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Newsstand

Blues Sign Robby Fabbri To Two-Way Deal

December 10, 2025 at 11:06 am CDT | by Josh Erickson 4 Comments

The Blues are bringing back forward Robby Fabbri on a two-way deal, according to a team announcement. He’ll earn prorated salaries of $775K in the NHL and $300K in the AHL for the remainder of the season. He will remain on the NHL roster for now. Winger Jordan Kyrou, who’s day-to-day with a lower-body injury, has landed on injured reserve in the corresponding move – although David Pagnotta of The Fourth Period reports he’s been downgraded to week-to-week.

Fabbri, 29, has gone unsigned since the Ducks elected to let him walk to unrestricted free agency last summer. He landed with the Penguins for training camp on a professional tryout but was released without landing a major or minor-league deal. He kept skating through the first two months of the season until finally landing a tryout with the Panthers’ AHL affiliate, the Charlotte Checkers, at the beginning of December. He’s now been released from that deal to get the next NHL opportunity he desired.

It’s a storybook return for Fabbri, who began his career as a first-round pick by the Blues in 2014. One year later, he had already established himself as a full-time NHLer with an 18-goal, 37-point rookie season. Unfortunately, a rash of injuries conspired to make sure those totals would stand as his career highs. The first real trouble came in his sophomore season. In February 2017, he tore his left ACL, ending his season. He showed up to training camp the following fall ready to go but blew up the same knee early in the preseason, robbing him of the entire 2017-18 season. A groin issue further delayed his return until he finally got back on the ice in November 2018, ending a year-and-a-half absence.

Those injuries pushed Fabbri down the depth chart and kept him out of a regular role for the Blues in the 2019 postseason, but he did still score once in 10 games on St. Louis’ run to the Stanley Cup. Early the following season, his first stint with the Blues came to an end when they dealt him to the Red Wings for Jacob de La Rose. His tenure in Detroit was troubled by more injuries – including another ACL surgery – but he played like a bona fide top-nine winger when healthy. He scored 66 goals and 127 points in 234 games as a Wing, good for 0.54 points per game, before they sent the final year of his contract at a $4MM cap hit to the Ducks in the 2024 offseason.

More knee problems and a hand fracture limited Fabbri to 44 games with Anaheim. The fit wasn’t as productive as it was in Detroit, and his usually high finishing rate dropped down to 12.3% – his lowest since 2018-19 – resulting in a conservative 8-8–16 scoring line in 44 games.

Fabbri did look ready to go in his brief stint with Charlotte, posting a goal and an assist in three games. He’ll now get an opportunity to get back in an NHL lineup for the first time since February as the Blues say he’ll join the team ahead of tomorrow’s game against the Predators.

Kyrou’s IR placement was an inevitability with all the injury problems the Blues are facing up front. He joins fellow forwards Jimmy Snuggerud, Alexey Toropchenko, and Nathan Walker on the injured list, while Nick Bjugstad’s status for tomorrow is uncertain after leaving yesterday’s 5-2 loss to the Bruins with an upper-body injury.

Newsstand| St. Louis Blues| Transactions Jordan Kyrou| Robby Fabbri

4 comments

Canadiens Promote Jacob Fowler, Owen Beck, Adam Engstrom

December 10, 2025 at 8:24 am CDT | by Josh Erickson 1 Comment

The Canadiens have recalled goaltender Jacob Fowler, center Owen Beck, and defenseman Adam Engstrom from AHL Laval, according to a team announcement late last night. They’d been operating without any healthy extras on the active roster, so they had three open spots. With no new injuries other than the Habs’ longstanding IR designations for Kirby Dach, Kaiden Guhle, Patrik Laine, and Alex Newhook, all three look to be performance-based recalls as Montreal continues to embrace the youth movement.

Fowler, 21, was Montreal’s third-round pick in the 2023 draft. He’s since become one of the top goalie prospects in hockey and a consensus top-five prospect in the Habs’ pool, ranking #4 according to NHL.com and #2 according to Daily Faceoff’s Steven Ellis. The Athletic’s Scott Wheeler also ranked Fowler as the No. 2 goalie prospect in the league over the offseason behind the Sharks’ Yaroslav Askarov. With the latter now being a full-fledged starter in San Jose, Fowler may be the brightest name outside of the NHL.

It’s his elite positioning and incredible side-to-side technique that scouts praise, leading him to post some ridiculous stat lines in college over the past few seasons. The Florida native spent two seasons at Boston College before turning pro with Laval at the end of last year. He backstopped the Eagles to back-to-back Hockey East regular-season championships, was a First Team All-Star both years, and won NCAA Goalie of the Year honors as a sophomore with a .940 SV%, 1.63 GAA, seven shutouts, and a 25-7-2 record in 35 games.

Now, as a first-year pro, he’s immediately stepped in as a top-five starter in the AHL. His three shutouts in 15 games are tied for the league lead, as are his 10 wins. Among 31 AHLers with 10-plus appearances, his .919 SV% and 2.09 GAA rank fifth. He’s well on track for an AHL All-Star nod, if not Rookie of the Year honors as well.

While some subpar scoring chance generation numbers at 5-on-5 are the biggest reason why the Habs have had trouble holding onto a playoff spot this year, subpar goaltending hasn’t helped. Last year’s breakout starter, Sam Montembeault, has now lost the crease to second-year NHLer Jakub Dobes and has an untenable .861 SV% in 14 appearances. Dobes has been better on the whole, but he’s also been incredibly streaky. The 24-year-old had a .940 SV% through his first five outings before posting a .827 mark in his next five. Since then, he’s averaged a .888 mark for a .891 SV% on the year, putting him squarely in ’meh’ territory with 0.1 goal saved above expected, per MoneyPuck.

One thing’s for sure – Fowler isn’t coming up to ride the bench when he could easily continue a starter’s workload in Laval. He should be ticketed for his first NHL start tomorrow against the Penguins. Montreal has the roster flexibility to carry three goalies for the time being while they sort out what’s best for the team now and what’s best for Fowler’s development.

Beck and Engstrom aren’t afterthoughts, either. The former was a second-round pick in 2022 and is still viewed as a top-five-to-10 prospect in the pipeline. The 21-year-old has gotten NHL reps before – including two appearances this year on an October recall. He has just one assist and a -4 rating in 15 career showings dating back to his post-draft season, though.

Things have been tough sledding in Laval this year for the 6’0″ pivot, though. Touted as one of the better two-way centers from his draft class, his -4 rating in 22 games is second-worst on the club – particularly jarring considering Laval has a +23 goal differential – and he’s been limited to three goals and eight assists for 11 points. That 0.50 points per game mark is a large step back from the 0.69 he managed last season as a rookie.

Nonetheless, things aren’t working on Montreal’s fourth line at present. Center Joe Veleno has just one point – a goal – in 24 games with a -10 rating. Beck’s career stats, even in a limited sample, are preferable to that. It wouldn’t be surprising to see him get a look over the former first-rounder in Veleno tomorrow in Pittsburgh as well.

Engstrom’s recall may be more oriented toward having an extra defender available for a road game, something the Habs have done many times already this season without shaking up their lineup. The 2022 third-rounder spent several days on the roster around Thanksgiving and made his first two career NHL appearances in the process, going without a point but managing an even rating and three shot attempts with two blocks and one hit. He was used squarely in bottom-pairing minutes, averaging 12:03 of ice time per game.

The 22-year-old lefty is viewed as a high-ceiling puck-mover, though, and has even been generating some trade interest as the Habs have very little maneuverability on defense long-term. Their top-four group of Guhle, Noah Dobson, Lane Hutson, and Mike Matheson are all signed long-term, with top prospect David Reinbacher still to come. Now in his second season in Laval, Engstrom is in the early stages of a breakout with a 5-11–16 scoring line in 20 games, including a +8 rating. With Guhle unavailable, there’s an argument to be made that he should be getting a longer look in the NHL ahead of lower-ceiling options like Jayden Struble and Arber Xhekaj.

Image courtesy of Eric Canha-Imagn Images.

Montreal Canadiens| Newsstand| Transactions Adam Engstrom| Jacob Fowler| Owen Beck

1 comment

Lightning’s Victor Hedman Leaves Due To Injury

December 9, 2025 at 8:10 pm CDT | by Bradley Keith 4 Comments

The Tampa Bay Lightning announced during the second intermission that star defenseman Victor Hedman will not return versus Montreal due to injury. The Swede left after 06:14 of ice time, which was all in the first period. Further details have not been provided at this time on possible severity. 

The hits keep coming for Tampa Bay, already having a defense corps ravaged by injury, to go with Andrei Vasilevskiy landing on IR yesterday. Hedman himself just came back after missing a large chunk of November with an undisclosed ailment, and naturally, it is unclear if today’s injury is related. Regardless, losing their captain when Ryan McDonagh and Erik Černák remain sidelined is a serious blow. Despite facing such adversity, the longtime contenders have mostly continued their winning ways, currently second in the Atlantic Division. J.J. Moser has stepped up and risen to the occasion in his second season as a Bolt, emerging as a highly reliable top four defender, a savvy pickup helping the team extend its contention window. 

Hedman himself, now 34, has been remarkably durable throughout his career. The towering defender is already well above 1,100 career games, not to mention another 170 playoff appearances, leading the team in heavy minutes throughout runs over the past decade. Despite all of it, when healthy, the 2009 draftee remains elite, having 12 points in 17 games this season.

As is symbolic of their season so far, Tampa Bay handled business over the Canadiens tonight even being short on the back-end. However, Hedman’s status will be a huge question, along with how long the team can sustain success with so many key players shaken up for the time being. Tonight’s win ended a four game skid, but things won’t get any easier without Vasilevskiy or Hedman.

Injury| Newsstand| Tampa Bay Lightning Victor Hedman

4 comments

Thomas Harley Returning To Stars Lineup

December 9, 2025 at 1:11 pm CDT | by Brennan McClain 1 Comment

Dec. 9: Harley will be back in the lineup tonight against the Jets, per Ken Wiebe of the Winnipeg Free Press. He never landed on injured reserve when he was out, so there’s no transaction involved.

Nov. 15: The Dallas Stars will be without one of their top defenseman for the next few weeks. Dallas announced that Thomas Harley is considered week-to-week with a lower-body injury.

Although Harley’s most recent game came in the Stars’ lopsided win against the Montreal Canadiens on Tuesday, there’s reason to believe that he’s been playing through the injury for some time. Given their salary cap space, it’s expected that Kyle Capobianco will fill in for Harley for the time being.

It’s safe to say that Harley will be a huge missing piece for Dallas moving forward. The former first-round pick has arguably been the Stars’ top defenseman for the last three years, scoring 32 goals and 107 points in his previous 175 games. Additionally, Harley was the highest-scoring defenseman for the Stars last postseason, adding four goals and 14 points in 18 games.

Fortunately, Dallas has built a solid lead in the standings that they can likely absorb Harley’s loss. At the time of writing, the Stars are four points up on the Utah Mammoth for second place in the Central Division standings and are five points up on the final wild-card spot in the Western Conference.

Moving forward, it’s likely that young blueliner Lian Bichsel will get a larger look in the Stars’ top-two defensive pairings. Also drafted 18th overall like Harley, Bichsel is in his second year in the NHL. At this point, he’s scored four goals and 11 points in 56 games with 213 hits, averaging 14:46 of ice time per night.

Dallas Stars| Injury| Newsstand Thomas Harley

1 comment

Penguins Recall Danton Heinen, Sam Poulin; Evgeni Malkin Out Week-To-Week

December 9, 2025 at 8:55 am CDT | by Josh Erickson 1 Comment

9:04 a.m.: Malkin and Lizotte are destined for longer absences than the minimum ones required by IR. The team later announced both have been downgraded to week-to-week with their upper-body injuries.

8:55 a.m.: The Penguins announced they’ve again added forwards Danton Heinen and Samuel Poulin to the NHL roster, marking each player’s second recall of the season from AHL Wilkes-Barre/Scranton. They placed forwards Evgeni Malkin and Blake Lizotte on injured reserve in corresponding moves.

Heinen was one of the most surprising training camp cuts across the league. The 30-year-old is in the back half of a two-year, $4.5MM deal he signed with the Canucks as a free agent in 2024. After scoring six goals and 18 points in 51 games for Vancouver, he was sent to Pittsburgh in the deal that saw the Nucks acquire Marcus Pettersson and Drew O’Connor. Heinen was a familiar pickup for the Pens, having scored a career-high 18 goals for them in the 2021-22 season.

For his $2.25MM cap hit, he was reasonably productive down the stretch. He totaled a 3-8–11 scoring line in 28 games and was viewed as likely trade bait entering this season as the Pens looked to clear out some veterans. After all, the 2014 fourth-round pick has been an NHL fixture for years now and hadn’t seen extended time out of the lineup since spending most of 2016-17, his first professional season, in the minors.

Pittsburgh hasn’t shown a propensity to keep veterans in the lineup for the sake of doing so this season, though. With Heinen not serving as much of a fit in their long-term plans – or short-term ones, for that matter – they opted to waive him at the beginning of this season with no desirable trade options on the table. The 6’2″, 187-lb forward has proved he still has NHL talent, lighting up the scoresheet in Wilkes-Barre/Scranton for a 6-12–18 scoring line in just 12 appearances.

Heinen spent most of November on the NHL roster as a result of injuries to Noel Acciari and Justin Brazeau, both of whom were recently activated from IR. He was returned to WBS on Nov. 30 after scoring one assist in nine games. He saw 12:15 of ice time per contest, getting some occasional reps on both special teams. While his production wasn’t impressive, his two-way impacts were spectacular. Among players with at least 50 5-on-5 minutes for the Pens this year, Heinen boasts the highest share of shot attempts (58.2%), expected goals (59.7%), scoring chances (60.0%), and high-danger chances (61.1%). He managed that with a 43.8 offensive zone start percentage, 17th out of 26 skaters.

Poulin has been similarly productive in the minors. He’s the only WBS skater with more points than Heinen this season, on track for a career year with nine goals and 20 points in 21 games. The 2019 first-round pick is now 24 years old and has aged out of being a top prospect, but he’s proving he can hold down a job as solid organizational depth and be a reliable call-up. He got into two games for the Pens last month on his call-up, recording a -2 rating and six shot attempts while averaging 13:49 of ice time.

Both will be on hand to add to their games-played totals this season tonight against the Ducks as the injury bug continues to bite Pittsburgh’s forward group. Malkin already missed Sunday’s game against the Stars with an upper-body injury and remains listed as day-to-day. Before landing on IR, the future Hall-of-Fame had rattled off two goals and three assists in his last two games. The IR placement technically only rules him out of tonight’s game. Since his last appearance was on Dec. 4, he’ll be eligible to be activated ahead of Thursday’s game against the Canadiens.

Lizotte’s IR placement comes as a surprise. He played nearly 14 minutes in Sunday’s shootout loss in Dallas, recording an assist in the process. He didn’t leave the game, and it’s unclear when he got banged up. The team hasn’t assigned any injury designation other than his IR placement. He’s not eligible for reinstatement until Dec. 14, so whatever’s going on with him will cause him to miss at least three games.

Lizotte, who turns 28 on Saturday, signed a two-year, $3.7MM pact with Pittsburgh in 2024 after being non-tendered by the Kings. He tied his career-high 11 goals last season despite being limited to 59 games and has continued to be quite valuable in a fourth-line role this season. He’s managed a +1 rating despite being used almost exclusively in the defensive zone at 5-on-5 and has contributed a 3-2–5 scoring line in 27 showings. He’s averaging 13:57 of ice time per game and is the Pens’ top penalty-killing forward, likely influencing their decision to add Heinen back into the fold. With Joona Koppanen in the minors and Filip Hallander and Rickard Rakell still on IR, Heinen is ticketed for a job on Pittsburgh’s top two shorthanded units.

Injury| Newsstand| Pittsburgh Penguins| Transactions Blake Lizotte| Danton Heinen| Evgeni Malkin| Samuel Poulin

1 comment

Latest On Olympic Rink Construction

December 8, 2025 at 9:44 pm CDT | by Gabriel Foley 14 Comments

NHL Deputy Commissioner Bill Daly met with the media to share the latest on the ice rink construction for the 2026 Winter Olympics in Milano Cortina, with updates summarized by ESPN’s Emily Kaplan. Daly confirmed that the rink will finish construction on February 2nd, just three days before the women’s tournament is scheduled to begin. The men’s tournament is set to start on February 11th. Daly added that the NHL has sent their own ice technicians and experts to Milano Cortina to support the construction, saying:

We’re basically moving everybody there to try to help get this done in a way that’s acceptable for NHL athletes. And I’m cautiously optimistic it will be fruitful.

The NHL is hearing positive updates, per Daly, and doesn’t view the construction challenges as an insurmountable barrier. At the same time, Daly said the NHL won’t send players if the ice conditions are deemed unsafe to play on. The ice sheet itself is set to be a standard international size – 196.85 feet by 85.3 feet (60 meters by 26 meters). That was the sized used in past Olympic events, but goes against an agreement made this summer between the NHL and IIHF. The NHL found out about the improper sizing last week. They okayed the it for 2026 but will expect proper dimensions for the 2030 Winter Olympics, per Daly.

The NHL is set to pause play for two weeks for the Winter Olympics. With an insistance that there is no contingency plan – Olympic hockey will only play at this newly-constructed arena next year – the NHL could find themselves in a true all-or-nothing situation. Daly spoke to the league’s optimism but also acknowledged that they may need to come up with an emergency solution, if faced with worst case scenario. What that solution would look like will be up to little more than speculation. The NHL set history with the 4-Nations Face-Off – an international, best-on-best tournament hosted by the NHL – last February. That could be a framework that let’s jettisoned Olypmians get back on the ice, while not disturbing the vacation plans of those not headed to Italy.

IIHF| NHL| Newsstand| Olympics| Players Bill Daly

14 comments

Lightning Place Andrei Vasilevskiy On IR, Activate Brayden Point

December 8, 2025 at 3:44 pm CDT | by Brennan McClain 4 Comments

3:44 p.m.: The corresponding move for Vasilevskiy’s IR placement is an IR activation for top center Brayden Point, per Erlendsson. The snakebitten pivot had missed the last seven games due to an undisclosed injury he sustained against the Capitals on Nov. 22. He’s hoping the time off jumpstarts a reset – the four-time 40-goal scorer had managed just three tallies through 21 games while shooting at a disastrous 6.8% clip, less than half his previous career low.

10:16 a.m.: According to Erik Erlendsson of Lightning Insider, the Tampa Bay Lightning have placed netminder Andrei Vasilevskiy on the team’s injured reserve. Having recalled Brandon Halverson a few days ago, any corresponding roster move, if any, will likely involve a forward or defenseman.

Vasilveskiy has already missed two games due to an undisclosed injury, and it’s now a guarantee he’ll miss at least two more. Since his last contest came last Tuesday against the New York Islanders, the 12-year veteran will only be eligible for activation after Tampa Bay’s matchup tomorrow against the Montreal Canadiens.

Unlike some of their injuries on defense, the Lightning haven’t fared as well without their former Vezina Trophy-winning netminder. Tampa Bay lost both games last week without Vasilevskiy (as well as his most recent start against the Islanders), allowing six goals on 50 shots for an .880 SV%.

Assuming that the Lightning will want to avoid overworking Jonas Johansson in their upcoming back-to-back against the Toronto Maple Leafs and Montreal, Vasilevskiy’s IR placement all but guarantees that Halvorsen will make his first appearance of the year. The 29-year-old netminer has managed a 9-4-0 record in 13 games with the Syracuse Crunch this season with a .901 SV%.

Fortunately, it doesn’t sound like Vasilevskiy will be out for too long. There was some speculation last week that Vasilevskiy was targeting today for his return, meaning that he may return by Thursday when the Lightning take on the Devils in New Jersey.

Newsstand| Tampa Bay Lightning| Transactions Andrei Vasilevskiy| Brayden Point

4 comments

Blackhawks Reassign Sam Rinzel, Landon Slaggert

December 8, 2025 at 3:04 pm CDT | by Josh Erickson 4 Comments

The Blackhawks have reassigned defenseman Sam Rinzel and winger Landon Slaggert to AHL Rockford, per Charlie Roumeliotis of WGN Radio 720. Both players are still waiver-exempt.

Slaggert’s demotion was expected. He’s been sent down once already this season and has been a healthy scratch in eight of Chicago’s last 10 games. Rinzel’s, however, comes as a surprise.

A first-round pick straight out of the Minnesota high school ranks in 2022, Rinzel was viewed as one of the higher-ceiling offensive defenders in the class but would need plenty of developmental runway to improve his overall game. The 6’4″ righty seemed to put most of the pieces together during the last two years with the University of Minnesota. He racked up a 12-48–60 scoring line in 79 games with a +43 rating. Not only was he a Big Ten First Team All-Star last year, but he was also named the conference’s Defensive Player of the Year.

Rinzel’s performance down the stretch last season for the Blackhawks after his collegiate campaign ended only added more fuel to his stock. Chicago deployed him in a top-pairing role with Alex Vlasic for their final nine games, and the results were fantastic. Rinzel rattled off five assists and a +1 rating while averaging 23:22 of ice time per game, getting an audition on the Hawks’ top power-play unit after Seth Jones was traded weeks earlier. He and Vlasic also controlled 50% of expected goals at 5-on-5, the only Blackhawks defense pair to break even with over 100 minutes of ice time last year, per MoneyPuck.

This season, however, there have been significant growing pains. Rinzel started back in that top-pairing job with Vlasic and skated over 25 minutes twice in the Hawks’ first three games. Since then, he’s only broken the 20-minute plateau three times and not since Oct. 26. He’s remained in the lineup all this time as Chicago has dressed seven defensemen for the majority of the campaign, but he was healthy scratched once on Nov. 15 against the Maple Leafs. Since returning to the lineup, he’s managed five assists in 11 games – all at even strength – but is only averaging 14:36 of ice time per game.

The reduced usage has come as a result of some warts popping up in Rinzel’s defensive game. Rinzel’s offensive zone start percentage at 5-on-5 is 55.4, ninth on the team (min. 50 minutes). Despite that, the Blackhawks are allowing more shots per 60 minutes with Rinzel on the ice (34.2) than any other player on the roster. The same goes for shot attempts (68.3), and his 33.4 scoring chances against per 60 are the worst among defensemen.

He’ll now get some time to clean up his game in Rockford. Given Chicago’s frequent juggling of defense pairs this season, a strong run of play means he could find himself back on the roster in fairly short order – particularly if they start listening to calls on pending unrestricted free agents Matt Grzelcyk and Connor Murphy closer to the trade deadline.

It’s too early to read into how Rinzel’s demotion will affect head coach Jeff Blashill’s propensity to ice 11 forwards and seven defenders this season. Chicago didn’t fill its newly open roster spots in corresponding moves today because they’re off until Wednesday, following a dreadful weekend in Southern California, losing back-to-back games against the Kings and Ducks by a combined score of 13-1. Those losses brought their record in their last 10 games down to 2-6-2, although their hot start means they’re still one game above .500 and one point back of the Mammoth for the second wild card spot in the West as they approach the 30-game mark.

As for Slaggert, he’s been most often used as an extra forward on the NHL roster this season, a consequence of fewer jobs being available to the forward group than normal. The 23-year-old has entered the lineup on 10 occasions with one goal on five shots and an even rating. He’s averaged just 9:04 of ice time per game after seeing over 12 minutes in 33 appearances last season.

Image courtesy of Kamil Krzaczynski-Imagn Images.

Chicago Blackhawks| Newsstand| Transactions Landon Slaggert| Sam Rinzel

4 comments

Craig Smith Announces Retirement

December 8, 2025 at 12:20 pm CDT | by Brennan McClain 4 Comments

As expected, forward Craig Smith has hung up his skates after 14 years in the NHL. The Magnuson Hockey Agency, which represented Smith, announced the retirement.

Smith’s professional career began back in 2009, when he was selected with the 98th overall pick by the Nashville Predators. He spent two years following the draft playing for the NCAA’s University of Wisconsin, scoring 27 goals and 76 points in 82 games while being named the program’s captain in his second season.

Impressively, after a standout performance for Team USA at the 2011 IIHF World Championships, Smith jumped right to the NHL in the 2011-12 season with the Predators. He finished 12th in Calder Trophy voting that year, scoring 14 goals and 36 points in 72 games — good for eighth in scoring on the team.

Due to some injury troubles, Smith skated in four games for the AHL’s Milwaukee Admirals, which would serve as the only AHL playing time Smith had throughout his career. Over the next eight years, Smith scored 148 goals and 294 points in 589 games with Nashville, averaging 14:57 of ice time in a middle-six role. He had a far lesser track record of success in the postseason, tallying seven goals and 16 points in 52 games from 2012 to 2020.

After his five-year, $21.25MM extension with Nashville concluded after the 2019-20 season, Smith reached free agency for the first time at 33 years old. Due to the pause caused by the COVID-19 pandemic, Smith had to wait until mid-October to sign his next contract, which became a three-year, $9.3MM deal with the Boston Bruins.

He enjoyed a pair of relatively productive seasons with the Bruins before transitioning to a bottom-six role in his final season. In the last year of his deal, Smith was traded to the Washington Capitals in the trade that sent Dmitry Orlov and Garnet Hathaway to New England.

The Madison, WI native would only sign two more NHL contracts after that trade — one with the Dallas Stars, and another with the Chicago Blackhawks before ultimately ending his career with the Detroit Red Wings. Smith finished his career with 220 goals and 452 points in 987 games, becoming the fifth-highest scoring Wisconsin-born player behind Joe Pavelski, Phil Kessel, Gary Suter, and Ryan Suter.

We at PHR congratulate Smith on a solid career and wish him the best in his next chapter.

Photo courtesy of Charles LeClaire-USA TODAY Sports. 

Boston Bruins| Chicago Blackhawks| Dallas Stars| Detroit Red Wings| Nashville Predators| Newsstand| Retirement| Washington Capitals Craig Smith

4 comments

Kings Exploring Change-Of-Scenery Options With Phillip Danault

December 8, 2025 at 9:40 am CDT | by Brennan McClain 14 Comments

On today’s rendition of 32 Thoughts, Sportsnet’s Elliotte Friedman reports that the Los Angeles Kings are exploring a change-of-scenery trade with center Phillip Danault. Additionally, Friedman suggested that Danault would be open to the idea of playing for a different organization.

There’s no question that the Kings have gotten a different version of Danault this year. In the four years following the summer of 2021, when the middle-six center signed a six-year, $33MM contract with Los Angeles, Danault had scored 70 goals and 195 points in 319 games wearing the black and silver while averaging approximately 18 minutes a night.

Additionally, Danault has managed a solid 53.0% success rate in the faceoff dot while starting most of his shifts in the defensive zone, and has held his own on the defensive side of the puck. He has been one of the Kings’ best playoff performers, despite failing to reach beyond the first round throughout his tenure, scoring seven goals and 19 points in 24 contests.

This season, by contrast, Danault has offered little to no offensive value. Through 28 games, the 32-year-old middleman has registered only five assists while averaging 16:27 of ice time. He has remained valuable on the defensive side of the puck, but it appears frustration is growing on both sides of the relationship, particularly due to the lack of offense.

Given his lack of offense, even for a change-of-scenery swap, it may prove difficult to move Danault. He’s signed through next season at a $5.5MM cap hit, and has a 10-team no-trade clause, though he may be willing to completely waive that if he’s committed to a new opportunity.

It’s unlikely that the Kings would want to move him for futures, either. Unless they acquire capital for a separate trade, Los Angeles doesn’t have many internal candidates that could replace Danault down the middle of the team’s third line.

That means that for any trade involving Danault, the Kings would likely look for another center who has had a similarly disappointing year. Peyton Krebs of the Buffalo Sabres, Jason Dickinson of the Chicago Blackhawks, Kent Johnson of the Columbus Blue Jackets, and Scott Laughton of the Toronto Maple Leafs all come to mind as potential options.

Los Angeles Kings| Newsstand Phillip Danault

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