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  • Devils Activate Brett Pesce, Place Arseny Gritsyuk On Injured Reserve
  • Hoffmann Group Nearing Deal To Purchase Pittsburgh Penguins
  • Flyers’ Tyson Foerster Out Five Months
  • Blues Claim Jonatan Berggren Off Waivers
  • Blackhawks Place Connor Bedard On Injured Reserve
  • Devils Have Discussed Dougie Hamilton, Ondrej Palat In Trade Talks
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Newsstand

Devils Activate Brett Pesce, Place Arseny Gritsyuk On Injured Reserve

December 17, 2025 at 6:07 pm CDT | by Josh Erickson Leave a Comment

After missing the past 24 games with an upper-body injury, the Devils announced they’ve activated top-pair defenseman Brett Pesce from injured reserve, indicating he’ll be in the lineup tonight against the Golden Knights. The team placed winger Arseny Gritsyuk on IR retroactive to Dec. 11 in the corresponding move.

The Devils had been anxiously awaiting Pesce’s clearance for weeks, but the injection of a right-shot defender into the lineup became all the more important after Simon Nemec sustained an undisclosed injury during practice last Friday that will have him out for at least a couple of weeks. They’ve been dealing with the season-long absence of righty Johnathan Kovacevic as well, making Pesce’s standing on the team all the more important.

Pesce had three assists and a +3 rating in nine games to begin the year. That coincided with an 8-1-0 start to the year, making New Jersey look like a legitimate contender to end up atop the Metropolitan Division. Since then, the Devils have gone 10-13-1 with their possession numbers dipping in the process.

There are a variety of factors that go into a slump, but being forced into breaking up what had been one of the best defense pairs in the league through the early going is high on that list. Pesce and Luke Hughes had served as the Devils’ most dominant unit on the blue line, controlling 60.2% of expected goals. Without Pesce, Hughes has been underwater in every possession metric. His point production has dipped as well, down to 0.55 per game after peaking with 0.62 per game as a second-year player last season.

The Devils’ press release indicated Pesce will be paired with Hughes again tonight, ideally giving them a true top-pair level of play that Dougie Hamilton and Jonas Siegenthaler haven’t been able to provide in the interim.

A healthier defense is paramount to help overcome the loss of a fifth forward to the injured or non-roster list in Gritsyuk. The Russian rookie, who’s eighth on the team in scoring with seven goals and 16 points in 31 games, has already missed the last two games with an upper-body injury.

He joins Jack Hughes, Evgenii Dadonov, and Zack MacEwen on IR, while Timo Meier carries a non-roster designation while on personal leave. Since he’s already missed six days, Gritsyuk will be eligible to return on Dec. 19 against the Mammoth, but that’s not feasible since he didn’t travel with the team on their raod trip. It’ll be Sunday at home against the Sabres to mark Gritsyuk’s first opportunity to get back into the lineup.

New Jersey Devils| Newsstand| Transactions Arseni Gritsyuk| Brett Pesce

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Hoffmann Group Nearing Deal To Purchase Pittsburgh Penguins

December 17, 2025 at 1:56 pm CDT | by Brennan McClain 11 Comments

According to insider Frank Seravalli, the Fenway Sports Group has agreed to sell the NHL’s Pittsburgh Penguins to the Chicago-based Hoffmann Group. The sale is reportedly pending approval from the NHL’s Board of Governors. Multiple other outlets have confirmed the sale.

The Hoffmann Group, led by David Hoffmann, has been interested in purchasing the Penguins for several months. In August, it was reported that Hoffmann had emerged as a contender for a minority stake in the Penguins, competing with franchise legend Mario Lemieux, who had expressed interest in reacquiring the team. Instead of a minority piece, Hoffmann will be acquiring the whole pie.

FSG originally purchased the team in 2021 for a reported value of $900MM, and is selling it only a few years later. According to Forbes, the Penguins are the 22nd most valuable franchise in the league with an estimated value of $1.75BB. TSN’s Pierre LeBrun believes that the final price will land between $1.7BB and $1.8BB.

As for the new owners, there is little known about the Hoffmann Group, primarily David. Forbes projected his net worth to be around $2BB, though there’s no confirmation of that. Additionally, the group’s only other venture into hockey has been their ownership of the ECHL’s Florida Everblades.

Regardless, they’re acquiring the team at an interesting time in their franchise history. Being one of the most successful teams since the turn of the century, the Penguins are nearing the end of the Sidney Crosby and Evgeni Malkin era. Without another player on the roster or in the system even close to that level of superstardom, the Hoffmann Group will be tasked with guiding the franchise through a turbulent time.

The speed of the sale is fairly status quo for FSG. Despite owning the team for only five years, they will have doubled their original investment of $900MM. In 1999, FSG purchased the MLB’s Miami Marlins for $150MM, and sold the team in 2002 for $158.5MM.

Newsstand| Pittsburgh Penguins

11 comments

Flyers’ Tyson Foerster Out Five Months

December 17, 2025 at 10:00 am CDT | by Josh Erickson 5 Comments

Dec. 17th: It appears that Foerster’s original two-to-three-month recovery timeline was premature. The Flyers shared today that following further medical evaluation, Foerster underwent arm surgery and is now expected to miss the next five months. Unless Philadelphia makes a surprise run to the second round of the playoffs or the Eastern Conference Final, Foerster’s season is likely done.

Dec. 3rd: Flyers winger Tyson Foerster is expected to miss two to three months with the upper-body injury he sustained in last night’s loss to the Penguins, the team announced. As expected, the Flyers announced that they’ve placed Foerster on the injured reserve. The transaction opens up a spot on Philadelphia’s 23-man roster.

The news sidelines Foerster, who leads the Flyers with 10 goals in 21 games, through the Olympic break. It was a non-contact injury as Foerster appeared to hyperextend his right shoulder or otherwise injure the upper arm area while unloading a one-timer midway through the second period (video via Flyers Clips on X).

It’s been a rough ride for the 23-year-old over the past few months. His status for opening night was doubtful through much of training camp after he sustained an elbow injury while playing for Canada at the World Championship back in May. The procedure itself wasn’t expected to keep him out through the start of the season, but he developed a related infection that delayed his recovery. He ended up not missing any time but sustained a lower-body injury at the beginning of November that landed him on injured reserve and kept him out for four games.

This absence will be in the 30-game range, though. If he returns right at the two-month mark, he could technically get a few reps in before the Olympic break – the Flyers’ last game before the schedule pause is on Feb. 5. But in the likely event he’s out until Philly resumes play on Feb. 25 (or even later if he misses a full three months), he’ll be out for at least 31 contests.

Under new head coach Rick Tocchet, the Flyers have flexed a high-end defensive system and a breakout season between the pipes from free-agent pickup Daniel Vladař to a 14-8-3 record, good for the second wild-card spot in the Eastern Conference at the time of writing. Their offensive output, however, ranks 26th in goals per game (2.76) and 29th in shots per game (24.8). Missing their best finisher in Foerster, who’s shooting at a 24.4% clip and also ranks fifth on the team in shots per game, threatens to sink those numbers even further.

Since arriving in the NHL in 2023, Foerster has quietly emerged as one of the league’s better young two-way wingers. The 2020 first-round pick is a career 15.9% shooter – right in range with names like Auston Matthews, Zach Hyman, and Elias Pettersson over the same span. He’s also averaged over 17 minutes per game, factors in on the Flyers’ second penalty kill unit, and consistently boasts above-average possession impacts. He’s been on a different level defensively this year, only on the ice for 0.88 goals against per 60 minutes at 5-on-5.

Fresh off signing a two-year, $7.5MM extension that looked to be one of the best value bets in the league this season, he’s now ticketed for an extended absence. As for who will be the beneficiary of his top-nine minutes, rookie Nikita Grebenkin is a solid bet to get the first crack. He’s already seen some elevation from his usual fourth-line duties, skating a handful of games alongside Noah Cates and Travis Konecny. The offensive production hasn’t quite arrived for the 22-year-old Russian, who’s notched one goal and three points through 16 games, but boasts solid possession numbers in his limited minutes and is worth a look higher up in the lineup.

With Foerster unavailable, the Flyers no longer have a healthy extra forward on their roster. With five games left on a six-game homestand, there likely isn’t much motivation to make a recall unless another injury occurs.

Injury| Newsstand| Philadelphia Flyers Tyson Foerster

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Blues Claim Jonatan Berggren Off Waivers

December 16, 2025 at 1:04 pm CDT | by Josh Erickson 4 Comments

The Blues have claimed winger Jonatan Berggren off waivers from the Red Wings, Elliotte Friedman of Sportsnet reports. The team moved center Nick Bjugstad to injured reserve to open up a roster spot for him, per Matthew DeFranks of The St. Louis Post-Dispatch.

When Detroit waived Berggren yesterday, the motivations weren’t clear. They might have been attempting to open a roster spot for Mason Appleton to come off injured reserve, or the Wings simply may have been looking to give the fourth-year Swede a fresh start elsewhere. If they were hoping to sneak him through to the AHL, though, they’ll be disappointed with today’s outcome.

Once a standout who led Sweden’s top junior league in scoring in his draft year, Berggren cracked the Wings’ lineup for the first time in 2022-23. He’s been a fairly efficient depth scorer ever since, averaging a 15-16–31 scoring line per 82 games despite averaging under 13 minutes of ice time, but had seen his role slashed in Detroit this year. He’s been a healthy scratch more times (18) than he’s played (15) and has only suited up once since Thanksgiving.

There’s long been optimism about what Berggren’s production could look like if given an expanded role. He hasn’t seen minor-league action in two years but was one of the AHL’s top scoring presences from 2021-24, recording 49 goals and 127 points in 130 games for Detroit’s affiliate in Grand Rapids.

The 25-year-old may now get that chance on a decimated Blues team that’s missing three of its top four wingers in Dylan Holloway, Jordan Kyrou, and Jimmy Snuggerud. Their injury crunch has recently forced veteran Robby Fabbri into a top-six role after signing a two-way deal just days ago, plus emergency AHL call-ups Hugh McGing and Matt Luff sliding into the bottom six.

Now, their low place in the standings pays some dividends in the form of the third-highest waiver priority in the league. In addition to adding some short-term depth, Berggren could continually slot into a top-nine role for St. Louis down the stretch if they sell off rumored trade chips Brayden Schenn, Mathieu Joseph, and Oskar Sundqvist.

In claiming Berggren, the Blues are on the hook for his $1.825MM cap hit for the remainder of the season. He’ll be a restricted free agent next summer with arbitration rights.

Bjugstad has already missed three games with an upper-body injury, which he sustained seven days ago on Dec. 9 against the Bruins. As such, he’s eligible to come off IR at any time. The 33-year-old pivot has four goals and an assist in 25 games this season.

Image courtesy of Walter Tychnowicz-Imagn Images.

Detroit Red Wings| Newsstand| St. Louis Blues| Transactions| Waivers Jonatan Berggren

4 comments

Blackhawks Place Connor Bedard On Injured Reserve

December 16, 2025 at 9:15 am CDT | by Brennan McClain 7 Comments

Dec. 16th: According to an update from ESPN’s Kevin Weekes, Bedard has reportedly suffered a separated shoulder. Given that the team will re-evaluate Bedard in early January, this suggests that it’s no more than a Grade 2 separation, which typically has a recovery timeline of four to eight weeks. If it’s only a Grade 1 separation, Bedard may only miss a few weeks. The lack of motivation for surgery indicates that Bedard didn’t suffer a Grade 3 separation or beyond, which carries a recovery timeline of multiple months.

Dec. 15th: According to a team announcement, the Chicago Blackhawks have placed star center Connor Bedard on the injured reserve, retroactive to Dec. 12. In a corresponding roster move, the Blackhawks have recalled defenseman Ethan Del Mastro and have returned goaltender Laurent Brossoit from his conditioning stint.

Bedard will be out through the holiday break and will be re-evaluated in early January, head coach Jeff Blashill told reporters (including Ben Pope of the Chicago Sun-Times). They’re not currently considering surgery for his suspected shoulder ailment.

His injury stems from the Blackhawks’ recent game against the St. Louis Blues. In the final moments of the contest, Bedard got tied up with Blues center Brayden Schenn during a faceoff and went down awkwardly. He was seen skating to the bench clutching his right shoulder, and no further updates have been given regarding the severity of his injury.

Losing Bedard for any amount of time is understandably a gut punch to a relatively competitive Chicago team. In the midst of a true breakout before the injury, Bedard had scored 19 goals and 44 points in 31 games, averaging 21:03 of ice time per contest. Nearly every facet of his game had taken meaningful steps forward, from his on-ice save percentage at even strength, CorsiFor% at even strength, to his faceoff percentage.

The Blackhawks already lost their first game without Bedard the following night at the hands of the Detroit Red Wings, and will play the Toronto Maple Leafs and Montreal Canadiens before he’s eligible to return. It wouldn’t be surprising to see a noticeable decrease in offensive output over those two games, as the team’s next leading scorer is Tyler Bertuzzi with 16 goals and 26 points in 29 games. Of Bertuzzi’s 16 goals, Bedard has assisted on 11 of them.

Del Mastro, 22, has already suited up in one game for the Blackhawks this season, earning a -1 rating in 17:35 of action. With that, he’s spent the rest of his time with the AHL’s Rockford IceHogs, scoring one goal and 11 points in 27 games with a +6 rating.

Although he will serve as the team’s seventh defenseman throughout their upcoming road trip, that doesn’t necessarily mean that Del Mastro won’t be in the lineup against the Maple Leafs and Canadiens. Throughout much of the 2025-26 campaign, head coach Jeff Blashill has opted to dress seven defensemen instead of the typical six, which may continue now that Chicago is down to 13 forwards on the active roster.

Meanwhile, Brossoit will have the opportunity to play in his first NHL contest since the 2024 Stanley Cup playoffs. He’s been recovering from both meniscus and hip surgeries over the last two years with the Blackhawks and is finally healthy enough to debut with the club. His numbers were fairly encouraging over his conditioning loan, managing a 2-1-0 record in three games with a .900 SV%.

Chicago Blackhawks| Injury| Newsstand| Transactions Connor Bedard| Ethan Del Mastro| Laurent Brossoit

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Devils Have Discussed Dougie Hamilton, Ondrej Palat In Trade Talks

December 16, 2025 at 8:12 am CDT | by Brennan McClain 6 Comments

Yesterday morning, ESPN’s Kevin Weekes reported that the New Jersey Devils have included defenseman Dougie Hamilton and forward Ondřej Palát in trade talks. That falls in line with what Sportsnet’s Elliotte Friedman had said regarding the Devils’ pursuit of defenseman Quinn Hughes before he was ultimately traded to the Minnesota Wild on Friday.

Friedman didn’t offer any specifics like Weekes, though he had said that he believed New Jersey had a few cap-clearing trades vetoed. That was always going to be the difficulty in moving off of Hamilton or Palát, as both veterans have no-movement clauses and moderate trade protection throughout the rest of their respective contracts.

The Devils have put themselves into this situation. The Wild only added approximately $1MM in salary by acquiring Hughes, and without knowing New Jersey’s final offer, that would have been nearly impossible for them to absorb.

Assuming the Devils were willing to trade a player or two off their active roster, and somehow only lost $1MM in salary cap space by acquiring Hughes, they would have had around $200K remaining in flexibility. That would have made it impossible for New Jersey to recall extra depth to fill out their roster, and they would have had to continue the season with an incomplete 23-man roster.

Still, their pursuit of Hughes suggests that General Manager Tom Fitzgerald is eager to make a big move to help the Devils’ roster, even as they continue to stall out in the standings. Again devastated by injuries, New Jersey has fallen out of the playoff picture, going 3-7-0 in their last 10 contests.

It would make sense that if the Devils are adamant on acquiring a top-level talent, then they will continue trade negotiations regarding Hamilton and Palát. Each player has provided New Jersey with 10 teams they would accept a trade to.

Unfortunately, considering that it’ll be a cap-clearing trade with little returning to New Jersey, their options are limited. Although this list will grow leading up to the deadline, there are only 12 teams that could acquire Palát outright, and only nine for Hamilton.

Especially for the latter, the Devils will likely need to include a sweetener to the acquiring team. The 34-year-old winger has scored two goals and seven points in 33 games for the Devils this season, making it 28 goals and 66 points in his last 181 games. Factoring in his $6MM cap hit through next season, New Jersey may never be able to move off of his contract.

Hamilton, by comparison, has more value, but marginally. Hit by the same injury bug that much of the roster has sustained, Hamilton has only played in 57.3% of New Jersey’s games over the last three years. Still, by scoring 18 goals and 64 points over that stretch, he’s nearly matched Palát in offensive production over that stretch in approximately 70 fewer games.

Given the difficult hurdles to clear, the Devils may end the season with both players on their active roster. Depending on who becomes available closer to the deadline, New Jersey’s front office may feel that simply getting everyone back healthy will be enough pseudo additions to return to competitiveness. There’s definitely an argument for this approach, as the Devils started the year 16-8-1 through their first 25 games with a fairly healthy team.

Photo courtesy of John Jones-Imagn Images. 

New Jersey Devils| Newsstand Dougie Hamilton| Ondrej Palat

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Sabres Fire Kevyn Adams, Name Jarmo Kekalainen GM

December 15, 2025 at 12:57 pm CDT | by Josh Erickson 44 Comments

The Sabres announced they’ve relieved general manager Kevyn Adams of his duties. Former Blue Jackets GM Jarmo Kekäläinen, who had been working with the team as a senior advisor to Adams this season, was named as his replacement. There’s no interim tag attached to Kekäläinen.

The change in leadership was widely expected after reports emerged Friday that the Sabres were seriously considering moving on from Adams following the conclusion of their road trip, which ended last night in Seattle with a three-game win streak. Matthew Fairburn and Tim Graham of The Athletic, who broke the story, indicated Kekäläinen was the likely name to take over but was in his native Finland on personal leave. He said on Instagram this morning that his father, Kari, passed away Sunday after a long-term illness.

Understandably, there likely won’t be a presser introducing Kekäläinen for a while as a result. The announcement likely couldn’t wait until after last week’s reporting, though. Owner Terry Pegula’s full statement on the matter is as follows:

I would like to thank Kevyn for his dedication and loyalty to the Buffalo Sabres. He has been a reliable presence, and we are appreciative of his enduring care and commitment. I personally wish him and his entire family all the best.

We are not where we need to be as an organization, and we are moving forward with new leadership within our hockey operations department. We are dedicated to building an organization that is competitive year after year, and we have fallen short of that expectation.

I have named Jarmo Kekäläinen as general manager of the Buffalo Sabres and he will be overseeing hockey operations, effective immediately. The hiring of Jarmo was the result of an extensive search process in which Jarmo stood out as our top choice for the senior advisor position. Jarmo has distinguished himself over the last eight months, and his experience, professionalism, and drive speaks for itself. I am looking forward to him leading our organization to the next level.

Adams, 51, had been Buffalo’s GM since his hiring during the 2020 offseason to replace the fired Jason Botterill. It was a surprising decision at the time, given his lack of managerial experience. The 2006 Stanley Cup champion, as a player with the Hurricanes, had never worked a high-level front office role. However, he was highly familiar to the organization and ownership – a decision likely made to help Pegula better put his finger on the pulse as their playoff drought neared a decade.

Five and a half years later, the Sabres still haven’t made it back to the postseason. Today’s news ends a lengthy run for Adams in the organization that began back in 2009-10, one season prior to their most recent playoff appearance. He served as a development coach from 2009-11 and an assistant coach from 2011-13 before moving away from a bench role. From 2013 to 2020, he worked mainly with the Sabres’ youth hockey program and took on a job as their senior VP of business administration in 2019-20 before getting the promotion to the GM’s chair.

From Buffalo’s last playoff appearance in 2011 to Adams’ hiring in 2020, the Sabres’ 260-343-88 (.440) record was last in the NHL. Adams has gotten them out of the cellar – they haven’t had a top-five pick since his first year on the job – but not back to playoff contention. Adams ends his tenure with a 178-196-42 (.478) record, only a marginal improvement that’s good for 26th in the league since the 2020-21 season. The closest they got to the postseason came in 2023, missing the cut by one point.

The Sabres’ 14-14-4 record out of the gate this season made moving on from Adams an inevitability. Another losing season risks core pieces Rasmus Dahlin and Tage Thompson running out of patience and demanding moves – although with both signed through 2030 or longer, the Sabres have leverage on their side. There is a bevy of important pieces who aren’t locked up long-term, namely pending UFA Alex Tuch and pending RFAs Zach Benson and Josh Doan, who to some extent control their own destiny. That’s top of mind for a Sabres club that was essentially forced into trading RFA JJ Peterka to the Mammoth last summer because of an unwillingness to re-sign, although they made out rather well in that deal by recouping one of this year’s top breakout scorers in Doan.

Now, it’s Kekäläinen’s turn at the helm to instill a clear path toward playoff contention – whether that comes via long-term oriented moves or a potential in-season shake-up to vault Buffalo up a tight Eastern Conference. While they’re tied for last with 32 points, they’re only six points out of a playoff spot.

The appeal in Kekäläinen not only lies in his previous GM experience – he’s the first non-first-timer the club has hired since Scotty Bowman in 1979 – but in the type of market he worked for. Kekäläinen assumed control of a stagnant Columbus team that had yet to record a playoff win in franchise history midway through the 2012-13 season. Within a year, the Blue Jackets made it back to the postseason. Over his first seven full seasons in Columbus, the Jackets made the playoffs five times and recorded their first series victory in franchise history, an extremely memorable upset over the Lightning in 2019.

Kekäläinen was fired by the Jackets midway through the 2023-24 season after essentially being forced into rebuilding following the departures of Artemi Panarin and Sergei Bobrovsky in free agency. Nonetheless, his proven track record of instituting a culture change in Columbus is of extremely understandable appeal.

Pegula didn’t announce any other front office or coaching changes. For now, Lindy Ruff and his staff remain intact behind the bench, as do assistant GMs Jerry Forton, Mark Jakubowski, Jason Karmanos, and special assistant Eric Staal.

Buffalo Sabres| Newsstand

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Blues Place Dylan Holloway On IR With Right High Ankle Sprain

December 15, 2025 at 11:08 am CDT | by Josh Erickson 3 Comments

The Blues announced forward Dylan Holloway will miss six weeks due to a right high ankle sprain and has been placed on injured reserve. Winger Alexey Toropchenko was activated from IR in the corresponding move.

Holloway sustained the injury in Sunday’s practice, not during game action. He was inadvertently tripped during a drill and wasn’t able to put any weight on his right leg as he was helped off the ice.

The 24-year-old is now in for his second extended absence of the calendar year. Holloway sustained a season-ending oblique injury with just five games left in the 2024-25 regular season, holding him out of their first-round loss to the Jets.

A pending restricted free agent after signing his two-year, $4.58MM offer sheet with St. Louis in 2024, Holloway’s production has taken a hit from last season’s breakout. After putting together a 26-37–63 scoring line in 77 appearances in 2024-25, he’s come out of the gate with eight goals and 17 points in 33 games this year. Expressed in points per game, that’s a drop from 0.82 to 0.52 – a 37% decrease.

That’s due mainly to natural ebbs and flows in luck. His shot and chance generation numbers are nearly identical to last season. His shooting percentage has dipped by over four percent from 14.6% to 10.5%, though. Combined with the team’s general lack of finishing ability – their 10.0 shooting percentage is 25th in the league – and his production has suffered.

He’s still second on the team in scoring and a weapon the offense-starved Blues can’t afford to lose for any length of time, particularly with three other forwards – including top-nine names Jordan Kyrou and Jimmy Snuggerud – on IR. He’s averaged 17:52 of ice time per game, third among St. Louis forwards, and is among their most impactful drivers of possession. At 5-on-5, his 49.8 CF% and 53.3 xGF% are both top three among Blues forwards, even if his -11 rating doesn’t indicate a great run of two-way play from him at a glance.

Despite the rash of injuries, the Blues have somewhat recovered from their dreadful start. They’re 5-4-1 in their last 10 games and have climbed up to 31 points, four out of a playoff spot. However, a tight Western Conference picture and dwindling underlying numbers combine to give them just an 8.4% chance at postseason play, per MoneyPuck.

They’ll at least recoup some depth in Toropchenko. The 26-year-old fourth-line piece has been a double-digit goal scorer before, but isn’t on track to do so this year with one goal and two points in 17 outings. He’s been out since the beginning of the month after sustaining burns to his legs in an off-ice incident.

The Blues already had an open roster spot with Toropchenko on IR, so they’ll stick with one now as Holloway takes his place. A six-week timeline puts Holloway back in action on Jan. 26 at the earliest, meaning a 19-game absence at minimum.

Injury| Newsstand| St. Louis Blues Alexey Toropchenko| Dylan Holloway

3 comments

Hurricanes Activate Jaccob Slavin, Reassign Joel Nystrom

December 14, 2025 at 4:14 pm CDT | by Gabriel Foley 1 Comment

A major piece will be back in the Carolina Hurricanes lineup when the puck drops in Sunday’s matchup with the Philadelphia Flyers. Defenseman Jaccob Slavin was activated from injured reserve just before the game, after being designated as a game-time decision before warmups. He will return from a lower-body injury sustained in the second game of the season. He’s missed the last 29 games. To make room for Slavin’s return, Carolina has reassigned defenseman Joel Nystrom to the AHL’s Chicago Wolves. Nystrom signed a four-year extension on Friday.

Slavin only played in 36 minutes of ice time before going down with injury. He managed no scoring, a minus-one, and three shot blocks in those minutes. But two games was hardly enough for Slavin to settle into his usual role on top of Carolina’s defense. He has averaged more than 22 minutes of ice time each game through 11 years with the Hurricanes. He brings a shutdown presence to hard matchups, giving Carolina the flexibility to deploy offensive defensemen like Shayne Gostisbehere.

The Hurricanes had to turn to a committee approach to round out their top-four in Slavin’s absence. Jalen Chatfield and Alexander Nikishin both rotated into the top-four, while Nystrom did well to carve out a role on an open bottom-pair. The 23-year-old rookie recorded five assists, a plus-three, and 14 shot blocks in the first 24 games of his NHL career. He played well enough to earn a multi-year, seven-figure extension just before this reassignment. That’s a tidy bit of confidence for Nystrom, who had only played in seven AHL games before his name was called to fill-in. He spent the last five seasons with the SHL’s Farjestads BK, where he won a league championship in 2022. Carolina drafted Nystrom in the seventh-round of the 2021 NHL Draft.

Slavin’s return will suddenly provide Carolina with a heap of defense depth, after going through a start to the season that saw most of the blue-line banged up. They will carry a confident three pairs, with Slavin watching over rookie Nikishin, into Sunday’s match against Philadelphia. That should only ramp up a Hurricanes squad that’s gone 6-2-0 in their last eight games, including back-to-back shootout wins in their last two.

AHL| Carolina Hurricanes| Injury| NHL| Newsstand| Transactions Jaccob Slavin| Joel Nystrom

1 comment

Connor Bedard Not Expected To Travel With Blackhawks

December 14, 2025 at 7:40 am CDT | by Ethan Hetu 10 Comments

It’s been a tough weekend for the Chicago Blackhawks, as on Friday, franchise center Connor Bedard suffered an injury in the closing moments of the team’s loss, and then on Saturday the team, without Bedard, was shut out 4-0 by the Detroit Red Wings. The most recent reporting regarding Bedard’s injury indicates that things are unlikely to get easier for the Blackhawks in the immediate future.

Sportsnet’s Elliotte Friedman reported on yesterday’s “Saturday Headlines” segment that the Blackhawks “are still collecting information” regarding Bedard’s injury and what a recovery timeline might look like. Friedman said he believes Bedard had an MRI on Saturday and that the Blackhawks are “still determining what the plan’s going to be” regarding his recovery.

The Blackhawks are set to travel on a three-game road trip this week, and per Friedman, Bedard is “not expected to travel” for at least the beginning of the road trip as the team continues to sort out his injury.

It goes without saying that any extended Bedard absence would deal a potentially fatal blow to the Blackhawks’ ability to stay afloat in the Western Conference playoff race. The Blackhawks, under new head coach Jeff Blashill, have surprised some this season, amassing a better-than-expected 13-13-6 record, which puts them three points behind the San Jose Sharks for the final Wild Card spot with a game in hand.

That better-than-expected start to 2025-26 has occurred in large part thanks to Bedard’s heroics. While he didn’t quite “pop” in his sophomore season the way some might have expected, Bedard has taken a major leap in 2025-26. He has 19 goals and 44 points in just 31 games, which is a 50-goal, 115-point full-season pace.

The Blackhawks have used Bedard heavily this season, and he’s just two seconds per game behind defenseman Alex Vlasic for the team lead in time-on-ice per game, something that in most cases belongs to a defenseman.

Put simply, in 2025-26, Bedard has been exactly the kind of franchise-altering talent he was billed to be by scouts and the media ahead of the 2023 draft. Losing Bedard for any period of time would put a significant amount of additional stress on the Blackhawks’ depth chart down the middle. 2022 first-rounder Frank Nazar has nearly matched his 2024-25 scoring total with 20 points in 30 games (he had 26 points in 53 games last year) but to expect him to fill Bedard’s shoes would be a mistake.

The Blackhawks rank No. 23 in the NHL averaging 2.84 goals per game, and that’s even with Bedard scoring at a top-five rate in the NHL. Without Bedard, the sources of offense dry up rapidly. Beyond Nazar, only veterans Tyler Bertuzzi and Andre Burakovsky have reached 20 points this season. The Blackhawks couldn’t find the back of the net without Bedard Saturday against Detroit, and they could continue to struggle to score with Bedard out.

Chicago Blackhawks| Newsstand Connor Bedard

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