged 5:57 of ice time against New Jersey before leaving the contest. Early in the second period, he was on the receiving end of incidental head-to-head contact with Devils forward Dawson Mercer during a net-front scrum and immediately headed to the locker room (video via TSN). Removing that outlier from the figure, Tanev is averaging around 19:40 of ice time per game – right at the mark he saw last year, his first in Toronto. The 16-year vet landed with the Leafs in free agency in 2024 on a six-year, $27MM pact and has been a top-four fixture ever since. He’s spent most of that time on a pairing with Jake McCabe. The duo is controlling 45.9% of expected goals through seven games, per MoneyPuck, yet they’re still outscoring opponents 3-2 at 5-on-5. That’s down sharply from their 55.1% mark last year, which ranked 14th among 41 pairings to log at least 600 minutes together in 2024-25.

On the scoresheet, the Toronto native had one assist, a plus-three rating, and two hits through seven outings. Oliver Ekman-Larsson, who has been playing on his off side in third-pairing duties with Simon Benoit, will be the leading candidate to replace Tanev in top-four duties alongside McCabe for the next few games.

It’s unclear if Mermis will get a shot in the lineup. Toronto has been carrying righty Philippe Myers as a healthy extra since the start of the season, but he hasn’t played. Losing a righty to injury would seemingly give the edge to Myers to make his season debut in Buffalo tomorrow.

Mermis, 31, comes up after clearing waivers late in training camp. He re-upped with the Leafs this summer on a two-year, league minimum contract after initially signing a one-year deal with Toronto in 2024. He spent a brief chunk of last season in Utah after they claimed him off waivers, but Toronto grabbed him back when he was exposed on the wire again. He got into four NHL showings, three of which were with the Leafs, with one assist and a minus-two rating. He has 78 career games since debuting with the Coyotes back in 2017-18, carrying a 4-9–13 scoring line with a plus-three rating while averaging 14:30 per game.

Mermis can remain on Toronto’s active roster for up to 30 nonconsecutive days or play 10 games until he needs to clear waivers again to return to the AHL. He’s without a point in two minor-league games to begin the season but has a plus-two rating.

Toronto Maple Leafs| Transactions Chris Tanev| Dakota Mermis

1 comment

PHR Live Chat Transcript: 10/22/25

October 22, 2025 at 1:27 pm CDT | by Josh Erickson 5 Comments

You can view the transcript from today’s live chat with Josh Erickson using this link or via the embedded window below:

Live Chats

5 comments

Mammoth Place Andrew Agozzino On Waivers

October 22, 2025 at 1:12 pm CDT | by Josh Erickson Leave a Comment

The Mammoth announced Wednesday that they’ve placed forward Andrew Agozzino on waivers. If he clears on Thursday, he’ll head to AHL Tucson.

Utah will have an open roster spot either today or tomorrow, depending on whether they move Agozzino to the non-roster list while he’s on waivers. They have a few players on injured reserve, including forward Alexander Kerfoot, who was listed as week-to-week with a lower-body injury at the beginning of training camp. If he’s nearing a return, that could be the impetus for Agozzino’s waiver placement.

Agozzino, 34, made an NHL opening night roster for the first time in his 15-year professional career this fall. He has 53 games of NHL experience, but before this year, he hadn’t touched NHL ice since March 2023 with the Sharks. The 5’10” winger signed a two-year, two-way deal with Utah in 2024 and played out last season with Tucson, recording 20 goals and 43 points in 55 games.

The Ontario native has long been a premier point producer in the minors. In a remarkable 791 career AHL games, second-most among active NHL/AHLers, he has a 265-358–623 scoring line. That’s quite the career for an undrafted player, who first landed a pro contract from the Avalanche’s minor-league affiliate back in 2012. Utah is his sixth NHL organization, following stops in Pittsburgh, Anaheim, Ottawa, and San Jose.

Agozzino appeared in the Mammoth’s first two games of the season but hasn’t played since, sitting as a scratch in five straight. He went 3-for-7 on faceoffs and averaged just 6:08 of ice time per game, staying off the scoresheet aside from a block and four hits. Utah was out-attempted 14-5 at even strength in his limited minutes.

Transactions| Utah Mammoth| Waivers Andrew Agozzino

0 comments

Golden Knights Recall Carl Lindbom, Jaycob Megna

October 22, 2025 at 12:37 pm CDT | by Josh Erickson Leave a Comment

The Golden Knights announced they’ve recalled goaltender Carl Lindbom and defenseman Jaycob Megna from AHL Henderson. They only had one open roster spot, and they created another by moving defenseman Noah Hanifin to injured reserve, per Danny Webster of the Las Vegas Review-Journal. With insufficient cap space, there’s another corresponding transaction still to come.

That move will likely be an IR/LTIR shift or placement. Right now, Mark Stone is on standard injured reserve and is week-to-week with a wrist injury. If they expect him to miss at least 10 games and 24 days, they can transfer him to LTIR, retroactive to Oct. 18, and increase their LTIR pool by roughly $3.5MM, given their current cap space ($310,275, per PuckPedia).

Lindbom’s recall indicates they expect Adin Hill to miss some time after he departed Monday’s game against the Hurricanes in the first period. It’s an apparent lower-body injury for Hill, who reacted awkwardly after flashing his left leg to make a save (video via B/R Open Ice). It was the second time in under a week that he’d left a start early due to injury. A retroactive IR placement would rule him out of Vegas’ next two games and make him eligible for activation on Oct. 28.

In the meantime, Lindbom gets the call from Henderson to man the Knights’ crease with Akira Schmid. While Carter Hart is with the team on a tryout, he’s ineligible to play until Dec. 1 as a result of his suspension following a not-guilty verdict in connection with a sexual assault charge. Until he’s a factor, Lindbom is an intriguing call-up option. The 22-year-old was a seventh-round pick back in 2021 but has quickly seen his stock rise following some standout performances in Sweden’s top two pro leagues. He arrived in North America last season and spent the year exclusively with Henderson, recording a .912 SV% and 2.65 GAA in 36 appearances. This year, he’s off to a pristine start with a 1.00 GAA and .958 SV% in two showings for the Silver Knights.

Any playing time would mean his NHL debut. While Schmid is undefeated in his four appearances, he doesn’t have overly inspiring numbers with a .899 SV% and 2.57 GAA. He hasn’t been a significant drag by any stretch, but has still allowed 0.6 goals above expected, per MoneyPuck. With him and Hill both posting tepid numbers out of the gate, it would make sense to give one of their top prospects a look, but amid a tough road trip through Florida and Carolina, they may be hesitant to do so.

Megna arrives to give the Knights an extra defenseman on hand for their road trip. They were only rostering six healthy ones without Hanifin, who hasn’t played since the season opener because of an undisclosed injury. Since he’s already missed more than a week, he’s eligible for activation at any time.

The 33-year-old Megna signed a two-year, $1.6MM deal with Vegas in the offseason and cleared waivers a few weeks back on his way to Henderson. The veteran of 193 NHL games has an assist, six penalty minutes, and a plus-two rating through his first four appearances with the minor-league club. With No. 7 Ben Hutton playing well since being inserted into the lineup for Hanifin, it’s unlikely Megna will see action unless another injury pops up. Hutton has two assists and a plus-three rating through six games while averaging 15:54 of ice time per night.

Transactions| Vegas Golden Knights Adin Hill| Carl Lindbom| Jaycob Megna| Noah Hanifin

0 comments

Islanders’ Pierre Engvall Unlikely To Play This Season

October 22, 2025 at 10:48 am CDT | by Josh Erickson 4 Comments

Islanders winger Pierre Engvall is unlikely to play this season after undergoing ankle surgery on Tuesday, general manager Mathieu Darche told reporters today (via Andrew Gross of Newsday).

Engvall had already started the season on injured reserve after he had a hip procedure performed over the offseason. Still, he was expected to be able to return sometime around the season opener. That didn’t come to pass, and there hadn’t been an update on his status in several weeks.

Engvall will now be eligible for long-term injured reserve, meaning the Islanders can exceed the salary cap by up to his $3MM cap hit with an optimal capture. If injuries pile up, they’ll take advantage. As things stand, they don’t have enough cap space ($702,490) for a standard recall, per PuckPedia.

The lost season dots what’s been a rather disastrous run on Long Island for Engvall since he signed a seven-year, $21MM contract with the club in the 2023 offseason. He was picked up from the Maple Leafs at the previous season’s trade deadline and looked like a potential long-term top-nine piece. He averaged north of 15 minutes per game down the stretch and produced a 5-4–9 scoring line in 18 games – a 41-point clip – and comprised the second line with Brock Nelson and Kyle Palmieri.

In his first season under the long-term deal, Engvall’s usage remained consistent, but his production didn’t. He only managed 10 goals and 28 points in 74 games, down from the 30-plus points he’d locked in over the prior two years spent mostly in Toronto. He can naturally be a frustrating player to watch at times, given his relative lack of physicality for his 6’6″ frame, so a dropoff in scoring made for a considerable dropoff in his perceived value.

Last year, his first full season under head coach Patrick Roy, Engvall failed to reverse the slide. He became a semi-regular healthy scratch, appearing in 62 games. When dressed, his ice time dipped to under 12 minutes per game. His scoring suffered in kind, churning out an 8-7–15 line with a career-worst minus-seven rating.

After the Islanders signed Jonathan Drouin and Max Shabanov in free agency this past offseason, it was clear they weren’t penciling Engvall into a spot in the opening night lineup, even if he was going to be healthy. Before his injury designation, he was a speculative waiver candidate after passing through unclaimed twice last season.

If his recovery from ankle surgery stretches past the end of the regular season, it could prevent the Islanders from pursuing a buyout of his contract. If he’s healthy enough to be on the receiving end of one, though, it might be something they consider at a flat cost of $1MM against the cap for the next eight years compared to $3MM for the next four, although that drops to under $2MM if he’s in the minors.

New York Islanders Pierre Engvall

4 comments

Bruins Place Jordan Harris On IR, Recall Michael Callahan

October 22, 2025 at 10:37 am CDT | by Josh Erickson Leave a Comment

The Bruins announced they’ve placed defenseman Jordan Harris on injured reserve. His roster spot is going to Michael Callahan, who’s been called up from AHL Providence in the corresponding move.

Rarely does an IR announcement come before any sort of injury designation, but that’s the case with Harris. He played in last night’s loss to the Panthers and, with 15:20 of ice time, shouldered his usual workload. The 25-year-old is averaging 15:38 through five games in his first year in Boston. The Massachusetts native signed a one-year deal worth $825,000 over the offseason and won the job as the Bruins’ extra defender out of training camp, but has drawn into action frequently over the past couple of weeks while Hampus Lindholm has been in and out due to a lower-body injury.

So far, he’s been a pleasant surprise. He’s scored a goal, something that no other Boston defender other than Nikita Zadorov can say this season. He’s recorded three blocks and four hits with strong possession impacts at even strength, leading the Bruins’ rearguards with a 57.1 CF% at even strength. He’s routinely comprised the third pairing with Andrew Peeke, a duo that’s controlled 53.5% of expected goals but has been outscored 3-2, according to MoneyPuck.

Now, they’ll be without him for at least seven days. Boston has a tight schedule to close the month and will have played four games by the time Harris is eligible to come off IR next Wednesday. His earliest potential return date is Oct. 30 against the Sabres.

If the Bruins continue to sit Lindholm, Callahan will be in line for his season debut tomorrow versus the Ducks. The 26-year-old is entering his sophomore season after skating in 17 games with the B’s last year, scoring once with a minus-five rating. The 6’2″ lefty managed nine shots on goal and projects as a semi-reliable, unassuming No. 7/8 option long-term. Considering he started nearly three-quarters of his even-strength shifts last year in the defensive end, his subpar 43.8 CF% is understandable. In four games with Providence this season, he’s still searching for his first point but has a plus-one rating.

Boston Bruins| Transactions Jordan Harris| Michael Callahan

0 comments

Predators Assign Brady Martin To OHL

October 22, 2025 at 10:02 am CDT | by Josh Erickson 4 Comments

The Predators announced Wednesday that they’ve assigned center Brady Martin to the OHL’s Soo Greyhounds. They now have two open roster spots, although roster considerations aren’t playing a factor in this move.

Martin, 18, has seen his stock rise more than most prospects over the past year. Viewed as a late first-round selection early in 2024-25, he rocketed his way up draft boards enough to earn the call at fifth overall from Nashville. That was fueled by an offensive explosion in juniors from the physical pivot, who produced 33 goals and 72 points in 57 games for the Greyhounds after recording just 10 goals and 28 points in 52 games the year prior.

That carried over into the preseason, where Martin converted a two-goal, one-assist performance in four games into a spot on Nashville’s opening roster submission. Initially, it looked like he would get quite a long leash. Martin started the opener on the top line with Filip Forsberg and Ryan O’Reilly, but only factoring in at even strength meant he only averaged 12:42 of ice time through a pair of games, recording an assist and an even rating, before the Predators scratched him in what they referred to as a preset development plan. Martin ended up sitting in the press box for four straight before re-entering the lineup for last night’s loss to the Ducks. He only skated 10:51 but managed his first two career shots on goal, along with one block and going 2-for-6 on faceoffs.

Yet Martin, still a raw prospect, needs playing time more than anything else. He’ll get that now in spades in Sault Ste. Marie, where he’ll be their top skater and should aim to be among the OHL’s leading scorers at season’s end, at least in terms of points per game. The demotion to the Greyhounds is permanent for the remainder of 2025-26, save for an extremely rare emergency exception in a catastrophic injury situation or until the Soo’s season comes to an end.

Martin still checks in as the Preds’ No. 1 prospect and is the highest-ceiling middle-man they’ve developed in-house in years. After another close-to-full season of development in juniors, he’ll be given plenty of leeway to secure a more permanent slot in Nashville’s forward group to begin the 2026-27 campaign.

Since Martin played fewer than 10 games before being sent back to juniors, his entry-level contract will not take effect this season and will not count toward Nashville’s 50-contract limit. He is now on track to reach restricted free agency in 2029 with an additional four years of team control after that. He still earns his $97,500 signing bonus for 2025-26, bringing his cap hit down from $975,000 to $942,500 for next year.

A corresponding recall in the coming days should still be expected. With Martin no longer in the picture, the Predators aren’t carrying any extra forwards with them. As things stand, they’ll need to dress 11 forwards and seven defensemen against the Canucks tomorrow if Jonathan Marchessault, who’s missed the last two games with a lower-body issue, can’t play.

Nashville Predators| Newsstand| Transactions Brady Martin

4 comments

Blue Jackets Reassign Dysin Mayo

October 22, 2025 at 9:48 am CDT | by Josh Erickson 1 Comment

Oct. 22: The Blue Jackets announced they’ve loaned Mayo back to Cleveland. He was rostered for last night’s 5-1 win over the Stars but did not play. The team is hoping for Gudbranson to be available for their game against the Penguins on Saturday, Aaron Portzline of The Athletic reports, so Mayo’s services as a healthy extra are no longer needed.

Oct. 19: The Blue Jackets announced they’ve recalled defenseman Dysin Mayo from AHL Cleveland. They’ve been operating with an open roster spot since their initial submission earlier this month, so no corresponding transaction is required.

The move is spurred by an injury to veteran righty Erik Gudbranson, who’s sat out the last three games with an upper-body injury and remains day-to-day. Two of those three games were at home. They’re now headed to Dallas on a mini road trip and would presumably like Mayo around as extra insurance in case another injury arises.

If Mayo plays, it will be his first NHL appearance since February 2023 with the Coyotes. The 29-year-old signed a two-way deal with the Blue Jackets in the offseason. The depth defender cleared waivers during the preseason and has recorded two assists, four PIMs, and an even rating through his first four appearances for Cleveland.

His NHL work is hard to gauge since it all came on a patchwork Arizona defense corps in the 2021-22 and 2022-23 seasons. He logged 82 appearances in those two years, including 67 as a rookie after spending five seasons with their AHL affiliate in Tucson. He’s been a decently stable two-way presence in the minors and even managed a 4-8–12 scoring line for the Yotes, but his defensive stats are understandably subpar. Overtaxed out of the gate (he played over 20 minutes per game in 2021-22), he has a career -30 rating with a CF% of just 40.1 and an xGF% of 37.8 at even strength.

Mayo, a 6’0″ righty, plays a similar physical brand to the injured Gudbranson. His 129 hits actually led Arizona’s defensemen in 2021-22. Summoning him ahead of higher-ceiling youngsters like Corson Ceulemans and Stanislav Svozil is no accident. Inserting him in the lineup would give Columbus an even lefty/righty balance again after dressing four lefties and two righties in Gudbranson’s absence. Jake Christiansen, who started the year as the Blue Jackets’ healthy extra but was forced into action with Gudbranson’s injury, has a -1 rating through three showings and has skated just 8:37 of ice time per game, absurdly low for a defender.

Mayo can remain on Columbus’ NHL roster for up to 30 days or play 10 games until he needs to clear waivers again to return to Cleveland.

Columbus Blue Jackets| Transactions Dysin Mayo

1 comment

Sabres Reassign Joshua Dunne

October 22, 2025 at 9:38 am CDT | by Josh Erickson Leave a Comment

The Sabres announced Wednesday that they’ve loaned forward Joshua Dunne to AHL Rochester. They now have two open roster spots, one of which will go to goaltender Ukko-Pekka Luukkonen as he comes off injured reserve following yesterday’s news that he’s been assigned to Rochester on a conditioning stint. The other will go to winger Beck Malenstyn, who’s returned to the team after taking paternity leave and was on the non-roster list, per Paul Hamilton of WGR Sports Radio 550.

Dunne’s first recall of the season lasted nearly two weeks. He was summoned from Rochester on Oct. 10 after Zach Benson took a puck to the face, resulting in a hospital visit, and after Joshua Norris sustained an oblique injury in the season’s first game. Benson has since returned and has six assists in three games, although Norris is on IR and will remain there until mid-December.

Recalled to serve as a depth piece rather than a lineup fixture, Dunne only appeared in two out of five games on his recall. The soon-to-be 27-year-old saw ice on Oct. 13 against the Avalanche and last Monday against the Canadiens, but only averaged 6:30 of ice time. The 6’4″, 208-lb pivot factored in on the wing and, aside from recording three hits, didn’t have a tangible impact. His ice time was down even further from the already-slim 7:06 per game he saw in a two-game look with Buffalo last year.

The Missouri native has 18 games of NHL experience but is still looking for his first point. Fourteen of them came with the Blue Jackets, where he first signed as an undrafted free agent out of Clarkson in 2021. He’s in the back half of a two-year, $1.55MM deal he signed with Buffalo in the 2024 offseason that carried a two-way structure last year but guarantees him the full NHL league minimum of $775,000 in 2025-26. In 202 career AHL appearances, 68 of which came with Rochester, he has a 46-48–94 scoring line with 194 PIMs and a minus-three rating.

Malenstyn could take Dunne’s place in the lineup when the Sabres host the Red Wings tonight. Since he was on the non-roster list and not on injured reserve, he doesn’t need to miss seven days since his last appearance. Through five games before exiting the lineup, he had no points with a minus-two rating and 13 hits while averaging 9:52 of ice time per game.

Buffalo Sabres| Transactions Beck Malenstyn| Joshua Dunne| Ukko-Pekka Luukkonen

0 comments

Islanders Name Sergei Naumov Goaltending Coach

October 22, 2025 at 8:04 am CDT | by Josh Erickson Leave a Comment

The Islanders have promoted AHL Bridgeport goaltending coach Sergei Naumov to the same role on their NHL bench, Elliotte Friedman of Sportsnet reports Wednesday. Piero Greco, who had been the team’s goaltending coach since the 2018-19 season, has been relieved of his duties.

Naumov, 56, is a relatively new addition to the organization. He was brought in as Bridgeport’s goalie coach ahead of the 2024-25 season. The native of Latvia had spent the previous 15 years coaching goalies in the Kontinental Hockey League. He made stops with Dinamo Riga (2009-12), Donbass Donetsk (2012-14), Atlant Mytishchi (2014-15), Lokomotiv Yaroslavl (2015-18), and CSKA Moscow (2018-24).

In Moscow, Naumov worked with star starter Ilya Sorokin in the final two seasons of his international career before he made the jump to Long Island. The 2018-19 campaign, in particular, was some of Sorokin’s best work. In 40 appearances, he logged a 1.16 GAA, .940 SV%, 11 shutouts, and a 28-6-4 record. He led the league in shutouts before leading CSKA to a Gagarin Cup championship, recording a playoff-leading 1.19 GAA and earning MVP honors.

With Sorokin off to an unusually rough start in 2025-26, today’s change is clearly targeted at getting him back to top form with a coach that, theoretically, knows precisely what buttons to push. It took the 30-year-old until last night, his fifth start of the season, to record a save percentage above .900. On the year, he has a .873 SV% with a 3.90 GAA and a 2-3-0 record. He has conceded 1.7 goals above expected, per MoneyPuck. That number is 53rd out of the 63 goalies to see action so far and marks the first time in his six-year NHL career that he’s flirted with below-average territory.

In a league where goaltending is increasingly volatile from year to year, few can say they boast the consistency that Sorokin has brought with him since making the jump from the KHL. After spending the 2020-21 campaign as countryman Semyon Varlamov’s backup, Sorokin assumed the No. 1 job from 2021-22 onward and has finished top 10 in Vezina Trophy voting on every occasion, including a sixth-place finish last year and runner-up honors in 2022-23.

Of course, it’s still only October. There’s plenty of runway left for Sorokin to turn on the jets and come up with another All-Star-caliber season. He showed signs of it last night, allowing a season-low three goals on a season-high 36 shots faced against the Sharks. But evidently, the Islanders had developed enough concern with what they’ve seen technically from Sorokin to open the season to feel a significant and prompt change was necessary.

New York Islanders

0 comments
« Previous Page
Load More Posts
    Top Stories

    Lightning Sign J.J. Moser To Eight-Year Extension

    ECHL Players Go On Strike

    Oilers, David Tomasek To Terminate Contract

    Maple Leafs Promote Steve Sullivan To Assistant Coach

    Golden Knights’ Adin Hill Out Week-To-Week, William Karlsson Targeting Olympic Return

    Maple Leafs Fire Assistant Coach Marc Savard

    Sharks’ Will Smith Out Week-To-Week, Collin Graf Questionable

    Rangers’ J.T. Miller Out Week-To-Week

    Oilers’ Tristan Jarry Out Week-To-Week, Frederic Scratched

    Blackhawks’ Frank Nazar Expected To Miss Four Weeks With Injury

    Recent

    Lightning Sign J.J. Moser To Eight-Year Extension

    Canucks To Activate Elias Pettersson Off Injured Reserve

    Metropolitan Notes: Blue Jackets, Horvat, Miller, Lizotte

    Sabres Recall Ryan Johnson

    Jake Evans To Miss Four To Six Weeks

    Atlantic Notes: Lightning, Carlo, Montembeault, Beckman

    Blackhawks Recall Landon Slaggert

    Blues Activate Jordan Kyrou And Jimmy Snuggerud

    Senators Recall Xavier Bourgault And Dennis Gilbert

    Lightning Recall Scott Sabourin And Steven Santini

    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

    • Rasmus Andersson Rumors
    • Ryan O’Reilly Rumors
    • Kiefer Sherwood Rumors
    • Steven Stamkos Rumors

    Pro Hockey Rumors Features

    Pro Hockey Rumors Features

    • Support Pro Hockey Rumors And Go Ad-Free
    • 2026 Free Agents
    • 2026 Free Agents By Team
    • 2027 Free Agents
    • Players Who Can Veto Trades In 2025-26
    • Pro Hockey Rumors On Bluesky
    • Pro Hockey Rumors On Facebook
    • Pro Hockey Rumors On Twitter/X
    • Pro Hockey Rumors Original Posts
    • Salary Cap Deep Dives 2025-26
    • Trade Rumors App
    • Trades – 2025-26 In-Season

     

     

     

     

    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