Headlines

  • Canucks Sign Linus Karlsson To Two-Year Extension
  • Bo Horvat Avoids Long-Term Injury, Out At Least One Week
  • Team Sweden Announces 2026 Olympic Roster
  • Team Finland Announces 2026 Olympic Roster
  • Team USA Announces 2026 Olympic Roster
  • Auston Matthews Expected To Return Thursday
  • 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

Newsstand

Canucks Sign Linus Karlsson To Two-Year Extension

January 2, 2026 at 6:21 pm CDT | by Brennan McClain 4 Comments

The Vancouver Canucks continue to work on figuring out next year’s roster as they enter a transitional period. The Canucks announced that they’ve signed forward Linus Karlsson to a two-year, $4.5MM extension ($2.25MM AAV).

Vancouver has obviously liked what they have seen from Karlsson’s first full year with the team. Despite being selected with the 87th overall pick of the 2018 NHL Draft, it took Karlsson multiple years to find a consistent spot on the Canucks’ roster.

Much of that time post-draft was with Karlskrona HK and BIK Karlskoga of the HockeyAllsvenskan. His status as an upper-level prospect with the Canucks began in the 2020-21 season, scoring 20 goals and 51 points in 52 games with Karlskoga. He followed that up with a sensational introductory performance with the SHL’s Skellefteå AIK, registering 26 goals and 46 points in 52 games, taking home SHL Rookie of the Year honors.

Understandably, the Canucks quickly brought him to North America following that performance. He spent the entire 2022-23 season with the AHL’s Abbotsford Canucks, recording 24 goals and 49 points in 72 games. Much like he did in Sweden, he followed that up with an even better showing, scoring 23 goals and 60 points in 60 games the next year while also making his NHL debut.

Last season was the most Karlsson had seen in the NHL until this year, though it wasn’t the showing that he or the team likely wanted. There was virtually no offense to his game in the sport’s highest league, finishing with three goals and six points in 23 contests. Still, his defensive metrics were impressive and proved valuable at some moments, given that he spent much of his time relegated to a bottom-six role.

Regardless, his subpar play in the NHL couldn’t take away from his impressive run in the AHL. Karlsson concluded the 2024-25 campaign with 23 goals and 39 points in 32 games for the AHL Canucks. Additionally, he helped the team win the Calder Cup, recording 14 goals and 26 points in 24 postseason appearances with a +4 rating.

Although his offense has been much better this season, nine goals and 16 points in 36 games, his defensive metrics have declined dramatically. Karlsson finished with a 94.3% on-ice SV% at even strength last season, and has only mustered an 85.8% mark this year.

Still, Karlsson is on pace for 20 goals this year, which is ultimately a win for the Canucks. At the beginning of the year, there was some concern that Karlsson would become a Group VI unrestricted free agent next summer, though he’s certainly on pace for 80 career games now. Regardless, Vancouver has committed to him through the 2027-28 season, and he’s currently projected to become the team’s eighth-highest-paid forward.

Photo courtesy of William Liang-Imagn Images. 

Newsstand| Transactions| Vancouver Canucks Linus Karlsson

4 comments

Bo Horvat Avoids Long-Term Injury, Out At Least One Week

January 2, 2026 at 11:49 am CDT | by Josh Erickson Leave a Comment

One day after being included on Team Canada’s roster for the 2026 Olympics, Islanders center Bo Horvat suddenly saw his participation fall into jeopardy after sustaining a lower-body injury in the third period of Thursday’s loss to the Mammoth. Today’s evaluation revealed he’s expected to be back in action before heading to Italy next month, although he will miss at least the next week, Elliotte Friedman of Sportsnet reports.

Horvat, 30, had recently returned from a two-week absence due to another lower-body injury. Sources told Stefen Rosner of NHL.com that the injury he sustained yesterday is of a similar nature and should carry a similar return timeline.

While those injuries have provided the Ontario native with some bumps in the road, he’s persisted to churn out a career-best offensive performance to earn him a spot on the world’s biggest stage as NHLers return to the Olympics. He had two goals in four games in his return to the lineup to boost his season totals to 21 goals and 33 points in 36 appearances.

The Isles’ top scorer and second-most used forward behind Mathew Barzal, Horvat is also averaging a career-high 20:30 of ice time per game as a true all-situations center. His 57.6 faceoff percentage is the eighth-best clip among the 45 players with at least 500 total faceoffs this season.

While concern over Horvat’s Olympics availability no longer abounds, there’s still the question of how the Islanders will navigate another multi-game stretch without him. Barzal will center the top line between Anders Lee and Emil Heineman to start, per Denis Gorman of the Associated Press, while second-year winger Maxim Tsyplakov will get a look in a second-line role after serving as a healthy scratch in nine of New York’s last 11 games.

Instead of placing Horvat on injured reserve, the Islanders opened a roster spot this morning by reassigning defenseman Marshall Warren to AHL Bridgeport. Warren, 24, had appeared in six straight games and has three assists in eight games on the year, the first appearances of his NHL career. Ice time has been limited, though, with the Long Island native averaging only 11:29 per game.

With Warren down, the Islanders can recall a forward from AHL Bridgeport before Saturday’s game against the Maple Leafs if they wish. However, with 13 healthy forwards still on the roster without Horvat and two games left on their homestand, there might not be a corresponding move.

Image courtesy of Kim Klement Neitzel-Imagn Images.

New York Islanders| Newsstand| Transactions Bo Horvat| Marshall Warren

0 comments

Team Sweden Announces 2026 Olympic Roster

January 2, 2026 at 10:10 am CDT | by Josh Erickson 1 Comment

After the other medal frontrunners unveiled their Olympic rosters earlier today, Team Sweden has also formalized the 25 players it’s taking to Milan, Italy, in February. Their full roster can be found below.

Forwards

  • RW Jesper Bratt (Devils)
  • C Leo Carlsson (Ducks)
  • C Joel Eriksson Ek (Wild)
  • LW Filip Forsberg (Predators)
  • RW Pontus Holmberg (Lightning)
  • RW Adrian Kempe (Kings)
  • LW Gabriel Landeskog (Avalanche)
  • C Elias Lindholm (Bruins)
  • RW William Nylander (Maple Leafs)
  • C Elias Pettersson (Canucks)
  • LW Rickard Rakell (Penguins)
  • RW Lucas Raymond (Red Wings)
  • C Alexander Wennberg (Sharks)
  • C Mika Zibanejad (Rangers)

Defensemen

  • D Rasmus Andersson (Flames)
  • D Philip Broberg (Blues)
  • D Jonas Brodin (Wild)
  • D Rasmus Dahlin (Sabres)
  • D Oliver Ekman-Larsson (Maple Leafs)
  • D Gustav Forsling (Panthers)
  • D Victor Hedman (Lightning)
  • D Erik Karlsson (Penguins)

Goaltenders

  • G Filip Gustavsson (Wild)
  • G Jacob Markström (Devils)
  • G Jesper Wallstedt (Wild)

Like Canada and the United States, Sweden’s roster is made up entirely of NHLers as the players make their first Olympic appearance since 2014. Headed to do battle with Finland, Slovakia, and the host Italy in Group B, they’re well-positioned as the favorite with one of the tournament’s deeper blue lines and highest-ceiling creases.

In goal, Gustavsson was Sweden’s starter at last year’s 4 Nations Face-Off and is likely ticketed for the No. 1 role again. He’s joined by two new faces, Markström and his teammate Wallstedt, who replace the struggling Samuel Ersson and Linus Ullmark from one year ago. The veteran Markström’s porous .884 SV% in 20 appearances for New Jersey this year indicates the Minnesota tandem, each of whom has saved more than 10 goals above expected (per MoneyPuck), will be leading the way.

Dahlin and Hedman will be the left-side anchors of Sweden’s top four group on defense after being locked in as two of their initial six players over the summer. Every single name on the list is a bona fide top-four piece for their NHL club – something only them, Canada and the US can say – with an appropriate mix of younger talent like the up-and-coming Broberg, while boasting two of the NHL’s best shutdown defenders in Brodin and Forsling. The only player not returning from the 4 Nations group is the Oilers’ Mattias Ekholm. He’s been replaced by Ekman-Larsson and Broberg as the Swedes added an eighth defender as permitted under IIHF rules.

Up front, Nylander will be the centerpiece of Sweden’s offense. The Toronto star has missed some time recently with an injury, but with 41 points in 33 games this season, he leads Swedish NHLers in points per game.

Both their forward and defense groups boast arguably the tournament’s most cohesive two-way identity. They boast multiple veteran, well-regarded all-situations centered like Eriksson Ek and Wennberg – although the latter’s linemate in San Jose, William Eklund, is a glaring omission, while more bottom-six/penalty-kill oriented options like Holmberg find themselves included.

Newsstand| Olympics| Team Sweden

1 comment

Team Finland Announces 2026 Olympic Roster

January 2, 2026 at 10:08 am CDT | by Gabriel Foley Leave a Comment

Finland has become the second country to announce their Winter Olympic roster on Friday. The roster closely aligns with Finland’s lineup at the 2025 4 Nations tournament, with some notable additions from across the hockey world. The full roster is as follows:

Forwards

  • C Sebastian Aho (Hurricanes)
  • RW Joel Armia (Kings)
  • C Mikael Granlund (Ducks)
  • C Erik Haula (Predators)
  • C Roope Hintz (Stars)
  • RW Kaapo Kakko (Kraken)
  • C Oliver Kapanen (Canadiens)
  • LW Joel Kiviranta (Avalanche)
  • LW Artturi Lehkonen (Avalanche)
  • C Anton Lundell (Panthers)
  • C Eetu Luostarinen (Panthers)
  • RW Mikko Rantanen (Stars)
  • LW Teuvo Teravainen (Blackhawks)
  • RW Eeli Tolvanen (Kraken)

Defense

  • LD Miro Heiskanen (Stars)
  • RD Henri Jokiharju (Bruins)
  • LD Mikko Lehtonen (ZSC Lions/NL)
  • LD Esa Lindell (Stars)
  • LD Olli Maatta (Mammoth)
  • RD Nikolas Matinpalo (Senators)
  • LD Niko Mikkola (Panthers)
  • RD Rasmus Ristolainen (Flyers)

Goaltenders

  • G Ukko-Pekka Luukkonen (Sabres)
  • G Kevin Lankinen (Canucks)
  • G Juuse Saros (Predators)

The biggest difference between Finland’s 4-Nations and Olympic rosters is the addition of star defenseman Heiskanen, who was unavailable for last year’s international tourney. He may be the country’s best representation on the NHL stage, offering top-level play on both sides of the puck. Heiskanen has 35 points in 41 NHL games this season and scored a career-high 73 points in 79 games in the 2022-23 campaign. He will be leaned on as a top player for the Finnish side, and could lead the team in average ice time.

Finland has also added Lehtonen and Canadiens rookie Kapanen – two interesting additions as the country looks to add a bit more bolt to their lineup. Lehtonen is a journeyman of international hockey. He has played in five top leagues and recently found a home with the Lions in Switzerland’s National League, where he won league championships in 2024 and 2025. He currently has 16 points in 32 games this season and offers downhill offense at the expense of robust defense. Centerman Kapanen has found a similar downhill drive in his first NHL season. He has 12 goals and 21 points in 40 games for Montreal, with no signs of slowing down. Kapanen was a revelation as a young player in Finland’s Liiga, where he totaled 65 points in 124 games and three seasons.

The Finns will return their 4 Nations roster otherwise, set to lean heavily on Aho, Rantanen, and Hintz as the explosive pieces of an otherwise fundamental offense. It was Granlund who led that team in scoring, though, with four points in three games – double the scoring of Finland’s top offensive pieces.

Second and third on the 4 Nations team in scoring were Patrik Laine (three points) and Aleksander Barkov (two points), who will both miss the Olympic Games due to injury. Barkov, one of the NHL’s premier two-way centers, had to undergo ACL and MCL surgery after a preseason injury. Laine is also on the mend after undergoing surgery in October.

With the slightly shorthanded roster and brave additions of an NHL rookie and Swiss-league defender, the Finns will step up as a team to watch this tournament. They don’t seem to offer the firepower of Sweden, the USA, or Canada, but could surprise with a significant defense addition supporting a goaltending room that struggled at the 4-Nations.

Newsstand| Olympics| Team Finland

0 comments

Team USA Announces 2026 Olympic Roster

January 2, 2026 at 8:34 am CDT | by Gabriel Foley 26 Comments

USA Hockey has officially announced its 25-man roster for the 2026 Winter Olympics in Milan, Italy. The roster was contested until the final days and features a few players who didn’t appear with the U.S. at the 2025 4-Nations Face-Off. The full roster is as follows:

Forwards

  • LW Matt Boldy (Wild)
  • LW Kyle Connor (Jets)
  • C Jack Eichel (Golden Knights)
  • LW Jake Guentzel (Lightning)
  • C Jack Hughes (Devils)
  • LW Clayton Keller (Mammoth)
  • C Dylan Larkin (Red Wings)
  • C Auston Matthews (Maple Leafs)
  • C J.T. Miller (Rangers)
  • C Brock Nelson (Avalanche)
  • RW Tage Thompson (Sabres)
  • LW Brady Tkachuk (Senators)
  • RW Matthew Tkachuk (Panthers)
  • C Vincent Trocheck (Rangers)

Defense

  • D Brock Faber (Wild)
  • D Noah Hanifin (Golden Knights)
  • D Quinn Hughes (Wild)
  • D Seth Jones (Panthers)
  • D Charlie McAvoy (Bruins)
  • D Jake Sanderson (Senators)
  • D Jaccob Slavin (Hurricanes)
  • D Zach Werenski (Blue Jackets)

Goaltenders

  • G Connor Hellebuyck (Jets)
  • G Jake Oettinger (Stars)
  • G Jeremy Swayman (Bruins)

As expected, Team USA is bringing a star-studded front to what’s sure to be a closely contested Olympic Games. Their strongest pillar stands in the net, where reigning NHL MVP Hellebuyck will be making his Olympic debut. Helleybuyck has fallen to a .907 save percentage in 22 games this season – but his track record of dominant play stretches back years. He has recorded a save percentage north of .910 in each of the last eight seasons, including five years north of a .920. He’s held onto those routinely league-topping numbers while playing upwards of 60 games a season.

Helleybuyck could back a potentially explosive offense. The States tied for the most goals at the 4 Nations tournament while leaning on Guentzel, Eichel, and the Tkachuk brothers to strong-arm the offense, while smooth-moving Werenski led the tourney in scoring with six assists. Boldy and Matthews were also key pieces of the 4 Nations offense, each netting three points.

Notably, the United States did not have former Norris Trophy winner Quinn Hughes at the 4 Nations tournament. Hughes missed the tournament due to injury and was replaced by Sanderson, who did enough to earn an Olympic berth. But Hughes’ impact could be a tourney-winning X-factor. The 26-year-old has 30 points in 27 games this season and is only two years removed from a 92-point campaign with the Vancouver Canucks. He is among the – or perhaps thee – best offensive defensemen in hockey and should gel well in his first return to international play since 2019.

Speaking of 2019 – USA Hockey will finally see the fruits of the historic 2019 USNTDP class with this tournament. Jack Hughes and Boldy were stars on that lineup and have only emerged further since breaking into the NHL. Both players offer unwavering offensive impact – but the question will be whether the States feel cheeky enough to play the two together. Their chemistry in junior hockey was unrivaled in the few games they played alongside each other, though Hughes would end up taking on Cole Caufield as his de facto linemate. Still, Hughes and Boldy were the keys to the NTDP offense that season, and have now earned the right to wear the crest at the top level.

The rest of the roster is, generally, rounded out by USA mainstays like the hard-nosed McAvoy, top-end goaltenders Oettinger and Swayman, and – surely to some fans’ dismay – the winning veteran presence of Nelson. All four players were a part of the USA’s 4 Nations squad and will return to their depth roles in this tournament.

There are some new faces in the mix, though. Rather than bring Chris Kreider, the USA has opted to bring high-scoring Sabres forward Tage Thompson and reliable front-man in Utah, Clayton Keller. The two undoubtedly earned their stay during the USA’s 2025 World Championship Gold Medal run that saw Keller score 10 points and Thompson score nine in 10 games. They were two heartbeats of the lineup and should continue to offer versatile impact without the need for top minutes.

With this lineup in place, Team USA will take its stand as a true medal favorite for the 2026 Olympic Games. Their toughest test will come at the hands of Canadian and Swedish offenses capable of pouring on the scoring. Team USA found as much out at the 4 Nations, where Canada emerged with the tourney win. But with a robust goaltending room and multiple additions to fortify their scoring, the American side should bring an explosive boost to the Winter Games.

NHL| Newsstand| Olympics| Players| Team USA

26 comments

Auston Matthews Expected To Return Thursday

January 1, 2026 at 9:40 am CDT | by Gabriel Foley 12 Comments

Jan. 1: It looks like only a one-game absence for Matthews. He was a full participant at morning skate and is expected to center Matthew Knies and Max Domi tonight against the Jets, per Lance Hornby of the Toronto Sun.


Dec. 30: The Toronto Maple Leafs announced that star forward Auston Matthews will miss Tuesday night’s game against the New Jersey Devils and will be out day-to-day due to a lower-body injury. Matthews sustained the injury on a blocked shot in Sunday’s overtime loss to the Detroit Red Wings. He missed Tuesday morning’s practice and was designated as a game-time decision before being ruled out.

The Maple Leafs are already down forward Dakota Joshua and defenseman Chris Tanev due to injury. Defender Matt Benning and forward Jacob Quillan were recalled to fill in for those absences. Calle Jarnkrok will step back into the lineup for Matthews after four games on the shelf.

Even with the committee effort and a quiet year from their star, Toronto is still going to face a steep test trying to make up for Matthews’ absence. He snapped a four-game scoring drought on December 27th and has four points in two games since. That brings Matthews up to 27 points in 33 games this season, good for fourth on the team in scoring. He is riding a 11.7 shooting percentage this season – roughly four percent lower than his career average of 15.6 percent. Matthews’ shooting success has dwindled over the last two seasons after he managed a career-high 18.7 percent – and 69 goals – in the 2023-24 season.

Quillan and Jarnkrok will fill out the fourth line on Tuesday night, while Scott Laughton earns a bump up to the third line. Laughton has stepped up as a responsible veteran over the recent stretch, bringing some support to a Maple Leafs offense that has leaned more on their depth as of late. His defense-first approach has helped multiple depth players step up their scoring. Toronto has scored 16 goals over its last three games, with multiple points from Matias Maccelli, Bobby McMann, and Nicholas Robertson. Those players will need to continue stepping up to keep the offense firing without Matthews in the lineup.

Newsstand| Toronto Maple Leafs Auston Matthews

12 comments

Ducks’ Frank Vatrano To Miss Six Weeks

December 31, 2025 at 6:45 pm CDT | by Bradley Keith 2 Comments

The Anaheim Ducks provided an injury update mid-game, as Frank Vatrano will miss approximately six weeks. The forward has suffered a shoulder fracture which occurred on Saturday against Los Angeles. Vatrano was listed as out two days ago, with uncertainty on how long he would be absent, so today’s news is perhaps worse than anticipated.

Based on the timeline, Vatrano will miss all of January and could be in line to return sometime before mid-February. A major story to start the season, Anaheim has slipped of late, but still hold onto the third spot in the Pacific Division. The 31-year-old has just six points in 38 games on the season, a major step backward from his output over the past three seasons as a Duck, including a 37-goal campaign in 2023-24.

With the emergence of young stars such as Leo Carlsson, Cutter Gauthier, Beckett Sennecke, the veteran’s role has dropped under Head Coach Joel Quenneville, mostly a third line deployment. The injury is a tough blow for Vatrano as he’s sought to find his game under the new regime, in what is year one of his three year contract extension, finally on an imposing team, no less. However, there should be ample time to get healthy and provide leadership for the group as they could end their seven-year playoff drought, even if it does not show on the score sheet for the Massachusetts native.

Vatrano did make a mark in the physical game. He has 67 hits this season, second-most on the Ducks’ offense behind Ross Johnston (111). He also ranks second on the offense with 24 blocked shots. Those will be hard impacts to replace – though Anaheim could have a perfect fit in extra forward Jansen Harkins. Harkins has 55 hits in just 17 games this season, making him the only Duck with a higher hits-per-game average than Johnston or Vatrano. He also has 12 blocked shots – already half of Vatrano’s total.

Harkins will take on the fourth-line center role with Vatrano on the mend. The extended injury could also provide a chance to test strong minor-leaguers like Tim Washe or Sasha Pastujov.

Pro Hockey Rumor’s Gabriel Foley contributed to this article.

Anaheim Ducks| Injury| Newsstand Frank Vatrano

2 comments

Penguins, Flyers Swap Egor Zamula, Philip Tomasino

December 31, 2025 at 1:46 pm CDT | by Josh Erickson 11 Comments

The Penguins announced they’ve acquired defenseman Egor Zamula from the Flyers in exchange for winger Philip Tomasino. Both players had previously cleared waivers and will report to their respective new AHL affiliates.

Zamula’s name first surfaced on the trade market at the beginning of the season, initially linked to the Flames. While that deal never came close to fruition, the 25-year-old became an increasingly frequent healthy scratch as the season progressed. After sitting for six straight games in December and being leapfrogged on the depth chart by AHL call-up Ty Murchison, the Flyers placed him on waivers.

Lehigh Valley hadn’t had a ton of action since Zamula’s demotion due to the holiday break, but the 6’3″ lefty did manage two assists and a -3 rating in three games. Last weekend, it was reported that Zamula had changed his representation and was considering terminating his contract to sign with another team at a lower cap hit to boost his chances of returning to the NHL.

Now, Zamula gets the change of scenery he wanted without having to walk away from the remainder of his $1.4MM base salary he’s owed this season. He’d spent his entire pro career in the Philly organization after signing with the Flyers as an undrafted free agent in 2020. Over the past six seasons, he’s scored eight goals and 41 points with a -12 rating in 168 appearances, averaging 15:53 per game.

He’s always carried some intrigue with him because of his size and offensive ceiling – he had a career-high 22 points in 61 games two seasons ago – but doesn’t play a physical brand. Nonetheless, he’s had some above-average possession impacts during his time in Philadelphia and, although he’d fallen out of favor with new head coach Rick Tocchet, his statistical profile suggests there’s still an opportunity for him to stick around as a third-pairing option with power-play deployability.

While Zamula will start in Wilkes-Barre/Scranton, he’ll likely be the first name called up if the Pens need a lefty. He should also quickly find his way onto the roster if the Pens ship out Brett Kulak or Ryan Shea, their two pending unrestricted free agents on the left side of their blue line, before the trade deadline.

Pittsburgh has been active in picking up change-of-scenery candidates over the past couple of seasons, including nabbing Yegor Chinakhov from the Blue Jackets just two days ago. Tomasino was a similar acquisition from the Predators last season as well, although that one didn’t end up paying dividends.

The 24th overall pick in 2019, Tomasino arrived in Pittsburgh early last season in exchange for a fourth-round pick. The high-skill winger looked like a natural fit in Pittsburgh’s top nine early on, even getting some reps alongside Evgeni Malkin. After posting just one assist in 11 games with Nashville to begin the year, he logged 11 goals and 23 points in 50 contests to close out the season with the Pens.

However, Pittsburgh’s preference to integrate its own drafted-and-developed talent, plus UFA pickups Justin Brazeau and Anthony Mantha developing some high-end chemistry with Malkin, pushed Tomasino down the depth chart from the drop this season. The 24-year-old only averaged 12:10 per game through nine contests, scoring one assist with a -2 rating, before he ended up on waivers in November. He was eventually reassigned to Wilkes-Barre/Scranton, where he’s clicked at over a point per game pace with a 5-10–15 line and +12 rating in 14 games.

For a Flyers team in need of some wing depth in the wake of Tyson Foerster’s season-ending arm injury, Tomasino is an intriguing pickup who could even slot into top-six minutes if they opt to return Denver Barkey to the minors after giving him his first taste of NHL hockey. If nothing else, he’s an immediate reinforcement to a Lehigh Valley offense that’s only producing 2.77 goals per game this season.

Both pending restricted free agents, Zamula carries a $1.7MM cap hit while Tomasino counts for $1.75MM. For now, Zamula will only cost $550K against the Pens’ books, and Tomasino will cost $600K for the Flyers while each remains in the minors.

Images courtesy of Eric Canha-Imagn Images (Zamula) and Charles LeClaire-Imagn Images (Tomasino).

Newsstand| Philadelphia Flyers| Pittsburgh Penguins| Transactions Egor Zamula| Philip Tomasino

11 comments

Chris Tanev, Dakota Joshua Out Indefinitely

December 31, 2025 at 1:32 pm CDT | by Josh Erickson 14 Comments

Dec. 31: Head coach Craig Berube told reporters today, including Friedman, that Tanev will be out indefinitely after being diagnosed with a groin injury.


Dec. 30: After previously being ruled out for tonight’s game, it’s clear Maple Leafs skaters Chris Tanev and Dakota Joshua will miss more time than that. Tanev will be out for “some time” with a lower-body issue unrelated to the previous injury that sidelined him for nearly two months, Elliotte Friedman of Sportsnet reports, while Joshua sustained a kidney injury in Sunday’s game against the Red Wings that resulted in internal bleeding, remaining in Detroit for observation.

Both will likely end up on injured reserve today to create the roster space for Matt Benning and Jacob Quillan, who were recalled from AHL Toronto this morning. Tanev was only just activated from IR last week, missing 27 of Toronto’s previous 28 contests with an upper-body injury. The right-shot defenseman’s brief return to the Toronto roster consisted of three games of work, posting a +3 rating with seven blocks while averaging 20:40 of ice time.

Tanev, arguably the Leafs’ most stabilizing defensive presence, has played in only 11 games this year due to an upper-body injury he initially sustained on Oct. 21 against the Devils. Despite that, his +8 rating is still third-best on the team, and his duo with Jake McCabe has allowed just 0.84 goals against per 60 minutes at 5-on-5, sitting among the league’s most staunch defense pairs.

Another multi-game absence will force the Leafs to continue to lean on overmatched right-shot depth like Philippe Myers, although it will give the chance for waiver claim Troy Stecher (1-5–6, +9 in 19 GP) to continue his strong run of play alongside McCabe. The burden on Myers and Stecher should be eased soon with Brandon Carlo nearing a return from foot surgery, but it’s far from an ideal situation as Toronto tries to climb out of a tie for last place in the Eastern Conference.

Joshua had appeared in all but two games for the Leafs this season, his first in Toronto after being acquired from the Canucks last offseason in exchange for a fourth-round pick. He’s improved on his underwhelming showing for Vancouver last year, but not by much, putting up a 6-4–10 scoring line in 36 games. He’s excelled in providing the element of physicality that’s expected from him, though, leading the team in hits with 127 and ranking second among Leafs forwards with 26 blocks.

For a player starting nearly three-quarters of his even-strength shifts in the defensive zone, though, Joshua’s -2 rating is a fine one. He’s consistently logged third-line minutes at even strength and is far from being an insignificant loss for what will likely be the next several weeks as a result. Expanded ice time should be in store for trade bait Matias Maccelli and rookie Easton Cowan, who’s posted four goals and 11 points through his first 27 games.

Newsstand| Toronto Maple Leafs Chris Tanev| Dakota Joshua

14 comments

Sabres’ Alex Lyon Out Indefinitely

December 31, 2025 at 12:51 pm CDT | by Josh Erickson 3 Comments

Dec. 31: Lyon has left the Sabres’ road trip to continue his evaluation and is out indefinitely, the team announced today. Ellis will be activated from injured reserve and will back up Luukkonen tonight against the Stars.


Dec. 30: Sabres goaltender Alex Lyon is undergoing evaluation for a lower-body injury he sustained late in last night’s win over the Blues, head coach Lindy Ruff told reporters (including Rachel Lenzi of The Buffalo News). He didn’t leave the contest, and it’s unclear if he’s going to miss time, but if they don’t have an update by tomorrow morning, he won’t be going in the crease against the Stars on Wednesday.

If Lyon is to miss time, the Sabres won’t need to recall a body from AHL Rochester. Ruff said third-stringer Colten Ellis has cleared concussion protocol and will be available to come off injured reserve if needed in Dallas.

Lyon hasn’t been the sole architect of Buffalo’s nine-game win streak to get back into playoff contention, but he’s been in the crease for most of it. He’s started seven out of nine to boost his numbers on the year to a 10-6-3 record, .906 SV%, 2.82 GAA, and one shutout, recovering well after a strong start followed by a steep crash.

The 33-year-old was signed to be the backup to Ukko-Pekka Luukkonen over the offseason but has instead emerged as Buffalo’s leading option in a crowded crease, starting 19 of 38 games with the best numbers on the team. He’s stopped 6.5 goals above expected compared to 1.5 combined from Luukkonen and Ellis, per MoneyPuck.

It was clear after Jarmo Kekäläinen took over the GM’s chair several weeks ago that the Sabres would look to get down to two goalies once Ellis was cleared to return. With the Sabres signing Ellis’ praises after claiming him off waivers from the Blues and Luukkonen signed through the 2028-29 season, Lyon was the most logical trade candidate and has been a person of interest in the Oilers’ search for added depth.

However, his injury could allow Kekäläinen more time to determine Lyon’s future and reconsider his options. Trading away the team’s best overall netminder this season won’t go over well for a team that’s done some heavy lifting as of late to try to end their league-record playoff drought at 14 years. Flipping Ellis, who’s only churned out a .895 SV% through eight starts and has the worst advanced numbers of the three, would be the smarter win-now move, regardless of the 25-year-old’s ceiling.

Image courtesy of Jeff Curry-Imagn Images.

Buffalo Sabres| Injury| Newsstand Alex Lyon| Colten Ellis

3 comments
Load More Posts
    Top Stories

    Canucks Sign Linus Karlsson To Two-Year Extension

    Bo Horvat Avoids Long-Term Injury, Out At Least One Week

    Team Sweden Announces 2026 Olympic Roster

    Team Finland Announces 2026 Olympic Roster

    Team USA Announces 2026 Olympic Roster

    Auston Matthews Expected To Return Thursday

    Ducks’ Frank Vatrano To Miss Six Weeks

    Penguins, Flyers Swap Egor Zamula, Philip Tomasino

    Chris Tanev, Dakota Joshua Out Indefinitely

    Sabres’ Alex Lyon Out Indefinitely

    Recent

    Senators Believed To Have Checked In On Rasmus Andersson

    Metropolitan Notes: Malkin, Hurricanes, Flyers Prospects

    Blue Jackets Activate Zach Werenski, Place Brendan Smith On IR

    Stars Recall Remi Poirier, Move Casey DeSmith To Non-Roster Status

    Josh Doan Building Case For Significant Pay Raise

    New York Islanders Recall Cole McWard

    Seth Jones Leaves Winter Classic With Injury

    Brayden McNabb Expected To Miss Multiple Weeks

    Lassi Lehti Generating NHL Interest

    Canucks Sign Linus Karlsson To Two-Year Extension

    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

    • Rasmus Andersson Rumors
    • Ryan O’Reilly Rumors
    • Kiefer Sherwood Rumors
    • Steven Stamkos Rumors

    Pro Hockey Rumors Features

    Pro Hockey Rumors Features

    • Support Pro Hockey Rumors And Go Ad-Free
    • 2026 Free Agents
    • 2026 Free Agents By Team
    • 2027 Free Agents
    • Players Who Can Veto Trades In 2025-26
    • Pro Hockey Rumors On Bluesky
    • Pro Hockey Rumors On Facebook
    • Pro Hockey Rumors On Twitter/X
    • Pro Hockey Rumors Original Posts
    • Roster Tracker 2025-26
    • Salary Cap Deep Dives 2025-26
    • Trade Rumors App
    • Trades – 2025-26 In-Season

     

     

     

     

    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