Headlines

  • Brett Pesce Won’t Travel On Devils’ Upcoming Road Trip
  • Patrik Laine Out Three To Four Months
  • Golden Knights Sign Carter Hart To Two-Year Deal
  • Canucks Acquire Lukas Reichel
  • Joseph Woll Returning To Maple Leafs From Personal Leave
  • Rangers Recall Brennan Othmann
  • 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

Sami Niku Signs Two-Year Deal In Switzerland

April 30, 2025 at 12:59 pm CDT | by Josh Erickson 1 Comment

An NHL comeback for free agent defenseman Sami Niku isn’t in the cards, at least for now. He’s signed a two-year deal to remain in Switzerland with National League club Lausanne HC, the club announced.

The 6’1″ lefty was a seventh-round pick of the Jets in 2015, but his hype quickly exceeded his draft pedigree. He came over to North America in 2017 following a pair of strong post-draft seasons with Liiga’s JYP in his native Finland. Niku crashed onto the scene in the minors with the Manitoba Moose, earning AHL Defenseman of the Year and First All-Star honors with a 16-goal, 54-point showing in 76 appearances. He also scored his first NHL goal in his first NHL game that year.

Niku’s development stalled out almost immediately, though. He remained on the Jets’ roster for the vast majority of the next three years as a No. 7/8 option but never secured a full-time role amid occasional AHL stints. Niku and the Jets mutually terminated his contract shortly before the 2021-22 season. He caught on with the Canadiens a few days later, but after being buried in AHL Laval for most of the year, wasn’t extended a qualifying offer and became an unrestricted free agent.

The 28-year-old has played in Europe ever since. He first rejoined JYP and, after a strong initial showing in 2022-23, erupted to lead Liiga defensemen with 37 assists and 49 points in 53 games with JYP and Ilves in 2023-24.

Niku jumped to Switzerland last year with EHC Kloten. He had a successful run with a 5-25–30 scoring line and plus-five rating in 52 games, but his stay with the club won’t extend past this season. His offensive performance overseas may warrant another look in NHL minutes, but time is running out for him to make a meaningful return since he’ll be 30 when his deal with Lausanne expires.

Lausanne, coming off back-to-back losses in the National League final, also has former NHLers Dominik Kahun, Janne Kuokkanen, and Antti Suomela on their roster for next season.

NLA| Transactions Sami Niku

1 comment

Lightning Recall Maxwell Crozier

April 30, 2025 at 12:43 pm CDT | by Josh Erickson 2 Comments

The Lightning announced they’ve recalled defenseman Maxwell Crozier from AHL Syracuse ahead of tonight’s must-win Game 5 against the Panthers.

While a single-player recall is eye-popping this time of year, especially after captain Victor Hedman briefly left Monday’s Game 4 loss for repairs, Tampa doesn’t anticipate having any injuries that require inserting Crozier into the lineup. Head coach Jon Cooper said Hedman’s (and banged-up center Anthony Cirelli’s) health “is status quo,” and they’re both in tonight as they try to avoid losing to Florida in five games in the first round in back-to-back years (via the team’s Benjamin Pierce).

Instead, Crozier’s inclusion on the roster comes as simple insurance with Syracuse on the brink of elimination in the Calder Cup Playoffs. Tampa has dressed seven defensemen for the majority of the series, leaving them without any press box options.

The 25-year-old got just five games of NHL action this season, averaging 16:41 per game with six blocks and 11 hits across a January call-up. In the slim chance he’s needed, it wouldn’t be his first Stanley Cup rodeo. The Calgary native drew into three of the Lightning’s five contests against the Panthers last year, posting a minus-one rating in bottom-pairing minutes.

A pending restricted free agent with arbitration rights, Crozier finished second among Syracuse defensemen in scoring and fourth overall on the team this season with a 9-25–34 line in 52 games. His +16 rating led the team. A 2019 fourth-round pick, he’s posted good numbers from the get-go in Syracuse after turning pro out of Providence College in 2023 and has likely worked his way into consideration for an opening night roster spot in Tampa next fall if he re-signs.

Tampa Bay Lightning| Transactions Maxwell Crozier

2 comments

Jeff Blashill, Jeff Halpern, Jay Leach Drawing Interest For Head Coach Vacancies

April 30, 2025 at 11:15 am CDT | by Josh Erickson 3 Comments

Bruins assistant coach Jay Leach and Lightning assistant coaches Jeff Blashill and Jeff Halpern are among the names under consideration for the eight active head coaching vacancies across the league, David Pagnotta of The Fourth Period reports.

Leach has another year left on his contract in Boston, Pagnotta relays, but the Bruins have evidently granted him permission to speak to other teams as he’s already begun the interview process for a few positions. He landed with the Bruins last summer after being a finalist for the Kraken’s HC job – he was an internal promotion option there, but they opted for the recently-fired Dan Bylsma instead. He was also a candidate for Boston’s head coach vacancy in 2022 after departing the organization for the Kraken.

The 45-year-old Leach now has a decade of coaching experience after retiring as a player in 2013, including four years as head coach of the Bruins’ AHL affiliate in Providence from 2017-18 through 2020-21. The New York native was an assistant coach for Adler Mannheim in 2014-15 when the German club won the DEL championship with a roster featuring former NHLers Jochen Hecht, Glen Metropolit, and Brandon Yip, among others.

Pagnotta also implied Blashill, still active in the playoffs with Tampa, has already completed some interviews. He’s taken a back seat to Jon Cooper with the Bolts since being let go by the Red Wings in 2022 following an unceremonious tenure as head coach there. Blashill only made the playoffs once in his first season with the rebuilding Wings, compiling a 204-261-72 (.447) record. He was a candidate for the Sharks’ vacancy last year and even had a second interview, but was passed over for rookie bench boss Ryan Warsofsky.

As for Halpern, teams are waiting until the Lightning’s postseason comes to an end before being given permission to talk to him. Halpern has been on Cooper’s staff as an assistant since 2018 and has only ever coached within the Lightning organization, serving as a development and assistant coach with AHL Syracuse from 2015-16 through 2017-18. The veteran of nearly 1,000 NHL games as a player was interviewed by the Capitals during their hiring cycle in 2023, but they opted to go with Spencer Carbery instead.

Boston Bruins| Tampa Bay Lightning| Uncategorized Jay Leach| Jeff Blashill| Jeff Halpern

3 comments

Nikita Kucherov, Nathan MacKinnon, Cale Makar Named Ted Lindsay Award Finalists

April 30, 2025 at 10:04 am CDT | by Josh Erickson 3 Comments

Lightning winger Nikita Kucherov and Avalanche superstars Nathan MacKinnon and Cale Makar have been named the Ted Lindsay Award finalists for the 2024-25 season, the NHLPA announced today. The Lindsay Award is given to the league’s most outstanding player as voted on by his peers.

Now in his 11th NHL season, Kucherov became the 10th player in league history with three or more scoring titles. He’s the first player with back-to-back Art Ross Trophies not named Connor McDavid since Jaromír Jágr won four straight from 1998 to 2001. He finished the campaign with 37 goals, 84 assists, and 121 points in 78 games, not quite sniffing last year’s career-highs across the board but still leading the league in assists and points.

If Kucherov wins, it’ll be his second Lindsay after winning it alongside his first Art Ross-winning season in 2018-19. He’s also just the fourth player in league history to record three consecutive 80-assist seasons, joining Paul Coffey, Wayne Gretzky, and Bobby Orr.

It’s rare to see two players from the same club nominated for the same award, but the wording of “most outstanding” as compared to “most valuable” in the Lindsay fine print opens up the opportunity for this award compared to the media-voted Hart Trophy for league MVP. MacKinnon could be the first back-to-back winner of the Lindsay since McDavid in 2016-17 and 2017-18. He tied Kucherov’s league-leading 84 assists this year and added 32 goals in 79 games in what was a down season for him in the shooting department. MacKinnon’s sky-high 22:47 average time on ice per game led all forwards this year, and he led the league in shots on goal (320) for the fourth time in his 12-year career. MacKinnon totaled 116 points for his third straight season above the century mark.

As for Makar, he was announced as a Norris Trophy finalist just yesterday for the fifth time in his six-year NHL resume. He registered a career-high 30 goals and 92 points in 80 games to lead NHL defensemen, now poised to take home the Defenseman of the Year award for the second time while potentially adding a Lindsay to his trophy case. He faces some extremely long odds, though. A defenseman has only won the Lindsay once since it was introduced as the Lester B. Pearson Award in the 1970-71 campaign – Orr took it home in 1974-75. Carey Price (2014-15) is the only non-forward to win it in the last 28 years.

Colorado Avalanche| NHLPA| Newsstand| Tampa Bay Lightning Cale Makar| Nathan MacKinnon| Nikita Kucherov

3 comments

Panthers’ Aaron Ekblad Receives Two Game Suspension

April 29, 2025 at 6:32 pm CDT | by Josh Erickson 36 Comments

6:32 p.m.: Ekblad will miss Game 5 and Game 6 of Florida’s series against the Lightning or Game 5 against Tampa and Game 1 against their Round Two opponent. The NHL’s Department of Player Safety announced they have suspended Ekblad for two games for elbowing.

10:43 a.m.: Panthers defenseman Aaron Ekblad is facing another suspension after knocking Lightning winger Brandon Hagel out of last night’s Game 4 with a high hit, Nick Kypreos of Sportsnet was first to report. It’s a phone hearing with the Department of Player Safety, so he’s ineligible to be suspended for longer than five games.

Midway through the second period, Ekblad came down the halfwall to deliver a check to Hagel. Instead of making body-on-body contact, Ekblad raised his forearm to contact Hagel’s head, forcing the latter into concussion protocol. He did not return to the game, nor was Ekblad penalized on the play, in what many chastised as a missed call. Florida scored three goals in the final four minutes of the game to win 4-2 and take a 3-1 series lead, with Ekblad scoring the game-tying goal.

While the hit itself likely warrants a second look for supplemental discipline regardless of the context, the length of Ekblad’s likely pending suspension could be increased if DoPS determines it was a retaliatory hit. Hagel had just returned to the lineup after serving a one-game suspension for interference against Panthers captain Aleksander Barkov.

Ekblad wasn’t the only Panthers defenseman to lay a controversial hit in Game 4. Niko Mikkola was ejected from the game early in the third period and given a major penalty for boarding Lightning forward Zemgus Girgensons. He won’t face a suspension, though. DoPS announced Tuesday he’s been fined $5,000 for the play but won’t have a hearing.

The 29-year-old Ekblad had just returned from a 20-game suspension for violating the league’s performance-enhancing substances rules in Game 3 of the series. His goal was his first point since returning. He posted a minus-three rating across Games 3 and 4 while averaging 21:16 of ice time.

Florida Panthers| Newsstand| Tampa Bay Lightning Aaron Ekblad| Brandon Hagel| Niko Mikkola

36 comments

How Do Qualifying Offers Work?

April 29, 2025 at 5:02 pm CDT | by Josh Erickson Leave a Comment

Players eligible for restricted free agency don’t become restricted free agents by default. To make a player a restricted free agent, a team must extend a qualifying offer to him — a player who doesn’t receive one becomes an unrestricted free agent instead.

The qualifying offer, which is essentially just a one-year contract offer, varies in amount depending on a player’s salary in the most recent season of their expiring contract:

  • $775,000 to $999,999: 105% of most recent salary up to $1,000,000.
  • $1MM or more: the lesser of their most recent salary or 120% of cap hit.

In the increasingly rare instance where an RFA signed their most recent contract before July 2020 and earned $1MM or more in the last year of their deal, the qualifying offer is simply equal to their most recent salary.

Let’s take the top RFA on the board, Oilers defenseman Evan Bouchard, as an example. While the cap hit of his expiring two-year deal is $3.9MM, he made $4.3MM in actual salary in 2024-25. However, his most recent salary is still less than 120% of his cap hit ($4.68MM), so his qualifying offer will be a one-year deal worth $4.3MM. That stipulation is why players signing an agreement with RFA expiry status will generally negotiate a base salary in the final year of the contract no higher than 120% of the cap hit, to prevent a salary reduction if they accept their qualifying offer. The two highest-salaried pending RFAs this year, defensemen Bowen Byram and K’Andre Miller, both took that route.

For players on expiring entry-level or two-way contracts, their qualifying offer is also a two-way deal. It’s important to note that “salary” as it relates to QOs is tied to a player’s base salary only, not their total guaranteed compensation, which includes salary plus signing bonuses. That’s why you’ll rarely see players opt to receive signing bonuses in the final year of a deal with RFA expiry status – while signing bonuses technically make a buyout less advantageous for the team and benefit the player, they also limit the floor of their earning potential on a qualifying offer.

They’re almost always unavoidable for players on expiring entry-level deals, though. Take Devils star Luke Hughes. He’ll make $2.775MM in total cash this season thanks to signing and performance bonuses, but his qualifying offer is just a two-way deal with a cap hit of $874,125 – 105% of his 2024-25 base salary of $832,500.

So while Noah Dobson has the highest cap hit among pending RFAs at $4MM, Miller, as mentioned earlier, actually has the highest qualifying offer this summer at his 2024-25 base salary of $4.646MM.

Qualifying offers are due by the later of June 25 or the Monday following the draft. Given how the league schedule has trended in recent years, it’s almost always the latter. That holds in 2025, when the qualifying offer deadline is again June 30, one day before free agency opens. They expire by July 15 if not extended in writing by the team; however, it’s not unusual to see players sign identical contracts to their QOs after that date. A team still holds a player’s signing rights even if the qualifying offer expires before an agreement is reached.

A player can also accept his qualifying offer if he chooses to do so. He then plays the following season on a one-year contract worth the amount of the QO, and, depending on their age or accrued NHL seasons, becomes an unrestricted free agent or repeats the process as an RFA. A player can go this route if he feels like the QO is the best offer he’ll receive, or if he’s one year away from being eligible for UFA status and wants to focus on testing that market.

Contract information courtesy of PuckPedia.

Photo courtesy of Charles LeClaire-Imagn Images.

2025 Free Agency| Pro Hockey Rumors Originals

0 comments

2025 NHL Draft Lottery Odds

April 29, 2025 at 4:00 pm CDT | by Josh Erickson 8 Comments

Apr. 29th: The ping pong balls will fall in less than a week. The NHL announced that the draft lottery will be held on Monday, May 5th.

Apr. 22nd: With the regular season in the rearview, the NHL’s draft lottery odds are set. As it has been since 2021, only two draws will be held.

Since 2022, teams who win the lottery can only move up a maximum of 10 spots, and teams can only move up in the draft order twice in five years. Every team is eligible to move up this year. The only two lottery-eligible teams who have moved up in the lottery since 2020 are the Kraken (No. 3 to No. 2 in 2021 to select Matty Beniers) and the Blackhawks (No. 3 to No. 1 in 2023 to choose Connor Bedard).

Odds for the league’s worst teams to retain their positions atop the draft increased as a result of the lottery draw for the third overall pick being eliminated four years ago, so there hasn’t been a ton of movement in the last few years. The last team outside the bottom three to win a lottery draw was the Devils, who moved up from No. 5 to No. 2 overall in 2022 to select Simon Nemec.

Perhaps there will be more meaningful changes to the order in this year’s lottery. The league has not yet set a date for the draw, but it typically takes place in the first half of May.

Via Tankathon.com, the draft lottery odds for 2024 are listed in the chart below. The numbers in the chart indicate percentages, so the Sharks’ pick, for instance, has a 25.5% chance of becoming the No. 1 selection and a 55.7% chance of ending up at No. 3. If a team’s odds are listed as >0, that percentage is below 0.1%. Odds are rounded to the nearest decimal place.

Here’s the full chart (if you’re on our mobile site or app and can’t see the whole thing, try turning your phone sideways):

 

Team 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16
SJS 25.5 18.8 57.7 – – – – – – – – – – – – –
CHI 13.5 14.1 30.7 41.7 – – – – – – – – – – – –
NSH 11.5 11.2 7.8 39.7 29.8 – – – – – – – – – – –
PHI 9.5 9.5 0.3 15.4 44.6 20.8 – – – – – – – – – –
BOS 8.5 8.6 0.3 – 24.5 44.0 14.2 – – – – – – – – –
SEA 7.5 7.7 0.2 – – 34.1 41.4 9.1 – – – – – – – –
BUF 6.5 6.7 0.2 – – – 44.4 36.5 5.6 – – – – – – –
ANA 6.0 6.2 0.2 – – – – 54.4 30.0 3.2 – – – – – –
PIT 5.0 5.2 0.2 – – – – – 64.4 23.5 1.7 – – – – –
NYI 3.5 3.7 0.1 – – – – – – 73.3 18.4 0.9 – – – –
NYR* 3.0 3.2 0.1 – – – – – – – 79.9 13.4 0.5 – – –
DET – 5.1 0.1 0.1 – – – – – – – 85.7 8.9 0.2 – –
CBJ – – 4.2 >0 >0 – – – – – – – 90.7 5.1 >0 –
UTA – – – 3.2 >0 >0 – – – – – – – 94.7 2.1 >0
VAN – – – – 1.1 – >0 – – – – – – – 97.9 1.1
CGY* – – – – – 1.1 – – – – – – – – – 98.9

Notes:

  • The Rangers’ pick is top 13 protected. It is guaranteed to land inside the top 13. They can decide between surrendering this year’s pick to the Penguins or deferring to an unprotected 2026 first-round selection. New York initially sent their pick to the Canucks in the J.T. Miller trade, but Vancouver immediately flipped the pick to Pittsburgh for Marcus Pettersson.
  • If the Flames retain No. 16 overall, the pick will be sent to the Canadiens. If Calgary wins a lottery draw to move them to No. 6 overall, they keep the pick and send the Panthers’ 2025 first-round pick, which they own, to Montreal.

2025 NHL Draft| Pro Hockey Rumors Originals

8 comments

Rick Tocchet Not Returning As Canucks Head Coach

April 29, 2025 at 3:13 pm CDT | by Josh Erickson 21 Comments

3:13 p.m.: Vancouver has formally announced Tocchet’s departure.

2:33 p.m.: The Canucks will not pick up head coach Rick Tocchet’s club option despite failing to come to terms on an extension, Elliotte Friedman of Sportsnet reports. Vancouver will now begin the search for a new bench boss.

President of hockey operations Jim Rutherford confirmed last week that the Canucks wouldn’t rope Tocchet into his club option regardless of whether they agreed on a new deal, so today’s news isn’t entirely out of the blue. Either the Canucks or Tocchet are expected to release a statement with his reasoning against extending his time in Vancouver later today, Friedman relays.

While Vancouver expressed interest in keeping Tocchet and was willing to pay up to do so, it’s not surprising to see at least one of the two sides decide that a split was the best way forward. The Canucks had an incredibly disappointing 2024-25 campaign, falling to a 38-30-14 record and missing the playoffs after recording a 50-win season and winning the Pacific Division in 2023-24. That campaign earned Tocchet Coach of the Year honors, but that hasn’t meant a ton for a coach’s long-term future with their club as of late.

It’s too early to say who might succeed Tocchet in British Columbia. Internal options could include assistant coach Adam Foote or AHL head coach Manny Malhotra. As for Tocchet, the Flyers have had their eye on his situation ever since firing John Tortorella with weeks left in the campaign. They’ll presumably be aggressive in bringing him back to the city in which he spent 11 of his 18 seasons as a player.

Tocchet ends his stint in Vancouver with a 108-65-27 (.608) record across two and a half seasons. He was initially brought in midway through the 2022-23 campaign after the Canucks fired Bruce Boudreau. In 2024-25, major regression from the since-traded J.T. Miller and Elias Pettersson, along with injuries to 2024 Vezina finalist Thatcher Demko and top-pair defenseman Filip Hronek, were simply too much to handle for Tocchet to keep the club afloat.

The Canucks are now the eighth active head coach vacancy, joining the Blackhawks, Bruins, Ducks, Flyers, Kraken, Penguins, and Rangers.

Photo courtesy of Nick Turchiaro-USA TODAY Sports.

Newsstand| Vancouver Canucks Rick Tocchet

21 comments

Utah Signs Jaxson Stauber To Two-Year, Two-Way Extension

April 29, 2025 at 2:12 pm CDT | by Josh Erickson Leave a Comment

Pending Group VI unrestricted free agent goaltender Jaxson Stauber has inked a two-year, two-way extension to keep him in Utah through the 2026-27 campaign, the team announced (X link). If Stauber is in the NHL, the contract will carry the league minimum cap hit of $775K, Belle Fraser of the Salt Lake Tribune reports.

Since Stauber is a likely candidate to land on waivers to begin next season, his signing doesn’t impact Utah’s salary cap projection for 2025-26 at present. 2024-25 was Stauber’s last year of waiver-exempt status. He becomes the 35th player under contract with the Club for next year.

Stauber, fresh off his 26th birthday, spent the season as Utah’s No. 3 in the net after getting non-tendered by the Blackhawks last summer. He inked a two-way deal with an $80K AHL salary and $100K guarantee in the first week of free agency last summer and, while he didn’t make the opening night roster, spent a solid chunk of the season up with the NHL team as Karel Vejmelka’s backup with Connor Ingram missing significant time due to injury and an active stint in the NHL/NHLPA Player Assistance Program.

Across his four starts and two relief appearances with Utah this year, the 6’3″ netminder posted a 2-1-1 record, .892 SV%, and a 3.26 GAA. It was his second season of NHL experience after starting six games for Chicago in 2022-23. He recorded his first NHL shutout in his season debut against the Golden Knights on Nov. 30 with a 29-save performance.

The Minnesota still primarily played with AHL Tucson this season. He backstopped the Roadrunners to a 12-7-2 record in 21 appearances with a .897 SV% and 3.14 GAA. He started two of Tucson’s three games in their first-round loss to Abbotsford, humming with a .935 SV% and 2.61 GAA.

Stauber will be eligible to test standard unrestricted free agency upon expiry.

Transactions| Utah Mammoth Jaxson Stauber

0 comments

Lightning’s Brandon Hagel To Miss Game 5

April 29, 2025 at 12:47 pm CDT | by Josh Erickson 20 Comments

Lightning top-six winger Brandon Hagel has been ruled out for Wednesday’s Game 5 matchup against the Panthers as he remains in suspected concussion protocol, head coach Jon Cooper said (per the team).

Tampa Bay now faces elimination without its second-leading point getter from the regular season. Even if they manage a win at home to stay alive in the series, there’s no timeline yet for Hagel’s return.

“He’s not playing tomorrow, and you know why,” Cooper said (per the team’s Benjamin Pierce). The reason Cooper’s referring to is a high hit from Florida defenseman Aaron Ekblad midway through the second period of last night’s Game 4 loss that earned him a hearing with the Department of Player Safety today. Ekblad will presumably miss Game 5 as well, if not longer, due to his pending suspension.

“There’s that catchy word called adversity, so the script doesn’t always go as planned,” Cooper said (via Pierce). “But I tell the players, let’s be the ones that write our own story.” The Lightning are trying to avoid their third straight first-round exit after making three consecutive Stanley Cup Finals from 2020 to 2022. Last year’s defeat also came at the hands of the eventual champion Panthers in five games.

Hagel, who erupted for a career-high 35 goals and 90 points in the regular season while playing in all 82 games, has only been available for two and a half games of this series. He was suspended for Game 3 after delivering an illegal hit to Panthers captain Aleksander Barkov in Game 2 and was limited to 11 minutes of ice time in Game 4 before the Ekblad hit. He’s been held without a point, only managing three shots on goal and a minus-four rating.

Nick Paul hopped up to Hagel’s spot on Anthony Cirelli’s wing in Game 3 when Hagel was unavailable. It’s unclear if he’ll do so again. Cooper has opted to dress 11 forwards and seven defensemen for the majority of the series, with the Hagel and Cirelli duo routinely going without a consistent winger as a result.

Florida Panthers| Tampa Bay Lightning Brandon Hagel

20 comments
« Previous Page
Load More Posts
    Top Stories

    Brett Pesce Won’t Travel On Devils’ Upcoming Road Trip

    Patrik Laine Out Three To Four Months

    Golden Knights Sign Carter Hart To Two-Year Deal

    Canucks Acquire Lukas Reichel

    Joseph Woll Returning To Maple Leafs From Personal Leave

    Rangers Recall Brennan Othmann

    Golden Knights Place Mark Stone On Long-Term Injured Reserve

    Predators Assign Brady Martin To OHL

    Anze Kopitar Out Week-To-Week With Foot Injury

    Brady Tkachuk Out 6-7 Weeks Following Hand Surgery

    Recent

    Washington Capitals Recall Ethen Frank

    Washington Capitals Sign, Waive Brett Leason

    Ottawa Senators Recall Hunter Shepard

    Pontus Johansson Drawing NHL Interest

    PHR Mailbag: Wild, Sharks, Third Lines, Goaltending Moves, Draft

    West Notes: Hughes, Foegele, Thomas, Foligno

    Devils Recall Seamus Casey

    Flames Looking To Add Scoring Help

    Evening Notes: Othmann, Girgensons, Daws

    Hurricanes Recall Domenick Fensore, Assign Charles-Alexis Legault To AHL

    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

    • 2025’s Top 50 Unrestricted Free Agents
    • Rasmus Andersson Rumors
    • Erik Karlsson Rumors
    • Rickard Rakell Rumors
    • Bryan Rust Rumors

    Pro Hockey Rumors Features

    Pro Hockey Rumors Features

    • Support Pro Hockey Rumors And Go Ad-Free
    • 2025 NHL Free Agent List
    • 2026 NHL Free Agent List
    • Active Roster Tracker
    • Offseason Trade Tracker
    • PTO Tracker 2025
    • Summer Synopsis Series 2025
    • Training Camp Rosters 2025
    • Pro Hockey Rumors On X
    • Pro Hockey Rumors Polls

     

     

     

     

    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