Avalanche Recall Jack Ahcan, Daniil Gushchin
The Avalanche announced Friday that they’ve recalled defenseman Jack Ahcan and winger Daniil Gushchin from AHL Colorado. The team has two open roster spots, so no corresponding transaction is required.
Today marks Ahcan’s second recall of the young season. He made the team out of camp after clearing waivers, but was sent down a couple of days in as Ilya Solovyov came off the non-roster list. He was summoned again the following week to give the Avs an extra defenseman in the wake of Samuel Girard‘s injured reserve placement, but was scratched twice before being returned to the AHL last Saturday.
All that roster time hasn’t translated into playing time for Ahcan. In the seven days he’s spent up in the NHL this month, Colorado’s had three games, and he’s played in none of them. The 28-year-old is in his third year in the organization. He initially signed a two-year, two-way deal in the 2023 offseason and reupped with the club on another two-way deal over the summer. He’s spent all but 11 games of his pro career in the minors, where he’s torched AHL competition with a goal and four assists in four games so far this season. His most recent NHL appearances came in a back-to-back set in April last season, his first games as an Av and his first in the NHL since the 2021-22 campaign with the Bruins.
With Colorado still only carrying six defenders for their recent stretch of games, Ahcan will give them a seventh option for their two-game road swing through Boston and New Jersey in case another injury pops up. It essentially serves as a confirmation that Girard, who’s week-to-week with his upper-body issue, won’t come off IR in the next few days.
Gushchin’s recall serves a similar purpose, but for the team’s forward group. Acquired from the Sharks over the offseason, Guchshin cleared waivers during training camp after putting together a 2-3–5 scoring line in 18 appearances over the past three years with San Jose. The undersized but skilled 23-year-old has made a considerable impression in the Avs’ farm system so far, leading the AHL with six goals in five games. A 2020 third-round pick, that’s more than earned Gushchin his first call-up as an Av, and, with fellow sub-5’10” winger Gavin Brindley off to a slow start with one goal in eight games on Colorado’s fourth line, he might get a look in Brindley’s spot on the upcoming road trip if the Avs are looking to jumpstart their depth.
Devils’ Cody Glass Out Multiple Weeks
Devils center Cody Glass will miss a significant chunk of time with the upper-body injury that held him out of Wednesday’s win over the Wild. Head coach Sheldon Keefe told reporters today, including Amanda Stein of the team’s website, that it’s “not a day-to-day situation” and that he hopes his absence is “no more than a couple of weeks,” though it could be longer.
Glass sustained the injury at some point during his last appearance on Tuesday against the Maple Leafs, but played through it, Keefe said earlier in the week. It’s been an otherwise fine start to the season for the 26-year-old, who signed a two-year, $5MM contract with New Jersey this summer after rumors he might not receive a qualifying offer. He’s got a pair of goals in six games while logging a plus-one rating with good possession impacts, ranking eighth on the team with a 52.5 CF% at even strength. He’s averaging 12:34 per game, has factored in on the Devils’ second power play unit, and has won 40.3% of his faceoffs while factoring in as their third-line center, most often slotting in between Connor Brown and Arseny Gritsyuk.
Another long-term injury puts the Devils in a crunch. Even with Evgenii Dadonov, Johnathan Kovacevic, and Zack MacEwen on long-term injured reserve, they don’t have the cap space to make a corresponding recall if they place Glass on IR. As a result, the Devils might be forced to dress 11 forwards and seven defensemen if there’s another injury to their forward group and, in an extreme situation, could play a skater short for a game before being granted an emergency exception by the league to recall a player with a cap hit of $875,000 or less.
In addition to those three, New Jersey also has depth center Juho Lammikko on injured reserve and goaltender Jacob Markström unavailable with a lower-body issue, although he remains on the active roster. They also just got Stefan Noesen back in the lineup after he missed the first six games while recovering from groin surgery. Despite all that adversity, the Devils are 6-1-0 – rattling off six wins in a row – and sit atop the Eastern Conference. Only the Golden Knights are scoring more than New Jersey’s four goals per game, and both their special teams are top-five in the league.
With Glass out, Dawson Mercer shifted over to center the third line against Minnesota and will presumably stay there for the foreseeable future. While he’s spent most of his time in the NHL on the wing, he’s a natural center and has done better in the faceoff dot (56.0%) this season than Glass. He’s also off to the best start of his five-year career with three goals and seven points in seven games.
Rangers Recall Brennan Othmann
The Rangers announced they’ve recalled Brennan Othmann from AHL Hartford. The winger will get his first look of the season on the NHL roster amid reports he’s been made available for trade. They’ve had an open roster spot since sending defenseman Scott Morrow down to Hartford at the beginning of the week, so no corresponding move is required.
While the recall could serve as a showcase to help boost the struggling prospect’s trade value, that’s not its primary purpose. The Rangers are down a forward after Matt Rempe sustained an upper-body injury in his fight Thursday night with the Sharks’ Ryan Reaves. Othmann ensures they continue to have a healthy extra forward in Rempe’s absence, however long that may be.
It’s likely that nothing so far this season has changed the Rangers’ mind that a change of scenery is the best outcome for Othmann, who they selected No. 16 overall in the 2021 draft. In four games with Hartford, he’s been limited to one assist and an even rating. While he hasn’t demonstrated much upside in his NHL call-ups thus far, only managing two assists in 25 games, he’s at least had some productive runs with Hartford, including 12 goals and 20 points in 27 games last year. An AHL scoring slump certainly won’t do good things for his trade value.
Presumably, the Rangers feel Othmann and his 6’0″, 192-lb frame are a better fit for a bottom-six role than late camp cuts like top prospect Gabriel Perreault, who’s managed a goal and an assist in four games for Hartford. They’ve had no prior hesitancy in dropping him into third or fourth-line jobs. He’s only averaged 9:52 of ice time per game in his NHL career while recording a plus-seven rating and 49 hits. While he’s been a semi-effective physical presence, he’s failed to show he can convert the high-end finishing ability he displayed in juniors (and in Hartford, to some extent) into NHL minutes. He’s yet to score on 26 shots on goal.
He’ll now get one of his last chances to change that track record in New York. It could be an extended one depending on the severity of Rempe’s injury. The pending restricted free agent will join a battle for playing time with Jonny Brodzinski and Juuso Pärssinen. Every other active Rangers forward has appeared in all nine games so far this season.
Islanders Recall Marshall Warren
Oct. 24: The Islanders announced they’ve returned Highmore on loan to Bridgeport. He did not play in last night’s 7-2 drubbing of the Red Wings, essentially confirming he was only brought up to help maximize their LTIR capture. There’s now an open roster spot if the Islanders wish to bring Gatcomb back up to the active roster.
Oct. 23: The Islanders announced they’ve recalled forward Matthew Highmore and defenseman Marshall Warren from AHL Bridgeport. The team already had one open roster spot and assigned forward Marc Gatcomb to Bridgeport to open the other one after he cleared waivers today. In a corresponding move, they shifted winger Pierre Engvall from injured reserve to long-term injured reserve. The moves left them with just $6,482 in cap space before Engvall’s LTIR placement, meaning they can unlock up to $2,993,518 of his $3MM cap hit in relief as they need it.
Highmore will serve as a direct replacement for Gatcomb as the club’s 14th forward, although with their LTIR pool now set, they have enough cap flexibility to swap them again if they choose. Highmore already cleared waivers before the start of the season, so as long as he stays less than 30 days on the Islanders’ active roster, he can be returned to Bridgeport without needing to clear them again.
There’s a chance Highmore sticks ahead of Gatcomb for a while, though. The 29-year-old signed a two-way deal with the Isles in free agency over the offseason and has a significant leg up on Gatcomb in terms of NHL experience. If Highmore plays, he’d be playing in his eighth NHL season, and he already has 187 games under his belt with 14 goals and 35 points. Gatcomb, while three years younger, only made his NHL debut last year and has a 40-game resume at the NHL level.
Highmore is also off to a strong start with Bridgeport. After appearing in 41 regular-season games and one playoff game for the Senators last year, he was hoping to remain on an NHL opening night roster in 2025-26. While that didn’t happen, he’s taken the demotion in stride and has four assists through his first four games for the Baby Isles. The Nova Scotia native has 170 points in 235 career AHL appearances dating back to his pro debut in 2017 and has been a legitimately valuable fourth-liner at the NHL level at times, even slotting in on occasional penalty kills.
As for Warren, it’s his first NHL recall. The Long Island native was a sixth-round pick by the Wild back in 2019 but never signed with them, instead becoming a free agent and landing a contract with the Isles out of Michigan in 2024. The 6’0″, 185-lb lefty had an impressive training camp and has carried that momentum straight through to Bridgeport, leading the club in scoring with two goals and three assists for five points in four games with a plus-three rating.
The club was in need of an extra defenseman for their next few games after placing Alexander Romanov on injured reserve earlier today. There’s no guarantee the lefty Warren makes his NHL debut on this call-up, but with the Isles’ balance of lefties and righties currently at two and four, it wouldn’t be surprising to see Warren get a look at least once in place of Adam Boqvist, who’s been a healthy scratch in four of six games to start New York’s season and only entered the lineup when Romanov exited it.
Engvall’s LTIR placement will stick for the remainder of the campaign. He’s done for the year after undergoing ankle surgery.
Panthers, Red Wings, Sabres Among Teams Interested In Yegor Chinakhov
It has been over three months since Blue Jackets winger Yegor Chinakhov‘s former agent said that his client had requested a trade out of Columbus. Much has happened since then, including an apparent reconciliation with head coach Dean Evason, but that was short-lived before he ended up back in a fourth-line/press box role in training camp. Following that move, Chinakhov switched his representation at the beginning of the month in hopes of accelerating his departure from the organization.
According to Pierre LeBrun of The Athletic, Chinkahov’s new representation at Maverick Sports Management now has permission to speak directly with other teams about facilitating a trade. Among the teams that “have recently kicked the tires” in trade talks with the Jackets are the Panthers, Red Wings, and Sabres, he adds.
All of those Atlantic Division clubs are looking to fill out their middle-six depth for various reasons, and it’s clear why Chinakhov specifically offers some intrigue there. While it’s been a tough go in Columbus for him, particularly over the last 12 months due to injuries and dwindling usage, he’s shown the ability to come up with productive scoring lines when given more considerable ice time. In his career-best 2023-24 season, the former first-round pick averaged 15:10 of ice time per game and managed 16 goals and 29 points in 53 appearances. That was on track for 45 points had he played a full 82-game schedule, and he also managed to record half a point per game last year with 15 in 30 appearances.
He’s by no means a top-six needle-mover for a contender with those numbers, but for teams needing to plug a third-line or fringe second-line hole, he could be of real benefit. The Panthers are without top-six forwards Aleksander Barkov and Matthew Tkachuk for months, and the ripple effect has been ugly. They’ve understandably gotten off to a sluggish 4-5-0 start and, more concerningly, are only scoring 2.44 goals per game – 29th in the league. Names like Sam Bennett (1-1–2 in nine games), Eetu Luostarinen (1-1–2 in nine games), and Jesper Boqvist (1-0–1 in nine games) have struggled to produce in elevated roles. Getting another body in the mix to ease everyone’s workload is a short-term priority for general manager Bill Zito.
Teams considering Chinakhov a short-term fix can non-tender him at the end of the season. He’s in the final year of a contract that carries a $2.1MM cap hit and an identical qualifying offer that he’s unlikely to warrant with his current trajectory. However, that can quickly change if he manages to return to his 2023-24 form with a new club.
As for the Red Wings, adding forward depth was always going to be a priority for them based on how they entered the season. Leaning into their youth has made them one of the league’s pleasant surprises early on. Still, they’ve struggled to find offensive consistency outside of their explosive first line of rookie Emmitt Finnie, Dylan Larkin, and Lucas Raymond. Only three other forwards have more than four points through eight games, and there’s been a bit of a mix-and-match through the first few weeks with Jonatan Berggren, Elmer Söderblom, and James van Riemsdyk all coming in and out of the lineup.
Detroit presumably hopes Chinakhov can be an upgrade on a similarly cast young winger in Berggren. The latter has never received the kind of leash Chinakhov did previously in Columbus, never averaging more than 13:28 of ice time per game. His career points-per-game pace, though, isn’t too far off from Chinakhov’s. Berggren averages 16 goals and 31 points per 82 games, while Chinakhov averages 16 and 33.
Like Florida, Buffalo’s interest is injury-fueled. Their already semi-questionable forward depth has been decimated in the season’s opening weeks by injuries to Jordan Greenway and Joshua Norris, among others. They’re looking for additional top-nine wing insurance, but with all of Zach Benson, Josh Doan, Jack Quinn, and Jason Zucker off to strong starts, their interest might be more tempered than what Detroit and Florida are bringing to the table.
Mammoth Recall Kevin Rooney
The Mammoth announced that forward Kevin Rooney has been recalled from AHL Tucson. They’ve opened a roster spot for him by reassigning Andrew Agozzino to Tucson after he cleared waivers today.
Rooney was a late addition to the Utah organization this offseason. He went unsigned for much of the summer before landing a professional tryout with the Devils, with whom he suited up from 2016 to 2020. While that PTO didn’t result in a contract with New Jersey, he landed a two-way deal with the Mammoth after being released. He was waived the next day and cleared, beginning the season in Tucson after technically being included on Utah’s opening night roster.
The 32-year-old Rooney has 32 goals, 28 assists, 60 points, and a -12 rating in 330 career NHL appearances with the Devils, Rangers, and Flames. While he may have had to settle for a two-way deal, he’s actually coming off a career-high 70 games played in Calgary last season. He spent the year as a fourth-line center or winger as needed, averaging 9:25 per game while recording a 5-5–10 scoring line and 109 hits.
He provides a more stable, experienced option – and one more oriented for a bottom-six checking role – than the offense-minded Agozzino was. As such, there’s a good chance he could stick around for a while, at least until Alexander Kerfoot is ready to come off injured reserve and make his season debut. It’s also a reward for a strong start in Tucson for Rooney, who has three goale and an assist in four games in what was his first minor-league action in two years.
Sabres Activate Ukko-Pekka Luukkonen From Conditioning Stint
Oct. 23: The Sabres announced they’ve recalled Luukkonen from his conditioning stint, putting him back on the active roster. He suited up for Rochester in a 4-2 win over Syracuse on Wednesday, making 21 saves on 23 shots for a .913 SV%.
Oct. 21: Sabres starting netminder Ukko-Pekka Luukkonen will head to AHL Rochester on a conditioning stint, the club announced. The team also reassigned defenseman Zachary Jones to Rochester after recalling him on Sunday. Luukkonen remains on IR while on his conditioning stint, so Buffalo is operating with an open roster spot with the Jones reassignment.
Luukkonen, 26, has yet to suit up in the regular season. He showed up to camp with a lower-body issue that sidelined him for a few days. He was eventually able to make a preseason start but sustained a second injury in the first period of that game that landed him on the shelf on a week-to-week basis before opening night. He’s now eligible to suit up for or practice with Rochester for up to two weeks before the Sabres have to leave him on IR or reinstate him.
In the meantime, veteran backup Alex Lyon has more than picked up the slack. He signed a two-year, $3MM deal in the offseason, and he’s started and finished all six of the Sabres’ games thus far. He’s carrying a 2-4-0 record after last night’s loss to Montreal, but has an eye-popping .924 SV% and 2.55 GAA in the process, even recording a 32-save shutout against the Panthers last weekend. His 4.5 goals saved above expected rank ninth in the NHL, per MoneyPuck.
It begs the question whether Luukkonen will even see the lion’s share of starts when he’s ready to return. Lyon is untested in this type of usage – the 32-year-old has only ever topped 30 starts in a season once – but it’s nearly impossible to justify taking the reins away from him given his early-season showing.
Giving Luukkonen a conditioning stint, aside from getting up to speed, also provides the Sabres more time to decide what to do with Colten Ellis. They claimed the 25-year-old off waivers from the Blues a few weeks ago for him to supplement Lyon with Luukkonen out. They sang his praises after the claim and would prefer to retain him, but must expose him to waivers again if they want him to go to Rochester. Doing so could result in a reclaim by the Blues, who could send him directly to their AHL affiliate if they’re the only team to submit a claim.
Luukkonen now looks to shake off the rust following a tough start to the year. After finishing 12th in All-Star Team voting in 2023-24 with a career year, the 2017 second-round pick regressed mightily in 2024-25. While he made a career-high 55 starts, it didn’t come with great numbers – a 24-24-5 record, .887 SV%, and 3.20 GAA with a pair of shutouts. That was “good” for -8.6 GSAx after posting a 9.4 the year before.
As for Jones, he was a healthy scratch for last night’s loss. Buffalo recalled him to ensure they had seven healthy defensemen on the active roster while Jacob Bryson sat in concussion protocol. He hasn’t been cleared yet, but if Buffalo needs another defenseman for tomorrow’s home game against the Red Wings, they can easily recall someone else from Rochester.
Rangers Sign Nathan Aspinall To Entry-Level Contract
The Rangers announced they’ve signed winger Nathan Aspinall to an entry-level contract. It’s a three-year deal that begins this season, although it will slide to 2026-27 in the likely event he doesn’t play 10 NHL games this season. Financial terms were not disclosed.
New York selected Aspinall in the fifth round of the 2024 draft. The hulking 6’7″, 194-lb Ontario native is beginning his fourth and final season of junior hockey with the OHL’s Flint Firebirds. His first NHL contract is a reward for a scorching start – he has six goals and 10 points through his first six games with Flint.
That’s a significant breakout for Aspinall, who’d been a valuable but not overly impressive offensive presence over the prior two years. Aspinall had an 18-16–34 scoring line in 65 games in his draft year before upping his overall production to a 17-30–47 line in 62 showings last year. He scores the majority of his goals within a few feet of the net – not a surprising tidbit about a winger with his frame – but has some intriguing raw passing skills as well.
He isn’t viewed as a top-10 talent in the Rangers’ system, but that’s not to say he’s devoid of upside. He’ll play out the rest of the year with Flint before presumably getting his first extended taste of pro hockey with AHL Hartford next season. He’ll then have another two years to work his way up toward an NHL recall before he risks being cut loose by the Rangers.
Wild Place Zach Bogosian On Injured Reserve
Oct. 23: The Wild announced that they’ve reassigned Haight back to Iowa. He did not play in the lone game of his call-up, yesterday’s 4-1 loss to the Devils. Rossi returned for that contest, so his services as a healthy extra are no longer needed.
Oct. 21: The Wild announced they’ve placed defenseman Zach Bogosian on injured reserve, retroactive to Oct. 17. His roster spot will go to forward Hunter Haight, who’s been recalled from AHL Iowa in the corresponding move.
It isn’t a meaningful update to Bogosian’s status. He remains day-to-day with a lower-body injury he sustained while blocking a shot against the Capitals last Friday. He’s already missed two games, and the IR placement means he’ll miss one more, tomorrow against the Devils, until he’s eligible for activation prior to Saturday’s game at home against the Mammoth. David Jiříček was brought up in his place over the weekend and directly replaced the fellow righty in third-pairing duties alongside Jacob Middleton. He hasn’t been particularly noticeable, recording a minus-one rating, one shot on goal, and no blocks or hits.
The 35-year-old Bogosian hopes his absence doesn’t stretch out much longer than one more game. He’s been surprisingly effective to begin the season, posting a plus-three rating in five appearances with nine blocks and six hits. The 18-year veteran has positive possession impacts at even strength, including a 56.4 xGF%, churning out a stable defensive presence in his limited minutes (13:53 per game). Jiříček, while more offensively gifted, hasn’t been able to deliver that physicality or defensive play. For a team struggling to produce offense at even strength, scoring just eight goals at 5-on-5 through seven games, getting a positive possession player like Bogosian back in the lineup will be a help, even if just a marginal one.
Haight comes up to give Minnesota some extra forward depth while fellow pivot Marco Rossi nurses a short-term injury. Rossi already missed yesterday’s win over the Rangers with an undisclosed injury, and Haight’s summons indicates he likely won’t be available tomorrow, either. Haight, 21, made the Wild’s opening roster submission and made his NHL debut in their first two games of the season, posting a minus-two rating and a 43.8 FO% while averaging 9:22 per game. The 2022 second-rounder understandably won’t get much development with that kind of usage and performance and was promptly sent to the minors. As such, his recall isn’t expected to be a lengthy one. He’s also struggled to begin the year in Iowa, going pointless with a minus-three rating through a pair of games.
Sharks Activate Timothy Liljegren From Injured Reserve
The Sharks announced that defenseman Timothy Liljegren was activated from injured reserve. He’ll re-enter the lineup tonight against the Rangers in place of rookie Sam Dickinson, Sheng Peng of San Jose Hockey Now relayed. The club had an open roster spot after reassigning Luca Cagnoni to the AHL on Tuesday.
Liljegren’s absence ends after nine days and three games, just above the IR minimums. He was dealing with an upper-body injury that he sustained on Oct. 14 against the Hurricanes. He landed on IR last week as some other injuries forced San Jose to do some roster shuffling, but they’re back to having a full 23-player contingent with only Shakir Mukhamadullin on IR – at least, among players who aren’t effectively retired.
A first-round pick in the 2017 draft by the Maple Leafs, Liljegren was a two-time 20-point getter for Toronto but slipped down their depth chart to the point where he was a frequent healthy scratch to begin last season. He was traded to San Jose in late October and popped up as a top-four piece in the Bay Area, posting a 6-11–17 scoring line with a -25 rating in 67 appearances while averaging 19:16 of ice time per game. Those raw numbers overshadow what were generally positive under-the-hood numbers for Liljegren, whose 47.2 CF% at 5-on-5 was 2.4 points better than what the team managed to control without him on the ice.
In a three-game sample to begin 2025-26, Liljegren didn’t record a point and logged a minus-two rating but reached new ice-time heights at 20:14 per game. He’s not factoring in on San Jose’s power play like he was last year, but he saw hugely increased shorthanded deployment at three minutes per game. After starting the year alongside Mario Ferraro at even strength, he’ll have a new face to his left tonight in Dmitry Orlov, reports Max Miller of Sharks Hockey Digest.
