Stars Trade Matt Dumba To Penguins

The Stars are trading defenseman Matt Dumba and their 2028 second-round pick to the Penguins in exchange for defenseman Vladislav Kolyachonok, reports Elliotte Friedman of Sportsnet. Both teams have since announced the trade, which doesn’t include any salary retention.

Completing the deal will make the Stars cap-compliant for the 2025-26 season. Even if Dallas has Kolyachonok on its opening night roster, he costs the league minimum $775K against the cap.

That’s $2.975MM less than Dumba’s $3.75MM cap hit, since Pittsburgh takes on the totality of his salary with no retention on Dallas’ part. That savings puts Dallas, which is currently $1.79MM above the upper limit, back under the cap.

The Stars signed Dumba to a two-year, $7.5MM contract in free agency last summer, viewed as a risky commitment at the time after the 6’1″ righty had just 12 points and a -18 rating in 76 games with the Coyotes and Lightning the year prior. The fears around the contract were quickly realized. Dumba, who turns 31 later this month, had negative possession impacts everywhere he was deployed and was out of the lineup entirely by the time the postseason rolled around.

Dumba played 63 games for the Stars last season, averaging just 15:18 per game with a 1-9–10 scoring line. He logged a minus-five rating in what amounted to his lowest usage since his rookie campaign and was a healthy scratch for all 18 playoff games.

The best years of Dumba’s NHL career came as a top-pairing piece for the Wild, who drafted him No. 7 overall in 2012. He remained there through the beginning of his steep decline in the early 2020s, leaving for Arizona in 2023 in free agency on a one-year contract. After failing to re-establish his value there, he was flipped to the Lightning at the trade deadline for two late-round picks and finished out the year as a bottom-pairing piece in Tampa before signing in Dallas in the offseason.

Dumba’s best season came back in 2017-18 as a 23-year-old, when he finished 19th in the league in scoring among defensemen with 50 points in 82 games and tied for 10th with 14 goals. He also had 12 goals and 22 points in just 32 games the following year before an upper-body injury ended his season. His offensive production never recovered, averaging just 22.4 points per 82 games since returning.

It’s unclear if Dumba will have much of a role in Pittsburgh’s lineup next season. They have three right-shot defenders ahead of him on the depth chart in Connor Clifton, Erik Karlsson, and Kris Letang, although Karlsson is well-known trade bait this summer. If he remains in the picture, though, Dumba could start the season in the press box – or even on waivers and buried in the minors – unless someone shifts to their offside.

Dumba’s price tag is exceedingly steep for the No. 6/7/8 defender he is at this stage of his career, one Dallas simply couldn’t afford to shoulder with their cap crunch after extending Mikko Rantanen and retaining UFAs Jamie Benn and Matt Duchene. They part with a second-round pick to wipe his deal off the books one year early – a steep price considering the market for cap dumps this summer, although they do well in acquiring a serviceable depth piece in Kolyachonok. They’re now without a pick before the third round in 2028.

The Penguins already had a bit of a crunch among depth defensemen after signing Alexander Alexeyev, Caleb Jones, and Parker Wotherspoon in free agency. It isn’t surprising to see them unwilling to take on a defenseman without moving one out.

They picked up Kolyachonok, a 24-year-old 6’2″ lefty with some untapped two-way potential, off waivers from Utah in February last season. He didn’t get into much game action, though, recording two assists and a minus-five rating in 12 appearances while averaging 14:20 per game. There wasn’t going to be much opportunity for him in Pittsburgh with their aforementioned additions and younger, higher-profile names like Owen Pickering pushing for more NHL ice time.

Kolyachonok, a second-rounder in 2019, has 14 points in 74 career NHL games with a minus-seven rating and 72 hits. He’ll presumably compete with veteran Alexander Petrovic to exit training camp as the extra defenseman on the NHL roster.

Sean Shapiro of DLLS Sports was first to report the Stars and Penguins were working on a trade centered around Dumba and Kolyachonok.

Image courtesy of Jerome Miron-Imagn Images.

Stars Re-Sign Antonio Stranges

The Stars have signed restricted free agent forward Antonio Stranges to a one-year deal, his agent, Gold Star Hockey’s Dan Milstein, announced Wednesday on X. PuckPedia reports it’s a two-way deal worth $775K in the NHL and $100K in the AHL.

Stranges, 23, was a fourth-round pick by Dallas in the 2020 draft. The skilled but inconsistent left-winger signed his entry-level contract near the end of his final junior season with the OHL’s London Knights in 2022.

The Michigan native’s development since turning pro in earnest three years ago has followed a linear track. He split an injury-plagued 2022-23 season between AHL Texas and ECHL Idaho, producing well at both levels when healthy. He’s stuck around in the AHL since, posting 23 games in 55 games two years ago before breaking out for an 18-25–43 scoring line in 55 games last season.

He’s still got a ways to go to prove he can be consistent enough of a scoring presence for a potential third-line role in Dallas down the line. He’s likely not a candidate to crack the opening night roster in the fall, but he will need to clear waivers if the Stars want to send him back to the minors. Another step forward in Texas in 2025-26 could put him in line for a one-way contract and an NHL job in 2026-27.

Despite his loads of professional experience, Stranges will again be a restricted free agent next summer, assuming the Stars choose to extend a qualifying offer to him again. He’ll still be too young to qualify for Group VI unrestricted free agent status.

Stars Hire Toby Petersen As AHL Head Coach

The Stars have appointed Avalanche skills coach and former NHL forward Toby Petersen as the head coach of their AHL affiliate, the Texas Stars, according to a team release.

A ninth-round pick back in 1998, Petersen went on to spend parts of nine seasons in the NHL, including six with Dallas. He appeared in 398 regular-season games and 18 playoff games for the Penguins, Oilers, and Stars, scoring 34 goals and 82 points with a -40 rating. He played for the Texas Stars in the 2010-11, 2012-13, and 2013-14 seasons as his pro career wound down.

Petersen, 46, transitioned to coaching immediately after retiring as a player in 2014. He bounced around AHL benches, serving as an assistant for the Springfield Falcons (2014-15), Lake Erie/Cleveland Monsters (2015-17), and Rochester Americans (2017-20) before taking a few years away. He re-emerged as a skills coach for Colorado ahead of the 2023-24 season and had spent the last two years in Denver.

Petersen replaces Neil Graham, who recently earned a promotion to the NHL bench as an assistant. He’d been at the helm of the Texas program since a midseason promotion in 2019-20 and was twice named as a coach for the league’s All-Star Game (2023, 2024).

Two-Way Deals: 7/1/25

As major signings come in around the NHL today with the 2025-26 league year beginning, teams are shoring up their minor-league depth as well by signing players to two-way contracts. We’re keeping track of those signings today in this article, which will be continuously updated. Deals are one year unless otherwise noted.

Boston Bruins

Riley Tufte ($775K NHL) – Ty Anderson of 98.5 The Sports Hub
Jonathan Aspirot ($775K NHL) – Ty Anderson of 98.5 The Sports Hub
Luke Cavallin ($775K NHL) – Ty Anderson of 98.5 The Sports Hub

Buffalo Sabres

Riley Fiddler-Schultz ($865K NHL/$90K SB/$35K PB/$85K AHL) – PuckPedia // two years, entry-level
Carson Meyer ($775K NHL/$350K AHL Y1 – $375K AHL Y2) – PuckPedia // two years
D Mason Geertsen ($775K NHL/$425K AHL) – Elliotte Friedman of Sportsnet // two years
Zachary Jones ($900K NHL/$550K AHL) – PuckPedia
Zach Metsa ($775K NHL/$250K AHL/$325K gt’d) – PuckPedia

Calgary Flames

Nick Cicek ($775K NHL) – team release

Carolina Hurricanes

Amir Miftakhov ($775K NHL/$100K AHL/$240K gt’d) – PuckPedia

Chicago Blackhawks

Dominic Toninato ($850K NHL) – team release // two years

Colorado Avalanche

T.J. Tynan (unknown) – team release
Jack Ahcan (unknown) – team release
Ronald Attard ($775K NHL/$450K AHL/$500K gt’d) – PuckPedia

Columbus Blue Jackets

Owen Sillinger (unknown) – team release
Christian Jaros (unknown) – team release

Dallas Stars

Niilopekka Muhonen (unknown) – team release // three years, entry-level

Edmonton Oilers

Riley Stillman ($775K NHL/$475K AHL) – PuckPedia // two years
Matt Tomkins ($775K NHL/$400K AHL/$450 Y2 gt’d) – PuckPedia // two years

Florida Panthers

Nolan Foote ($775K NHL/$150K AHL/$250K gt’d) – PuckPedia
Jack Studnicka ($775K NHL/$450K AHL) – Chris Johnston of TSN/The Athletic
Brandon Bussi ($775K NHL/$400K AHL) – PuckPedia
Kirill Gerasimyuk (unknown) – team release // two years, entry-level

Los Angeles Kings

Cole Guttman ($775K NHL/$450K Y1 – $475K Y2 AHL/$475K gt’d Y1 – $500K gt’d Y2) – PuckPedia // two years

Minnesota Wild

Tyler Pitlick ($775K NHL/$300K Y1 – $350K Y2 AHL/$325K gt’d Y1 – $375K gt’d Y2) – PuckPedia // two years
Ben Gleason ($800K NHL/$475K AHL) – PuckPedia

Montreal Canadiens

Alex Belzile (unknown) – team release
Nathan Clurman ($775K NHL/$125K AHL/$140K gt’d) – PuckPedia

New Jersey Devils

Calen Addison ($775K NHL/$325K AHL/$400K gt’d) – PuckPedia
Angus Crookshank ($775K NHL/$425K AHL/$475K gt’d) – PuckPedia // two years, one-way in 2026-27

New York Islanders

Matthew Highmore (unknown) – team release
Ethan Bear ($775K NHL/$325K AHL/$425K gt’d) – PuckPedia
Cole McWard (unknown) – team release

New York Rangers

Derrick Pouliot ($775K NHL/$400K AHL/$425K gt’d Y1 – $450K gt’d Y2) – PuckPedia // two years

Ottawa Senators

Wyatt Bongiovanni ($775K NHL/$160K AHL) – PuckPedia
Olle Lycksell ($775K NHL/$450K AHL/$500K gt’d) – Darren Dreger of TSN

Philadelphia Flyers

Lane Pederson ($775K NHL/$525K AHL) – PuckPedia

San Jose Sharks

Jimmy Huntington (unknown) – team release
Samuel Laberge (unknown) – team release
Colin White ($775K NHL/$425K AHL/$475K gt’d) – PuckPedia
Cole Clayton (unknown) – team release

St. Louis Blues

Matt Luff ($775K NHL/$400K AHL) – PuckPedia

Tampa Bay Lightning

Nicholas Abruzzese (unknown) – team release
Tristan Allard (unknown) – team release // two years, entry-level
Boris Katchouk (unknown) – team release
Simon Lundmark ($775K NHL/$250K AHL/$350K gt’d) – PuckPedia // two years
Ryan Fanti ($775K NHL/$80K AHL) – PuckPedia

Utah Mammoth

Kailer Yamamoto ($775K NHL/$500K AHL) – PuckPedia
Scott Perunovich ($775K NHL/$400K AHL/$500K gt’d) – PuckPedia

Vancouver Canucks

Joseph LaBate ($775K NHL/$350K AHL) – PuckPedia
Mackenzie MacEachern ($775K NHL/$575K AHL) – PuckPedia // two years
Jimmy Schuldt ($775K NHL/$500K AHL) – PuckPedia // two years

Winnipeg Jets

Phillip Di Giuseppe ($775K NHL/$450K AHL) – PuckPedia
D Kale Clague (unknown) – Elliotte Friedman of Sportsnet

Stars To Sign Radek Faksa To Three-Year Deal

The Stars are bringing center Radek Faksa back to Dallas on a three-year contract worth $2MM per season, sources tell Frank Seravalli.

Faksa will return to the Stars, where he’s already spent nine seasons, after only one year away from Texas. He spent that year away serving as the St. Louis Blues’ fourth-line center. He racked up five goals and 15 points in 70 games in that role, while also tallying 115 hits and 50 blocked shots. Faksa filled a toolsy role in St. Louis, often sat behind play and diving into plays in the corners and in front of the nets. But  an ultimately quiet campaign from player and team will inspire a move back to familiar, and more productive, grounds.

Faksa reached 89 goals and 200 points in 638 games with the Stars prior to this season. Like he did in St. Louis, much of his time in Dalals was spent in a bottom-line, utility role. He routinely rivaled 100 hits and 20 points in scoring, though did have a bit more oomph in his early days – netting three consecutive seasons of at least 30 points and 100 hits between 2016 and 2019. But those days were far ago, and Faksa now reasons to step in as Dallas’ burly fourth-line center, capable of filling the roles his teammates won’t. At 32 years old, a three-year contract could reasonably carry him through the remainder of his career, and end with a retirement with the same team that drafted him in the first-round of the 2012 NHL Draft.

PHR’s Gabriel Foley contributed significantly to this article.

Stars Hire Glen Gulutzan As Head Coach

July 1: Dallas has announced Gulutzan’s appointment.

June 29: The Stars have offered their head coaching vacancy to Oilers assistant Glen Gulutzan, TSN’s Darren Dreger reports. They’ve yet to agree on a contract but are expected to announce him as their new bench boss in the near future.

The hiring will kick off Gulutzan’s second stint in the Stars organization. They’re the team that gave him his first NHL head coaching gig back in 2011, promoting him after he served as the head coach of AHL Texas for two seasons. His two-year run with Dallas was forgettable – a 64-57-9 record (.527) and no playoff appearances led to his dismissal after two seasons. He then joined the Canucks’ bench as an assistant for three years before resurfacing as head coach of the Flames, where he posted a 82-68-14 record (.543) before again being let go after two years. Calgary made the playoffs under Gulutzan in 2017 but was swept by the Ducks in the first round.

Gulutzan, 53, returns to Dallas hoping for better results this time around. He’ll have a much better roster to help him out. While he bounced from team to team for much of the 2010s, the now-53-year-old caught on as an assistant coach in Edmonton after being fired by the Flames and has remained there until today. He’s helped the team to back-to-back Stanley Cup Final appearances on Kris Knoblauch’s staff, beating the Stars in the Western Conference Final on both occasions.

The former ECHL Coach of the Year with the Las Vegas Wranglers will take over for Peter DeBoer, who was a surprise firing after Dallas was bounced in this year’s WCF. Reports indicated the relationship between DeBoer and starting goaltender Jake Oettinger had rapidly deteriorated after DeBoer pulled him from their Game 5 season-ending loss early.

His new staff in Dallas remains to be seen. They already lost assistants Steve Spott to the Bruins and Misha Donskov to a role with Hockey Canada. It’s unclear if the lone remaining assistant, Alain Nasreddine, will return under Gulutzan.

Image courtesy of Mark J. Rebilas-USA TODAY Sports.

Stars Sign Colin Blackwell To Two-Year Deal

The Stars are bringing forward Colin Blackwell back to Dallas on a two-year deal worth $775,000 per season, Sportsnet’s Elliotte Friedman reports.

Blackwell, 32, returns to Dallas as cost-effective depth for a cap-strapped club. The versatile 5’8″ center won a career-high 151 draws for the Stars last year while providing solid depth scoring in a four-line role, posting six goals and 17 points and a plus-four rating in 63 appearances.

After spending the first few years of his pro career in the minors, the high-energy Blackwell has carved out a nice role for himself as a depth scorer, even in a bit of a journeyman role. He’s recorded 91 points in 298 career games with the Predators, Rangers, Kraken, Maple Leafs, Blackhawks, and Stars. If he plays out this deal with Dallas, it’ll be his longest run with a single team.

Dallas now has a cap-compliant roster that they could theoretically roll into next season with no changes. Blackwell brings their roster count up to 21 – 11 forwards and eight defensemen, with $205,084 in space, per PuckPedia. They’ll still likely pursue a cap-clearing trade if possible, but there’s now officially an avenue toward starting the season with a full 20-man roster and at least one injury replacement.

Granlund To Test The Open Market

While the Stars have been trying to find a way to keep pending UFA center Mikael Granlund in the fold, he will be testing the open market today, mentions Pierre LeBrun of TSN and The Athletic (Twitter link).  The 33-year-old had his second straight year of at least 60 points last season, notching 22 goals and 44 assists across 83 games between San Jose and Dallas while adding 10 points in 18 playoff contests.  Granlund is now the best center option in a market that has dwindled sharply in recent weeks, setting him up for a multi-year deal at a price tag above the $5MM he made in each of the last four years.

Free Agent Notes: Marchand, Gavrikov, Provorov, Granlund, Faksa, Pezzetta

If the Panthers can’t get a deal done to keep Brad Marchand in Florida before the market opens tomorrow, Darren Dreger of TSN expects the Bruins, Mammoth, and Maple Leafs to be his most aggressive suitors in free agency.

A Boston reunion would be surprising given there’s been no change in the front office that wasn’t willing to match Marchand’s cheaper requests for an extension during the season, resulting in the Bruins trading their captain to the Panthers at the deadline. Nonetheless, it’s a financially feasible move for them and one that would address their rather significant need for top-six forwards. The club still has $12.74MM in cap space after getting extensions done for names like John BeecherMorgan Geekie, and Henri Jokiharju in the last 24 hours, per PuckPedia. Marchand would likely command a contract in the $8MM range annually if he hits the open market.

While Utah has seemed to dial back its rhetoric of making a significant free agent splash, instead placing complete trust in its young core and opting for more youthful pickups via trade, like JJ Peterka, Marchand might make more sense on a shorter-term contract. They still have nearly $15MM in cap space and enter 2025-26 with one of the youngest forward groups in the league – their only forwards 30 or older are Alexander Kerfoot and Liam O’Brien.

The Leafs also have their cap flexibility for Tuesday dialed in after getting rather affordable extensions done for Matthew Knies ($7.75MM) and John Tavares ($4.38MM AAV) in the last few days. They’d presumably be one of the more appealing fits for Marchand to remain both with a contending team and in a top-six role, potentially even seeing top-line minutes in place of the departing Mitch Marner.

Here are a few more rumors from around the NHL ahead of the official start of free agency on Tuesday:

  • Pierre LeBrun of TSN and The Athletic relays that the Kings are making a last-ditch effort today to reach an extension with defenseman Vladislav Gavrikov. While general manager Ken Holland said over the weekend he expects Gavrikov to test the market, L.A. still hasn’t heard back from Gavrikov’s camp on their final offer.
  • While things were quiet on extension talks between the Blue Jackets and defenseman Ivan Provorov for weeks, they re-engaged in negotiations yesterday, Aaron Portzline of The Athletic reports. They presumably decided getting yesterday’s extension for Dante Fabbro done, ensuring they retain depth on their weaker right side of the blue line, was a priority over Provorov’s talks.
  • Center Mikael Granlund and the Stars continue to have mutual interest in an extension, according to LeBrun. It still looks unlikely something will get done before tomorrow with the Stars having just $980K in projected cap space for next season, but they could reach a handshake agreement if Dallas is confident they can move out other contracts to make Granlund’s money work. They’ve already been successful in retaining vets Jamie Benn and Matt Duchene on below-market-value deals.
  • Depth pivot Radek Faksa will have plenty of options tomorrow if he reaches the market, given the lack of centers available, but there’s still the possibility he stays with the Blues. The two sides remain in extension talks, says Jeremy Rutherford of The Athletic.
  • The Maple Leafs are among the teams expected to have interest in Canadiens enforcer Michael Pezzetta, assuming he hits the market tomorrow, reports LeBrun.

Stars’ Jim Nill Named General Manager Of The Year

Dallas Stars’ GM Jim Nill has been named the 2024-25 Jim Gregory General Manager of the Year, per a league announcement. Nill has now won the award three consecutive years, becoming the first GM to achieve the three-peat. He was named on 37 of the 42 ballots submitted for the award.

Nill received 139 points, which equates to 17 first-place votes, 17 second-place votes, and three third-place votes. Florida Panthers GM Bill Zito finished second with 102 points, while Winnipeg Jets GM Kevin Cheveldayoff finished a distant third with 52 points. In total, 13 general managers received votes.

Nill supported the Stars’ efforts during the 2024-25 season by acquiring Mikael Granlund and Cody Ceci from the San Jose Sharks in February and then swung for the fences by trading for star winger Mikko Rantanen from the Carolina Hurricanes at the deadline. Granlund posted 21 points in 31 regular-season games for the Stars, while Rantanen went on a historic playoff run with the team, posting nine goals and 22 points in 18 games.

Nill spent nine seasons playing in the NHL, skating in 524 career games for five different teams. Following his playing career, he spent time scouting and eventually worked his way into a management role in the Red Wings organization. He was named the Stars’ general manager in 2013 and in his 12 seasons in Dallas has been a finalist for the Jim Gregory Award five times.

Voting for the award was conducted by NHL Club General Managers and a panel of league executives and media members at the conclusion of the second round in the playoffs.

 

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