Penguins RFA Filip Lindberg Signs With Liiga’s SaiPa

Penguins restricted free agent netminder Filip Lindberg has signed a one-year deal with SaiPa of the Finnish Liiga, per a team release (translated to English).

Lindberg, 25, hasn’t played in North America since his entry-level contract with the Penguins expired after the 2022-23 season. A seventh-round pick of the Wild in 2019, they failed to sign him to an ELC before his exclusive signing rights lapsed, and he ended up with Pittsburgh in free agency after three seasons of excellent hockey at UMass.

The Finnish puck-stopper struggled with injuries in college and never won the starting role outright, platooning with Stars netminder Matt Murray during his time in Amherst. But when Lindberg was in the crease, he was dominant, recording a 1.58 GAA, .937 SV%, 11 shutouts and a 29-10-6 record in 50 appearances.

Unfortunately, injuries followed him to Pennsylvania after he turned pro. After being named the AHL’s goalie of the month in October 2021, he played in just 26 games for AHL Wilkes-Barre/Scranton over two seasons in the Penguins organization. He did have solid numbers (3.03 GAA, .901 SV%) behind a weak team but failed to replicate his collegiate play.

The Penguins retained his NHL rights by extending him a qualifying offer after the 2022-23 campaign ended, but Lindberg opted not to sign it and returned home to suit up for the Liiga’s TPS this season. He managed to stay healthy, but his level of play fell off a cliff, struggling to a 2.54 GAA, .883 SV% and 6-12-11 record in 31 appearances.

Unsurprisingly, the Espoo native decided to try his hand elsewhere and didn’t extend with TPS. He now lands with SaiPa, whose goaltenders posted similarly poor numbers last season, to bolster their crease.

Lindberg carries 10.2(c) status in the eyes of the NHL, meaning he’s ineligible to sign an offer sheet with another team while his signing rights are still the property of the Penguins. Pittsburgh must sign him to a contract before free agency opens in 2026 to avoid letting his signing rights lapse.

Sharks Interview Assistant Ryan Warsofsky For Head Coaching Vacancy

The Sharks have interviewed assistant coach Ryan Warsofsky recently, reports Sheng Peng of San Jose Hockey Now. He’ll be considered for a promotion after the team fired bench boss David Quinn last month with one season left on his contract.

Warsofsky, 36, has never been a head coach in the NHL, but this isn’t the first time he’s received interest. After a quick rise up the ranks in the AHL, reports indicated he was generating buzz among NHL front offices in the summer of 2022, although he settled for an assistant role on Quinn’s staff in San Jose.

His two-year run as an assistant with the Sharks thus far is his first-ever role in the NHL as a player or coach. After a collegiate career and one-year professional stint in 2011-12 that included stops in the Netherlands and American low minor leagues, Warsofsky ended his playing career and returned to his alma mater, Curry College, to assist their Division III program.

After one season, Warsofsky landed a job as an assistant with the ECHL’s South Carolina Stingrays, then the second-tier affiliate of the Bruins. Serving on the staff of future Capitals head coach Spencer Carbery, Warsofsky remained in his assistant role for three seasons before taking over as head coach in 2016 after Carbery left to be the head coach of the Ontario Hockey League’s Saginaw Spirit.

The Stingrays, now affiliated with Washington, continued a solid success with Warsofsky as their head coach and director of hockey operations. They didn’t win a division title under Warsofsky, but they did make the playoffs both times and advanced to the Kelly Cup Final in 2017. After posting an 88-44-12 record in two campaigns in South Carolina, Warsofsky joined the Hurricanes organization as an assistant coach with their AHL affiliate, the Charlotte Checkers.

Warsofsky lasted just one season in Charlotte before being promoted, assuming head coaching duties for the 2019-20 season after serving on Mike Vellucci‘s Calder Cup-winning staff the year prior. He remained with the Hurricanes when they changed their AHL affiliation to the Chicago Wolves for 2020-21, capping off his time in the organization with a Calder Cup championship of his own in 2021-22 with future Carolina regulars Jalen ChatfieldJack DruryPyotr Kochetkov and Stefan Noesen playing integral roles.

It was at that point that Warsofsky started garnering NHL consideration. After landing with the Sharks in 2022, he received his first call to the U.S. men’s national team, serving as an assistant under Quinn at the 2023 World Championship.

If he gets the job, Warsofsky would become the youngest head coach in the NHL by a mile, beating out Carbery by six years. The Sharks haven’t been firmly linked to other candidates on the market. However, there’s been a fair amount of speculation about Lightning assistant Jeff Halpern, Kraken assistant Jay Leach, former Sharks winger and AHL Ontario head coach Marco Sturm, ex-Sharks assistant and Oilers coach Jay Woodcroft, all of whom Sportsnet’s Elliotte Friedman suggested as fits on the “32 Thoughts” podcast late last month.

Rangers’ Filip Chytil To Return For Game 3

5:53 p.m.: Chytil is listed on the Rangers’ lineup card for Game 3 and will play, per The Athletic’s Peter Baugh. He’s been taken off long-term injured reserve as a result, although the move has no salary cap ramifications in the postseason.

5:43 p.m.: Pre-game line rushes indicate that Rangers center Filip Chytil is likely to draw in for tonight’s Game 3 against the Hurricanes, per NHL.com’s Dan Rosen. The Czech pivot hasn’t played in over seven months due to suspected concussion symptoms.

The Rangers have only ever confirmed that Chytil missed time with an upper-body injury, although multiple reports have suggested concussions were the reason for his absence. He sustained the initial suspected concussion against the Hurricanes on Nov. 2, leading him to return to Czechia midseason for a brief period in his recovery.

Chytil returned to New York in mid-January, but during just his second session with the team in a non-contact jersey, he tripped and sustained a setback that required him to be helped off the ice by teammates during a lightly attended skate. The Rangers announced within days that Chytil would miss the remainder of the 2023-24 campaign, but he was medically cleared a bit sooner than expected and returned to practice with the club nearly a month ago.

With no hiccups in his return to game conditioning over the past few weeks, they now get him back with a chance to take a 3-0 stranglehold on their second-round series on the road in Carolina. Fourth-line enforcer Matt Rempe will be scratched to accommodate his return after logging a goal, 8 PIMs, and a +1 rating in just 6:22 of average ice time through his first six playoff games.

In 10 regular-season games before his injury, Chytil had six assists while averaging 15:56 per game. The 2017 first-round pick had a career-high 22 goals and 45 points last season.

Offseason Checklist: NHL Utah

The offseason has arrived for three-quarters of the NHL for teams that either missed the playoffs or were eliminated in the first round.  Accordingly, it’s now time to examine what they will need to accomplish over the coming months.  Next up is a look at Utah.

The hockey operations staff that formerly comprised the Arizona Coyotes entered the 2023-24 campaign looking to take a measured step forward. They’d last made the playoffs in 2012, excluding the COVID bubble, and had already seen one season of improvement under head coach André Tourigny.

Early on, it looked like they may have had a prayer of ending their playoff drought, keeping pace in the wild-card race with a 19-14-2 record on New Year’s Day. Without a suitable arena plan in place by the All-Star break, though, relocation rumors again surged and, as players and staff have since admitted, fueled a long run of losing play.

They still ended the season with a respectable 36 wins, their most since 2019, and look a step closer to playoff contention. Under new ownership in Utah and a relatively endless supply of cap space and draft picks this summer, general manager Bill Armstrong has the opportunity to accelerate the yet-to-be-named roster’s rebuild in a big way.

Take Care Of Their Own

As a result of their previous situation, Utah has one of the lowest amounts of standard player contracts signed for next season in the league (22). That impact is felt mostly on defense, where not a single NHL-ready player is signed for 2024-25.

The good news is only two of their NHL regulars on the back end, Josh Brown and Travis Dermott, are unrestricted free agents. Everybody else is under team control, including their youthful top pairing of Sean Durzi and J.J. Moser.

The former relished the opportunity of being the Coyotes’ number-one defenseman last season, his first in the desert after they acquired him from the Kings last June. He responded with a career-best 41 points and a -1 rating in 76 games, averaging 22:43 per game and quarterbacking their top power-play unit. His possession impacts at even strength were among the best on the team, and while he may not be a long-term number-one guy on a championship team, he solidified his status as a first-pairing piece for the present. Evolving Hockey projects Durzi to receive a four-year deal worth around $5.9MM per season, an agreement both sides should be happy with.

Moser, who was also solid this season with 26 points in 80 games riding shotgun with Durzi, also needs a new deal. The 23-year-old has completed his entry-level contract. Michael Kesselring and Juuso Välimäki, who each held top-four roles for a decent chunk of the season, are also RFAs.

Utah has much less contractual work to do with their forwards. Among NHL regulars, only Barrett Hayton is an RFA, while enforcer Liam O’Brien is headed for unrestricted free agency but seems a good bet to re-sign. Nonetheless, gearing up for a big offseason spending spree will require a better indication of what their salary cap picture will look like with their RFAs and other returning players taken care of – especially if Armstrong and owners Smith Entertainment Group plan on gracing the $87.7MM upper limit.

Land An Impact Defenseman

The Coyotes’ biggest improvement last season was their offense. Ranking 16th in the league at 3.10 goals per game, it was certainly good enough to get them into the playoffs if their defense saw a marked improvement from last season.

Obviously, that wasn’t the case. Outside of Durzi and Moser, it was a rough go for most Coyotes blue-liners last season. Even Välimäki and Kesselring had some good moments throughout the year, but other regulars like Dermott and Mathew Dumba, prior to his trade to the Lightning, were bleeding quality chances against on a nightly basis.

Reports earlier in the month indicated that a top-four defenseman, along with a second-line center and a top-six winger, was on Armstrong’s shopping list for Utah’s roster this summer. A cursory look suggests it should be his biggest priority.

Kesselring and Välimäki proved last season they could stay afloat, each logging possession metrics slightly better than the team average. But having both of them in a top-four isn’t ideal, especially with a solid but pedestrian first pairing in Durzi and Moser. Adding a right-shot defenseman to complement Välimäki to slot in behind Durzi on the depth chart, allowing Kesselring to be increasingly effective in third-pairing minutes, would have a considerable domino effect. Can Armstrong land a Brett Pesce or Matt Roy on the UFA market? He’ll certainly have the cash.

Complement Cooley

Priority number two behind adding a defenseman among Armstrong’s already-dictated targets is adding a complement for Logan Cooley as a top-six center. The 2022 third-overall pick struggled early on in the season, getting caved defensively and failing to drive play, but settled in throughout the season en route to a solid 20-goal, 44-point rookie campaign. Averaging nearly 16 minutes per game, he’s not quite ready to be a bonafide first-liner between Clayton Keller and Nick Schmaltz, but he’s getting there. They’ll need some help to avoid overextending him too early in his career, though.

Adding a 1B center who can split top-six duties with Cooley would allow Nick Bjugstad and Hayton to center the club’s third and fourth lines, suddenly creating extremely solid depth considering they both rose to the occasion when relied upon for top-six usage this season. They can occupy top-six minutes to ease the burden on Cooley if necessary, but it’s not ideal if Armstrong and Smith believe playoffs should be in the conversation for Utah in 2024-25. The production wasn’t there for Hayton, who had just three goals and 10 points in 33 games despite spending most of his time when healthy next to Keller, but his 54.9 CF% at even strength was the best on the team, and he looks to be a reliable, two-way pivot to anchor their third line in the long term.

Jack McBain is also in the mix at center but, like the others, is much more comfortable in a bottom-six role. There aren’t many bonafide top-six options on the free agent center market this summer, so if Armstrong is looking to leverage some of Utah’s many upcoming second-round picks, it would be wise to do so.

Image courtesy of USA Today Sports.

Injury Notes: Pesce, Drouin, Kiviranta

There’s no update on a timeline for Hurricanes defenseman Brett Pesce‘s return to the lineup as they try and climb out of a 2-0 series hole against the Rangers. He remains out indefinitely with his lower-body injury and has still yet to resume skating, head coach Rod Brind’Amour told Chip Alexander of the Raleigh News and Observer on Wednesday.

Pesce has now played just three games in the last month. He was scratched for rest for two of Carolina’s final three games of the regular season before exiting their first-round victory over the Islanders in Game 2. The 29-year-old had an assist and a +2 rating in nearly 20 minutes of ice time in the Canes’ Game 1 victory. It was a down year offensively for the pending unrestricted free agent blue-liner, logging a career-low 13 points in 70 games, but he remained a top-four fixture alongside Brady Skjei on Carolina’s second pairing. Tony DeAngelo has replaced him in the lineup, logging an assist in five games after sitting as a healthy scratch for most of the regular season.

Other injury updates as the second round chugs on:

  • Like Pesce, there’s still no timetable for Avalanche winger Jonathan Drouin‘s return, but he is making progress. He’s back skating with the team and has made “really good progress” over the last few days, head coach Jared Bednar said to The Denver Gazette’s Kyle Fredrickson. However, he won’t be making his playoff debut tonight and remains ruled out for Game 2 against the Stars. The 29-year-old sustained a lower-body injury in the final game of the regular season after posting a career-high 37 assists and 56 points in 79 games.
  • The Avalanche may be getting their other injured forward back in the fold, as Bednar told Fredrickson that depth winger Joel Kiviranta is “hopefully” an option to slot in for Game 2. The midseason signing would be playing his first game in nearly two weeks, last suiting up in Game 3 against the Jets on April 26. After beginning 2023-24 on a tryout and subsequent minor-league contract, Kiviranta had nine points in 56 regular-season games for the Avs and had recorded one assist through three postseason contests. Veteran Chris Wagner will likely sit to make room for Kiviranta after making his first appearance of the playoffs in Game 1’s come-from-behind win over Dallas.

Devils Linked To Sheldon Keefe

It took until Thursday morning, but the Maple Leafs did decide to move on from head coach Sheldon Keefe after losing in the first round for the fourth time in his five-year tenure. His sparkling regular-season record over that time still immediately catapults him to being one of the top candidates on the open market, though.

To that end, the Devils are one of the teams expected to interview Keefe for their vacancy, TSN’s Pierre LeBrun reports. They’ve also been linked to former Blues bench boss Craig Berube – widely viewed as the most desirable candidate on the market – and ex-Oilers coach Jay Woodcroft.

New Jersey also has some documented interest in Penguins head coach Mike Sullivan should he hit the open market, but it seems more likely he’ll remain in Pittsburgh. The Devils are one of six teams with an active vacancy after firing Lindy Ruff in March and opting not to promote interim head coach Travis Green, who has since signed a four-year deal to become the next head coach of the Senators.

Keefe’s 212-97-40 record over 349 games with the Leafs is good for a .665 points percentage, the highest all-time among head coaches with at least 300 games of service. While there are others out there with far worse postseason winning percentages/records than his 16-21 mark, the failure to win more than one series despite consistently boasting an above-average team did him in. As did an all-too-familiar lack of scoring – the Leafs’ offense, led by some of the premier scoring and playmaking talents in the world in Auston MatthewsMitch Marner and William Nylander, went 14 games without scoring more than three goals.

In New Jersey, he would take over a team with a very similar level of uncertainty between the pipes – at least for now. Ilya Samsonov and Joseph Woll were both high-ceiling yet inconsistent options last year, although, as a whole, they were preferable to the rotating cast of Devils netminders that conceded 19 goals above average. They’re expected to be on the hunt for a top-tier name on the trade market, though, and are likely to see a name like Jacob MarkströmLinus Ullmark or Juuse Saros as their opening-night starter.

He’d also be assuming a defense core that, with a healthy Dougie Hamilton, is one of the most tantalizing yet well-rounded groups in the league. Hamilton, along with rising sophomores Luke Hughes and Simon Nemec, gives Keefe the option to ice a premier puck-moving threat on all three pairings, balanced with a defensively responsible other half in Kevin BahlJohn Marino and Jonas Siegenthaler.

Image courtesy of USA Today Sports.

Canadiens Prospect Oliver Kapanen Signs With SHL’s Timrå IK

Canadiens fans may have to wait a little longer to see 2021 second-round pick Oliver Kapanen in North America. The Finnish center has signed a two-year contract with Timrå IK of the Swedish Hockey League, the club announced Thursday.

The Habs have yet to come to terms on an entry-level contract with Kapanen, which they must do by June 1, 2025, to avoid losing his signing rights and letting him become an unrestricted free agent. They can still sign him this summer if they wish, but in the likely event he doesn’t make the NHL roster, today’s news means he must be offered back to Timrå on loan before he can be assigned to AHL Laval. However, he could play in Laval in 2025-26 without Timrå’s permission.

Kapanen, 20, is a Finnish national but returns to his birthplace of Timrå for the next step in his professional career. The 6’1″ pivot has developed well over the past two seasons with KalPa in the Finnish Liiga, totaling 27 goals and 65 points in 124 games since making his top-level debut in 2021-22.

He’ll be suiting up for the Finnish men’s national team for the first time starting tomorrow at the 2024 World Championship, although it’s not his first experience on the international stage. He captained Finland’s contingent at the 2023 World Juniors, scoring twice and adding an assist in five games.

Kapanen should be in line for a significant role with Timrå next season. He ended 2023-24 on an electric tear with KalPa in the postseason, tying for the team lead in scoring with seven goals and 14 points in 13 games. He’ll join a Timrå offense featuring former Oilers forwards Anton Lander and Magnus Pääjärvi, as well as Senators prospect Oliver Johansson and Penguins prospect Filip Hallander.

Predators Reassign Spencer Stastney

The Predators have reassigned defenseman Spencer Stastney to AHL Milwaukee, general manager Barry Trotz announced Thursday.

Stastney wasn’t sent down with three other fringe players last weekend, likely because he was still rehabbing the upper-body injury he sustained on a hit from Canucks forward Dakota Joshua in Game 3 of Nashville’s first-round loss. Today’s move indicates he’s been cleared to return.

The 24-year-old graduated from rookie status this season, skating in a career-high 20 regular season games with the Preds. A Nashville fifth-round pick in 2018, Stastney is wrapping up his second full professional season after finishing his collegiate career at Notre Dame in 2022.

It was a solid run for the 6’0″, 183-lb left-shot defender. He was passable at worst in his limited role, compiling two goals and two assists with a +9 rating while averaging 15:59 per game. Advanced metrics painted an optimistic picture of Stastney’s game, logging a 51.9 CF% and 59.3 xGF% at even strength.

Stastney played a handful of games for the Preds early on in the season but remained in Milwaukee for most of the year until a mid-March recall. After a three-month minor-league assignment, he sustained an upper-body injury in his first game back in the NHL but returned to play in Nashville’s final 10 games of the regular season.

That earned him a spot in head coach Andrew Brunette‘s Game 1 lineup against Vancouver ahead of the more experienced Tyson Barrie and Dante Fabbro. Before leaving the series due to the Joshua hit, Stastney had a +1 rating, one shot on goal and one block against the Canucks.

Stastney now returns to Milwaukee for some Calder Cup Playoff action after posting five goals, 20 points and a +27 rating in 44 regular-season games there. The Admirals trail 2-1 in their best-of-five division semifinal series against Texas, with Stastney expected to draw in for a must-win Game 4 on Friday. He’s in need of a new contract this summer, with his two-year entry-level contract set to expire and make him a restricted free agent.

Snapshots: AHL, Bennett, Lekkerimaki

The AHL will remain under stable leadership for next season and beyond. Current league president and CEO Scott Howson was on an expiring contract entering next season, but the AHL’s Board of Governors announced today that he’s agreed to a multi-year extension.

Before assuming his current role in 2020, the 64-year-old Howson was a mainstay in NHL front offices. Nearly a decade after his brief playing career concluded in 1986, Howson was appointed as the general manager of the Oilers’ AHL affiliate, then in Cape Breton, in 1994. He continued in the role when Edmonton reached an affiliation agreement with the Hamilton Bulldogs in 1996, and he was eventually promoted to an AGM role with the Oilers’ NHL staff in 2000.

He got his first shot as an NHL GM after helping construct the Edmonton squad that reached the 2006 Stanley Cup Final, signing on as the Blue Jackets’ GM for 2007-08. He lasted there for more than five seasons until he was fired shortly into the lockout-constricted 2012-13 season. Howson then immediately returned to Edmonton as a pro scout and eventually became their director of player development in 2017 before leaving for his AHL president/CEO role during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Other news and notes from around hockey:

  • Panthers forward Sam Bennett remains out for Game 2 against the Bruins tonight as Florida looks to tie the series. But the top-six center may not miss much more time with his upper-body injury and could return when the series shifts to Boston for Games 3 and 4, per The Hockey News’ David Dwork. Bennett, 27, had a goal and assist against the Lightning in the first round before leaving with injury partway through Game 2. He’s now missed more than two weeks of action but has officially been upgraded to day-to-day.
  • Canucks top forward prospect Jonathan Lekkerimäki is back with AHL Abbotsford for their playoff run, the team confirmed today. Lekkerimäki, 19, was assigned to Abbotsford in March to make his North American professional debut but was loaned to the Swedish national team in mid-April in advance of the 2024 World Championship. He didn’t make the cut for the final roster, though, and will suit up in a must-win Game 3 tonight against the Ontario Reign to keep their season alive. The 2022 first-round pick had a goal and an assist for Abbotsford during his earlier brief stint.

NHL-Affiliated Players Participating In The 2024 World Championship

May 8, 3:38 p.m.: Blue Jackets 2023 second-round pick Gavin Brindley has been added to Team USA’s roster.

May 8, 12:15 p.m.: A few notable changes were announced today, including Penguins netminder Alex Nedeljkovic heading to Czechia to complement Red Wings Trey Augustine and Alex Lyon in the crease. Sweden’s national governing body also confirmed their full roster for the tournament.

May 6: Nearly every one of the 16 countries participating has confirmed their whole roster ahead of the 2024 IIHF World Championship, which begins Friday in Czechia. The following is a full list of NHL-affiliated players, including those both under contract with teams in 2023-24 or on reserve lists, attending the tournament. For fans of non-playoff bound teams, the Worlds are always a great chance to watch your team’s players skate in competitive hockey in May. Countries without any NHL-affiliated representation are Great Britain, Kazakhstan and Poland.

There’s one notable change to report from already announced/reported rosters: Norris Trophy finalist Roman Josi has been added to Switzerland’s roster, per Elite Prospects. The Predators captain will participate in his first World Championship since 2019.

Anaheim Ducks

Lukáš Dostál (Czechia)
Radko Gudas (Czechia)
F Isac Lundeström (Sweden)
Pavol Regenda (Slovakia)
F Trevor Zegras (USA)
Olen Zellweger (Canada)

Boston Bruins

Dans Locmelis (Latvia)

Buffalo Sabres

D Bowen Byram (Canada)
F Dylan Cozens (Canada)
Rasmus Dahlin (Sweden)
F Victor Olofsson (Sweden)
John-Jason Peterka (Germany)
Owen Power (Canada)

Calgary Flames

F Andrew Mangiapane (Canada)
Martin Pospisil (Slovakia)

Carolina Hurricanes

Juha Jääskä (Finland)
Felix Unger Sörum (Sweden)

Chicago Blackhawks

F Connor Bedard (Canada)
D Seth Jones (USA)
Philipp Kurashev (Switzerland)
Petr Mrázek (Czechia)
Vili Saarijärvi (Finland)
D Alex Vlasic (USA)

Columbus Blue Jackets

F Adam Fantilli (Canada) REMOVED FROM ROSTER
F Johnny Gaudreau (USA)
Elvis Merzļikins (Latvia)
Damon Severson (Canada)
Calvin Thurkauf (Switzerland)
D Zach Werenski (USA)

Dallas Stars

Arttu Hyry (Finland)

Detroit Red Wings

G Trey Augustine (USA)
G Alex Lyon (USA)
Olli Määttä (Finland)
D Jeff Petry (USA)
F Lucas Raymond (Sweden)

Florida Panthers

F Alexander True (Denmark)

Los Angeles Kings

F Carl Grundström (Sweden)
Pierre-Luc Dubois (Canada)
F Adrian Kempe (Sweden)

Minnesota Wild

F Matt Boldy (USA)
Jonas Brodin (Sweden)
F Joel Eriksson Ek (Sweden)
Filip Gustavsson (Sweden)
Samuel Hlavaj (Slovakia)
F Marcus Johansson (Sweden)
Marco Rossi (Austria)
David Špaček (Czechia)
Jesper Wallstedt (Sweden)
Mats Zuccarello (Norway)

Montreal Canadiens

F Cole Caufield (USA)
Kaiden Guhle (Canada)
Oliver Kapanen (Finland)
F Vinzenz Rohrer (Austria)
Juraj Slafkovsky (Slovakia)

Nashville Predators

Roman Josi (Switzerland)

New Jersey Devils

Nico Daws (Canada)
Nico Hischier (Switzerland)
D Luke Hughes (USA)
Dawson Mercer (Canada)
Simon Nemec (Slovakia)
Ondřej Palát (Czechia)
Akira Schmid (Switzerland)
Jonas Siegenthaler (Switzerland)

New York Islanders

F Brock Nelson (USA)

Ottawa Senators

F Ridly Greig (Canada)
Dominik Kubalík (Czechia)
F Shane Pinto (USA)
D Jake Sanderson (USA)
F Brady Tkachuk (USA)

Philadelphia Flyers

Samuel Ersson (Sweden)
F Joel Farabee (USA)
Matej Tomek (Slovakia)

Pittsburgh Penguins

Raivis Ansons (Latvia)
F Michael Bunting (Canada)
D Erik Karlsson (Sweden)
Alex Nedeljkovic (USA)
D Marcus Pettersson (Sweden)
Jesse Puljujärvi (Finland)
Valtteri Puustinen (Finland)

San Jose Sharks

Mikael Granlund (Finland)
F Luke Kunin (USA)
Jan Rutta (Czechia)
F Will Smith (USA)
Nico Sturm (Germany)
F Fabian Zetterlund (Sweden)

Seattle Kraken

Pierre-Édouard Bellemare (France)
F André Burakovsky (Sweden)
Philipp Grubauer (Germany)
F Jared McCann (Canada)
Oskar Fisker Mølgaard (Denmark)
Jamie Oleksiak (Canada)
Brandon Tanev (Canada)
Tomas Tatar (Slovakia)

St. Louis Blues

Jordan Binnington (Canada)
F Kevin Hayes (USA)
Joel Hofer (Canada)
D Matthew Kessel (USA)
Colton Parayko (Canada)

Tampa Bay Lightning

F Michael Eyssimont (USA)
Brandon Hagel (Canada)
D Victor Hedman (Sweden)
F Nick Paul (Canada)

Toronto Maple Leafs

Fabrice Herzog (Switzerland)
F Pontus Holmberg (Sweden)
David Kämpf (Czechia)

NHL Utah

F Dylan Guenther (Canada)
Milos Kelemen (Slovakia)
D Michael Kesselring (USA)
Patrik Koch (Slovakia)
F Jack McBain (Canada)
Maksymilian Szuber (Germany)
Karel Vejmelka (Czechia)

Vegas Golden Knights

Martins Dzierkals (Latvia)

Washington Capitals

Martin Fehérváry (Slovakia)
Antoine Keller (France)
F Ryan Leonard (USA)

Winnipeg Jets

Nino Niederreiter (Switzerland)