Jonas Brodin To Have MRI, Avoided ACL Injury
Wild left-shot defenseman Jonas Brodin will undergo imaging today to determine the extent of a lower-body injury he sustained in Tuesday’s 4-0 win over the Ducks, The Athletic’s Michael Russo reports. The belief is that Brodin has avoided an ACL tear in his right knee, which folded awkwardly when Ducks winger Alex Killorn delivered a late shove along the boards (video link, viewer discretion advised). Killorn was not penalized for the play, and he will not face supplemental discipline.
While Brodin may not be out months, it’s certainly possible his 2023-24 campaign may be in jeopardy with only a few weeks left on the regular-season schedule if imaging reveals a mid-grade injury of any kind. The blue-liner, who’s now in the third season of a seven-year, $42MM extension, missed 17 games earlier this season with an upper-body injury.
The injuries have limited Minnesota’s top shutdown man to 51 games on the season, although he’s looked no worse for wear when in the lineup. Brodin has seven goals and 23 points through 51 games, the highest points-per-game pace of his 12-year career, as well as a team-leading +17 rating. He hasn’t overtaken the number-one role vacated by captain Jared Spurgeon‘s season-ending injuries, however. That honor has gone to rookie Brock Faber, who’s well on his way toward a top-two finish in Calder Trophy voting with 38 points in 69 games while averaging 25:06 per contest – the most for a rookie since ATOI began being tracked in the 1997-98 season.
Now 30, Brodin remains a core on-ice and off-ice component to this Wild club, and any absence is a gigantic blow to their chances of capturing a playoff spot. The Wild are hot – 6-2-2 in their past 10 games – but only have a roughly 1 in 5 chance of catching the Golden Knights for the second wild-card spot, per MoneyPuck, a number that certainly drops without Brodin and Spurgeon in the fold.
With likely out for tonight’s game against the Kings at a minimum, one of Alex Goligoski or Dakota Mermis will slide into the lineup after serving as healthy scratches against Anaheim. Mermis is much more probable, as the 38-year-old Goligoski has been a scratch in 19 straight games dating back to Feb. 7 against the Blackhawks. Mermis has been a healthy scratch for five straight.
Coyotes Likely To Remain At Mullett Arena For 2024-25
Speaking to reporters on Wednesday, NHL Deputy Commissioner Bill Daly confirmed the Coyotes are likely to remain at Tempe’s Mullett Arena for the 2024-25 season (via Chris Johnston of The Athletic and TSN). Coyotes owner Alex Meruelo’s current attempt to keep the team in the Phoenix area involves a bid for a public land auction involving a plot in the north part of the city, although the auction won’t occur until June. Next season is the final one in the initial three-year lease the Coyotes signed with Arizona State University to play at the new facility, which also has two one-year extension options.
Daly said the league “probably” wouldn’t have enough time to pivot toward relocation if the bid fails and would punt an effort to move the team to a new market – Salt Lake City is the most likely – to 2025-26. Per Johnston, both Daly and Commissioner Gary Bettman did not issue a set deadline on a relocation decision for the franchise, but the former said “it’s getting late” in the process.
The Coyotes’ initial attempt to remain in the market, a multi-use development in Tempe near the Phoenix Sky Harbor airport, failed when their proposal was struck down in a public referendum last May. They have since yet to issue a comprehensive plan for a new arena in the region.
Bettman affirmed the league’s faith in Arizona as an NHL market, once again signaling the league will return if relocation becomes a necessity:
We would’ve preferred to be in a new arena by now, but there are certain things that couldn’t be controlled. We would’ve preferred that the referendum in Tempe went the other way, but it didn’t, and so we deal with what we can deal with. Having said that, we believe Arizona, particularly the greater Phoenix area, is a good NHL market. It’s a place we want to be.
In the unlikely event that the Coyotes lose the auction and have no serviceable Plan B lined up, it’s hard to imagine the league issuing them any more patience. If so, the franchise will likely not take advantage of their extension options on the Mullett lease and move to either Salt Lake City or another market with demonstrated interest, such as Atlanta or Houston, for the 2025-26 season.
Blues Agree To Terms With First-Round Pick Theo Lindstein
The Blues have signed 2023 first-round pick Theo Lindstein to a three-year, entry-level contract, per a team release. The team did not disclose financial terms.
St. Louis selected the left-shot defenseman from Brynäs IF of the Swedish Hockey League with the 29th overall pick. The 19-year-old was viewed as a potential top-10 choice in early 2023 prospect rankings as a shutdown blue liner but dropped down public boards throughout the year and was graded as low as a third-round pick by a few notable public scouting outfits, including Elite Prospects and McKeen’s Hockey. Elite Prospects’ final scouting report called him “safe, calm and a play killer with his stick” but criticized his ability to process plays quickly and said he “lacked initiative, often deferring to his partner on breakouts.”
Others are more optimistic about the 6-foot-1, 180-lb defender, such as Dobber Prospects, who list him as one of the Blues’ premier defense prospects and believe he has a top-four ceiling. Those who had him ranked lower tab his projection as a bottom-pairing, penalty-killing utility player at his peak. The Athletic’s Scott Wheeler ranked Lindstein as the Blues’ best defense prospect and their fifth-best overall prospect, calling him an “unspectacular but solid two-way defenseman” with a “high likelihood of becoming a solid D partner to someone in the NHL long term.”
Even for shutdown players, a lack of point-producing ability at lower levels, such as what Lindstein displayed in his draft season, is generally indicative of a tough path to NHL minutes. His totals on the scoresheet improved markedly this season, however, leading all defensemen at the 2024 World Junior Championship with six assists and eight points in seven games for Sweden en route to a silver medal, as well as 15 points and a +13 rating in 49 games for Brynäs, who were demoted to the second-tier HockeyAllsvenskan after losing last year’s SHL relegation series.
Lindstein was the last of three first-round picks the Blues had in last year’s draft, selected after centers Dalibor Dvorský (10th overall) and Otto Stenberg (22nd overall). The Blues acquired the pick they used to select Lindstein from the Rangers in February 2023’s Vladimir Tarasenko trade, and the Rangers had previously acquired the pick from the Stars in exchange for defenseman Nils Lundkvist in September 2022.
Rangers Sign Jaroslav Chmelar To Entry-Level Deal
The Rangers have signed forward Jaroslav Chmelar to a three-year, entry-level deal, per a team announcement. The contract is expected to begin in the 2024-25 season, although he’s eligible to finish the 2023-24 campaign on a tryout with the team’s AHL affiliate in Hartford. The New England Hockey Journal’s Mark Divver reported Tuesday that Chmelar would likely ink his ELC in the coming days. The deal has a cap hit of $867.5K broken down into a $775K NHL salary, $92.5K signing bonus, $57.5K games played bonus, and $80K minors salary each season, per PuckPedia.
Chmelar, 20, completed his sophomore season at Providence College on Saturday after UMass eliminated them in the Hockey East quarterfinals. Before coming stateside, the Czech power forward spent four seasons in the Finnish development system. The Rangers selected him out of Jokerit’s U-18 club in the fifth round of the 2021 draft. He also represented Czechia at the 2022 and 2023 World Junior Championships, winning the silver medal his second time around.
Chmelar had a decent freshman campaign with Providence, factoring into their middle six and only missing a handful of games due to his WJC appearance. His seven goals and 13 points in 33 games, along with a -2 rating on a team that finished with a +16 goal differential, signaled he wasn’t ready to turn pro, but few expected him to anyway. He missed roughly a third of this season with injuries but showed improvement when in the lineup, posting 15 points in 26 games along with a +7 rating that tied for third on the team.
He’ll need some seasoning in the minors, but the 6-foot-5, 220-lb winger will have NHL-ready size whenever he gets his first recall. Hartford has an eight-point cushion on a playoff spot in the AHL’s Atlantic Division with 14 games remaining in their regular season schedule, so he has a decent chance at seeing professional postseason action to close out 2023-24. Chmelar checked in at number 13 on The Athletic’s Scott Wheeler’s most recent ranking of Rangers prospects, a pool that’s deepest at wing with Brennan Othmann and Gabe Perreault both living up to their first-round pedigree thus far in their development.
Assuming Chmelar’s deal is registered for the 2024-25 campaign, he’ll reach RFA status in 2027. His ELC signing age will be recorded as 21 because he has a July birthday, meaning he’ll require waivers after three years or playing 80 NHL games, whichever comes first.
NHL Rejects Flames’ Agreement With Sam Morton
6:44 PM: CapFriendly reports that the NHL has rejected Morton’s contract. The issue is that while he’s currently 24, the contract being submitted is for his age-25 season. A player’s age for contract purposes is defined by their age as of September 15th in the year he signs; Morton turns 25 in July. North American-born players are ineligible for an entry-level deal in their age-25 season and beyond. The Flames will now have to resubmit a new deal without performance bonuses.
2:50 PM: The Flames have made their first splash in this year’s college free agent market, inking Minnesota State University forward Sam Morton to a one-year, entry-level contract for the 2024-25 season. Morton’s contract will carry a $950K cap hit, and he’ll close out this season on a tryout with the club’s AHL affiliate, the Calgary Wranglers. Sportsnet’s Pat Steinberg reports Morton’s AHL salary next season will be $82.5K, and he’ll also earn a signing bonus of $95K.
Morton, 24, was a bright spot in what was otherwise the Mankato school’s worst season in over a decade. In 37 games, he led the squad with 24 goals, 34 points and a +8 rating, earning CCHA First All-Star Team honors and a nomination for the Hobey Baker Award for the top collegiate player.
In signing his ELC, Morton wraps up a rare six-year collegiate career. After two seasons playing junior hockey with the BCHL’s Wenatchee Wild, Morton joined Union College for two seasons in 2018-19 and 2019-20 but left early in the latter campaign to rejoin Wenatchee until the COVID pandemic shut down the season. The Colorado native then entered the transfer portal, where he landed with MSU from 2020 onward. Over four years with the school, Morton registered 44 goals, 76 points and a +46 rating in 102 contests.
The two-time conference champion with Mankato will now immediately head to the pros, where he will join a Wranglers team that’s still trying to secure a playoff spot in the AHL’s North Division. The Wranglers have 14 games remaining on their regular-season schedule, so he should get a decent chunk of action down the stretch and in the Calder Cup Playoffs.
Morton will be an RFA next summer when his ELC expires.
Coyotes Recall Nathan Smith
The Coyotes recalled forward Nathan Smith from the AHL’s Tucson Roadrunners on Monday, according to a team announcement. It’s his first recall of the season. The move comes under emergency conditions, meaning the Coyotes may be without a second regular forward in addition to Barrett Hayton (lower-body, day-to-day) for Wednesday’s game against the Stars.
Arizona picked up the signing rights to Smith, 25, in a trade with the Jets in 2022 that saw the Coyotes take on the remainder of center Bryan Little‘s contract, who last played in the 2019-20 season but will not play again due to a ruptured eardrum. The former Minnesota State University standout and 2022 Olympian with the United States signed a two-year entry-level deal shortly thereafter and re-upped on a one-year, two-way deal ($775K/$115K/$165K) upon expiry last summer.
Smith is settling into professional life after a disappointing campaign with Tucson last year. He’s already matched 2022-23’s point total in 16 fewer games and has improved defensively, recording nine goals and 27 points with an even rating in 48 games. He hasn’t played in the NHL since a four-game call-up in March last year.
In 14 career NHL appearances over the 2021-22 and 2022-23 campaigns, Smith recorded two goals, two assists, and a -2 rating while averaging 12:14 per game. The Tampa native is a natural center but struggled in the faceoff dot during his NHL stints, winning 40.5% of his draws.
Smith is still waiver-exempt, although that will lapse next season if the Coyotes opt to bring him back. If they choose to issue him a qualifying offer, he’ll be an RFA with arbitration rights this summer.
Wild Sign Rasmus Kumpulainen To Entry-Level Deal
The Wild signed forward Rasmus Kumpulainen to a three-year, entry-level contract on Monday, per a team announcement. Financial terms were not disclosed, although Minnesota did confirm the deal will begin in 2024-25.
A natural center, Kumpulainen was the first of two second-round picks the Wild owned in the 2023 draft. Their other selection was WHL Prince George forward Riley Heidt, who’s third in the league in scoring with 114 points in 64 games.
The 18-year-old Kumpulainen went off the board earlier as a safer but lower-ceiling pick, as evidenced by his solid but not overly impressive transition to North American ice. After spending his draft year with Lahden Pelicans U20 in Finland’s top junior circuit, he came to Ontario after the OHL’s Oshawa Generals made him the 13th overall selection in last year’s CHL Import Draft. The physically-inclined two-way center (6-foot-2, 194 lbs) has 28 goals, 27 assists, 55 points, and a +13 rating in 56 games with the Gens, placing him sixth on the team in scoring. He’s heated up as of late, though, posting 14 points and a +8 rating in his last 10 outings. He’s registered a point in all eight of Oshawa’s games in March.
Kumpulainen also represented Finland at this year’s World Juniors, scoring twice in seven games en route to a bronze-game loss to Czechia. He’s ranked as the 12th-best prospect in the Wild’s system by Scott Wheeler of The Athletic, with his classmate Heidt checking in at fourth.
Kumpulainen’s contract is eligible for an entry-level slide as he’ll be 19 next season. If he plays under 10 NHL games in 2024-25, a likely scenario, the beginning of his contract will defer to 2025-26. Any signing bonuses included in the first season of his deal must be paid regardless. He’ll be an RFA at the end of the ELC, which could be in either 2027 or 2028.
Blackhawks Recall Wyatt Kaiser
The Blackhawks recalled defenseman Wyatt Kaiser on an emergency loan Monday, per CapFriendly. It’s the 21-year-old’s first recall since Chicago assigned him to the AHL’s Rockford IceHogs in late December.
Since his recall comes under emergency conditions, the Blackhawks maintain their two remaining post-trade deadline standard recalls. Kaiser must replace one of Chicago’s six currently healthy defenders, one of whom is likely questionable for Tuesday’s game against the Kings, to remain eligible for an emergency loan. Otherwise, the Blackhawks must convert his recall into a standard one or return him to the IceHogs.
The 2020 third-round pick played in a career-high 23 games in the first few months of the season, recording four assists and a +1 rating. Averaging 16:40 per game, the former University of Minnesota-Duluth standout wasn’t quite the relative shutdown master his positive rating on a rebuilder suggests. Above-average goaltending boosted his actual results, while his even-strength possession numbers (42.7 CF%, 40.3 xGF%) reflected that of a developing talent.
Nonetheless, Kaiser is one of the Blackhawks’ more intriguing defense prospects and may get another shot to log some games after making the Blackhawks’ roster out of camp. Ranked as the 11th-best overall prospect in Chicago’s system and the third-best defenseman by The Athletic’s Scott Wheeler, he has three goals and 15 points in 31 games for Rockford in his first taste of AHL action this year. Over three seasons at Minnesota-Duluth, he recorded 45 assists, 52 points, and a +5 rating in 97 contests.
Kaiser is in the second season of his three-year entry-level contract, which took effect immediately after signing in March of last year. He carries a cap hit of $917K and will be an RFA in 2025.
Predators Recall Marc Del Gaizo
The Predators recalled defenseman Marc Del Gaizo from the AHL’s Milwaukee Admirals on Monday, according to a team release. His recall is an emergency loan, per CapFriendly’s transactions log, so the Preds retain their three remaining post-trade deadline standard recalls. They used their first of four last week by recalling defenseman Spencer Stastney from Milwaukee.
Del Gaizo, 24, gets his second recall of the season. Nashville summoned their 2019 fourth-round pick for a five-game stint in November, where he impressed with three assists and a +2 rating while averaging 16:22 per game. It was the first call-up of his career.
Now in his third full professional season, Del Gaizo is having a career year with the Admirals. The New Jersey native leads Milwaukee defenders across the board with eight goals, 24 assists and 32 points in 51 games, and his +16 rating is second to Stastney’s +27. He’s been the highlight of a stingy Admirals defense in front of star goalie prospect Yaroslav Askarov, who have combined to allow only 150 goals this season, the third-lowest in the AHL.
Recalling Del Gaizo under emergency conditions suggests one of the Predators’ six healthy defenders may be unavailable for Tuesday’s game against the Sharks. If Del Gaizo is not needed for tomorrow’s contest, they must either convert his emergency recall into a standard one or return him to Milwaukee.
Size remains a concern with Del Gaizo, who checks in at 5-foot-11 and 190 pounds. He’s shown linear development in the minors after a solid three-year collegiate stint at UMass, however, and this likely won’t be his last chance to show what he can do in the NHL. He’s nearing completion of his three-year, $2.775MM entry-level contract and will be an RFA with arbitration rights this summer.
Oilers Sign Connor Ungar To Entry-Level Contract
11:32 a.m.: Ungar’s deal begins next season and carries a cap hit of $860K, per PuckPedia. He’ll earn $775K in base salary, an $85K signing bonus, and $82.5K in minors salary each season.
11:16 a.m.: The Oilers have signed undrafted free agent goaltender Connor Ungar to a two-year entry-level contract, per a team release Monday. The team did not release financial terms but did confirm he’s been assigned to the AHL’s Bakersfield Condors for the remainder of the 2023-24 season.
Ungar, 22, was surprisingly not signed by any professional team last summer after posting a .925 SV% and 26-7-0 record in 38 games with the WHL’s Moose Jaw Warriors. A late bloomer, the Calgary native wasn’t a full-time netminder in the major junior ranks until his age-19 season, but he was one of the best goalies in the league during his two full campaigns with the Warriors and the Red Deer Rebels.
With no professional home and having aged out of the WHL, Ungar took his talents to the Canadian collegiate circuit for 2023-24. Playing with St. Catharines’ Brock University, Ungar led Brock to a first-place finish in the OUA West Division and was the only USports goalie to reach 20 wins. In 26 appearances, he posted a .932 SV% and three shutouts.
He’s now secured his first professional home on the heels of that strong showing. While the team didn’t confirm the start date of the contract, it’s likely his NHL deal begins with the 2024-25 season, and he plays out the season with the Condors on a tryout contract. He’ll join a minor-league rotation with Jack Campbell and Olivier Rodrigue down the stretch, the latter of whom is an RFA this summer. Fifth-string netminder Ryan Fanti, who’s spent all of 2023-24 on assignment to the ECHL’s Fort Wayne Komets, is also a pending RFA and seems unlikely to receive a qualifying offer. Ungar will likely replace Fanti’s job on the depth chart next season, either as a backup or third-string option in Bakersfield behind Rodrigue. If his deal begins next season, Ungar will be an RFA in 2026.
